README.html
README.odt
README.pdf
-whitepaper.html
-whitepaper.odt
-whitepaper.pdf
-library-configuration.html
-library-configuration.odt
-library-configuration.pdf
+mkws-manual.html
+mkws-manual.odt
+mkws-manual.pdf
# Copyright (c) 2013-2014 IndexData ApS. http://indexdata.com
DOCS = README.html README.odt README.pdf \
- whitepaper.html whitepaper.odt whitepaper.pdf \
- library-configuration.html library-configuration.odt library-configuration.pdf
+ mkws-manual.html mkws-manual.odt mkws-manual.pdf
-INSTALLABLE = README.html whitepaper.html library-configuration.html mkws-doc.css
+INSTALLABLE = README.html mkws-manual.html mkws-doc.css
INSTALLED = $(INSTALLABLE:%=../tools/htdocs/%)
install: $(INSTALLED)
# http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/demo/example9/pandocs-markdown.html -->
# for older pandoc (<1.9) run first:
-# perl -i.bak -npe 's/"(Authors|Subjects)": "(.*?)"/"$1": "test"/' tools/htdocs/whitepaper.markdown
+# perl -i.bak -npe 's/"(Authors|Subjects)": "(.*?)"/"$1": "test"/' tools/htdocs/mkws-manual.markdown
#
%.html: %.markdown
rm -f $@
pandoc --standalone $< -o $@
chmod ugo-w $@
-# ### In order to compile the whitepaper, which has tables, to PDF,
+# ### In order to compile the manual, which has tables, to PDF,
# you will need to install the Debian package
# texlive-latex-recommended
%.pdf: %.markdown
~~~
For much more detail, see:
-
-* [Embedded metasearching with the MasterKey Widget Set](whitepaper.html)
-* [MKWS Target Selection](library-configuration.html)
+[Embedded metasearching with the MasterKey Widget Set](mkws-manual.html)
- - -
+++ /dev/null
-% MKWS Target Selection
-% Mike Taylor
-
-
-MKWS accesses targets using the Pazpar2 metasearching engine. Although
-Pazpar2 can be used directly, using a statically configured set of
-targets, this usage is unusual. More often, Pazpar2 is fronted by the
-Service Proxy (SP), which manages authentication, sessions, target
-selection, etc.
-
-This document assumes the SP is used, and explains how to go about
-making a set of targets (a "library") available, how to connect your
-MKWS application to that library, and how to choose which of the
-available targets to use.
-
-
-Maintaining the library
------------------------
-
-The service proxy accesses sets of targets that are known as
-"libraries". In general, each customer will have their own library,
-though some standard libraries may be shared between many customers --
-for example, a library containing all open-access academic journals.
-A library can also contain other configuration information, including
-the set of categories by which targets are classified for the library.
-
-Libraries are maintained using MKAdmin (MasterKey
-Admin). Specifically, those used by MKWS are generally maintained on
-the "MKX Admin" installation at
-<http://mkx-admin.indexdata.com/console/>
-
-In general, Index Data will create a library for each customer, then
-give the customer a username/password pair that they can use to enter
-MKAdmin and administrate that library.
-
-Once logged in, customers can select which targets to include (from
-the list of several thousand that MKAdmin knows about), and make
-customer-specific modifications -- e.g. overriding the titles of the
-targets.
-
-Most importantly, customers' administrators can add authentication
-credentials that the Service Proxy will used on their behalf when
-accessing subscription resources -- username/password pairs or proxies
-to use for IP-based authentication. Note that **it is then crucial to
-secure the library from use by unauthorised clients**, otherwise the
-customer's paid subscriptions will be exploited.
-
-Access to libraries is managed by creating one or more "User Access"
-records in MKAdmin, under the tab of that name. Each of these records
-provides a combination of credentials and other data that allow an
-incoming MKWS client to be identified as having legitimate access to
-the library. The authentication process, described below, works by
-searching for a matching User Access record.
-
-
-Authenticating your MWKS application onto the library
------------------------------------------------------
-
-Some MKWS applications will be content to use the default library with
-its selection of targets. Most, though, will want to define their own
-library providing a different range of available targets. An important
-case is that of applications that authenticate onto subscription
-resources by means of backe-end site credentials stored in MKAdmin:
-precautions must be taken so that such library accounts do not allow
-unauthorised access.
-
-Setting up such a library is a process of several stages.
-
-### Create the User Access account
-
-Log in to MKAdmin administrate your library:
-
-* Go to <http://mkx-admin.indexdata.com/console/>
-* Enter the adminstrative username/password
-* Go to the User Access tab
-* Create an end-user account
-* Depending on what authentication method it be used, set the
- User Access account's username and password, or IP-address range, or
- referring URL, or hostname.
-
-If your MWKS application runs at a well-known, permanent address --
-<http://yourname.com/app.html>, say -- you can set the User Access
-record so that this originating URL is recognised by setting it into
-the "Referring URL" field.
-
-If your application accesses the Service Proxy by a unique virtual
-hostname -- yourname.sp-mkws.indexdata.com, say -- you can tie the use
-of this hostname to your library by setting the User Access record's
-"Host Name" field to name of the host where the SP is accessed. **Note
-that this is not secure, as other applications can use this virtual
-hostname to gain access to your library.**
-
-> TODO Authentication by IP address does not yet work correctly -- see
-> bug MKWS-234 ("Improve SP configuration/proxying for better
-> authentication").
-
-Alternatively, your application can authenticate by username and
-password credentials. This is a useful approach in several situations,
-including when you need to specify the use of a different library from
-usual one. To arrange for this, set the username and password as a
-single string separated by a slash -- e.g. "mike/swordfish" -- into
-the User Access record's Authentication field.
-
-You can create multiple User Access records: for example, one that
-uses Referring URL, and another that uses a username/password pair to
-be used when running an application from a different URL.
-
-### Tell the application to use the library
-
-In the HTML of the application, tell MKWS to authenticate on to the
-Service Proxy. When IP-based, referer-based or hostname-based
-authentication is used, this is very simple:
-
- <script type="text/javascript">
- var mkws_config = { service_proxy_auth:
- "//sp-mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=perconfig" };
- </script>
-
-> TODO This should be the default setting
-
-And ensure that access to the MWKS application is from the correct
-Referrer URL or IP-range.
-
-### (Optional): access by a different virtual hostname
-
-When hostname-based authentication is in use, it's necessary to access
-the Service Proxy as the correctly named virtual host. This can be
-done by setting the `service_proxy_auth` configuration item to a
-URL containing that hostname, such as
-<//yourname.sp-mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=perconfig>
-
-> TODO It should be possible to change just the hostname without
-> needing to repeat the rest of the URL (protocol, path, query)
-
-> TODO When changing the SP authentication URL, the Pazpar2 URL should
-> in general change along with it.
