IdSchemas Metadata

This page describes a first cut at a minimal set of required metadata for the IdSchemas Catalog.

The attribute metadata listed below are a subset of this Metadata compilation.

Pre-Existing RDF predicates
The first category are those properties which have a native pre-existing RDF representation:


 * label: one line descriptions of the schema element (localizable). Suitable for display to an end user.
 * comment: multi-line descriptions of the schema element (localizable). Primarily for use by application developers.
 * equivalence: identifiers of other schema elements of the same kind as this one which are equivalent, differing only in their identifier. This is to support mapping between organizations which have redefined schemas.
 * seeAlso: identifiers of related attributes of interest. Primarily for use by application developers.
 * obsolete/deprecation: an indication of when a schema element was made obsolete by its originator. Primarily of use for application developers.
 * subtype and supertype relations: for indicating specialization of attribute or claim types in a Directed Acyclic Graph. For example, applications can use this property to determine if a more-specific attribute or claim can be provided to a relying party that is requesting a less-specific attribute E.g., a 'mobile telephone number' might be suitable for a relying party requesting merely a 'telephone number'.

Common
The second category are those metadata properties which are common across definitions of schema in many identity systems (e.g., these would be useful in one or more of LDAP, OpenID AX, or I-Card based identity systems):


 * cardinality: how many values of this attribute or claim can be present in a record holding this attribute/claim. For example, a minimum and maximum nubmer of values.
 * value syntax: an identifier of the syntax of this value. This would indicate whether a value is a 'string', what form of date, a binary blob, or a complex type which requires specialized encoders/decoders.
 * value syntax restriction: for string-valued attributes, a constraint on the pattern of acceptable values. Constraints on the choice of characters or strings forming the values. There would be several options here: regular expression (as validators are widely available), XBNF and the XML schema formats.

OpenID AX
The third category are the schema metadata properties originally proposed for use in OpenID AX:


 * sample value: an example value of this attribute. Primarily for use by application developers to have data suitable for testing.
 * acquisition source: an identifier of an Internet service where a value of this internet can be obtained. Primarily for use in applications which are presenting an RP's requirements to the end user. For example, a site requiring a Yahoo ID might indicate that such an ID can be obtained from Yahoo.
 * authority: if there is only a small number of parties on the Internet that can legitimately issue values of this attribute. For example, a 'bigco-employee-number' attribute only is suitable for consideration if issued by a 'bigco' organization service.

Change Control
The fourth category are metadata properties for use in change control:


 * originator of the schema: what party proposed the schema definition.
 * change history: for example, who made a change, the timestamp of the change, etc.