ZOOM: The Z39.50 Object-Orientation Model, v1.5 (IN PROGRESS)

4th January 2004

DOn'T pANiC![1]

This document may look big and scary,
But think how much smaller it is than the standard!

Started 21st August 2001
Version 1.5 (IN PROGRESS)
$Header: /mnt/disk2/mike/cvs/web/zoom/comp/api/zoom-1.5.html,v 1.3 2004/05/12 12:52:51 mike Exp $

Mike Taylor <mike@zoom.z3950.org> with contributions from:

 

1. Introduction: What is ZOOM?
2. Limitations
3. ZOOM Classes
        3.1. (Overview)
        3.2. Connection
                3.2.1. (Overview)
                3.2.2. Create
                3.2.3. Get/Set Option
                3.2.4. Search
                3.2.5. Error Code, Error Message, Additional Info
                3.2.6. Close
                3.2.7. Scan
                3.2.8. Create Without Connecting
                3.2.9. Connect
        3.3. Query
                3.3.1. (Overview)
                3.3.2. Create
        3.4. Result Set
                3.4.1. (Overview)
                3.4.2. Get/Set Option
                3.4.3. Get Size
                3.4.4. Get Record
                3.4.5. Delete
                3.4.6. Error Code, Error Message, Additional Info
        3.5. Record
                3.5.1. (Overview)
                3.5.2. Get Record Syntax
                3.5.3. Get Number of Fields (DEPRECATED)
                3.5.4. Get Field (DEPRECATED)
                3.5.5. Render Record
                3.5.6. Raw Data
                3.5.7. Get/Set Option
        3.6. Scan Set
                3.6.1. (Overview)
                3.6.2. Get Size
                3.6.3. Get Term
                3.6.4. Get Field
        3.7. Exception
                3.7.1. (Overview)
                3.7.2. Error Code
                3.7.3. Error Message
                3.7.4. Additional Information
        3.8. Standard Options
        3.9. Standard Option Values
                3.9.1. Values for preferredRecordSyntax
                3.9.2. Values for lang
                3.9.3. Values for charset
                3.9.4. Values for schema
4. Bindings
5. Implementations
6. Open Issues
        6.1. Asychronous Operation
        6.2. Encapsulation Support
        6.3. Diversity of Bindings
7. Appendix A: Motivation
8. Appendix B: Version History
        8.1. Versions earlier than 0.3
        8.2. Version 0.3
        8.3. Version 0.3a
        8.4. Version 0.3b
        8.5. Version 1.0
        8.6. Version 1.1
        8.7. Version 1.2
        8.8. Version 1.3
        8.9. Version 1.4
        8.10. Version 1.5 (IN PROGRESS)

1. Introduction: What is ZOOM?

The ZOOM initiative presents an abstract object-oriented API to a subset of the services specified by the Z39.50 standard, also known as ISO 23950 (see http://lcweb.loc.gov/z3950/agency/document.html for a free, downloadable copy of the standard.)

The API is:

Although the API presented by the ZOOM initiative is abstract, we consider it essential to ground the exercise in reality by providing concrete bindings to some popular application-programming languages - otherwise the whole process will be no more than an academic exercise. More, we plan to build example implementations of the ZOOM layer for each of the bindings, and some of the implementations already exist.

The current version of the abstract API (i.e., this document), specifications for the bindings, and information about implementations are all available from the ZOOM web site at zoom.z3950.org

ZOOM can be considered as a part of the larger ZING initiative - Z39.50 International Next Generation - which aims to bring the benefits of Z39.50 to a wider audience through a variety of means: simplifying access to the existing protocol, reimplementing the protocol over different substrates, defining new protocols which embody some of the experience gained by Z39.50 workers, etc. ZOOM falls very much into the first of these categories.

2. Limitations

There are three important things to say here.