-
-### (Optional): embed credentials for access to the library
-
-When credential-based authentication is in use (username and
-password), it's necessary to pass these credentials into the Service
-Proxy when establishing the session. This can most simply be done just
-by setting the `service_proxy_auth` configuration item to a URL such as
-<//sp-mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=perconfig&username=mike&password=swordfish>
-
-> TODO It should be possible to add the username and password to the
-> configuration without needing to repeat the rest of the URL.
-
-### (Optional): conceal credentials from HTML source
-
-Using a credential-based Service-Proxy authentication URL such as the
-one above reveals the the credentials to public view -- to anyone who
-does View Source on the MKWS application. This may be acceptable for
-some libraries, but is intolerable for those which provide
-authenticated access to subscription resources.
-
-In these circumstances, a more elaborate approach is necessary. The
-idea is to make a URL local to the customer that is used for
-authentication onto the Service Proxy, hiding the credentials in a
-local rewrite rule. Then local mechanisms can be used to limit access
-to that local authentication URL. Here is one way to do it when
-Apache2 is the application's web-server, which we will call
-yourname.com:
-
-- Add a rewriting authentication alias to the configuration:
-
- RewriteEngine on
- RewriteRule /spauth/ http://mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=check,login&username=U&password=PW [P]
-
-- Set the MKWS configuration item `service_proxy_auth` to
- <http://yourname.com/spauth/>
-- Protect access to the local path <http://yourname.com/spauth/>
- (e.g. using a .htaccess file).
-
-
-Choosing targets from the library
----------------------------------
-
-MKWS applications can choose what subset of the library's targets to
-use, by means of several alternative settings on individual widgets or
-in the `mkws_config` structure:
-
-* `targets` -- contains a Pazpar2 targets string, typically of the form
- "pz:id=" or "pz:id~" followed by a pipe-separated list of low-level
- target IDs.
- At present, these IDs can take one of two forms, depending on the
- configuration of the Service Proxy being used: they may be based on
- ZURLs (so a typical value would be something like
- `pz:id=josiah.brown.edu:210/innopac|lui.indexdata.com:8080/solr4/select?fq=database:4902`)
- or they may be UDBs (so a typical value would be something like
- `pz:id=brown|artstor`)
-
-* `targetfilter` -- contains a CQL query which is used to find relevant
- targets from the relvant library. For example,
- `udb==Google_Images`
- or
- `categories=news`
-
-* `target` -- contains a single UDB, that of the sole target to be
- used. For example,
- `Google_Images`.
- This is merely syntactic sugar for "targetfilter" with the query
- `udb==NAME`
-
-For example, a `Records` widget can be limited to searching only in
-targets that have been categorised as news sources by providing an
-attribute as follows:
-
- <div class="mkwsRecords" targetfilter='categories=news'/>
-
-
-- - -
-
-Copyright 2014 IndexData ApS. <http://indexdata.com>
font-family: Gill Sans, "Gillius ADF", Gillius, GilliusADF, Verdana, Sans-Serif;
}
-h2 a, h3 a, h4 a, div#TOC a {
+h1 a, h2 a, h3 a, h4 a, div#TOC a {
color: #68a;
text-decoration: none;
}
margin-bottom: -0.5em;
}
-h1 {
+h1.title {
background: #e0e8f8;
padding: 0.2em;
font-weight: normal;
--- /dev/null
+% Embedded metasearching with the MasterKey Widget Set
+% Mike Taylor
+% 30 July 2014
+
+
+Introduction
+============
+
+There are lots of practical problems in building resource discovery
+solutions. One of the biggest, and most ubiquitous is incorporating
+metasearching functionality into existing web-sites -- for example,
+content-management systems, library catalogues or intranets. In
+general, even when access to core metasearching functionality is
+provided by simple web-services such as
+[Pazpar2](http://www.indexdata.com/pazpar2), integration work is seen
+as a major part of most projects.
+
+Index Data provides several different toolkits for communicating with
+its metasearching middleware, trading off varying degrees of
+flexibility against convenience:
+
+* pz2.js -- a low-level JavaScript library for interrogating the
+ Service Proxy and Pazpar2. It allows the HTML/JavaScript programmer
+ to create JavaScript applications display facets, records, etc. that
+ are fetched from the metasearching middleware.
+
+* masterkey-ui-core -- a higher-level, complex JavaScript library that
+ uses pz2.js to provide the pieces needed for building a
+ full-featured JavaScript application.
+
+* MasterKey Demo UI -- an example of a searching application built on
+ top of masterkey-ui-core. Available as a public demo at
+ http://mk2.indexdata.com/
+
+* MKDru -- a toolkit for embedding MasterKey-like searching into
+ Drupal sites.
+
+All of these approaches require programming to a greater or lesser
+extent. Against this backdrop, we introduced MKWS (the MasterKey
+Widget Set) -- a set of simple, very high-level HTML+CSS+JavaScript
+components that can be incorporated into any web-site to provide
+MasterKey searching facilities. By placing `<div>`s with well-known
+identifiers in any HTML page, the various components of an application
+can be embedded: search-boxes, results areas, target information, etc.
+
+
+Simple Example
+==============
+
+The following is a complete MKWS-based searching application:
+
+ <html>
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
+ <title>MKWS demo client</title>
+ <script type="text/javascript" src="http://mkws.indexdata.com/mkws-complete.js"></script>
+ <link rel="stylesheet" href="http://mkws.indexdata.com/mkws.css" />
+ </head>
+ <body>
+ <div id="mkwsSearch"></div>
+ <div id="mkwsResults"></div>
+ </body>
+ </html>
+
+Go ahead, try it! You don't even need a web-server. Just copy and
+paste this HTML into a file on your computer -- `/tmp/magic.html`,
+say -- and point your web-browser at it:
+`file:///tmp/magic.html`. Just like that, you have working
+metasearching.
+
+
+How the example works
+---------------------
+
+If you know any HTML, the structure of the file will be familar to
+you: the `<html>` element at the top level contains a `<head>` and a
+`<body>`. In addition to whatever else you might want to put on your
+page, you can add MKWS elements.
+
+These fall into two categories. First, the prerequisites in the HTML
+header, which are loaded from the tool site mkws.indexdata.com:
+
+* `mkws-complete.js`
+ contains all the JavaScript needed by the widget-set.
+
+* `mkws.css`
+ provides the default CSS styling
+
+Second, within the HTML body, `<div>` elements with special IDs that
+begin `mkws` can be provided. These are filled in by the MKWS code,
+and provide the components of the searching UI. The very simple
+application above has only two such components: a search box and a
+results area. But more are supported. The main `<div>`s are:
+
+* `mkwsSearch` -- provides the search box and button.
+
+* `mkwsResults` -- provides the results area, including a list of
+ brief records (which open out into full versions when clicked),
+ paging for large results sets, facets for refining a search,
+ sorting facilities, etc.
+
+* `mkwsLang` -- provides links to switch between one of several
+ different UI languages. By default, English, Danish and German are
+ provided.
+
+* `mkwsSwitch` -- provides links to switch between a view of the
+ result records and of the targets that provide them. Only
+ meaningful when `mkwsTargets` is also provided.
