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Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
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Overview and Analysis of the Department of Defense Discovery Metadata Specification (DDMS)
How the DoD is using metadata to make its massive data stores more visible

The Department of Defense (DoD) Discovery Metadata Specification (DDMS) describes the DOD's preferred approach for decorating data assets with metadata. By providing a common convention for metadata, the DoD is building a common system for asset discovery, search, description, consumption, and security. This article provides a summary of the DDMS's purpose, structure, and capability. Upon completion the reader should have a basic understanding of the DDMS and should know where to go to get more detail and related materials. All questions regarding this article should be directed to Michael Sick at mike@serenesoftware.com.

Metadata
Metadata is typically defined as "data about data." A metadata specification is an attempt to describe the format and content of a metadata convention. Establishing unambiguous conventions for the expression of metadata allows Communities of Interest (COIs) to better leverage their data assets, by making them more visible. Metadata conventions are beneficial because they can aid in the following areas shown in Table 1.

The DDMS establishes a broad set of categories for its metadata as well as a common set of data elements within the larger categories. While the DDMS provides several options for the metadata format (text, HTML, and XML), the formats are clear enough to support consistent metadata production, consumption, and validation. For an alternate look at metadata specifications, see BEA & IBM's ongoing efforts to establish a metadata specification for business computing at: http://dev2dev.bea.com/pub/a/2004/12/emd.html.

DDMS Overview
The United States Department of Defense governs the Army, Air Force, Navy, and a host of supporting intelligence and logistics agencies. Collectively the supporting IT organizations comprise one of the largest, if not the largest, IT enterprises in the world. The DoD's systems are highly variable in their implementation details and the DoD requires a comprehensive approach to making its data assets visible.

In May 2003, the DoD published the DoD Net-Centric Data Strategy that broadly defines the goals and approaches for making data assets available. The DDMS is the official response to the DoD's network-centric view of data discovery and descriptions and is designed to work across varying data formats, types, locations, and classifications. The DDMS specification is governed by the Global Information Grid (GIG) Enterprise Services Metadata Working Group (GES-MWG). The GES-MWG is charged with evolving the specification to continually match the concepts of operations adopted by DoD.

Granularity
The DDMS specification is currently aimed at the higher-level data assets. The DDMS specification does not require that assets be described at the lower "record set" levels. However, the specification is flexible enough to allow tags to be placed at lower levels in the data hierarchy, if the implementers choose to do so.

Structure
DDMS content is separated into Core and Extensible layers. The Core Layer has four predefined element categories: Security, Resource, Summary Content and Format. Each element is assigned an obligation level (Mandatory, Mandatory Unless Not Applicable, Conditional, and Optional). The Extensible Layer is provided to contain content for domain-specific content areas. Additional obligation sets can be expressed through data requirement languages such as XML Schema and additional schemas can be registered in the DoD Metadata Registry.

The core layer is separated into four distinct category sets, Security, Resource, Summary, and Format, each containing elements supporting its designated role. The Security Set provides security-related information intended to classify the document. An external access control system can consume this information and authorize a client to view some or all of the DDMS description or underlying data. The Resource Set contains elements that provide ways to describe administration, maintenance, and pedigree of the data asset. The Summary Content Set describes elements most often associated with data searches and contains elements such as subject, title, and description. The Format Set describes physical aspects of the underlying data such as mime-type. Table 2 shows the Primary Category Elements for the Core Layer.

While the Security elements do not actively protect the data in the DDMS document, they do provide enough information for an external security system to make a decision on what information to provide based on the client's role and credentials. The samples provided in Listings 1-4 were derived from the specification and are intend to give the reader a feel for what a DDMS document might look like.

Suggestions
The core DDMS specification is clear and the site contains many resources (some protected) that help implementers quickly understand the technology. What was not evident from the site was if the DoD provides any resources and encouragement for Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) to implement DDMS support in their projects. Developers of relational database systems (RDBMS), content management systems (CMS), enterprise application integration tools (EAI), software modeling tools, enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, and enterprise information integration (EII) tools should all be strongly encouraged to support DDMS. Custom programming of DDMS support is valuable but repeated implementations across DoD will certainly reduce ROI and slow implementation. A more visible program for ISV support would help the specification succeed over time.

Summary
DDMS provides a comprehensive and extensible system for publishing metadata about data assets. The organization of the standard into a minimal Core Layer and an Extensible Layer allows implementers to start with a subset of the information that they would ideally like to publish and then organically improve the quality of their metadata systems. The organization of elements into Security, Resource, Summary Content, and Format category sets allow producers and consumers to separate out design concerns for access, categorization, search, and consumption. As DDMS is incorporated into custom systems and commercial tools (RDBMS, modeling tools, EAI tools, EII tools, ERP systems, search engines) its value will continue to grow.

References

  • DDMS Site, Global Information Grid (GIG) Enterprise Services metadata Working Group (GES-MWG): http://diides.ncr.disa.mil/mdreg/user/DDMS.cfm
  • Department of Defense Net-Centric Data Strategy, Version 1.0, May 9, 2003, signed by the DoD CIO
  • Dublin Core Metadata Element Set, Version 1.1, July 2, 1999, published by the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)
  • Enterprise Metadata Discovery, published by BEA Systems: http://dev2dev.bea.com/pub/a/2004/12/emd.html
  • About Michael A. Sick
    Michael Sick is the Founder and President of Serene Software, a Jacksonville, Florida firm specializing in Enterprise Architecture (EA) via IT Strategy, IT Governance, IT Budgeting, Service Oriented Architectures (SOA), and IT Legacy Planning services. With over 15 years of experience, he has served as VP Development, Enterprise Architect and Lead Software Architect, while providing expertise to organizations like BAE, Sun Microsystems, Badcock Furniture, Raytheon (Future Combat Systems), the United States Air Force, USDA, BearingPoint, and other firms. Areas of interest include: SOA, IT budget optimization and planning, cloud and distributed computing, and process optimization.

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