Version 2.1 is a legacy release, and these documents are no longer being maintained.

CSV import

Most often understood as an acronym for “comma-separated values” (though sometimes called “character-separated values” because the separator character does not have to be a comma), CSV is a file format that stores tabular data in plain-text form. Information with common properties that can be expressed as a sequence of fields sharing a common header can be stored in plain-text using the CSV format, making it application agnostic and highly transportable.

A CSV file consists of a number of records (rows), that have identical fields, separated by commas (or in some cases, another separator). Often a header column (i.e. the cell values in first or top row of a CSV file) is included, naming each column and indicating what kind of data the column contains. Data is then entered using a separator or delimitor (such as a comma) to indicate a separation of fields (or cells), and a line break or carriage return to indicate rows (i.e. different records). Most spreadsheet applications (such as OpenOffice Calc or MS Excel) can open CSV files and express them as a spreadsheet. See Wikipedia for more information on CSV.

In AtoM, the CSV import function allows user to import data from a spreadsheet, or another database (so long as the export from the database is in CSV format). Artefactual has created a number of CSV templates that can be used to import

For small data imports (i.e. CSV files with less than 100 records), CSV files that have been mapped to the sample templates provided (below) can be imported via the user interface.

For large data imports (i.e. CSV files with 100 or more records), the import will need to be performed using the Command-line interface (CLI) - meaning you will need access to your installation environment and some basic familiarity with using the command line.

Below are instructions for using the CSV import module in AtoM to:

Before you import

Before you start importing records, there are a number of things you’ll need to do to prepare. You’ll likely want to determine import complexity to see how much technical resources need to be allocated and you’ll want to make modifications to your import data to ensure that it imports properly. Below are some guidelines to help you prepare your data for import into AtoM via CSV.

Important

We strongly recommend that imports never be carried out in your production environment, if possible. Instead, consider deploying a development/test version of your AtoM instance, performing the import(s) there, reviewing the data for any problems and making any required edits via the user interface, and then migrating this data to your production server. For more information, please see our section on Server migration in the Administrators manual.

Determining import complexity

To quickly gauge the complexity of CSV data you wish to import, the csv:check-import command can be used in the command-line. This command displays the following:

  • The number of rows of data (useful when estimating the amount of processing time needed to perform the import, and whether or not you can use the user interface to perform the import)
  • The number of columns (useful when estimating the amount of developer time needed to map the columns to AtoM data - see: CSV Column mapping below)
  • How many instances of pipe (|) characters are found in each column (pipe characters are used by some systems to put multiple values in a single cell of data)
  • Sample column values

You will need access to the command-line of the server on which AtoM is installed, and you will need to know the file path where your CSV is currently located. Run the command from the root directory of your AtoM install.

Example use:

php symfony csv:check-import lib/task/import/example/rad/example_information_objects_rad.csv

CSV Column mapping

AtoM was originally built to encourage broad adoption and use of the ICA’s international standards, and expanded to support other recognized standards. Consequently, all of the description templates in AtoM correspond to a recognized content or metadata exchange standard, and many of the fields in our underlying database model are also inspired by ICA standards. For your data to import successfully into AtoM, you will first need to map it to one of our existing CSV templates, which are derived from the various standards-based templates available in AtoM for description.

Mapping your data to the supplied CSV templates below implies a familiarity with the standards used in AtoM, so you can make appropriate decisions on which fields in your data map to which fields in AtoM, and how to proceed if your data does not easily map 1:1 with the standard upon which our templates are based.

For further information and source links to the standards used in AtoM, see:

The cell values in the top row of a CSV data file conventionally name each column. The name indicates what kind of data the column contains. If the CSV data you wish to import doesn’t include a row like this, you should insert one. You should then make the names correspond to AtoM-friendly names using the top row of data in the example CSV file(s) appropriate to your import.

Available example files are:

  • ISAD archival description CSV template
  • RAD archival description CSV template
  • Authority record CSV template
    • Authority record aliases CSV template
    • Authority record relationships CSV template
  • Accessions CSV template
  • Events CSV template

All CSV templates can be found on the AtoM wiki:

You can also find all example CSV import templates included in your AtoM installation, in: lib/task/import/example.

The order of the columns in the example CSV files is the same as the order in the AtoM interface, and should be maintained. Having the correct names in the cell values of the first row of your CSV data enables AtoM to import values in each column to the correct AtoM fields.

Tip

A good way to make sure your column mapping is correct is to create a blank row after the top row and populate this with test values. You can then do an import, stop it after the first row (using CTRL-C), and make sure that all the values from the CSV row are present in AtoM. Including, in each field of a row, the letter corresponding to the corresponding spreadsheet column (including, for example, the text “(A)” for data in spreadsheet column A) makes it easy to quickly determine if a field is showing up on the AtoM side after import.

Verify character encoding and line endings

For your CSV files to import properly, you will need to ensure two things prior to importing: that the character encoding of your CSV file is set to UTF-8, and that the end-of-line characters used in your CSV conform to the Unix/Linux style of newline character.

Important

Your import will likely fail if you don’t ensure these two things are are correctly set prior to import! Please review the sub-sections below for further details.

Character encoding (UTF-8)

For a CSV file to upload properly into AtoM (and display any special characters such as accents contained in the data), your CSV file must use a UTF-8 character encoding. If you have used a Windows or Mac spreadsheet application (such as Excel, for example), it’s possible that the default character encoding will not be UTF-8. For example, Excel uses machine-specific ANSI encoding as its defaults during install, so an EN-US installation might use Windows-1252 encoding by default, rather than something more universal such as UTF-8 (the default encoding in AtoM). This can cause problems on import into AtoM with special characters and diacritics. Make sure that if you are using Excel or another spreadsheet application, you are setting the character encoding to UTF-8. Many open source spreadsheet programs, such as LibreOffice Calc, use UTF-8 by default, and include an easy means for users to change the default encoding.