+
+* `mkwsTargets` -- the area where per-target information will appear
+ when selected by the link in the `mkwsSwitch` area. Of interest
+ mostly for fault diagnosis rather than for end-users.
+
+* `mkwsStat` --provides a status line summarising the statistics of
+ the various targets.
+
+To see all of these working together, just put them all into the HTML
+`<body>` like so:
+
+ <div id="mkwsSwitch"></div>
+ <div id="mkwsLang"></div>
+ <div id="mkwsSearch"></div>
+ <div id="mkwsResults"></div>
+ <div id="mkwsTargets"></div>
+ <div id="mkwsStat"></div>
+
+
+Configuration
+=============
+
+Many aspects of the behaviour of MKWS can be modified by setting
+parameters into the `mkws_config` object. **This must be done *before*
+including the MKWS JavaScript** so that when that code is executed it
+can refer to the configuration values. So the HTML header looks like
+this:
+
+ <script type="text/javascript">
+ var mkws_config = {
+ lang: "da",
+ sort_default: "title",
+ query_width: 60
+ };
+ </script>
+ <script type="text/javascript" src="http://mkws.indexdata.com/mkws-complete.js"></script>
+
+This configuration sets the UI language to Danish (rather than the
+default of English), initially sorts search results by title rather
+than relevance (though as always this can be changed in the UI) and
+makes the search box a bit wider than the default.
+
+The full set of supported configuration items is described in the
+reference guide below.
+
+
+Control over HTML and CSS
+=========================
+
+More sophisticated applications will not simply place the `<div>`s
+together, but position them carefully within an existing page
+framework -- such as a Drupal template, an OPAC or a SharePoint page.
+
+While it's convenient for simple applications to use a monolithic
+`mkwsResults` area which contains record, facets, sorting options,
+etc., customised layouts may wish to treat each of these components
+separately. In this case, `mkwsResults` can be omitted, and the
+following lower-level components provided instead:
+
+* `mkwsTermlists` -- provides the facets
+
+* `mkwsRanking` -- provides the options for how records are sorted and
+ how many are included on each page of results.
+
+* `mkwsPager` -- provides the links for navigating back and forth
+ through the pages of records.
+
+* `mkwsNavi` -- when a search result has been narrowed by one or more
+ facets, this area shows the names of those facets, and allows the
+ selected values to be clicked in order to remove them.
+
+* `mkwsRecords` -- lists the actual result records.
+
+Customisation of MKWS searching widgets can also be achieved by
+overriding the styles set in the toolkit's CSS stylesheet. The default
+styles can be inspected in `mkws.css` and overridden in any
+styles that appears later in the HTML than that file. At the simplest
+level, this might just mean changing fonts, sizes and colours, but
+more fundamental changes are also possible.
+
+To properly apply styles, it's necessary to understand how the HTML is
+structured, e.g. which elements are nested within which
+containers. The structures used by the widget-set are described in the
+reference guide below.
+
+
+Refinements
+===========
+
+
+Message of the day
+------------------
+
+Some applications might like to open with content in the area that
+will subsequently be filled with result-records -- a message of the
+day, a welcome message or a help page. This can be done by placing an
+`mkwsMOTD` division anywhere on the page. It will be moved into the
+`mkwsResults` area and initially displayed, but will be hidden when a
+search is made.
+
+
+Customised display using Handlebars templates
+---------------------------------------------
+
+Certain aspects of the widget-set's display can be customised by
+providing Handlebars templates with well-known classes that begin with
+the string `mkwsTemplate_`. At present, the supported templates are:
+
+* `mkwsTemplate_Summary` -- used for each summary record in a list of
+ results.
+
+* `mkwsTemplate_Record` -- used when displaying a full record.
+
+For both of these the metadata record is passed in, and its fields can
+be referenced in the template. As well as the metadata fields
+(`md-*`), two special fields are provided to the `mkwsTemplate_Summary`
+template, for creating popup links for full records. These are `_id`,
+which must be provided as the `id` attribute of a link tag, and
+`_onclick`, which must be provided as the `onclick` attribute.
+
+For example, an application can install a simple author+title summary
+record in place of the usual one providing the following template:
+
+ <script class="mkwsTemplate_Summary" type="text/x-handlebars-template">
+ {{#if md-author}}
+ <span>{{md-author}}</span>
+ {{/if}}
+ <a href="#" id="{{_id}}" onclick="{{_onclick}}">
+ <b>{{md-title}}</b>
+ </a>
+ </script>
+
+For details of Handlebars template syntax, see
+[the online documentation](http://handlebarsjs.com/).
+
+
+Responsive design
+-----------------
+
+Metasearching applications may need to appear differently on
+small-screened mobile devices, or change their appearance when
+screen-width changes (as when a small device is rotated). To achieve
+this, MKWS supports responsive design which will move the termlists to
+the bottom on narrow screens and to the sidebar on wide screens.
+
+To turn on this behaviour, set the `responsive_design_width` to the desired
+threshhold width in pixels. For example:
+
+ <script type="text/javascript">
+ var mkws_config = {
+ responsive_design_width: 990
+ };
+ </script>
+
+If individual result-related components are in use in place of the
+all-in-one mkwsResults, then the redesigned application needs to
+specify the locations where the termlists should appear in both
+cases. In this case, wrap the wide-screen `mkwsTermlists` element in a
+`mkwsTermlists-Container-wide` element; and provide an
+`mkwsTermlists-Container-narrow` element in the place where the narrow-screen
+termlists should appear.
+
+
+Popup results with jQuery UI
+----------------------------
+
+The [jQuery UI library](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JQuery_UI)
+can be used to construct MKWS applications in which the only component
+generally visible on the page is a search box, and the results appear
+in a popup. The key part of such an application is this invocation of
+the MKWS jQuery plugin:
+
+ <div class="mkwsSearch"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsPopup" popup_width="1024" popup_height="650" popup_modal="0" popup_autoOpen="0" popup_button="input.mkwsButton">
+ <div class="mkwsSwitch"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsLang"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsResults"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsTargets"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsStat"></div>
+ </div>
+
+The necessary scaffolding can be seen in an example application,
+http://example.indexdata.com/index-popup.html
+
+
+Authentication and target configuration
+---------------------------------------
+
+By default, MKWS configures itself to use a demonstration account on a
+service hosted by mkws.indexdata.com. This account (username `demo`,
+password `demo`) provides access to about a dozen free data
+sources. Authentication onto this service is via an authentication URL
+on the same MKWS server, so no explicit configuration is needed.
+
+In order to search in a customised set of targets, including
+subscription resources, it's necessary to create an account with
+Index Data's hosted service proxy, and protect that account with
+authentication tokens (to prevent unauthorised use of subscription
+resources). For information on how to do this, see the next section.
+
+
+MKWS Target Selection
+=====================
+
+MKWS accesses targets using the Pazpar2 metasearching engine. Although
+Pazpar2 can be used directly, using a statically configured set of
+targets, this usage is unusual. More often, Pazpar2 is fronted by the
+Service Proxy (SP), which manages authentication, sessions, target
+selection, etc.
