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[CF-metadata] Towards recognizing and exploiting hierarchical groups (Charlie Zender - Steve Hankin - Richard Signell)

From: Steve Hankin <steven.c.hankin>
Date: Wed, 18 Sep 2013 09:32:00 -0700

On 9/18/2013 7:56 AM, Roy Mendelssohn - NOAA Federal wrote:
> Hi All:
>
> NASA has used hierarchies for years, and appears committed to them. So, either it is done in an ad hoc way, or through a standard. That doesn't mean CF is the place for the standard, just that it would be nice to have one.

Roy,

Lets explore the avenue you have opened here: "/that doesn't mean CF is
the place for the standard/". The need for hierarchies as tools for
programming is indisputable. But will hierarchical groups advance the
interoperability objectives of CF? At the start of this discussion I
had assumed that there would be compelling examples that supported the
introduction of hierarchies to CF. Thus far all that have been put on
display seem to be counter-examples(*):

  * For CMIP5 any given hierarchy is an arbitrary, brittle
    representation. The CMIP5 collection is better modeled by facets
    (metadata tags) than by hierarchies.
  * The suitcase analogy serves best to illustrate the _problems_ that
    hierarchies can bring -- to locate the black socks in a suitcase
    usually involves rummaging the entire suitcase.
      o ==> Which speaks to Rich's valid concern that the
        data-discovery-to-data-access transition may be very negatively
        impacted if hierarchies are not used carefully.
  * NASA hierarchies that are 10 levels deep strike me as by definition
    an "insider" view of a data collection. These hierarchies may add
    clarity for the specific satellite program communicating with its
    designated science groups, but they are likely a barrier to an
    outsider wanting to utilize the data.

To proceed forward we need to see some compelling use cases that will
help us to understand the costs and benefits?

     - Steve

(*) with the exception of Feature Collections types already contained in CF

=================================================

> I would point out that every major modern programming language has structures, which are essentially hierarchies. Matlab was criticized for years about not having structures, and finally added them a few years back. R has them, C has them, Python has them, even modern Fortran has them. So clearly there must be situations where hierarchies make sense, and are more efficient than having everything flat. There are clearly situations where flattening everything makes sense.
>
> My $0.02.
>
> -Roy
>
>
>
> On Sep 18, 2013, at 4:52 AM, "Signell, Richard" <rsignell at usgs.gov> wrote:
>
>> All,
>>
>> I'm glad we are discussing this topic, but the fact that large data
>> providers are already distributing data using groups and hierarchies
>> is not a compelling reason to endorse this practice through CF. After
>> all, a lot of data providers are currently distributing scientific
>> data in any number of forms, and the point of CF (along with OGC
>> standards) is to help clean up the mess!
>>
>> I agree that groups make sense for metadata and for certain types of
>> datasets. For example, the discrete sampling geometry featureTypes
>> like profile collection would be easier to understand and deal with as
>> a netcdf4 group of profiles rather than as a netcdf3 ragged array.
>> But the choice was made for CF 1.6 that backward compatibility was
>> more important.
>>
>> I don't think it's cowardly to belive that the more folks use groups
>> to organize their data in an ad hoc way (the suitcase analogy), the
>> more it will hinder the remarkable progress that has been made
>> recently on finding and utilizing distributed CF data via the catalog
>> services (e.g. the geonetwork, gi-cat, geoportal, CKAN instances) that
>> many governments are setting up. When we open the data service
>> endpoints that our query returns, we need to have known data
>> structures, and that's what the CF featureTypes provide.
>>
>> To return to the suitcase/clothing analogy again, we are rapidly
>> gaining the capability via good metadata and catalog services to find
>> all the black socks owned by Jim and Martin that have been washed in
>> the last week. But if our catalog query returns fourteen of Jim's
>> suitcases and twelve of Martin's, then we have more work to do.
>> Unlike socks, luckily we don't need actual suitcases to organize data,
>> we can construct collections on the fly using whatever attributes we
>> desire.
>>
>> I would hope that our job as the CF community would be to identify
>> compelling additional specific featureTypes that we should support.
>> And if these identified featureTypes demand groups for efficiency or
>> some other reason, well, let's have that discussion.
>>
>> -Rich
>>
>> On Wed, Sep 18, 2013 at 12:08 AM, Roy Mendelssohn - NOAA Federal
>> <roy.mendelssohn at noaa.gov> wrote:
>>> Hi All:
>>>
>>> I am old and slow, and I must be missing something, because at this point most of the discussion has been about the desirability of files with groups and hierarchies. Again, unless I am missing something, there already are data providers who are distributing data using groups and hierarchies, including at least one very large data provider, and they obviously feel that there is a benefit to such structures. I am not arguing whether they are right or wrong, just that is the reality.
>>>
>>> If we start from that premise, then the real questions for discussion are should there be conventions on how groups and hierarchies are used in netcdf4 and hdf5 files, so that a user or software provider will know what to expect, and the second question is if it is deemed desirable to have such conventions, is CF the proper place for them to be developed.
>>>
>>> My sense it that this is what the original proposers are after.
>>>
>>> -Roy
>>>
>>>
>>> **********************
>>> "The contents of this message do not reflect any position of the U.S. Government or NOAA."
>>> **********************
>>> Roy Mendelssohn
>>> Supervisory Operations Research Analyst
>>> NOAA/NMFS
>>> Environmental Research Division
>>> Southwest Fisheries Science Center
>>> 1352 Lighthouse Avenue
>>> Pacific Grove, CA 93950-2097
>>>
>>> e-mail: Roy.Mendelssohn at noaa.gov (Note new e-mail address)
>>> voice: (831)-648-9029
>>> fax: (831)-648-8440
>>> www: http://www.pfeg.noaa.gov/
>>>
>>> "Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill."
>>> "From those who have been given much, much will be expected"
>>> "the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice" -MLK Jr.
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> CF-metadata mailing list
>>> CF-metadata at cgd.ucar.edu
>>> http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata
>>
>>
>> --
>> Dr. Richard P. Signell (508) 457-2229
>> USGS, 384 Woods Hole Rd.
>> Woods Hole, MA 02543-1598
> **********************
> "The contents of this message do not reflect any position of the U.S. Government or NOAA."
> **********************
> Roy Mendelssohn
> Supervisory Operations Research Analyst
> NOAA/NMFS
> Environmental Research Division
> Southwest Fisheries Science Center
> 1352 Lighthouse Avenue
> Pacific Grove, CA 93950-2097
>
> e-mail: Roy.Mendelssohn at noaa.gov (Note new e-mail address)
> voice: (831)-648-9029
> fax: (831)-648-8440
> www: http://www.pfeg.noaa.gov/
>
> "Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill."
> "From those who have been given much, much will be expected"
> "the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice" -MLK Jr.
>
> _______________________________________________
> CF-metadata mailing list
> CF-metadata at cgd.ucar.edu
> http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata

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