Tip

For Excel users, here is an eHow guide on converting CSV files to UTF-8: http://www.ehow.com/how_8387439_save-csv-utf8.html

Line endings

“In computing, a newline, also known as a line ending, end of line (EOL), or line break, is a special character or sequence of characters signifying the end of a line of text. The actual codes representing a newline vary across operating systems, which can be a problem when exchanging text files between systems with different newline representations.” (Wikipedia)

Here are some of the differences:

  • Unix / Linux / FreeBSD / OS X use LF (line feed, \n, 0x0A)
  • Macs prior to OS X use CR (carriage return, \r, 0x0D)
  • Windows / DOS use CR+LF (carriage return followed by line feed, \r\n, 0x0D0A)

AtoM’s CSV import will expect Unix-style line breaks ( \n ). If you have been using a spreadsheet application (such as Excel) on a Mac or Windows, you may encounter import issues. There are many command-line utilities and free software options out there to convert newline characters. Please ensure that your spreadsheet is using the correct line endings prior to upload, otherwise the upload will fail.

Data transformation

If you are working with a CSV export from another system (such a different database), you may need to do further pre-processing to prepare your CSV. If your previous system was designed for standards-compliance to a standard that AtoM supports (see: Descriptive standards), the mapping process might be simple - but if your system used custom data fields, mapping to one of the supported standards could be trickier.

You may, for example, want to combine multiple CSV column values, that don’t cleanly map conceptually to AtoM-compatible CSV columns, into single columns so they can be put into AtoM as notes. So ColumnA and ColumnB could be combined into a generalNote column. This requires you to transform the data before importing.

Depending on the size of your import data, this work can be done manually using a spreadsheet program - simply cut and paste your data into the corresponding cell in the provided import templates. However, for larger data sets, data transformation can be done with custom programming (for example, a Python script written by a developer), existing tools such as the open source Pentaho Data Integration application, or by use of a CSV transformation script.

We have included some guidelines for creating custom CSV transformation scripts. See:

Note

Creating custom CSV scripts is an activity generally performed by a developer.

Estimating import duration

Once you’ve mapped the columns names in your CSV export to the corresponding AtoM-compatible CSV column names you may wish to perform a test import.

A test import gives you an idea how long the import will take to complete on your hardware. To estimate how long it will take to import 20,000 rows of CSV data, for example, you could time the import of the first 1000 records and multiply that by 20.

If your test import proves to be too slow on your hardware, or you don’t have hardware to spare, you can consider using cloud computing resources, such as Open Hosting, Amazon EC2, or Rackspace Cloud.

Testing your import

Once you’ve prepared your import, you may want to clone your AtoM site and test your import on the clone before importing to your production AtoM installation. This prevents you from having to delete any improperly imported data. During import testing if you want to delete all imported data you can use the command-line purge tool.

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Legacy ID mapping: dealing with hierarchical data in a CSV

The legacyId column in imports is used to associate specific legacy data to AtoM data using ID columns. Why would you need to associate this data? Let’s say you’re importing a CSV file of description data you’ve exported from a non-AtoM system. If the imported descriptions are in any way hierarchical – with a fond containing items for example – a column in a child description will have to specify the legacy ID of its parent. The parent’s legacy ID can then be used to look up the AtoM ID of the parent that was imported earlier. With the AtoM ID discovered, the parent/child relationship can then be created. In addition to hierarchical description data, supplementary data such as events must specify a legacy parent ID when imported.

Image of the the keymap table in AtoM's database

A representation of the keymap table in AtoM, from an Entity Relationship Diagram of AtoM’s MySQL database.

When CSV data is imported into AtoM, values in the legacyID column are stored in AtoM’s keymap table, in a column named source_id. A system administrator or developer can access this information, either via the command-line, or by using a graphical application such as phpMyAdmin to look up exising legacy ID values in the source_id column of the MySQL keymap table.

In cases where data is being imported from multiple sources, legacy IDs may conflict. Two datasets, for example, may have objects with an ID of 3. When importing, you can use the command-line option --source-name to only record or reference mappings for a specific data source. This will add a value in the source_name column of AtoM’s keymap table, which can then be used for mapping subsequent imports.

The following example shows an import of information objects that records a specific source name when mapping legacy IDs to AtoM IDs:

php symfony csv:import information_objects_rad.csv --source-name=collection_name

In the above example, collection_name represents the value added by the user during import - now collection_name will be added to the source_name column of the keymap table for all records imported. Given the above example, the subsequent import of events using the following command would make sure that they get associated with information objects from the specific source identified as collection_name:

php symfony csv:event-import events.csv --source-name=collection_name

Tip

If you use the --source-name command-line option during your CSV import and you want to use spaces in the source name you add, you will need to enclose it in quotation marks. For example, both of the following are valid:

php symfony csv:import information_objects_rad.csv –source-name=collection_name

or:

php symfony csv:import information_objects_rad.csv –source-name=”collection name”

The --source-name option can also be used to keep larger imports that have been broken into multiple CSV files related. Adding the --source-name option to each CSV import, with a common name added for each, will prevent AtoM from duplicating import data, such as terms and actors (authority records) during import.

Import archival descriptions via CSV

The information object import tool allows you to map CSV columns to AtoM data. Example RAD and ISAD CSV template files are available in AtoM source code (lib/task/import/example/rad/example_information_objects_rad.csv and lib/task/import/example/isad/example_information_objects_isad.csv) or you can download the files here:

Hierarchical relationships

Information objects often have parent-child relationships - for example, a series is a child of the fonds to which it belongs; it has a parent fonds. If you want to import a fonds or collection into AtoM along with its lower levels of description (i.e. its children - series, files, items, etc.), you will need a way to specify which rows in your CSV file belong to which parent description.