+
+This document assumes the SP is used, and explains how to go about
+making a set of targets (a "library") available, how to connect your
+MKWS application to that library, and how to choose which of the
+available targets to use.
+
+
+Maintaining the library
+-----------------------
+
+The service proxy accesses sets of targets that are known as
+"libraries". In general, each customer will have their own library,
+though some standard libraries may be shared between many customers --
+for example, a library containing all open-access academic journals.
+A library can also contain other configuration information, including
+the set of categories by which targets are classified for the library.
+
+Libraries are maintained using MKAdmin (MasterKey
+Admin). Specifically, those used by MKWS are generally maintained on
+the "MKX Admin" installation at
+<http://mkx-admin.indexdata.com/console/>
+
+In general, Index Data will create a library for each customer, then
+give the customer a username/password pair that they can use to enter
+MKAdmin and administrate that library.
+
+Once logged in, customers can select which targets to include (from
+the list of several thousand that MKAdmin knows about), and make
+customer-specific modifications -- e.g. overriding the titles of the
+targets.
+
+Most importantly, customers' administrators can add authentication
+credentials that the Service Proxy will used on their behalf when
+accessing subscription resources -- username/password pairs or proxies
+to use for IP-based authentication. Note that **it is then crucial to
+secure the library from use by unauthorised clients**, otherwise the
+customer's paid subscriptions will be exploited.
+
+Access to libraries is managed by creating one or more "User Access"
+records in MKAdmin, under the tab of that name. Each of these records
+provides a combination of credentials and other data that allow an
+incoming MKWS client to be identified as having legitimate access to
+the library. The authentication process, described below, works by
+searching for a matching User Access record.
+
+
+Authenticating your MWKS application onto the library
+-----------------------------------------------------
+
+Some MKWS applications will be content to use the default library with
+its selection of targets. Most, though, will want to define their own
+library providing a different range of available targets. An important
+case is that of applications that authenticate onto subscription
+resources by means of backe-end site credentials stored in MKAdmin:
+precautions must be taken so that such library accounts do not allow
+unauthorised access.
+
+Setting up such a library is a process of several stages.
+
+### Create the User Access account
+
+
+Log in to MKAdmin administrate your library:
+
+* Go to <http://mkx-admin.indexdata.com/console/>
+* Enter the adminstrative username/password
+* Go to the User Access tab
+* Create an end-user account
+* Depending on what authentication method it be used, set the
+ User Access account's username and password, or IP-address range, or
+ referring URL, or hostname.
+
+If your MWKS application runs at a well-known, permanent address --
+<http://yourname.com/app.html>, say -- you can set the User Access
+record so that this originating URL is recognised by setting it into
+the "Referring URL" field.
+
+If your application accesses the Service Proxy by a unique virtual
+hostname -- yourname.sp-mkws.indexdata.com, say -- you can tie the use
+of this hostname to your library by setting the User Access record's
+"Host Name" field to name of the host where the SP is accessed. **Note
+that this is not secure, as other applications can use this virtual
+hostname to gain access to your library.**
+
+> TODO Authentication by IP address does not yet work correctly -- see
+> bug MKWS-234 ("Improve SP configuration/proxying for better
+> authentication").
+
+Alternatively, your application can authenticate by username and
+password credentials. This is a useful approach in several situations,
+including when you need to specify the use of a different library from
+usual one. To arrange for this, set the username and password as a
+single string separated by a slash -- e.g. "mike/swordfish" -- into
+the User Access record's Authentication field.
+
+You can create multiple User Access records: for example, one that
+uses Referring URL, and another that uses a username/password pair to
+be used when running an application from a different URL.
+
+### Tell the application to use the library
+
+In the HTML of the application, tell MKWS to authenticate on to the
+Service Proxy. When IP-based, referer-based or hostname-based
+authentication is used, this is very simple:
+
+ <script type="text/javascript">
+ var mkws_config = { service_proxy_auth:
+ "//sp-mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=perconfig" };
+ </script>
+
+> TODO This should be the default setting
+
+And ensure that access to the MWKS application is from the correct
+Referrer URL or IP-range.
+
+### (Optional): access by a different virtual hostname
+
+When hostname-based authentication is in use, it's necessary to access
+the Service Proxy as the correctly named virtual host. This can be
+done by setting the `service_proxy_auth` configuration item to a
+URL containing that hostname, such as
+<//yourname.sp-mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=perconfig>
+
+> TODO It should be possible to change just the hostname without
+> needing to repeat the rest of the URL (protocol, path, query)
+
+> TODO When changing the SP authentication URL, the Pazpar2 URL should
+> in general change along with it.
+
+### (Optional): embed credentials for access to the library
+
+When credential-based authentication is in use (username and
+password), it's necessary to pass these credentials into the Service
+Proxy when establishing the session. This can most simply be done just
+by setting the `service_proxy_auth` configuration item to a URL such as
+<//sp-mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=perconfig&username=mike&password=swordfish>
+
+> TODO It should be possible to add the username and password to the
+> configuration without needing to repeat the rest of the URL.
+
+### (Optional): conceal credentials from HTML source
+
+Using a credential-based Service-Proxy authentication URL such as the
+one above reveals the the credentials to public view -- to anyone who
+does View Source on the MKWS application. This may be acceptable for
+some libraries, but is intolerable for those which provide
+authenticated access to subscription resources.
+
+In these circumstances, a more elaborate approach is necessary. The
+idea is to make a URL local to the customer that is used for
+authentication onto the Service Proxy, hiding the credentials in a
+local rewrite rule. Then local mechanisms can be used to limit access
+to that local authentication URL. Here is one way to do it when
+Apache2 is the application's web-server, which we will call
+yourname.com:
+
+- Add a rewriting authentication alias to the configuration:
+
+ RewriteEngine on
+ RewriteRule /spauth/ http://mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/?command=auth&action=check,login&username=U&password=PW [P]
+
+- Set the MKWS configuration item `service_proxy_auth` to
+ <http://yourname.com/spauth/>
+- Protect access to the local path <http://yourname.com/spauth/>
+ (e.g. using a .htaccess file).
+
+
+Choosing targets from the library
+---------------------------------
+
+MKWS applications can choose what subset of the library's targets to
+use, by means of several alternative settings on individual widgets or
+in the `mkws_config` structure:
+
+* `targets` -- contains a Pazpar2 targets string, typically of the form
+ "pz:id=" or "pz:id~" followed by a pipe-separated list of low-level
+ target IDs.
+ At present, these IDs can take one of two forms, depending on the
+ configuration of the Service Proxy being used: they may be based on
+ ZURLs (so a typical value would be something like
+ `pz:id=josiah.brown.edu:210/innopac|lui.indexdata.com:8080/solr4/select?fq=database:4902`)
+ or they may be UDBs (so a typical value would be something like
+ `pz:id=brown|artstor`)
+
+* `targetfilter` -- contains a CQL query which is used to find relevant
+ targets from the relvant library. For example,
+ `udb==Google_Images`
+ or
+ `categories=news`
+
+* `target` -- contains a single UDB, that of the sole target to be
+ used. For example,
+ `Google_Images`.