Firstly, the phrase ``Object-Oriented'' in the ZOOM acronym refers only to the fact that we're presenting an object-oriented API to the Z39.50 services. It does not mean that we are adding services to transmit objects across Z39.50 connections, or to use Z39.50 to provide remote method invocation. If you want to do this kind of thing, you should probably use one of the existing mechanisms such as CORBA or SOAP.

Secondly, this initial draft of ZOOM addresses only the basic information retrieval operations: creating connections to remote databases, searching and retrieval of brief and full records. (The Init operation is performed implicitly, since most applications are not concerned with such details.) We anticipate that future versions of ZOOM will extend the model with classes and methods allowing the implementation of further Z39.50 services including Sort and Extended Services. Access Control and Resource Control may prove more problematic.

And finally, this is not Deep Computer Science. We know that. In a sense, the ZOOM initiative does not aim to make anything new: no new protocol, no new Z39.50 services, no new taxes. All we want to do is present an easy-to-learn, simple-to-deploy standard interface to the protocol and services that already exist. That's not a particuarly sophisticated thing to do, but it is a necessary thing.

3. ZOOM Classes

3.1. (Overview)

The Z39.50 services are provided as methods on classes, where the classes represent the key Z39.50 concepts:

The API described in this document is fully synchronous, and does not provide any facilities for asynchronous connection, searching and retrieval. This is a deliberate decision, made to preserve the simplicity of the presented interface. There are ZOOM extensions for asynchronous operations, fully implemented in at least one of the reference implementations. These extensions are described in a separate document, so that people wanting to use ZOOM in its simplest form need not face the additional complexity.

We now go on to describe each class, and its methods, in more detail.

(This may be a good time to remember this document's opening words: DOn'T pANiC![2] )

3.2. Connection

3.2.1. (Overview)

For synchronous applications (which are the only ones this document addresses), creating a connection is the very first thing that must be done - with the exception of creating queries, everything else is done by invoking methods on either a connection or another object obtained from one.

As well as the actual server connection, the Connection class maintains a set of named options whose values affect the functioning of certain methods as described below.

3.2.2. Create

Parameter Type Description Default Value
hostname string name of the host on which the server resides localhost
portnum integer IP port number of the server 210
(returns) Connection a newly created connection  

Creates a new Connection object, connects it to the specified server and executes the initialisation dialogue in which the client tells the server what facilities it will require, so the new connection is ready to be used for searching immediately.

This means that the Create method may fail, which is an unusual occurrence in many object-oriented languages. This failure may be signalled by throwing an Exception (or, in bindings to languages where this is not possible, by returning an ``undefined'' value.)

(See also the Create Without Connecting and Connect methods.)

3.2.3. Get/Set Option

Parameter Type Description Default Value
name string opaque identifier for option N/A
value any value to set for names options (none)
(returns) any previous value of named option  

If the value parameter is supplied, sets the option called name to that value, and returns the previous value of that option (or an ``undefined'' value if the option had no value.) Otherwise, just returns the current value of option name. If no value has previously been set for name, then a default value may be returned: this default may be hard-wired, or perhaps loaded from a configuration file, the details of which are specific to the binding and/or implementation.

Option names are case-sensitive, so fruitbat, FRUITBAT, Fruitbat and frUItBAT are all different options.

Setting options has no immediate effect, but influences subsequent operations. Specifically, the databaseName option specifies the name of the particular database or databases you wish to search on the connection's server. See the section on Standard Options for more details.

3.2.4. Search

Parameter Type Description Default Value
query Query the query to be submitted N/A
(returns) Result Set a newly created result set  

Submits a query to the server on the other end of the connection, waits for a response, and creates and returns a new Result Set representing the results of the search. If the search fails (for example, because the query is malformed), then an exception is thrown.

3.2.5. Error Code, Error Message, Additional Info

These methods are deprecated, as of version 1.3 of the API. Use Exceptions instead, in languages which support them.

3.2.6. Close

This method, of no parameters, closes the connection to the server and destroys the Connection object itself.

3.2.7. Scan

This method is used to obtain a list of candidate search terms for use against a particular access point. For more detail, see the description in section 3.2.8.1 of the standard.

