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IOOS Compliance Checker

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The IOOS Compliance Checker is a python based tool for data providers to check for completeness and community standard compliance of local or remote netCDF files against CF and ACDD file standards. The python module can be used as a command-line tool or as a library that can be integrated into other software.

A web-based version of the Compliance Checker was developed to enable a broader audience and improve accessibility for the checker. With the web version, providers can simply provide a link or upload their datasets and get the full suite of capabilities that Compliance Checker offers.

It currently supports the following sources and standards:

Standard Source .nc/OPeNDAP/.cdl SOS
ACDD (1.1, 1.3) Built-in X -
CF (1.9) Built-in X -
CF (1.8) Built-in X -
CF (1.7) Built-in X -
CF (1.6) Built-in X -
IOOS SOS Built-in - GetCapabilities, DescribeSensor
IOOS (1.1) Built-in X -
IOOS (1.2) Built-in X -
Glider DAC ioos/cc-plugin-glider X -
NCEI (1.1, 2.0) ioos/cc-plugin-ncei X -

Advice to data providers

While the command-line version of this tool can be run in a loop, it is not necessary to check every file if they are all created the same way. In short, this tool is not meant for identifying bugs in your data processing stream. It is, however, intended to help you identify your process procedure compliance to the standards. If you change your processing procedure for any reason it would be worth your while to run one file through the Compliance Checker to insure you procedure change does not impact your file’s compliance.

If you feel you will need to run a batch of files through the Compliance Checker, please contact the IOOS Program Office Operations Division for assistance.

The IOOS Compliance Checker front end companion.

https://compliance.ioos.us/index.html

Source Code is available on GitHub:

https://github.com/ioos/compliance-checker-web

Usage

Select the test you want to run from the dropdown menu. Then, either upload your dataset or provide a url to a remote dataset (OPeNDAP) and click 'Submit'.

The output of the Compliance Checker will give you a comprehensive list of issues and the actions needed to correct them. You may download the Compliance Checker report as a text file by clicking the 'Download Report' button

Compliance-Checker-Web

API

In addition to a web-based front-end for the IOOS Compliance Checker project, an API is provided for users interested in batch processing files hosted via OPeNDAP. Details on how to use the API are available on the Compliance Checker Web wiki page.

Here are a couple examples:

HTML Output

https://compliance.ioos.us/index.htmlapi/run?report_format=html&test=acdd&url=http://sos.maracoos.org/stable/dodsC/hrecos/stationHRMARPH-agg.ncml

JSON Output

https://compliance.ioos.us/index.htmlapi/run?report_format=json&test=acdd&url=http://sos.maracoos.org/stable/dodsC/hrecos/stationHRMARPH-agg.ncml

The Compliance Checker Command Line Tool

Concepts & Terminology

Each compliance standard is executed by a Check Suite, which functions similar to a Python standard Unit Test. A Check Suite runs checks against a dataset based on a metadata standard, returning a list of Results which are then aggregated into a summary.

Each Result has a (# passed / # total) score, a weight (HIGH/MEDIUM/LOW), a computer-readable name, an optional list of human-readable messages, and optionally a list of child Results.

A single score is then calculated by aggregating on the names, then multiplying the score by the weight and summing them together.

The computer-readable name field controls how Results are aggregated together - in order to prevent the overall score for a Check Suite varying on the number of variables, it is possible to group Results together via the name property. Grouped results will only add up to a single top-level entry.

See the Development wiki page for more details on implementation.

Installation

Check out the Installation wiki for instructions on how to install.

Command Line Usage

The compliance-checker can work against local files (.nc files, .cdl metadata files, .xml files of SOS GetCapabilities/DescribeSensor requests) or against remote URLs (OPeNDAP data URLs, SOS GetCapabilities/DescribeSensor URLs).

If you are aiming to check a netCDF-dump, also known as a CDL file, the file must be named to end with a .cdl for the check-suite to be able to correctly parse it's contents.

WARNING The CF/ACDD checks will access data, so if using a remote OPeNDAP URL, please be sure the size is reasonable!

usage: cchecker.py [-h] [--test TEST] [--criteria [{lenient,normal,strict}]]
                   [--verbose] [--describe-checks] [--skip-checks SKIP_CHECKS]
                   [-f {text,html,json,json_new}] [-o OUTPUT] [-O OPTION] [-V]
                   [-l] [-d DOWNLOAD_STANDARD_NAMES]
                   [dataset_location [dataset_location ...]]

positional arguments:
  dataset_location      Defines the location of the dataset to be checked.
                        The location can be a local netCDF file, a remote
                        OPeNDAP endpoint, a remote netCDF file which returns
                        content-type header of 'application/x-netcdf', or an
                        ERDDAP TableDAP endpoint. Note that the ERDDAP TableDAP
                        endpoint will currently attempt to fetch the entire
                        TableDAP dataset.


optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --test TEST, -t TEST, --test= TEST, -t= TEST
                        Select the Checks you want to perform. Defaults to
                        'acdd' if unspecified. Versions of standards can be
                        specified via `-t <test_standard>:<version>`. If
                        `<version>` is omitted, or is "latest", the latest
                        version of the test standard is used.
  --criteria [{lenient,normal,strict}], -c [{lenient,normal,strict}]
                        Define the criteria for the checks. Either Strict,
                        Normal, or Lenient. Defaults to Normal.
  --verbose, -v         Increase output. May be specified up to three times.
  --describe-checks, -D
                        Describes checks for checkers specified using `-t`. If
                        `-t` is not specified, lists checks from all available
                        checkers.
  --skip-checks SKIP_CHECKS, -s SKIP_CHECKS
                        Specifies tests to skip. Can take the form of either
                        `<check_name>` or `<check_name>:<skip_level>`. The
                        first form skips any checks matching the name. In the
                        second form <skip_level> may be specified as "A", "M",
                        or "L". "A" skips all checks and is equivalent to
                        calling the first form. "M" will only show high
                        priority output from the given check and will skip
                        medium and low. "L" will show both high and medium
                        priority issues, while skipping low priority issues.
  -f {text,html,json,json_new}, --format {text,html,json,json_new}
                        Output format(s). Options are 'text', 'html', 'json',
                        'json_new'. The difference between the 'json' and the
                        'json_new' formats is that the 'json' format has the
                        check as the top level key, whereas the 'json_new'
                        format has the dataset name(s) as the main key in the
                        output follow by any checks as subkeys. Also, 'json'
                        format can be only be run against one input file,
                        whereas 'json_new' can be run against multiple files.
  -o OUTPUT, --output OUTPUT
                        Output filename(s). If '-' is supplied, output to
                        stdout. Can either be one or many files. If one file
                        is supplied, but the checker is run against many
                        files, all the output from the checks goes to that
                        file (does not presently work with 'json' format). If
                        more than one output file is supplied, the number of
                        input datasets supplied must match the number of
                        output files.
  -O OPTION, --option OPTION
                        Additional options to be passed to the checkers.
                        Multiple options can be specified via multiple
                        invocations of this switch. Options should be prefixed
                        with a the checker name followed by the option, e.g.
                        '<checker>:<option_name>' Available options:
                        'cf:enable_appendix_a_checks' - Allow check results
                        against CF Appendix A for attribute location and data
                        types.

  -V, --version         Display the IOOS Compliance Checker version
                        information.
  -l, --list-tests      List the available tests
  -d DOWNLOAD_STANDARD_NAMES, --download-standard-names DOWNLOAD_STANDARD_NAMES
                        Specify a version of the cf standard name table to
                        download as packaged version. Either specify a version
                        number (e.g. "72") to fetch a specific version or
                        "latest" to get the latest CF standard name table.

Examples

Check a local file against CF 1.6

compliance-checker --test=cf:1.6 compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/hycom_global.nc
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         IOOS Compliance Checker Report
                                  cf:1.6 check
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               Corrective Actions
hycom_global.nc has 9 potential issues


                                     Errors
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name                                      Reasoning
§3.2 Either long_name or standard_name    Attribute long_name or/and standard_name
is highly recommended for variable time:  is highly recommended for variable time
§4.3.1 depth is a valid vertical          vertical coordinates not defining
coordinate:                               pressure must include a positive
                                          attribute that is either 'up' or 'down'


                                    Warnings
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name                                   Reasoning
§2.6.1 Global Attribute Conventions    Conventions global attribute does not
includes CF-1.6:                       contain "CF-1.6". The CF Checker only
                                       supports CF-1.6 at this time.
§2.6.2 Recommended Attributes:         institution should be defined source
                                       should be defined references should be
                                       defined
§2.6.2 Recommended Global Attributes:  global attribute history should exist
                                       and be a non-empty string
§8.1 Packed Data defined by water_u    Attributes add_offset and scale_factor
contains valid packing:                are not of type float or double.
§8.1 Packed Data defined by water_v    Attributes add_offset and scale_factor
contains valid packing:                are not of type float or double.

Check a remote file against ACDD 1.3

The remote dataset url is taken from the Data URL section of an OPeNDAP endpoint.

compliance-checker --test=acdd:1.3 "http://sos.maracoos.org/stable/dodsC/hrecos/stationHRMARPH-agg.ncml"

Checking against remote ERDDAP Datasets

ERDDAP datasets are becoming a popular way to access data. Supply an ERDDAP TableDAP or GridDAP URL to the checker:

compliance-checker --test ioos:1.2 "https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/griddap/pibhmc_bathy_60m_guam"

Ensure to supply the URL without the format extension at the end (no .nc, .ncCF, etc.).