There are two basic ways to specify which information object is the parent of an information object being imported in your CSV - either through the use of the legacyID and parentID columns (generally used for new descriptions being imported, or from descriptions being migrated from another access system), or by using the qubitParentSlug column to import new child descriptions to an existing description in AtoM.

Warning

Note that if you set both the parentId and qubitParentSlug in a single row, the import will default to using the qubitParentSlug. In general, only one type of parent specification should be used for each imported information object (i.e. each row in your CSV).

You can use a mix of legacyId/parentId and qubitParentSlug in the same CSV, just not in the same row. So, for example, if you wanted to import a series description as a child of a description already in AtoM, as well as several files as children of the series description, you could set a legacyID for the series, use the qubitParentSlug to point to the parent fonds or collection already in AtoM, and then use the parentID column for all your lower-level file descriptions. However, using both parentID and qubitParentSlug in the same row will cause a conflict, and AtoM will prefer the qubitParentSlug so the import does not fail.

Both methods of establishing hierarchical relationships are described below.

LegacyID and parentID

One way to establish hierarchical relationships during a CSV import involves the use of the parentId column to specify a legacy ID (referencing the legacyId column of a previously imported information object). This way is most often used for migrations from other access systems. Using this method, parent descriptions (e.g. fonds, collections, etc) must appear first (i.e. above) in your CSV and must include a legacyID - while child records must appear after (i.e. below) their parent records in your CSV, and must include the legacyID of the parent record in the parentID column.

Here is an example of the first three columns of a CSV file (shown in a spreadsheet application), importing a Fonds > Series > Item hierarchy:

example CSV parentID rows

Important

When the CSV is imported, it progresses row by row - meaning, if your CSV is not properly ordered with parent records appearing before their children, your import will fail!

qubitParentSlug

The other method of importing hierarchical data into AtoM enables you to specify an existing archival description that doesn’t have a legacyID (one, for example, that has been manually created using the AtoM web interface), and import descriptions as children of the target description(s).

To specify a parent that exists in AtoM, you must first take note of the parent information object’s slug. The “slug” is a textual identifier that is included in the URL used to view the parent description. If the URL, for example, is http://myarchive.com/AtoM/index.php/example-fonds then the slug will be example-fonds. This slug value would then be included in your import in the qubitParentSlug column in the rows of children of the parent description.

Alternately, if you are using the command-line to perform your import, you can use the --default-parent-slug option in the command-line to set a default slug value, that will be used when no qubitParentSlug or parentID values have been included for the row. For more information, see the details in the Command-line options section below.

Here is an example of the first few columns of a CSV file (shown in a spreadsheet application), importing a new series to an existing fonds, and importing two new file-level descriptions to an existing series:

example CSV qubitParentSlug rows

If desired, you can mix the use of the qubitParentSlug column with the use of the parentID column in the same CSV - for example, you could attach a new series to an existing fonds by giving it a legacyID and the slug for the existing fonds in the qubitParentSlug column, and then including lower-level files attached to the new series by adding the legacyID of the new series to the parentID column of the new files.

Important

You should not add both a parentID and a qubitParentSlug to the same row - AtoM expects one or the other. When the import encounters both columns populated in a single row, AtoM will default to use the qubitParentSlug value. In general, each row must have only one or the other - either a parent slug, or a parent ID.

Other data entry notes

  • language and languageOfDescription, like culture, expect two-letter ISO 639-1 language code values - for example, “en” for English; “fr” for French, “it” for Italian, etc. See Wikipedia for a full list of ISO 639-1 language codes. Unlike the culture column, however, these two fields will accept multiple values separated by a pipe character - for example, en|fr|it.
  • The script and scriptOfDescription columns expect four-letter ISO 15924 script code values - for example, “Latn” for Latin-based scripts, “Cyrl” for Cyrillic scripts, etc. See Unicode for a full list of ISO 15924 script codes.

Important

We have discovered a bug in AtoM 2.0/2.1 related to some of the columns in our CSV import that map to terms managed in AtoM’s taxonomies - including levelOfDetail, radGeneralMaterialDesignation, and descriptionStatus - if data for any of these columns is included in your CSV, values in these fields must conform to the default AtoM values for the import to succeed.

We hope to fix this bug in a future release of AtoM, and have filed issue tickets to track work done to resolve these issues.

  • levelOfDetail - #6756
  • radGeneralMaterialDesignation - #6757
  • descriptionStatus#6758

Using the user interface

For small imports (i.e. CSV files with less than 100 records), imports can be performed via the user interface.

Important

Before proceeding, make sure that you have reviewed the instructions above, to ensure that your CSV import will work. Here is a basic checklist of things to check for importing a CSV of archival descriptions via the user interface:

  • CSV file is saved with UTF-8 encodings
  • CSV file uses Linux/Unix style end-of-line characters (/n)
  • CSV file is less than 100 records
  • All parent descriptions appear in rows above their children
  • All new parent records have a legacyID value, and all children include the parent’s legacyID value in their parentID column
  • No row uses both parentID and qubitParentSlug (only one should be used - if both are present AtoM will default to using the qubitParentSlug)
  • Any records to be imported as children of an existing record in AtoM use the proper qubitParentSlug of the existing parent record

If you have double-checked the above, you should be ready to import your descriptions.