+ This is merely syntactic sugar for "targetfilter" with the query
+ `udb==NAME`
+
+For example, a `Records` widget can be limited to searching only in
+targets that have been categorised as news sources by providing an
+attribute as follows:
+
+ <div class="mkwsRecords" targetfilter='categories=news'/>
+
+
+Reference Guide
+===============
+
+Configuration object
+--------------------
+
+The configuration object `mkws_config` may be created before including
+the MKWS JavaScript code to modify default behaviour. This structure
+is a key-value lookup table, whose entries are described in the table
+below. All entries are optional, but if specified must be given values
+of the specified type. If ommitted, each setting takes the indicated
+default value; long default values are in footnotes to keep the table
+reasonably narrow.
+
+----
+Element Type Default Description
+-------- ----- --------- ------------
+debug_level int 1 Level of debugging output to emit. 0 = none, 1 = messages, 2 = messages with
+ datestamps, 3 = messages with datestamps and stack-traces.
+
+facets array *Note 1* Ordered list of names of facets to display. Supported facet names are
+ `xtargets`, `subject` and `author`.
+
+lang string en Code of the default language to display the UI in. Supported language codes are `en` =
+ English, `de` = German, `da` = Danish, and whatever additional languages are configured
+ using `language_*` entries (see below).
+
+lang_options array [] A list of the languages to offer as options. If empty (the default), then all
+ configured languages are listed.
+
+language_* hash Support for any number of languages can be added by providing entries whose name is
+ `language_` followed by the code of the language. See the separate section below for
+ details.
+
+pazpar2_url string *Note 2* The URL used to access the metasearch middleware. This service must be configured to
+ provide search results, facets, etc. It may be either unmediated or Pazpar2 the
+ MasterKey Service Proxy, which mediates access to an underlying Pazpar2 instance. In
+ the latter case, `service_proxy_auth` must be provided.
+
+perpage_default string 20 The initial value for the number of records to show on each page.
+
+perpage_options array *Note 3* A list of candidate page sizes. Users can choose between these to determine how many
+ records are displayed on each page of results.
+
+query_width int 50 The width of the query box, in characters.
+
+responsive_design_width int If defined, then the facets display moves between two locations as the screen-width
+ varies, as described above. The specified number is the threshhold width, in pixels,
+ at which the facets move between their two locations.
+
+service_proxy_auth url *Note 4* A URL which, when `use_service_proxy` is true, is fetched once at the beginning of each
+ session to authenticate the user and establish a session that encompasses a defined set
+ of targets to search in.
+
+service_proxy_auth_domain domain Can be set to the domain for which `service_proxy_auth` proxies authentication, so
+ that cookies are rewritten to appear to be from this domain. In general, this is not
+ necessary, as this setting defaults to the domain of `pazpar2_url`.
+
+show_lang bool true Indicates whether or not to display the language menu.
+
+show_perpage bool true Indicates whether or not to display the perpage menu.
+
+show_sort bool true Indicates whether or not to display the sort menu.
+
+show_switch bool true Indicates whether or not to display the switch menu, for switching between showing
+ retrieved records and target information.
+
+sort_default string relevance The label of the default sort criterion to use. Must be one of those in the `sort`
+ array.
+
+sort_options array *Note 6* List of supported sort criteria. Each element of the list is itself a two-element list:
+ the first element of each sublist is a pazpar2 sort-expression such as `data:0` and
+ the second is a human-readable label such as `newest`.
+
+use_service_proxy bool true If true, then a Service Proxy is used to deliver searching services rather than raw
+ Pazpar2.
+----
+
+Perhaps we should get rid of the `show_lang`, `show_perpage`,
+`show_sort` and `show_switch` configuration items, and simply display the relevant menus
+only when their containers are provided -- e.g. an `mkwsLang` element
+for the language menu. But for now we retain these, as an easier route
+to lightly customise the display than my changing providing a full HTML
+structure.
+
+### Notes
+
+1. ["sources", "subjects", "authors"]
+
+2. /pazpar2/search.pz2
+
+3. [10, 20, 30, 50]
+
+4. http://mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy-auth
+
+5. http://mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/
+
+6. [["relevance"], ["title:1", "title"], ["date:0", "newest"], ["date:1", "oldest"]]
+
+
+Language specification
+----------------------
+
+Support for another UI language can be added by providing an entry in
+the `mkws_config` object whose name is `language_` followed by the
+name of the language: for example, `language_French` to support
+French. Then value of this entry must be a key-value lookup table,
+mapping the English-language strings of the UI into their equivalents
+in the specified language. For example:
+
+ var mkws_config = {
+ language_French: {
+ "Authors": "Auteurs",
+ "Subjects": "Sujets",
+ // ... and others ...
+ }
+ }
+
+The following strings occurring in the UI can be translated:
+`Displaying`,
+`Next`,
+`Prev`,
+`Records`,
+`Search`,
+`Sort by`,
+`Targets`,
+`Termlists`,
+`and show`,
+`found`,
+`of`,
+`per page`
+and
+`to`.
+
+In addition, facet names can be translated:
+`Authors`,
+`Sources`
+and
+`Subjects`.
+
+Finally, the names of fields in the full-record display can be
+translated. These include, but may not be limited to:
+`Author`,
+`Date`,
+`Location`,
+`Subject`
+and
+`Title`.
+
+
+
+jQuery UI popup invocation
+--------------------------
+
+The MasterKey Widget Set can be invoked in a popup window on top of the page.
+
+Note that when using the `popup` layout, facilities from the jQuery UI
+toolkit are used, so it's necessary to include both CSS and JavaScript
+from that toolkit. The relevant lines are:
+
+ <script src="http://code.jquery.com/ui/1.10.3/jquery-ui.min.js"></script>
+ <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"
+ href="http://code.jquery.com/ui/1.10.3/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.css" />
+
+ <div class="mkwsSearch"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsPopup" popup_width="1024" popup_height="650" popup_modal="0" popup_autoOpen="0" popup_button="input.mkwsButton">
+ <div class="mkwsSwitch"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsLang"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsResults"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsTargets"></div>
+ <div class="mkwsStat"></div>
+ </div>
+
+----
+Element Type Default Description
+-------- ----- --------- ------------
+popup_width string 880 Width of the popup window (if used), in
+ pixels.
+
+popup_height string 760 Height of the popup window (if used), in
+ pixels.
+
+popup_button string input.mkwsButton (Never change this.)
+
+popup_modal string 0 Modal confirmation mode. Valid values are 0 or 1
+
+popup_autoOpen string 1 Open popup window on load. Valid values are 0 or 1
+
+----
+
+
+The structure of the HTML generated by the MKWS widgets
+-------------------------------------------------------
+
+In order to override the default CSS styles provided by the MasterKey Widget
+Set, it's necessary to understand that structure of the HTML elements that are
+generated within the components. This knowledge make it possible, for example,
+to style each `<div>` with class `term` but only when it occurs inside an
+element with ID `#mkwsTermlists`, so as to avoid inadvertently styling other
+elements using the same class in the non-MKWS parts of the page.
