학술논문

Skluma: An Extensible Metadata Extraction Pipeline for Disorganized Data
Document Type
Conference
Source
2018 IEEE 14th International Conference on e-Science (e-Science) E-SCIENCE e-Science (e-Science), 2018 IEEE 14th International Conference on. :256-266 Oct, 2018
Subject
Computing and Processing
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
General Topics for Engineers
Geoscience
Signal Processing and Analysis
Metadata
Data mining
Crawlers
Containers
Pipelines
Null value
Metadata extraction
data swamp
scientific repository
Language
Abstract
To mitigate the effects of high-velocity data expansion and to automate the organization of filesystems and data repositories, we have developed Skluma-a system that automatically processes a target filesystem or repository, extracts content-and context-based metadata, and organizes extracted metadata for subsequent use. Skluma is able to extract diverse metadata, including aggregate values derived from embedded structured data; named entities and latent topics buried within free-text documents; and content encoded in images. Skluma implements an overarching probabilistic pipeline to extract increasingly specific metadata from files. It applies machine learning methods to determine file types, dynamically prioritizes and then executes a suite of metadata extractors, and explores contextual metadata based on relationships among files. The derived metadata, represented in JSON, describes probabilistic knowledge of each file that may be subsequently used for discovery or organization. Skluma's architecture enables it to be deployed both locally and used as an on-demand, cloud-hosted service to create and execute dynamic extraction workflows on massive numbers of files. It is modular and extensible-allowing users to contribute their own specialized metadata extractors. Thus far we have tested Skluma on local filesystems, remote FTP-accessible servers, and publicly-accessible Globus endpoints. We have demonstrated its efficacy by applying it to a scientific environmental data repository of more than 500,000 files. We show that we can extract metadata from those files with modest cloud costs in a few hours.