Some examples of ERDDAP datasets:

Write results to text file

compliance-checker --test=acdd:1.3 --format=text --output=/tmp/report.txt compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/hycom_global.nc

Write results to JSON file

compliance-checker --test=acdd:1.3 --format=json --output=/tmp/report.json compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/hycom_global.nc

Write results to HTML file

compliance-checker --test=acdd:1.3 --format=html --output=/tmp/report.html compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/hycom_global.nc

Output text from multiple input files to one output file

compliance-checker --test=cf:1.6 --format text --output=/tmp/combined_output.txt compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/hycom_global.nc compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/ww3.nc

Output html and text files from multiple input files (part 1)

In this case you'll get 2 files /tmp/combined_output.txt and /tmp/combined_output.html that contain cf check results for both input files because you only specified 1 output filename.

compliance-checker --test=cf:1.6 --format text --format html --output=/tmp/combined_output.txt compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/hycom_global.nc compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/ww3.nc

Output html and text files from multiple input files (part 2)

In this case you'll get 4 files /tmp/hycom.txt, /tmp/hycom.html, /tmp/ww3.txt, and /tmp/ww3.html that contain cf check results because you specified as many output filenames as input filenames.

compliance-checker --test=cf:1.6 --format text --format html --output=/tmp/hycom.txt --output=/tmp/ww3.txt compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/hycom_global.nc compliance_checker/tests/data/examples/ww3.nc

Download a particular CF standard names table for use in the test

Note During the CF test, if a file has a particular version of the cf standard name table specified in the global attributes (i.e. :standard_name_vocabulary = "CF Standard Name Table v30" ;) that doesn't match the packaged version, it will try to download the specified version. If it fails, it will fall back to packaged version.

compliance-checker -d 35

Downloading cf-standard-names table version 35 from: http://cfconventions.org/Data/cf-standard-names/35/src/cf-standard-name-table.xml


Alternatively, you can specify an absolute path to a standard name table you may have locally in an environment variable named CF_STANDARD_NAME_TABLE and the compliance checker will use that version instead.


## Python Usage

If you are interested in incorporating the IOOS Compliance Checker into your own python projects, check out the following python code example:
```python
from compliance_checker.runner import ComplianceChecker, CheckSuite

# Load all available checker classes
check_suite = CheckSuite()
check_suite.load_all_available_checkers()

# Run cf and adcc checks
path = '/path/or/url/to/your/dataset'
checker_names = ['cf', 'acdd']
verbose = 0
criteria = 'normal'
output_filename = '/output/report.json'
output_format = 'json'
"""
Inputs to ComplianceChecker.run_checker

path            Dataset location (url or file)
checker_names   List of string names to run, should match keys of checkers dict (empty list means run all)
verbose         Verbosity of the output (0, 1, 2)
criteria        Determines failure (lenient, normal, strict)
output_filename Path to the file for output
output_format   Format of the output

@returns                If the tests failed (based on the criteria)
"""
return_value, errors = ComplianceChecker.run_checker(path,
                                                     checker_names,
                                                     verbose,
                                                     criteria,
                                                     output_filename=output_filename,
                                                     output_format=output_format)

# Open the JSON output and get the compliance scores
with open(output_filename, 'r') as fp:
    cc_data = json.load(fp)
    scored = cc_data[cc_test[0]]['scored_points']
    possible = cc_data[cc_test[0]]['possible_points']
    log.debug('CC Scored {} out of {} possible points'.format(scored, possible))

Compliance Checker Plug-Ins

Separate Plug-ins have been developed to complement the Compliance Checker tool with specifications for preparing data to be submitted to different data assembly centers. The version numbering of these plug-ins are not necessarily link to the version of the Compliance Checker, but they are all designed to run with the Compliance Checker tool.

Current Plug-in Releases:

This is a checker for GliderDAC files

This is a checker for NCEI netCDF Templates v1.1 and v2.0 files.

These plug-ins must be installed separately but work on top of the base compliance checker software.

pip install cc-plugin-ncei

Check to see if it installed correctly, list the tests:

compliance-checker -l

You should see

 IOOS compliance checker available checker suites (code version):
 - ncei-grid (2.1.0)
 - ncei-grid:1.1 (2.1.0)
 - ncei-grid:2.0 (2.3.0)
 - ncei-grid:latest (2.1.0)
 - ncei-point (2.3.0)
 - ncei-point:1.1 (2.1.0)
 - ncei-point:2.0 (2.3.0)
 etc ....

Once installing the plug-in the usage is similar to the built in checkers.

Examples of how to use the Plug-Ins

  1. Run the NCEI Point check on a THREDDS endpoint
compliance-checker -t ncei-point -v "https://data.nodc.noaa.gov/thredds/dodsC/testdata/mbiddle/GOLD_STANDARD_NETCDF/1.1/NODC_point_template_v1.1_2016-06-15_133710.844375.nc"
  1. Run NCEI Trajectory Profile Orthogonal Check on local dataset
compliance-checker -t ncei-trajectory-profile-orthogonal -v ~/data/sample-trajectory-profile.nc
  1. Outputting JSON from a gridded file check
compliance-checker -t ncei-grid -f json -o ~/Documents/sample_grid_report.json ~/Documents/sample_grid_report.nc

Disclaimer

The objective of the IOOS Compliance Checker is to check your file against our interpretation of select dataset metadata standards to use as a guideline in generating compliant files. The compliance checker should not be considered the authoritative source on whether your file is 100% "compliant". Instead, we recommend that users use the results as a guide to work towards compliance.

Miscellaneous/Acknowledgements

Contributors

GitHub Contributors Image

Portions of the CF checker are based on Michael Decker's work, http://repositories.iek.fz-juelich.de/hg/CFchecker/