To import a CSV file via the user interface:

  1. Click on the import Import menu, located in the AtoM header bar, and select “CSV”.
The import menu
  1. AtoM will redirect you to the CSV import page. Make sure that the “Type” drop-down menu is set to “Archival description”.
The CSV import page in AtoM
  1. Click the “Browse” button to open a window on your local computer. Select the CSV file that you would like to import.
Clicking the "Browse" button in the CSV import page
  1. When you have selected the file from your device, its name will appear next to the “Browse” button. Click the “Import” button located in the button block to begin your import.
Starting a CSV import in AtoM

Note

Depending on the size of your CSV import, this can take some time to complete. Be patient! Remember, uploads performed via the user interface are limited by the browser’s timeout limits - this is one of the reasons we recommend importing only smaller CSV files via the user interface.

  1. After your import is complete, AtoM will list the amount of time the import took, and provide a link to the archival description browse page. Unlike the XML import, a link directly to your import is not provided, because a CSV upload may contain multiple descriptions; instead, a link to the browse page is given, so users can locate their descriptions.
Starting a CSV import in AtoM

Tip

Use the sort button located in the top-right hand side of the browse page to change the results display to be ordered by “Most recent” if it is not already - that way, the most recently added or edited descriptions will appear at the top of the results. If you have come directly here after importing your descriptions, they should appear at the top of the results.

The browse page following a CSV import
  1. If any warnings or errors are encountered, AtoM will also display them on the import page. Some warnings will cause an import to fail (and some will not - they will alert the user, but the import will still complete), while all error messages mean that the import has failed, and a link to the archival description browse page will not be provided. - instead, the CSV upload page will reappear below the error message. Errors can occur for many reasons - please review the checklist above for suggestions on resolving the most common reasons that CSV imports fail.
An error message from a failed CSV import

Using the command-line interface (CLI)

For larger CSV imports (e.g. those with 100 or more records), we recommend using the Command-line interface to import your descriptions.

Example use (with the RAD CSV template) - run from AtoM’s root directory:

php symfony csv:import lib/task/import/example/rad/example_information_objects_rad.csv

Command-line options

An image of the command-line options for CSV import

By typing php symfony help csv:import into the command-line from your root directory, without specifying the location of a CSV, you will able able to see the CSV import options available (pictured above). A brief explanation of each is included below.

The --application, --env, and connection options should not be used - AtoM requires the uses of the pre-set defaults for symfony to be able to execute the import.

The --rows-until-update option can be used for a simple visual representation of progress in the command-line. Enter a whole integer, to represent the number of rows should be imported from the CSV before the command-line prints a period (e.g. `` . `` ) in the console, as a sort of crude progress bar. For example, entering --rows-until-update=5 would mean that the import progresses, another period will be printed every 5 rows. This is a simple way to allow the command-line to provide a visual output of progress. For further information on the --rows-until-update option and an example of the command-line option in use, see also the section below, Display the progress of an upload via the command-line interface (CLI).

You can use the --skip-rows option to skip X amount of rows in the CSV before beginning the import. This can be useful if you have interrupted the import, and wish to re-run it without duplicating the records already imported. --skip-rows=10 would skip the first 10 rows in the CSV file, for example. Note that this count does not inlcude the header column, so in fact, the above example would skip the header column, and rows 2-11 in your CSV file.

The --error-log option can be used to specify a directory where errors should be logged. Note that this option has not been tested by Artefactual developers.

Use the --source-name option (described above to specify a source when importing information objects from multiple sources (with possibly conflicting legacy IDs). This will ensure that multiple related CSV files will remain related - so, for example, if you import an archival description CSV, and then supplement the authority records created (from the creators field in the description CSV templates) with an authority record CSV import, using the --source-name option will make sure that matching names are linked and related, instead of duplicate authority records being created. You can also use this option to relate a large import that is broken up into multiple CSV files. See the Legacy ID mapping: dealing with hierarchical data in a CSV section above for further tips and details on the uses of this option.

The --default-legacy-parent-id option will allow the user to set a default parentID value - for any row in the CSV where no parentID value is included and no qubitParentSlug is present, this default value will be inserted as the parentID.

Similarly, the --default-parent-slug option allows a user to set a default qubitParentSlug value - wherever no slug value or parentID / legacyID is included, AtoM will populate the qubitParentSlug with the default value. If you are importing all rows in a CSV file to one parent description already in AtoM, you could use the --default-parent-slug option to specify the target slug of the parent, and then leave the legacyID, parentID, and qubitParentSlug columns blank in your CSV. Note that this example will affect ALL rows in a CSV - so use this only if you are importing all descriptions to a single parent!

By default, AtoM will build the nested set after an import task. The nested set is a way to manage hierarchical data stored in the flat tables of a relational database. However, as Wikipedia notes, “Nested sets are very slow for inserts because it requires updating left and right domain values for all records in the table after the insert. This can cause a lot of database thrash as many rows are rewritten and indexes rebuilt.” When performing a large import, it can therefore sometimes be desirable to disable the building of the nested set during the import process, and then run it as a separate command-line task following the completion of the import. To achieve this, the --skip-nested-set-build option can be used to disable the default behavior.

NOTE that the nested set WILL need to be built for AtoM to behave as expected. You can use the following command-line task, from the AtoM root directory, to rebuild the nested set if you have disabled during import:

php symfony propel:build-nested-set

Tip

Want to learn more about why and how nested sets are used? Here are a few great resources:

Similarly, when using the user interface to perform an import, the import is indexed automatically - but when running an import via the command-line interface, indexing is disabled by default. This is because indexing during import can be incredibly slow, and the command-line is generally used for larger imports. Generally, we recommend a user simply clear the cache and rebuild the search index following an import - from AtoM’s root directory, run:

php symfony cc && php symfony search:populate

However, if a user would like to index the import as it progresses, the --index option can be used to enable this.