+
+The HTML structure is as follows. As in CSS, #ID indicates a unique identifier
+and .CLASS indicates an instance of a class.
+
+ #mkwsSwitch
+ a*
+
+ #mkwsLang
+ ( a | span )*
+
+ #mkwsSearch
+ form
+ input#mkwsQuery type=text
+ input#mkwsButton type=submit
+
+ #mkwsBlanket
+ (no contents -- used only for masking)
+
+ #mkwsResults
+ table
+ tbody
+ tr
+ td
+ #mkwsTermlists
+ div.title
+ div.facet*
+ div.termtitle
+ ( a span br )*
+ td
+ div#mkwsRanking
+ form#mkwsSelect
+ select#mkwsSort
+ select#mkwsPerpage
+ #mkwsPager
+ #mkwsNavi
+ #mkwsRecords
+ div.record*
+ span (for sequence number)
+ a (for title)
+ span (for other information such as author)
+ div.details (sometimes)
+ table
+ tbody
+ tr*
+ th
+ td
+ #mkwsTargets
+ #mkwsBytarget
+ table
+ thead
+ tr*
+ td*
+ tbody
+ tr*
+ td*
+
+ #mkwsStat
+ span.head
+ span.clients
+ span.records
+
+- - -
+
+Copyright (C) 2013-2014 by IndexData ApS, <http://www.indexdata.com>
+++ /dev/null
-% Embedded metasearching with the MasterKey Widget Set
-% Mike Taylor
-
-
-Introduction
-------------
-
-There are lots of practical problems in building resource discovery
-solutions. One of the biggest, and most ubiquitous is incorporating
-metasearching functionality into existing web-sites -- for example,
-content-management systems, library catalogues or intranets. In
-general, even when access to core metasearching functionality is
-provided by simple web-services such as
-[Pazpar2](http://www.indexdata.com/pazpar2), integration work is seen
-as a major part of most projects.
-
-Index Data provides several different toolkits for communicating with
-its metasearching middleware, trading off varying degrees of
-flexibility against convenience:
-
-* pz2.js -- a low-level JavaScript library for interrogating the
- Service Proxy and Pazpar2. It allows the HTML/JavaScript programmer
- to create JavaScript applications display facets, records, etc. that
- are fetched from the metasearching middleware.
-
-* masterkey-ui-core -- a higher-level, complex JavaScript library that
- uses pz2.js to provide the pieces needed for building a
- full-featured JavaScript application.
-
-* MasterKey Demo UI -- an example of a searching application built on
- top of masterkey-ui-core. Available as a public demo at
- http://mk2.indexdata.com/
-
-* MKDru -- a toolkit for embedding MasterKey-like searching into
- Drupal sites.
-
-All of these approaches require programming to a greater or lesser
-extent. Against this backdrop, we introduced MKWS (the MasterKey
-Widget Set) -- a set of simple, very high-level HTML+CSS+JavaScript
-components that can be incorporated into any web-site to provide
-MasterKey searching facilities. By placing `<div>`s with well-known
-identifiers in any HTML page, the various components of an application
-can be embedded: search-boxes, results areas, target information, etc.
-
-
-Simple Example
---------------
-
-The following is a complete MKWS-based searching application:
-
- <html>
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
- <title>MKWS demo client</title>
- <script type="text/javascript" src="http://mkws.indexdata.com/mkws-complete.js"></script>
- <link rel="stylesheet" href="http://mkws.indexdata.com/mkws.css" />
- </head>
- <body>
- <div id="mkwsSearch"></div>
- <div id="mkwsResults"></div>
- </body>
- </html>
-
-Go ahead, try it! You don't even need a web-server. Just copy and
-paste this HTML into a file on your computer -- `/tmp/magic.html`,
-say -- and point your web-browser at it:
-`file:///tmp/magic.html`. Just like that, you have working
-metasearching.
-
-
-How the example works
----------------------
-
-If you know any HTML, the structure of the file will be familar to
-you: the `<html>` element at the top level contains a `<head>` and a
-`<body>`. In addition to whatever else you might want to put on your
-page, you can add MKWS elements.
-
-These fall into two categories. First, the prerequisites in the HTML
-header, which are loaded from the tool site mkws.indexdata.com:
-
-* `mkws-complete.js`
- contains all the JavaScript needed by the widget-set.
-
-* `mkws.css`
- provides the default CSS styling
-
-Second, within the HTML body, `<div>` elements with special IDs that
-begin `mkws` can be provided. These are filled in by the MKWS code,
-and provide the components of the searching UI. The very simple
-application above has only two such components: a search box and a
-results area. But more are supported. The main `<div>`s are:
-
-* `mkwsSearch` -- provides the search box and button.
-
-* `mkwsResults` -- provides the results area, including a list of
- brief records (which open out into full versions when clicked),
- paging for large results sets, facets for refining a search,
- sorting facilities, etc.
-
-* `mkwsLang` -- provides links to switch between one of several
- different UI languages. By default, English, Danish and German are
- provided.
-
-* `mkwsSwitch` -- provides links to switch between a view of the
- result records and of the targets that provide them. Only
- meaningful when `mkwsTargets` is also provided.
-
-* `mkwsTargets` -- the area where per-target information will appear
- when selected by the link in the `mkwsSwitch` area. Of interest
- mostly for fault diagnosis rather than for end-users.
-
-* `mkwsStat` --provides a status line summarising the statistics of
- the various targets.
-
-To see all of these working together, just put them all into the HTML
-`<body>` like so:
-
- <div id="mkwsSwitch"></div>
- <div id="mkwsLang"></div>
- <div id="mkwsSearch"></div>
- <div id="mkwsResults"></div>
- <div id="mkwsTargets"></div>
- <div id="mkwsStat"></div>
-
-Configuration
--------------
-
-Many aspects of the behaviour of MKWS can be modified by setting
-parameters into the `mkws_config` object. **This must be done *before*
-including the MKWS JavaScript** so that when that code is executed it
-can refer to the configuration values. So the HTML header looks like
-this:
-
- <script type="text/javascript">
- var mkws_config = {
- lang: "da",
- sort_default: "title",
- query_width: 60
- };
- </script>
- <script type="text/javascript" src="http://mkws.indexdata.com/mkws-complete.js"></script>
-
-This configuration sets the UI language to Danish (rather than the
-default of English), initially sorts search results by title rather
-than relevance (though as always this can be changed in the UI) and
-makes the search box a bit wider than the default.
-
-The full set of supported configuration items is described in the
-reference guide below.
-
-
-Control over HTML and CSS
--------------------------
-
-More sophisticated applications will not simply place the `<div>`s
-together, but position them carefully within an existing page
-framework -- such as a Drupal template, an OPAC or a SharePoint page.