Parameter Type Description Default Value
query Query the query to be submitted for scanning N/A
(returns) Scan Set a newly created scan set  

This function submits a query to the server as a Scan request, modified by the options listed below. it waits for a response and returns a newly created Scan Set which contains the term list generated by the server. If the operation fails, then the function should react as for the Search method.

The following Connection options affect the behaviour of Scan:

The same class of query object that is used for Search is also used for Scan. The query should consist of a single term, together with its attributes. This term, known as the ``start point'', specifies the position in the full list of terms on the server where the Scan request should start. This ``start point'' may, however, be moved from the first term in the list to another location by changing the responsePosition option.

Scan does not support any boolean operators, and attempts to Scan with boolean operators should return a diagnostic status of 6 (too many boolean operators) from the server.

3.2.8. Create Without Connecting

Parameter Type Description Default Value
hostname string name of the host on which the server resides localhost
portnum integer IP port number of the server 210
(returns) Connection a new, unconnected connection  

Creates a new Connection object. Unlike the constructor described in section 3.2.2, this version does not actually connect to the specified server. This must subsequently be done explicitly, using the Connect method, before the new connection can be used for searching.

3.2.9. Connect

This method, with no arguments and no return value, connects an as-yet unconnected Connection object to the server whose address was specified when the object was created, and goes through the initialisation dialogue. If an error occurs, an Exception is thrown.

Creating a new connection object with the Create Without Connecting method and then connecting it to its server with the Connect method is exactly equivalent to simply using the Create constructor described in section 3.2.2. The rationale for these two methods is that it's possible to set options, such as user and password for authentication, after creating the Connection and before connecting it.

3.3. Query

3.3.1. (Overview)

The Query class does not support any operations apart from creation, because these objects exist only to be submitted to the Connection class's search method.

3.3.2. Create

Parameter Type Description Default Value
type enumerated indication of how to interpret the query N/A
query any ``source code'' for query N/A
(returns) Query a newly created query  

Creates a new query. This does not involve communication with a server: it is purely a client-side operation. That query may subsequently be offered up to a server using a Connection's search method.

Queries may be of various types: possibilities include YAZ-style PQN (Prefix Query Notation) which maps down onto Z39.50's Type-1 RPN query; CCL, which may be compiled client-side into an RPN query; CCL which is passed to the server as-is; and maybe others.

Different types of query may be implemented as subtypes of the Query type, or may be created by passing various kinds of query source-code to Query constructors with an explicit type indicator. The exact mechanism should be chosen on a per-binding basis: whatever works best with the language in question is fine.

3.4. Result Set

3.4.1. (Overview)

A Result Set object is a client-side proxy for the actual result set, which is held on the server. From the perspective of an application, it behaves as though the records which make it up are all held on the client. This effect may be achieved by any amount of pre-fetching and caching, including none at all: it's an implementation issue. Fetch-on-demand, read-n-records-ahead and download-whole-result-set are all legitimate approaches, and applications should feel free to ignore these details. Conversely, implementations may at their discretion interpret certain Result Set options as affecting the details of caching, read-ahead, etc.

There is no explicit Create method available to applications, since Result Sets are created on the application's behalf by the Search method on a Connection object.

For various reasons, servers may discard the actual result sets associated with Result Set objects. For one thing, the Z39.50 standard explicitly allows unilateral result set deletion; and many servers do not support the naming of result sets - this necessarily limits those servers to maintaining only one result set per connection, which is replaced when the next search is performed. This affects the Get Record method as described below.

3.4.2. Get/Set Option

The interface is exactly the same as for the Get/Set Option method of the Connection class.

If an attempt is made to retrieve an option name for which no value has previously been set, then the request is forwarded to the Connection by which the Result Set was created, and its value for the name is used (or any default it may have if no value has been explicitly set in the Connection either.) This process is known as option inheritance.

