Caltech Center for Advanced Computing Research

XSIL: Extensible Scientific Interchange Language

Kent Blackburn, Albert Lazzarini, Tom Prince and Roy Williams (1999) XSIL: Extensible Scientific Interchange Language. Technical Report. California Institute of Technology. [CaltechCACR:CACR-1999-171]

Full text available as:

PDF - Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader or other PDF viewer.

Abstract

We motivate and define the XSIL language as a flexible, hierarchical, extensible transport language for scientific data objects. The entire object may be represented in the file, or there may be metadata in the XSIL file, with a powerful, fault-tolerant linking mechanism to external data. The language is based on XML, and is designed not only for parsing and processing by machines, but also for presentation to humans through web browsers and web-database technology. There is a natural mapping between the elements of the XSIL language and the object model into which they are translated by the parser. As well as common objects (Parameter, Array, Time, Table), we have extended XSIL to include the IGWDFrame, used by gravitational-wave observatories.

EPrint Type:Monograph (Technical Report)
Subjects:All Records
ID Code:29
Deposited By:Sarah M. Emery
Deposited On:18 March 2004
Record Number:CaltechCACR:CACR-1999-171
Official Persistent URL:http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechCACR:CACR-1999-171
Usage Policy:You are granted permission for individual, educational, research and non-commercial reproduction, distribution, display and performance of this work in any format.

Archive Staff Only: edit this record