-
-While it's convenient for simple applications to use a monolithic
-`mkwsResults` area which contains record, facets, sorting options,
-etc., customised layouts may wish to treat each of these components
-separately. In this case, `mkwsResults` can be omitted, and the
-following lower-level components provided instead:
-
-* `mkwsTermlists` -- provides the facets
-
-* `mkwsRanking` -- provides the options for how records are sorted and
- how many are included on each page of results.
-
-* `mkwsPager` -- provides the links for navigating back and forth
- through the pages of records.
-
-* `mkwsNavi` -- when a search result has been narrowed by one or more
- facets, this area shows the names of those facets, and allows the
- selected values to be clicked in order to remove them.
-
-* `mkwsRecords` -- lists the actual result records.
-
-Customisation of MKWS searching widgets can also be achieved by
-overriding the styles set in the toolkit's CSS stylesheet. The default
-styles can be inspected in `mkws.css` and overridden in any
-styles that appears later in the HTML than that file. At the simplest
-level, this might just mean changing fonts, sizes and colours, but
-more fundamental changes are also possible.
-
-To properly apply styles, it's necessary to understand how the HTML is
-structured, e.g. which elements are nested within which
-containers. The structures used by the widget-set are described in the
-reference guide below.
-
-
-Refinements
------------
-
-
-### Message of the day
-
-Some applications might like to open with content in the area that
-will subsequently be filled with result-records -- a message of the
-day, a welcome message or a help page. This can be done by placing an
-`mkwsMOTD` division anywhere on the page. It will be moved into the
-`mkwsResults` area and initially displayed, but will be hidden when a
-search is made.
-
-
-### Customised display using Handlebars templates
-
-Certain aspects of the widget-set's display can be customised by
-providing Handlebars templates with well-known classes that begin with
-the string `mkwsTemplate_`. At present, the supported templates are:
-
-* `mkwsTemplate_Summary` -- used for each summary record in a list of
- results.
-
-* `mkwsTemplate_Record` -- used when displaying a full record.
-
-For both of these the metadata record is passed in, and its fields can
-be referenced in the template. As well as the metadata fields
-(`md-*`), two special fields are provided to the `mkwsTemplate_Summary`
-template, for creating popup links for full records. These are `_id`,
-which must be provided as the `id` attribute of a link tag, and
-`_onclick`, which must be provided as the `onclick` attribute.
-
-For example, an application can install a simple author+title summary
-record in place of the usual one providing the following template:
-
- <script class="mkwsTemplate_Summary" type="text/x-handlebars-template">
- {{#if md-author}}
- <span>{{md-author}}</span>
- {{/if}}
- <a href="#" id="{{_id}}" onclick="{{_onclick}}">
- <b>{{md-title}}</b>
- </a>
- </script>
-
-For details of Handlebars template syntax, see
-[the online documentation](http://handlebarsjs.com/).
-
-
-### Responsive design
-
-Metasearching applications may need to appear differently on
-small-screened mobile devices, or change their appearance when
-screen-width changes (as when a small device is rotated). To achieve
-this, MKWS supports responsive design which will move the termlists to
-the bottom on narrow screens and to the sidebar on wide screens.
-
-To turn on this behaviour, set the `responsive_design_width` to the desired
-threshhold width in pixels. For example:
-
- <script type="text/javascript">
- var mkws_config = {
- responsive_design_width: 990
- };
- </script>
-
-If individual result-related components are in use in place of the
-all-in-one mkwsResults, then the redesigned application needs to
-specify the locations where the termlists should appear in both
-cases. In this case, wrap the wide-screen `mkwsTermlists` element in a
-`mkwsTermlists-Container-wide` element; and provide an
-`mkwsTermlists-Container-narrow` element in the place where the narrow-screen
-termlists should appear.
-
-
-### Popup results with jQuery UI
-
-The [jQuery UI library](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JQuery_UI)
-can be used to construct MKWS applications in which the only component
-generally visible on the page is a search box, and the results appear
-in a popup. The key part of such an application is this invocation of
-the MKWS jQuery plugin:
-
- <div class="mkwsSearch"></div>
- <div class="mkwsPopup" popup_width="1024" popup_height="650" popup_modal="0" popup_autoOpen="0" popup_button="input.mkwsButton">
- <div class="mkwsSwitch"></div>
- <div class="mkwsLang"></div>
- <div class="mkwsResults"></div>
- <div class="mkwsTargets"></div>
- <div class="mkwsStat"></div>
- </div>
-
-The necessary scaffolding can be seen in an example application,
-http://example.indexdata.com/index-popup.html
-
-
-### Authentication and target configuration
-
-By default, MKWS configures itself to use a demonstration account on a
-service hosted by mkws.indexdata.com. This account (username `demo`,
-password `demo`) provides access to about a dozen free data
-sources. Authentication onto this service is via an authentication URL
-on the same MKWS server, so no explicit configuration is needed.
-
-In order to search in a customised set of targets, including
-subscription resources, it's necessary to create an account with
-Index Data's hosted service proxy, and protect that account with
-authentication tokens (to prevent unauthorised use of subscription
-resources). For information on how to do this, see
-[MKWS Target Selection](library-configuration.html)
-
-
-Reference Guide
----------------
-
-### Configuration object
-
-The configuration object `mkws_config` may be created before including
-the MKWS JavaScript code to modify default behaviour. This structure
-is a key-value lookup table, whose entries are described in the table
-below. All entries are optional, but if specified must be given values
-of the specified type. If ommitted, each setting takes the indicated
-default value; long default values are in footnotes to keep the table
-reasonably narrow.
-
----
-Element Type Default Description
--------- ----- --------- ------------
-debug_level int 1 Level of debugging output to emit. 0 = none, 1 = messages, 2 = messages with
- datestamps, 3 = messages with datestamps and stack-traces.
-
-facets array *Note 1* Ordered list of names of facets to display. Supported facet names are
- `xtargets`, `subject` and `author`.
-
-lang string en Code of the default language to display the UI in. Supported language codes are `en` =
- English, `de` = German, `da` = Danish, and whatever additional languages are configured
- using `language_*` entries (see below).
-
-lang_options array [] A list of the languages to offer as options. If empty (the default), then all
- configured languages are listed.
-
-language_* hash Support for any number of languages can be added by providing entries whose name is
- `language_` followed by the code of the language. See the separate section below for
- details.
-
-pazpar2_url string *Note 2* The URL used to access the metasearch middleware. This service must be configured to
- provide search results, facets, etc. It may be either unmediated or Pazpar2 the
- MasterKey Service Proxy, which mediates access to an underlying Pazpar2 instance. In
- the latter case, `service_proxy_auth` must be provided.
-
-perpage_default string 20 The initial value for the number of records to show on each page.
-
-perpage_options array *Note 3* A list of candidate page sizes. Users can choose between these to determine how many
- records are displayed on each page of results.
-
-query_width int 50 The width of the query box, in characters.
-
-responsive_design_width int If defined, then the facets display moves between two locations as the screen-width
- varies, as described above. The specified number is the threshhold width, in pixels,
- at which the facets move between their two locations.