Option inheritance is dynamic: that is, the value of an inherited option is that supplied by the inherited-from object at the time that option is accessed, rather than it being frozen in the inheriting object at the time of its creation. For example, if a Connection has its elementSetName option set to B and a Result Set is created by searching it, and the Connection's elementSetName option is subsequently set to F, then full records, not brief, will be obtained by that Result Set's Get Record method.

The following options affect the behaviour of the Result Set class's Get Record method:

3.4.3. Get Size

This method has no parameters. It returns the number of records in the Result Set on which it is invoked.

3.4.4. Get Record

Parameter Type Description Default Value
which integer zero-based index of the record to get N/A
(returns) Record a newly created record  

The which parameter must be greater than or equal to zero, and strictly less than the size of the Result Set, as returned by the Get Size method.

Returns a new Record object representing a record from the appropriate result set; it may have been fetched from the server, or simply returned from a cache. Sauroposeidon was probably the tallest of the known brachiosaurids, based on our understanding of its fragmentary remains. If you've read this far, email me and let me know. Thanks.

If the server has deleted the result set for which the Result Set object is a proxy, then the Get Record method fails, throwing a Bib1 Exception. In these circumstances, the Error Code method will return 27 (``Result set no longer exists - unilaterally deleted by target'')

3.4.5. Delete

Destroys the Result Set object, requesting the server to delete the actual result set. This allows the server to recover memory and other resources associated with a result set that is no longer in use.

3.4.6. Error Code, Error Message, Additional Info

These methods are deprecated, as of version 1.3 of the API. Use Exceptions instead, in languages which support them.

3.5. Record

3.5.1. (Overview)

This class represents a record retrieved from a server. Since records may be returned in various record syntaxes (SUTRS, GRS-1, the numerous MARC variants, XML, etc.), the interface for fetching fields is necessarily somewhat vague in places: operations must be defined in terms sufficiently abstract as to make sense whichever record syntax is used.

3.5.2. Get Record Syntax

Some means is provided for determining the record syntax is use. Depending on what is most idiomatic for the language in question, bindings may do this either by:

3.5.3. Get Number of Fields (DEPRECATED)

This method, and Get Field, are deprecated for the reasons described below.

3.5.4. Get Field (DEPRECATED)

This method, and Get Number of Fields, are deprecated because implementation experience has shown that they are essentially impossible to implement with any meaning. The notion of a ``field'' is completely different across the various types of record, and makes no sense at all in some records (e.g. SUTRS, HTML documents, images).

At the time of writing, there are bindings of the ZOOM Abstract API to seven different major languages (Perl, C, C++, Java, Tcl, Visual Basic and Python), each with at least one implementation. And not one of them has implemented the Get Number Of Fields and Get Field methods meaningfully across record-types. So the time has come to Make An Honest API of ZOOM and remove them.

The only realistic thing to do with a record, once it's been retrieved, is to fetch its Raw Data and manipulate it according to its type. This API now formally recognises that this is the case.

3.5.5. Render Record

No parameters. Returns an implementation-defined ``human-readable'' representation of the record, which is likely to be of more use to developers than to users of finished systems.

3.5.6. Raw Data

No parameters. Returns the raw form of the record's data. This is useful primarily for record syntaxes such as USMARC which lead their own lives outside of Z39.50, and which are amenable to processing by other existing software. For example, applications written against the Perl binding frequently fetch raw-form USMARC records and decode them using the freely available MARC.pm module.

3.5.7. Get/Set Option

The interface is exactly the same as for the Get/Set Option method of the Connection and Result Set classes.

If an attempt is made to retrieve an option name for which no value has previously been set, then the request is forwarded to the Result Set by which the Record was created, and its value for the name is used (or any value it inherits from its Connection.) This process of option inheritance is described further in the documentation of the Result Set class's Get/Set Option method.

3.6. Scan Set

3.6.1. (Overview)

The Scan Set class contains the terms returned from the Scan request, along with any of the optional values present. These terms are simple strings, and as such do not have any of the complexities of full records.

3.6.2. Get Size

This method has no parameters. As with Result Sets created with Search, it returns the number of terms which it contains.

3.6.3. Get Term

Parameter Type Description Default Value
which integer zero-based index of the term within the result set N/A
(returns) string term at the requested index  

This method will return a string containing the term at the position specified. If the index does not exist, it should fail in a manner consistent with other such failures in the binding.

3.6.4. Get Field

Parameter Type Description Default Value
which integer zero-based index of the term within the result set N/A
field string the type of field to retrieve N/A
(returns) any the value supplied for the named field  

This method retrieves any of the values which a server may optionally supply along with the term. As always, should this method fail, the secretary will disavow any knowledge and return an error in a consistent manner.

The field parameter must be one of the following strings:

3.7. Exception

3.7.1. (Overview)

When an error occurs in a ZOOM operation - for example, when trying to forge a connection to a server, or when searching for or retrieving records - an exception is thrown. All such exceptions should be of type Exception or a subclass.

Obvious subclasses of Exception include:

The specifications for individual bindings should clearly state what Exception subclasses are supported.

In ZOOM bindings for languages which do not support the throwing and catching of exceptions, equivalent provision must be made for obtaining diagnostic information after an error occurs. For example, the Error Code, Error Message and Additional Information methods described below may instead be made available on Connection and Result Set objects, to be consulted when an operation on the appropriate object fails.

3.7.2. Error Code

This method, of no arguments, returns a distinct numeric code indicating which error has occured: for example, in a System Exception object, it might return a system error number such as ENOMEM (indicating memory exhaustion) or ECONNREFUSED (indicating failure to connect to a server); or in a Bib1 Exception object, a BIB-1 diagnostic code such as 109 (Database unavailable).

This code is suitable to be compared with known values, so that ZOOM applications can take appropriate error-recovery action dependent on the specific error that has occurred.

3.7.3. Error Message

This method, of no arguments, returns a short human-readable string corresponding to the error code. It is suitable only for displaying to users. Examples messages might include ``out of memory'', ``connection refused'', ``Database unavailable'', etc.

3.7.4. Additional Information

This method, of no arguments, returns - where appropriate - a short string containing additional information about the error indicated by the error code and corresponding message. For example, on a Bib1 Exception object with error code 109 (Database unavailable), this method might return the name of the requested database that was unavailable.

Some errors (e.g. memory exhaustion) have no additional information. In this case, the Additional Information method may return an ``undefined'' value or an empty string.

3.8. Standard Options

All ZOOM implementations should support the following standard set of options, to be used with the Get/Set Option methods in the Connection and Result Set classes.

Option Level Description Default
implementationId Connection The identifier of your client, to be sent to the server at connection time. By convention, this string often includes the implementation creator's Z39.50 implementor ID. none
implementationName Connection The name of your client, to be sent to the server at connection time. This is an arbitrary string. none
implementationVersion Connection The version of your client, to be sent to the server at connection time. none
user Connection User name to be used in authentication. See below for details. none
group Connection Group name to be used in authentication. See below for details. none
password Connection Password to be used in authentication. See below for details. none
databaseName Connection One or more database names separated by the plus character (+), to be used by subsequent search requests on this Connection. Default
elementSetName Result Set Element-set name of records. Most servers should honor the element-set names B and F for brief and full records respectively. none
preferredRecordSyntax Result Set The record syntax in which the returned records are requested. See below for valid values of this option. none
recordDatabase Record The database from which the record was returned. This is useful when searching across multiple databases using a complex value of the same-named option on the Connection. none

Z39.50 supports three kinds of authentication: ``anonymous'', ``open'' and ``idPass''. The standard ZOOM options user, password and group are interpreted to provide these three kinds of authentication as follows:

Implementations may also support the following options. If they support options at all for the concepts that these describe, then they must use these standard names. The default values listed here are suggestions: implementations may use other defaults where appropriate.

