Hi all, (cross-posted to purl-dev)

I'm a documents librarian (and member of the Depository Library Council) and usually just a lurker over here. Thanks Keith and Patricia for the easy workaround. I shared this with govdoc-l and on my blog:

http://freegovinfo.info/node/2704

See especially the comment that as of today, only 3,677 PURLs out of 116,237 have been restored (3.1%). I would love to hear your thoughts/ideas for how this kind of critical system failure can be averted in the future from a technological standpoint. Is it possible to mirror a purl server? Will the same issue occur when GPO moves to handles in FDsys (http://www.handle.net/)? Will a distributed infrastructure as I've briefly mapped out be able to handle these types of critical system crashes better?

Please let me know and I'd be happy to share your ideas with GPO and the documents community.

Best,

James Jacobs




Keith Jenkins wrote:
Thanks to everyone who helped me confirm that the GPO PURL server is
down.  An official announcement on the GPO Listserv said:
   "The PURL Server is currently inaccessible. GPO is working with IT
staff to restore service as soon as possible. We regret any
inconvenience caused by the server problems. An updated listserv will
be sent once service is restored."

While the server is down, here is one workaround (thanks to Patricia Duplantis):
   1. Go to http://catalog.gpo.gov/
   2. Click "Advanced Search"
   3. Search for word in "URL/PURL", enter the PURL
   4. Click "Go"
   5. The original URL at the time of cataloging should appear in a 53x note.

This incident, however, illuminates a weakness in PURL systems: access
is broken when the PURL server breaks, even though the documents are
still online at their original URLs.

Maybe someone more familiar with PURL systems can tell me... is there
any way to harvest data from a PURL server, so that a backup/mirror
can be available?

Keith

--
James R. Jacobs
International Documents Librarian
Green Library, Stanford University
P: (650) 725-1030 E: [email protected]
AIM: LibrarianJames T: @freegovinfo

The more beautiful questions demand the more beautiful answers,
and if we can learn to ask them, we stand a chance of steering
clear of shipwreck on our jury-rigged and not so distant star.
--Lewis Lapham, Lapham's Quarterly I(3), Summer, 2008, p.17.

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