-
-service_proxy_auth url *Note 4* A URL which, when `use_service_proxy` is true, is fetched once at the beginning of each
- session to authenticate the user and establish a session that encompasses a defined set
- of targets to search in.
-
-service_proxy_auth_domain domain Can be set to the domain for which `service_proxy_auth` proxies authentication, so
- that cookies are rewritten to appear to be from this domain. In general, this is not
- necessary, as this setting defaults to the domain of `pazpar2_url`.
-
-show_lang bool true Indicates whether or not to display the language menu.
-
-show_perpage bool true Indicates whether or not to display the perpage menu.
-
-show_sort bool true Indicates whether or not to display the sort menu.
-
-show_switch bool true Indicates whether or not to display the switch menu, for switching between showing
- retrieved records and target information.
-
-sort_default string relevance The label of the default sort criterion to use. Must be one of those in the `sort`
- array.
-
-sort_options array *Note 6* List of supported sort criteria. Each element of the list is itself a two-element list:
- the first element of each sublist is a pazpar2 sort-expression such as `data:0` and
- the second is a human-readable label such as `newest`.
-
-use_service_proxy bool true If true, then a Service Proxy is used to deliver searching services rather than raw
- Pazpar2.
----
-
-Perhaps we should get rid of the `show_lang`, `show_perpage`,
-`show_sort` and `show_switch` configuration items, and simply display the relevant menus
-only when their containers are provided -- e.g. an `mkwsLang` element
-for the language menu. But for now we retain these, as an easier route
-to lightly customise the display than my changing providing a full HTML
-structure.
-
-#### Notes
-
-1. ["sources", "subjects", "authors"]
-
-2. /pazpar2/search.pz2
-
-3. [10, 20, 30, 50]
-
-4. http://mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy-auth
-
-5. http://mkws.indexdata.com/service-proxy/
-
-6. [["relevance"], ["title:1", "title"], ["date:0", "newest"], ["date:1", "oldest"]]
-
-
-### Language specification
-
-Support for another UI language can be added by providing an entry in
-the `mkws_config` object whose name is `language_` followed by the
-name of the language: for example, `language_French` to support
-French. Then value of this entry must be a key-value lookup table,
-mapping the English-language strings of the UI into their equivalents
-in the specified language. For example:
-
- var mkws_config = {
- language_French: {
- "Authors": "Auteurs",
- "Subjects": "Sujets",
- // ... and others ...
- }
- }
-
-The following strings occurring in the UI can be translated:
-`Displaying`,
-`Next`,
-`Prev`,
-`Records`,
-`Search`,
-`Sort by`,
-`Targets`,
-`Termlists`,
-`and show`,
-`found`,
-`of`,
-`per page`
-and
-`to`.
-
-In addition, facet names can be translated:
-`Authors`,
-`Sources`
-and
-`Subjects`.
-
-Finally, the names of fields in the full-record display can be
-translated. These include, but may not be limited to:
-`Author`,
-`Date`,
-`Location`,
-`Subject`
-and
-`Title`.
-
-
-
-### jQuery UI popup invocation
-
-The MasterKey Widget Set can be invoked in a popup window on top of the page.
-
-Note that when using the `popup` layout, facilities from the jQuery UI
-toolkit are used, so it's necessary to include both CSS and JavaScript
-from that toolkit. The relevant lines are:
-
- <script src="http://code.jquery.com/ui/1.10.3/jquery-ui.min.js"></script>
- <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"
- href="http://code.jquery.com/ui/1.10.3/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.css" />
-
- <div class="mkwsSearch"></div>
- <div class="mkwsPopup" popup_width="1024" popup_height="650" popup_modal="0" popup_autoOpen="0" popup_button="input.mkwsButton">
- <div class="mkwsSwitch"></div>
- <div class="mkwsLang"></div>
- <div class="mkwsResults"></div>
- <div class="mkwsTargets"></div>
- <div class="mkwsStat"></div>
- </div
-
----
-Element Type Default Description
--------- ----- --------- ------------
-popup_width string 880 Width of the popup window (if used), in
- pixels.
-
-popup_height string 760 Height of the popup window (if used), in
- pixels.
-
-popup_button string input.mkwsButton (Never change this.)
-
-popup_modal string 0 Modal confirmation mode. Valid values are 0 or 1
-
-popup_autoOpen string 1 Open popup window on load. Valid values are 0 or 1
-
----
-
-
-### The structure of the HTML generated by the MKWS widgets
-
-In order to override the default CSS styles provided by the MasterKey Widget
-Set, it's necessary to understand that structure of the HTML elements that are
-generated within the components. This knowledge make it possible, for example,
-to style each `<div>` with class `term` but only when it occurs inside an
-element with ID `#mkwsTermlists`, so as to avoid inadvertently styling other
-elements using the same class in the non-MKWS parts of the page.
-
-The HTML structure is as follows. As in CSS, #ID indicates a unique identifier
-and .CLASS indicates an instance of a class.
-
- #mkwsSwitch
- a*
-
- #mkwsLang
- ( a | span )*
-
- #mkwsSearch
- form
- input#mkwsQuery type=text
- input#mkwsButton type=submit
-
- #mkwsBlanket
- (no contents -- used only for masking)
-
- #mkwsResults
- table
- tbody
- tr
- td
- #mkwsTermlists
- div.title
- div.facet*
- div.termtitle
- ( a span br )*
- td
- div#mkwsRanking
- form#mkwsSelect
- select#mkwsSort
- select#mkwsPerpage
- #mkwsPager
- #mkwsNavi
- #mkwsRecords
- div.record*
- span (for sequence number)
- a (for title)
- span (for other information such as author)
- div.details (sometimes)
- table
- tbody
- tr*
- th
- td
- #mkwsTargets
- #mkwsBytarget
- table
- thead
- tr*
- td*
- tbody
- tr*
- td*
-
- #mkwsStat
- span.head
- span.clients
- span.records
-
-- - -
-
-Copyright (C) 2013-2014 by IndexData ApS, <http://www.indexdata.com>
Include files
-------------
-The whitepaper says to include mkws-complete.js. This file is made by concatenating
+The manual says to include mkws-complete.js. This file is made by concatenating
a number of files (see Makefile). For us developers, it is easier to include the
raw files, as in
// Set up global mkws object. Contains truly global state such as SP
// authentication, and a hash of team objects, indexed by team-name.
//
-var mkws = {
+// We set it as a property of window to make the global explicit as
+// some things complain about an implicit global.
+window.mkws = {
$: $, // Our own local copy of the jQuery object
authenticated: false,
log_level: 1, // Will be overridden from mkws.config, but
mkws.js
mkws.min.js
pz2.js
-whitepaper.html
-library-configuration.html
+mkws-manual.html
The <a href="README.html">README</a> -- mostly technical details.
</li>
<li>
- The <a href="whitepaper.html">whitepaper, including a
+ The <a href="mkws-manual.html">MKWS manual, including a
reference section.</a>
This is a much better introduction.
</li>