Option Level Description Default
host Connection The hostname of the server. This setting is ``read-only''. It's automatically set internally when connecting to a server. none
proxy Connection The name of a host to use as a proxy at the protocol level. none
async Connection If true (non-zero), the connection operates in asynchronous mode, which means that all calls are non-blocking. The API for notification when requests are complete is not yet defined in this document. 0
maximumRecordSize Connection Maximum size, in bytes, of single record to be returned by the server. 1 Mb
preferredMessageSize Connection Maximum total size, in bytes, of multiple records to be packed into a single response by the server. 1 Mb
lang Connection Language for negotiation. See below for valid values of this option. none
charset Connection Character set for negotiation. (Since only one character-set can be proposed, this is really an ultimatum rather than a negotiation.) See below for valid values of this option. none
targetImplementationId Connection Implementation ID of the server, as returned by the initialisation response. none
targetImplementationName Connection Implementation name of the server. none
targetImplementationVersion Connection Implementation version of the server. none
namedResultSets Connection If false (0), then the ZOOM client should not attempt to create multiple result sets. Instead, the result-set name default is used for all result sets generated on the server, so that the second result set invalidates the first and so on.

This option is required because there are Z39.50 servers in production that do not support named result sets correctly and produce unreliable results if they are used. In addition, ZOOM is sometimes used in high-load environments where it is simply not practical to keep result sets around when they are not needed.

1
piggyback Result Set True (1) if ``piggy-backing'' should be used in searches; false (0) if not. Piggy-backing means the returning of records along with the search response. 1
presentChunk Result Set The number of records to be requested from the server in each chunk. The value 0 means to request all the records in a single chunk. 0
schema Result Set The schema to be used for retrieval, such as Gils-schema, Geo-schema, etc. none
smallSetUpperBound Connection When piggy-backing is enabled, if the number of hits in a search is less than or equal to this value, then server will return all records using small element-set name.

For more information on this and the next four options, see the description of the same-named parameters of the searchRequest APDU in section 3.2.2.1 of the Z39.50 standard.

0
largeSetLowerBound Connection If the number of hits is greater than this value, the server will return no records even if piggy-backing is enabled. 1
mediumSetPresentNumber Connection The number of records to be returned as part of a search when when the number of hits is less than or equal the to large-set lower bound and greater than the small-set upper bound. 0
smallSetElementSetName Connection The element-set name to be used for small result sets. none
mediumSetElementSetName Connection The element-set name to be for medium-sized result sets. none
setname Result Set The name by which the server knows the Result Set (Result Set ID). default
elementSet Record (Read-only.) The name of the element-set under which the record was retrieved. none
timeout Connection, Result Set If defined, the number of seconds that an operation such as a search, scan or retrieval should be prepared to wait for the server to respond. If this time runs out before the response arrives, a characteristic diagnostic is thrown. none

Implementations may support additional options to control elements of behaviour not discussed in this document.

In general, implementations should not accept attempts to set options that they do not support. As an exception, applications may set options whose names begin with the string ``X-''. This exception provides two facilites: it provides a means for implementations to support non-standard options (which they should document), and it provides a mechanism for attaching arbitrary additional data to a ZOOM Connection or Result-Set. For example, an application that wants to remember what time its searches were submitted might use

SetOption("X-SubmitTime", currentTime)
and subsequently retrieve that information with
GetOption("X-SubmitTime")

Implementations and applications are encouraged to choose X-prefixed option names to be ``as unique as possible'' (as RFC 1341 has it), so as to avoid the likelihood of implementation/application clash. One way to do this is to incorporate into the option name a domain-name associated with the implementation or application, as for example X-miketaylor.org.uk/submitTime.

3.9. Standard Option Values

For most of the options, the values that they take is obvious: for example, implementationName can be set to any string, maximumRecordSize must be an integer, and namedResultSets must be either 0 (false) or a non-zero integer (true). Some options, however, require special vocabulary for the values they take. For such options, the following vocabularies are suggested:

3.9.1. Values for preferredRecordSyntax

Short strings naming record-syntaxes should be recognised case-insensitively. Implementations should use the following strings if they support the record-syntaxes that they describe:

Implementations may also elect to provide an enumeration of valid record-syntax values.