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Import events via CSV

The information object (e.g., archival description) import tool allows you to import creation events, but doesn’t accommodate other types of events, such as accumulation, broadcasting, etc).

For this the event import tool is better suited and should be ran after you import your information objects.

The event import processes 3 CSV columns: legacyId, eventActorName, and eventType. The legacyId should be the legacy ID of the information object the event will be associated with. The eventActorName and eventType specify the name of the actor involved in the event and the type of event. An example CSV template file is available in the AtoM source code (lib/task/import/example_events.csv) or can be downloaded here:

Important

Before proceeding, make sure that you have reviewed the instructions above, to ensure that your CSV import will work. Here is a basic checklist of things to check for importing a CSV of events via the user interface:

  • CSV file is saved with UTF-8 encodings
  • CSV file uses Linux/Unix style end-of-line characters (/n)
  • CSV file is less than 100 records if importing via the user interface
  • All legacyID values entered correspond to the legacyID values of their corresponding archival descriptions
  • If you are referencing existing authority records already in AtoM, make sure that the name used in the actorName column matches the authorized form of name in the authority record exactly.

If you have double-checked the above, you should be ready to import your events.

Using the user interface

For small imports (i.e. CSV files with less than 100 records), imports can be performed via the user interface.

To import an events CSV file via the user interface:

  1. Click on the import Import menu, located in the AtoM header bar, and select “CSV”.
The import menu
  1. AtoM will redirect you to the CSV import page. Make sure that the “Type” drop-down menu is set to “Event”.
The CSV import page in AtoM
  1. Click the “Browse” button to open a window on your local computer. Select the events CSV file that you would like to import.
Clicking the "Browse" button in the CSV import page
  1. When you have selected the file from your device, its name will appear next to the “Browse” button. Click the “Import” button located in the button block to begin your import.
Starting a CSV import in AtoM

Note

Depending on the size of your CSV import, this can take some time to complete. Be patient! Remember, uploads performed via the user interface are limited by the browser’s timeout limits - this is one of the reasons we recommend importing only smaller CSV files via the user interface.

Using the command-line interface (CLI)

For larger CSV imports (e.g. those with 100 or more records), we recommend using the Command-line interface to import your descriptions.

Example use - run from AtoM’s root directory:

php symfony csv:event-import lib/task/import/example/example_events.csv

There are also various command-line options that can be used, as illustrated in the options depicted in the image below:

An image of the command-line options for events imports

By typing php symfony help csv:event-import into the command-line from your root directory, without specifying the location of a CSV, you will able able to see the CSV import options available (pictured above). A brief explanation of each is included below.

The --application, --env, and connection options should not be used - AtoM requires the uses of the pre-set defaults for symfony to be able to execute the import.

The --rows-until-update, --skip-rows, and --error-log options can be used the same was as described in the section above on importing descriptions. For more information on the --rows-until-update option, see also the section below, Display the progress of an upload via the command-line interface (CLI).

Use the --source-name to specify a source importing to a AtoM installation in which information objects from multiple sources have been imported, and/or to associate it explicitly with a previously-imported CSV file that used the same --source-name value. An example is provided above in the section on legacy ID mapping.

The --event-types option is deprecated, and no longer supported in AtoM.

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Import archival institutions via CSV

You can import repositories (i.e. archival institutions into AtoM as well. At this time, there is no support for importing a repository CSV via the user interface - however, the command-line may be used.

Find the example CSV import template here:

CSV columns

  • The uploadLimit column allows a user to set a default upload limit for a repository at the time of import. This value should be a number, representing Gigabytes. For more information on the use of respository upload limits in AtoM, see: Set digital object upload limit for an archival institution.
  • Almost all other fields are drawn directly from the archival institution edit template in AtoM, which is based upon the International Council on Archives’ International Standard for Describing Institutions with Archival Holdings (ISDIAH). For more information on the use of each field, see: International Standard for Describing Institutions with Archival Holdings.
    • Most fields in the CSV template have been named in a fairly obvious way, translating a simplified version of the field name in our data entry templates into a condensed camelCase. For example, ISDIAH 5.3.2, Geographical and cultural context (in the Description Area) becomes geoCulturalContext in the CSV template. Consult the ISDIAH for further help with fields.
  • The culture column indicates to AtoM the language of the descriptions being uploaded. This column expects two-letter ISO 639-1 language code values - for example, “en” for English; “fr” for French, “it” for Italian, etc. See Wikipedia for a full list of ISO 639-1 language codes.

Important

Before proceeding, make sure that you have reviewed the “Before you import” instructions above, to ensure that your CSV import will work. Most importantly, make sure your:

  • CSV file is saved with UTF-8 encodings
  • CSV file uses Linux/Unix style end-of-line characters (/n)

Using the command-line

Example use - run from AtoM’s root directory:

php symfony csv:repository-import lib/task/import/example/example_repositories.csv

There are also various command-line options that can be used, as illustrated in the options depicted in the image below:

An image of the command-line options for repository imports

By typing php symfony help csv:repository-import into the command-line from your root directory, without specifying the location of a CSV, you will able able to see the CSV import options available (pictured above). A brief explanation of each is included below.

The --application, --env, and connection options should not be used - AtoM requires the uses of the pre-set defaults for symfony to be able to execute the import.

The --rows-until-update, --skip-rows, and --error-log options can be used the same was as described in the section above on importing descriptions. For more information on the --rows-until-update option, see also the section below, Display the progress of an upload via the command-line interface (CLI).

The --merge-existing option may be used to avoid the creation of duplicate repositories. That is - if, during import, any rows in the CSV contain the same authorized form of name as a repository already in the database, those rows will be ignored (i.e. not imported).

