This library dereferences URLs to get its RDF contents.
This tool is useful in situations where you have a URL, and you just need the parsed triples/quads, without having to concern yourself with determining the correct content type and picking the correct parser.
RDF contents are returned as an RDF stream with RDFJS-compliant quads. If you would prefer a DatasetCore
return type see rdf-dereference-store.
This library takes care of all the necessary boilerplate automatically,
such as content negotiation for getting appropriate RDF serialization, decompression, following redirects, setting base URLs, and so on.
If the server did not emit any content type, then the content type will be guessed based on well-known extensions.
The following RDF serializations are supported:
Name | Content type | Extensions |
---|---|---|
TriG | application/trig |
.trig |
N-Quads | application/n-quads |
.nq , .nquads |
Turtle | text/turtle |
.ttl , .turtle |
N-Triples | application/n-triples |
.nt , .ntriples |
Notation3 | text/n3 |
.n3 |
JSON-LD | application/ld+json , application/json |
.json , .jsonld |
RDF/XML | application/rdf+xml |
.rdf , .rdfxml , .owl |
RDFa and script RDF data tags HTML/XHTML | text/html , application/xhtml+xml |
.html , .htm , .xhtml , .xht |
Microdata | text/html , application/xhtml+xml |
.html , .htm , .xhtml , .xht |
RDFa in SVG/XML | image/svg+xml ,application/xml |
.xml , .svg , .svgz |
SHACL Compact Syntax | text/shaclc |
.shaclc , .shc |
Extended SHACL Compact Syntax | text/shaclc-ext |
.shaclce , .shce |
Internally, this library makes use of RDF parsers from the Comunica framework, which enable streaming processing of RDF.
Internally, the following fully spec-compliant parsers are used:
If you need something more low-level with more control, have a look at rdf-parse
.
$ npm install rdf-dereference
or
$ yarn add rdf-dereference
This package also works out-of-the-box in browsers via tools such as webpack and browserify.
import { rdfDereferencer } from "rdf-dereference";
or
const { rdfDereferencer } = require("rdf-dereference");
The rdfDereferencer.dereference
method accepts an URL,
and outputs a promise resolving to an object containing a quad stream.
const { data } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('http://dbpedia.org/page/12_Monkeys');
data.on('data', (quad) => console.log(quad))
.on('error', (error) => console.error(error))
.on('end', () => console.log('All done!'));
Such a stream is useful when the RDF document is huge, and you want to process it in a memory-efficient way.
Dereferencing works with any kind of RDF serialization, even HTML documents containing RDFa and JSON-LD:
const { data: quads1 } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://www.rubensworks.net/');
const { data: quads2 } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://www.netflix.com/title/80180182');
Similar as above, the rdfDereferencer.dereference
method also accepts file paths.
const { data } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('path/to/file.ttl', { localFiles: true });
data.on('data', (quad) => console.log(quad))
.on('error', (error) => console.error(error))
.on('end', () => console.log('All done!'));
Note that the localFiles
flag MUST be enabled before local paths can be dereferenced for security reasons.
This feature is not available when this package is used within a browser environment.
These resulting quads can easily be stored in a more convenient datastructure
using tools such as rdf-store-stream
:
import {storeStream} from "rdf-store-stream";
import {DataFactory} from "rdf-data-factory";
const dataFactory = new DataFactory();
const store = await storeStream(quads);
// Now you can do quad pattern queries over the stream, such as getting all triples having 'http://example.org/subject' as subject.
const resultStream = store.match(dataFactory.namedNode('http://example.org/subject'));
You can pass custom headers for the HTTP request via the options object:
const { data } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://www.netflix.com/title/80180182', {
headers: {
'Accept-Datetime': 'Thu, 31 May 2007 20:35:00 GMT',
},
});
By default, the GET
method will be used.
You can define the HTTP method via the options object:
const { data } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://www.netflix.com/title/80180182', {
method: 'POST',
});
By default, the GET
method will be used.
You can pass custom headers for the HTTP request via the options object:
const { data } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://www.netflix.com/title/80180182', {
fetch: myFetch,
});
By default, the GET
method will be used.
If dereferencing went through various redirects, it may be useful to determine the final URL.
This can be done using the url
field of the output object:
const { data, url } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://www.netflix.com/title/80180182');
console.log(url); // The final URL, e.g. https://www.netflix.com/at-en/title/80180182
This library will return the HTTP response headers as a Headers object:
const { data, headers } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://ruben.verborgh.org/profile/');
console.log(headers); // Example: new Headers({ 'content-length': '65701' })
Some RDF serializations don't support named graphs, such as Turtle and N-Triples.
In some cases, it may be valuable to know whether or not an RDF document was serialized with such a format.
If this was the case, the triples
flag will be set to true on the resulting object:
const { quads, metadata } = await rdfDereferencer.dereference('https://ruben.verborgh.org/profile/');
console.log(metadata.triples); // If the document only supported triples, true in this case, since it returned Turtle.
A CLI version of this tool exists, which can be installed globally as follows:
$ npm install -g rdf-dereference
After that, you can dereference any URL to a compact JSON-based quad representation:
$ rdf-dereference https://www.rubensworks.net/
[
{"subject":"https://www.rubensworks.net/","predicate":"http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/primaryTopic","object":"https://www.rubensworks.net/#me","graph":""},
{"subject":"https://www.rubensworks.net/","predicate":"http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/maker","object":"https://www.rubensworks.net/#me","graph":""},
{"subject":"https://www.rubensworks.net/#me","predicate":"http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type","object":"http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/Person","graph":""},
{"subject":"https://www.rubensworks.net/#me","predicate":"http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name","object":"\"Ruben Taelman\"","graph":""},
...
After that, you can dereference local files, for which the content type will be identified by extension:
$ rdf-dereference path/to/file.ttl
...
This software is written by Ruben Taelman.
This code is released under the MIT license.