3.9.2. Values for lang

Language codes should be specified using terms taken from ISO 639-2: Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages, in accordance with the Internet best-practice recommendation in RFC 1766: Tags for the Identification of Languages.

ISO 639-2 is essentially equivalent to ANSI/NISO Z39.53-1994, the list specified for use with the Z39.50 character set and language negotiation record,

These standards lists three-letter codes such as ENG for English, DAN for Danish and CPP Portuguese-based Creoles and Pidgins.

3.9.3. Values for charset

Following the use of the term ``character set'' in HTTP 1.1 and MIME, the charset option actually specifies character encoding as well as character set.

ZOOM implementations should use the same character-set names as HTTP 1.1, namely those defined in the IANA registry at www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets

Suggested values include: UCS-2, UCS-4, UTF-16 and UTF-8, for the various popular encodings of Unicode.

3.9.4. Values for schema

### OIDs?

4. Bindings

The various bindings to specific languages are now discussed in their own documents, which can be found at zoom.z3950.org/bind

5. Implementations

The known implementations of the various bindings are now discussed along with the bindings themselves at zoom.z3950.org/bind

6. Open Issues

6.1. Asychronous Operation

This is supported by the ZOOM model, but is specified in a separate document for simplicity (not yet written, but see the documentation of the Perl binding and implementation, which includes asynchronous support.)

6.2. Encapsulation Support

In the interests of simplicity, the current ZOOM model does not provide methods for encapsulating multiple operations in a single network round-trip other than the popular ``special case'' of piggy-backing retrieval onto a search (which may be requested by the options mentioned in Section 3.8, Standard Options).

6.3. Diversity of Bindings

This section has been removed, since we now have the Python and Visual Basic bindings that it lamented the lack of, not to mention Java and Tcl bindings. See zoom.z3950.org/bind/index.html for much more detail on the various bindings.

7. Appendix A: Motivation

This section doesn't really belong in an API specification document, and so has now moved to its own document at zoom.z3950.org/api/motivation.html

8. Appendix B: Version History

8.1. Versions earlier than 0.3

Unreleased (author's eyes only :-)

8.2. Version 0.3

The first version to see the light of day. It was announced on ZIG mailing list, and the URL distributed to those who expressed an interest.

8.3. Version 0.3a

8.4. Version 0.3b

8.5. Version 1.0

This was the first publicly released version.

8.6. Version 1.1

The changes between 1.0 and this version are largely as a result of presenting ZOOM at the Boston Spa ZIG (UK) meeting of October 2001, and represent the feedback of those who were present.

8.7. Version 1.2

Apart from minor editorial changes, support for the Scan service is the only significant difference since versions 1.1:

8.8. Version 1.3

The important changes here are simplifications to error handling and record representation. All in all, version 1.3 is nearly 500 words shorter than version 1.2.

8.9. Version 1.4

8.10. Version 1.5 (IN PROGRESS)

The following changes are planned for version 1.5 or a subsequent version. The items marked with the rune of fear (###) have not yet been done in the current version of this document.

 


Notes

[1]
As Douglas Adams wrote in The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy:
In many of the more relaxed civilizations on the Outer Eastern Rim of the Galaxy, ZOOM has already supplanted the Z39.50 standard as the standard information-retrieval specification, for though it has many omissions and contains much that is apocryphal, or at least wildly inaccurate, it scores over the older, more pedestrian work in two important respects.

First, it is slightly cheaper; and secondly it has the words Don't Panic inscribed in large friendly letters on its cover. [back]

[2]
In The Hitch Hiker's Guide, when Arthur first reads these words, he comments: ``That's the first helpful or intelligible thing anyone's said to me all day.'' [back]

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