You can use the --upload-limit option to specify the default upload limit for repositories which don’t specify their uploadLimit in the CSV file. That is, if for example you performed a CSV import with the command-line option of --upload-limit=5, then for every repository in the CSV that does NOT have a value in the uploadLimit column, the default value of 5 GBs will be assigned.

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Import authority records via CSV

The authority record import tool allows you to import data about organizations and individuals. In addition to importing data detailing these entities, the tool also allows the simultaneous import of supplementary data (in separate CSV files) on how these entities relate to each other and alternate names these entities are known by.

You can view the example CSV files for authority records in the AtoM code (at lib/task/import/example/authority_records/) or they can be downloaded directly here:

CSV Columns

A brief explanation of the main fields in each CSV template is included below.

Authority records CSV

  • The culture column indicates to AtoM the language of the descriptions being uploaded. This column expects two-letter ISO 639-1 language code values - for example, “en” for English; “fr” for French, “it” for Italian, etc. See Wikipedia for a full list of ISO 639-1 language codes.
  • the typeOfEntity column maps to the entity type terms recommended in ISAAR 5.1.1 Type of Entity, and maintained in AtoM in the Actor Entity Types taxonomy. This column expects one of three recommended values - Person, Corporate body, or Family.
  • Almost all other fields are drawn directly from the authority record edit template in AtoM, which is based upon the International Council on Archives’ International Standard Archival Authority Record for Corporate Bodies, Persons and Famillies (ISAAR-CPF). For more information on the use of each field, see: International Standard Archival Authority Record for Corporate Bodies, Persons, and Families.
    • Most fields in the CSV template have been named in a fairly obvious way, translating a simplified version of the field name in our data entry templates into a condensed camelCase. For example, ISAAR 5.2.1, Dates of Existence (in the ISAAR Description Area) becomes datesOfExistence in the CSV template. Consult the ISDIAH for further help with fields.
    • The history column, which conforms to ISAAR 5.2.2, will appear as the Administrative or Biographical history in any archival description that the authority record is linked to. For more information on how AtoM manages authority records, see: Authority records.

Alternate names CSV

  • The parentAuthorizedFormOfName should match exactly a target name in the related authority record CSV being imported. The aliases (or alternate names) included in the Aliases CSV will be associated with that actor’s authority record following import.
  • The alternateForm should include the alternate name or alias you wish to import.
  • The formType column contains data about what kind of alternate is being created. Each alias can be one of three forms: a parallel form, a standardized form according to other descriptive practices, or an “other” form. Enter either “parallel”, “standardized”, or “other” as a value in this the cells of this column. For more information on the distinction between these three types of alternate names, please consult ISAAR-CPF 5.1.3 - 5.1.5
  • The culture column indicates to AtoM the language of the descriptions being uploaded. This column expects two-letter ISO 639-1 language code values - for example, “en” for English; “fr” for French, “it” for Italian, etc. See Wikipedia for a full list of ISO 639-1 language codes.

Relationships CSV

  • The sourceAuthorizedFormOfName is used to specify one of the actors included in the Authority record CSV upload. This field should match exactly one of the actors listed in the authorizedFormOfName column of the Authority record CSV.
  • The targetAuthorizedFormOfName is also used to specify one of the actors in the Authority record CSV upload - the actor with which you intend to create a relationship. The values entered int this column should match exactly one of the actors listed in the authorizedFormOfName column of the Authority record CSV.
  • The category column contains data about the type of relationship you are creating, and maps to ISAAR 5.3.2 Category of Relationship. The terms recommended in the ISAAR standard are maintained in the Actor Relation Type taxonomy in AtoM. Values entered should be either “associative”, “family”, “hierarchical”, or “temporal”. For more information on the distinction between these terms, please consult ISAAR-CPF 5.3.2.
  • The date field is a free-text string field that will allow a user to enter a date or date range for the relationship. It allows the use of special characters and typographical marks to indicate approximation (e.g. [ca. 1900]) and/or uncertainty (e.g. [199-?]). Use the startDate and endDate fields to enter ISO-formated date values (e.g. YYYY-MM-DD, YYYY-MM, or YYYY) that correspond to the free-text date field. Public users in the interface will see the date field values when viewing relationships; the startDate and endDate values are not visible, and are used for date range searching in the application.
  • The culture column indicates to AtoM the language of the descriptions being uploaded. This column expects two-letter ISO 639-1 language code values - for example, “en” for English; “fr” for French, “it” for Italian, etc. See Wikipedia for a full list of ISO 639-1 language codes.

Important

Before proceeding, make sure that you have reviewed the “Before you import” instructions above, to ensure that your CSV import will work. Most importantly, make sure your:

  • CSV file is saved with UTF-8 encodings
  • CSV file uses Linux/Unix style end-of-line characters (/n)

Using the user interface

Note

Only the basic Authoriy record CSV can be imported via the user interface. If you wish to import authority relationships and aliases as well, you will need to use the command-line. Imports conducted via the user interface should include no more than 100 records - otherwise we strongly recommend you use the command-line!

To import authority records via the user interface:

  1. Click on the import Import menu, located in the AtoM header bar, and select “CSV”.
The import menu
  1. AtoM will redirect you to the CSV import page. Make sure that the “Type” drop-down menu is set to “Authority record”.
The CSV import page in AtoM
  1. Click the “Browse” button to open a window on your local computer. Select the authority record CSV file that you would like to import.
Clicking the "Browse" button in the CSV import page
  1. When you have selected the file from your device, its name will appear next to the “Browse” button. Click the “Import” button located in the button block to begin your import.
Starting a CSV import in AtoM

Note

Depending on the size of your CSV import, this can take some time to complete. Be patient! Remember, uploads performed via the user interface are limited by the browser’s timeout limits - this is one of the reasons we recommend importing only smaller CSV files via the user interface.

