Skip to content

usnistgov/CASE-Implementation-PROV-O

Repository files navigation

CASE Implementation: PROV-O

This repository maps CASE to W3C PROV-O, and provides a provenance review mechanism. Note that contrary to other CASE implementations, this maps CASE out to another data model, instead of mapping another data model or tool into CASE.

Disclaimer

Participation by NIST in the creation of the documentation of mentioned software is not intended to imply a recommendation or endorsement by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, nor is it intended to imply that any specific software is necessarily the best available for the purpose.

Usage

This repository can be installed from PyPI or from source.

Installing from PyPI

pip install case-prov

Installing from source

Users who wish to install pre-release versions and/or make improvements to the code base should install in this manner.

  1. Clone this repository.
  2. (Optional) Create and activate a virtual environment.
  3. (Optional) Upgrade pip with pip install --upgrade pip. (This can speed installation of some dependent packages.)
  4. Run pip install $x, where $x is the path to the cloned repository.

Local installation is demonstrated in the .venv.done.log target of the tests/ directory's Makefile.

Usage and testing

The tests directory demonstrates the three standalone scripts run against CASE example JSON-LD data.

  • case_prov_rdf - This script takes as input one or more CASE graph files, and outputs a graph file that adds annotations to the CASE nodes that serve as a standalone PROV-O graph.
  • case_prov_dot - This script takes as input one or more PROV-O graph files, and outputs a Dot render.
  • case_prov_check - This script takes as input one or more graph files, and reviews data for OWL consistency according to PROV-O (e.g. ensuring no one graph individual is a member of two PROV-O disjoint sets), and for breaks in chain of custody.

On using case_prov_rdf.py to create a PROV-O graph, it is possible to provide that graph to a PROV-O consumer, such as a PROV-CONSTRAINTS validator. This CASE project runs a Python package listed on the W3C 2013 implementations report, prov-check, as part of its sample output. For instance, the CASE-Examples repository is analyzed here.

All of the demonstration rendering (to PROV-O and to SVG images) can be run by cloning this repository and running (optionally with -j):

make

Be aware that some resources will be downloaded, including Git submodules, a Java tool used by the CASE community to normalize Turtle-formatted data, and PyPI packages. External resources not from PyPI are versioned as Git records. PyPI packages, listed in the tests directory, are purposefully imported at up-to-date versions instead of locking a specified version.

Development status

This repository follows CASE community guidance on describing development status, by adherence to noted support requirements.

The status of this repository is:

4 - Beta

Versioning

This project follows SEMVER 2.0.0 where versions are declared.

Ontology versions supported

This repository supports the CASE and UCO ontology versions that are distributed with the CASE-Utilities-Python repository, at the newest version below a ceiling-pin in setup.cfg. Currently, those ontology versions are:

  • CASE 1.0.0
  • UCO 1.0.0

Repository locations

This repository is available at the following locations:

Releases and issue tracking will be handled at the casework location.

Make targets

Some make targets are defined for this repository:

  • all - Build PROV-O mapping files based on CASE examples, and generate figures.
    • Non-Python dependency - Figures require dot be installed.
  • check - Run unit tests.
  • clean - Remove built files.
  • distclean - Also remove test-installation artifacts.

Note that the all and check targets will trigger a download of a Java content normalizer, to apply the ontology process described in CASE's normalization procedures.

Design notes

This repository maps CASE to PROV-O by the use of SPARQL CONSTRUCT queries, listed here.

Both direct relationships and qualified relationships are implemented, according to data tied to CASE InvestigativeActions. For example, the CONSTRUCT query for prov:actedOnBehalfOf) directly relates an action's instrument as a delegated agent of the action's performer. This is built as a qualified, annotatable relationship with the CONSTRUCT query for prov:Delegation).

One CASE practice that might look non-obvious in the PROV context is CASE's representation of an initial evidence submission. CASE represents this by an InvestigativeAction that has no inputs. For a simplification of chain of custody querying, this project represents this as actions that use, and entities that are derived from, the empty set, prov:EmptyCollection. (This is implemented in this query).