Using the command-line interface (CLI)

Example use - run from AtoM’s root directory:

php symfony csv:authority-import lib/task/import/example/authority_records/example_authority_records.csv

There are also various command-line options that can be used, as illustrated in the options depicted in the image below:

An image of the command-line options for authority record imports

By typing php symfony help csv:authority-import into the command-line from your root directory, without specifying the location of a CSV, you will able able to see the CSV import options available (pictured above). A brief explanation of each is included below.

The --application, --env, and connection options should not be used - AtoM requires the uses of the pre-set defaults for symfony to be able to execute the import.

The --rows-until-update, --skip-rows, --error-log, and --index options can be used the same was as described in the section above on importing descriptions. For more information on the --rows-until-update option, see also the section below, Display the progress of an upload via the command-line interface (CLI).

The --alias-file and --relation-file options are used to import accompanying alternate name (aka Alias data) and relationship CSV files at the same time as the authority record CSV import. An example of each will be given below, though they can be used together.

Importing alternate names (Alias data)

Alternate names are defined in a separate CSV file. Each alias can be one of three forms: a parallel form, a standardized form, or “other” form. See the section on data entry above for further guidance.

An example CSV template file of supplementary alias data is available in the AtoM source code ( at lib/task/import/example/authority_records/example_authority_ record_aliases.csv) or can be downloaded here:

The Alternate names CSV file must be imported at the same time as its related Authority record CSV file. The --alias-file command-line option is used to specify a separate path to the Alternate names CSV, with a back slash ( \ ) used to separate it from the path of the original authority record CSV, as shown below.

Example import of authority records and corresponding aliases:

php symfony csv:authority-import lib/task/import/example/authority_records/example_authority_records.csv \
--alias-file=lib/task/import/example/authority_records/example_authority_record_aliases.csv

Import accessions via CSV

When importing information objects (e.g. archival descriptions, you can specify an associated accession record using an accessionNumber column in the CSV. After importing your information objects you can then run the accession import tool to import details about each accession from a CSV file.

An example CSV template file is available in the lib/task/import/example/example_accessions.csv directory of AtoM, or it can be downloaded here:

As of AtoM 2.1, a new column, qubitParentSlug has been added. This column will behave similarly to the qubitParentSlug column in the archival description CSV templates (described above) - it will allow you to link new CSV-imported accessions to existing descriptions in AtoM. To link an accession row in your CSV to an existing description in your AtoM instance, simply enter the slug of the target description in the qubitParentSlug column. AtoM will located the matching description, and link the two during import, similar to how an accession created through the user interface can be linked to a description (see: Link an accession record to an archival description).

Using the user interface

For small imports (i.e. CSV files with less than 100 records), accession record imports can be performed via the user interface.

To import an accessions CSV file via the user interface:

  1. Click on the import Import menu, located in the AtoM header bar, and select “CSV”.
The import menu
  1. AtoM will redirect you to the CSV import page. Make sure that the “Type” drop-down menu is set to “Accession”.
The CSV import page in AtoM
  1. Click the “Browse” button to open a window on your local computer. Select the authority record CSV file that you would like to import.
Clicking the "Browse" button in the CSV import page
  1. When you have selected the file from your device, its name will appear next to the “Browse” button. Click the “Import” button located in the button block to begin your import.
Starting a CSV import in AtoM

Note

Depending on the size of your CSV import, this can take some time to complete. Be patient! Remember, uploads performed via the user interface are limited by the browser’s timeout limits - this is one of the reasons we recommend importing only smaller CSV files via the user interface.

Using the command-line interface (CLI)

For larger accession record imports (e.g. those with 100 or more records), we recommend using the command-line task to import your CSV file.

Example use - run from AtoM’s root directory:

php symfony csv:accession-import /path/to/my/example_accessions.csv

There are also a number of options available with this command-line task.

An image of the command-line options for accession record imports

By typing php symfony help csv:accession-import into the command-line from your root directory, without specifying the location of a CSV, you will able able to see the CSV import options available (pictured above). A brief explanation of each is included below.

The --application, --env, and connection options should not be used - AtoM requires the uses of the pre-set defaults for symfony to be able to execute the import.

Use the --source-name to specify a source importing to a AtoM installation in which accessions and information objects from multiple sources have been imported, and/or to associate it explicitly with a previously-imported CSV file that used the same --source-name value. An example is provided above in the section on legacy ID mapping.

The --rows-until-update, --skip-rows, --error-log, and --index options can be used the same was as described in the section above on importing descriptions. For more information on the --rows-until-update option, see also the section below, Display the progress of an upload via the command-line interface (CLI).

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Display the progress of an upload via the command-line interface (CLI)

The various CSV import tools allow the use of the --rows-until-update command-line option to display the current row of CSV data being imported. This is an extremely simplified way to indicate progress graphically via the command-line - the user sets a numerical value for the number of rows the task will progress before an update, and then the task will output a dot (or period ) in the command-line every time the indicated number of rows has been processed in the current CSV.

Example use reporting progress every 5 rows:

php symfony csv:import lib/task/import/example/rad/example_information_objects_rad.csv --rows-until-update=5

This can be useful for large imports, to ensure the import is still progressing, and to try to roughly determine how far the task has progressed and how long it will take to complete.

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Load digital objects via the command line

Known as the Digital object load task, this command-line tool will allow a user to bulk attach digital objects to existing information objects (e.g. archival descriptions) through the use of a simple CSV file.

This task will take a CSV file as input, which contains two columns: filename and EITHER information_object_id OR identifier as the second column; the script will fail if these column headers are not present in the first row of the CSV file, and it will fail if there are more than 2 columns - you must choose which variable you prefer to work with ( identifier or object ID) for the second column. Each will be explained below.

The filename column contains the full (current) path to the digital asset (file). The information_object_id or identifier column identifies the linked information object. AtoM does not allow more than one digital object per information object (with the exception of derivatives), and each digital object must have a corresponding information object to describe it, so this one-to-one relationship must be respected in the CSV import file.

The information_object_id is a unique internal value assigned to each information object in AtoM’s database - it is not visible via the user interface and you will have to perform a SQL query to find it out - a sample SQL query with basic instructions has been included below.

The identifier can be used instead if preferred. A description’s identifier is visible in the user interface, which can make it less difficult to discover. ** However,**, if the target description’s identifier is not unique throughout your AtoM instance, the digital object may not be attached to the correct description - AtoM will attach it to the first matching identifier it finds.

Finding the information_object_id

The information_object_id is not a value that is accessible via the user interface - it is a unique value used in AtoM’s database. You can, however, use SQL in the command-line to determine the ID of an information object. The following example will show you how to use a SQL query to find the information_object_id, if you know the slug of the description:

  1. First, you will need to access mysqlCLI to be able to input a SQL query. To do this, you will need to know the database name, user name, and password you used when creating your database during installation. If your database is on a different server (e.g. if you are trying to SSH in to access your database server), you will also need to know the hostname - that is, the IP address or domain name of the server where your database is located.

  2. The following is an example of the CLI command to enter to access mysqlCLI:

    mysql -u root -pMYSECRETPASSWORD atom
    
    • -u = user. If you followed our installation instructions, this will be root
    • -p = password. Enter the password you used during installation right after the -p. If you did not enter a password, include the -p on its own. If you are prompted later for a password and didn’t use one, just press enter.
    • -h = hostname. If your database is on a different server, supply either an IP address, or the domain name, where it is located.
    • atom = your database name. If you followed our installation instructions, this will be atom; otherwise enter the database name you used when installing AtoM.
  3. You may be prompted for your password again. If so, enter it. If you did not use a password during installation, simply press enter.

  4. Your command prompt should now say something like mysql>. You can now enter a SQL query directly.

  5. The following example SQL command will return the information_object_id for a desription, when the information object’s slug is known:

    SELECT object_id FROM slug WHERE slug='your-slug-here';
    
  6. The query should return the object_id for the description. Here is an example:

An image of a successful SELECT statement in mysqlCLI
  1. Enter quit to exit mysqlCLI.

Using the digital object load task

Before using this task, you will need to prepare:

  • A CSV file with 2 columns - EITHER information_object_id and filename, OR identifier and filename
  • A directory with your digital objects inside of it

Important

You cannot use both information_object_id and identifier in the same CSV - it must be one or the other. If you use the identifier, make sure your target description identifiers are unique in AtoM - otherwise your digital objects may not upload to the right description!

Here is a sample image of what the CSV looks like when the identifier is used, and the CSV is prepared in a spreadsheet application:

Example CSV for digitalobject:load task using identifier

Tip

Before proceeding, make sure that you have reviewed the instructions above, to ensure that your CSV will work when used with the digitalobject:load task. The key point when creating a CSV is to ensure the following:

  • CSV file is saved with UTF-8 encodings
  • CSV file uses Linux/Unix style end-of-line characters (/n)

You can see the options available on the CLI task by typing in the following command:

php symfony help digitalobject:load
An image of the command-line options for digitalobject:load

The --application, --env, and connection options should not be used - AtoM requires the uses of the pre-set defaults for symfony to be able to execute the import.

By default, the digital object load task will not index the collection as it runs. This means that normally, you will need to manually repopulate the search index after running the task. Running without indexing allows the task to complete much more quickly - however, if you’re only uploading a small set of digital objects, you can choose to have the task index the collection as it progresses, using the --index (or -i) option

The --path option will allow you to simplify the filename column in your CSV, to avoid repetition. If all the digital objects you intend to upload are stored in the same folder, then adding /path/to/my/folder/ to each object filename seems tedious - your filename column will need to look something like this:

filename
/path/to/my/folder/image1.png
/path/to/my/folder/image2.jpg
/path/to/my/folder/text1.pdf
etc...

To avoid this when all digital objects are in the same directory, you can use the --path option to pre-supply the path to the digital objects - for each filename, the path supplied will be appended. Note that you will need to use a trailing slash to finish your path prefix - e.g.:

php symfony digitalobject:load --path="/path/to/my/folder/" /path/to/my/spreadsheet.csv

TO RUN THE DIGITAL OBJECT LOAD TASK

php symfony digitalobject:load /path/to/your/loadfile.csv

NOTES ON USE

  • If an information object already has a digital object attached to it, it will be skipped during the import

  • Remember to repopulate the search index afterwards if you haven’t used the --index option!

    php symfony search:populate
    

Regenerating derivatives

Sometimes the digitalobject:load task won’t generate the thumbnail and reference images properly for digital objects that were loaded (e.g. due to a crash or absence of convert installed, etc.). In this case, you can regenerate these thumbsnail/reference images using the following command:

php symfony digitalobject:regen-derivatives

Warning

All of your current derivatives will be deleted! They will be replaced with new derivatives after the task has finished running. If you have manually changed the thumbnail or reference display copy of a digital object via the user interface (see: Edit digital objects), these two will be replaced with digital object derivatives created from the master digital object.

For more information on this task and the options available, see: Regenerating derivatives.

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Index your content after an upload

After an import, you’ll want to index your content so it can be searched by users. To do so, enter the following into the command-line:

php symfony search:populate

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Version 2.1