Visual-design notes

Some of the tests include small galleries of figures that are tracked as documentation. Other figures can be generated by an interested user, but are not version-controlled at the moment.

See for example:

The following notes describe visual-design decisions.

Visual-design credits

The case_prov_dot module adopts the design vocabulary used by Trung Dong Huynh's MIT-licensed Python project prov. prov's short tutorial landing page illustrates the shape and color selections for various nodes, edges, and annotations. The case_prov_dot program uses this instead of the W3C's design vocabulary, illustrated in Figure 1 of the PROV-O documentation page, because of the greater color specificity used for the various between-node-class edges.

The version of prov that case_prov_dot draws its designs from is tracked as a Git submodule. This tracking is not for any purpose of importing code. The prov.dot package is imported as a library for its styling dictionaries, though this CASE project implements its own dot-formatted render to implement some extending design decisions, some of which are specific to CASE concepts.

Conventions provided by the W3C were found after initial design of this section. Color selection has not been compared, but directional flow has been adopted. Notably, time flows from up to down, and when compared, left to right. (Note, though, that left-to-right temporal flow is not yet implemented.)

Departures from original visual-design vocabularies

Activity-activity edges

Both the illustration in W3C PROV-O's Figure 1, and the edge colors in the prov project, assign black to both wasInformedBy and wasDerivedFrom. This CASE project opts to distinguish wasInformedBy by coloring its edges a shade of blue.

Activity labels

Activity labels in this CASE project include the activity's time interval, using closed interval notation for recorded times, and an open interval end with ellipsis for absent times.

Activity labels with time intervals

Provenance records as collections

A prov:Collection is a subclass of a prov:Entity. To distinguish prov:Collections that are CASE investigation:ProvenanceRecords, versus other prov:Entitys, a slightly different yellow is used, as well as a different shape.

The label form is also adjusted to include a CASE exhibitNumber, when present.

Provenance record versus another entity

Edge weights

The PROV-O model provides direct-relationship predicates, and qualified relationships that imply the same direct structure but instead use an annotatable qualification object. This CASE project illustrates PROV-O direct relationships, but makes one difference from the original prov visual-design vocabulary, using edge representation to represent relationship qualifiability.

Take for example this graph, which presents a shortened illustration from the prov:Attribution example:

@prefix prov: <http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#> .

<urn:example:someAgent> a prov:Agent .

<urn:example:someEntity>
  a prov:Entity ;
  prov:wasAttributedTo <urn:example:someAgent> ;
  prov:qualifiedAttribution <urn:example:someAttribution> ;
  .

<urn:example:someAttribution>
  a prov:Attribution ;
  prov:agent <urn:example:someAgent> ;
  .

The direct relationship in this graph between someEntity and someAgent can be expressed in one statement:

<urn:example:someEntity> prov:wasAttributedTo <urn:example:someAgent> .

The qualified relationship between someEntity and someAgent requires a path through two statements to link the two together:

<urn:example:someEntity> prov:qualifiedAttribution <urn:example:someAttribution> .
<urn:example:someAttribution> prov:agent <urn:example:someAgent> .

The prov:wasAttributedTo predicate can be mechanically derived, by running a CONSTRUCT query that builds the predicate from the path ?nEntity prov:qualifiedAttribution/prov:agent ?nAgent. Since the Attribution object can also be further annotated in analysis, this project considers creation of an Attribution a stronger mapping of object relationships in CASE to PROV-O.

On the other hand, there may be times when the CASE mapping into PROV-O can provide the direct relationship, but not the qualified relationship. This project considers this a weaker mapping of an object relationship in CASE to PROV-O, but still worth illustrating.

To illustrate the difference in projective capability of the subject CASE instance data, a solid line is used to represent when a qualified relationship was constructed from the CASE instance data. A dashed line is used to represent when a direct relationship was constructed, but the qualified relationship could not be constructed. This figure presents a variant on the above example, with the source data in readme-attribution.ttl:

Qualified vs. unqualified relationship illustration

Licensing

This repository is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License. See LICENSE.

Portions of this repository contributed by NIST are governed by the NIST Software Licensing Statement.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •