I've tried both the web and the Java version of the administrator. I am
using 3.5

 

The error I got after the successful ingest (with the file urls) was 500
Internal Server Error. Purging the datastream and then reimporting the
files works fine.

 

 

From: Richard Green [mailto:r.gr...@hull.ac.uk] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2011 12:00 PM
To: Support and info exchange list for Fedora users.
Subject: Re: [fcrepo-user] Ingest Question

 

Rich

 

Don't assume that it's just you.  This sounds rather familiar and we've
been wondering if it was *us*.  Are you trying this with the Fedora Java
admin client (ingest object(s) from repository)?  If so - exactly what
error message do you get?  What version of Fedora are you using?

 

Richard

___________________________________________________________________

 

Richard Green

Consultant to Library & Learning Innovation, University of Hull

managing the History DMP and Hydra (Hull) Projects

 

http://hydra.hull.ac.uk

http://hydrangeainhull.wordpress.com

http://projecthydra.org

http://historydmp.wordpress.com

 

 

 

From: Burgis, Richard [mailto:burgi...@ais.msu.edu] 
Sent: 29 November 2011 4:04 PM
To: Support and info exchange list for Fedora users.
Subject: [fcrepo-user] Ingest Question

 

I'm moving a test repository and trying various methods to get it to
work.

 

For objects with  embedded content (X), I have no problem ingesting from
the source repository. But when I try ingesting objects with Managed
content (M), I get errors saying that the managed content cannot be
found.

 

I tried exporting the objects and ingesting the exported objects, but I
get the same result.

 

I modified the contentLocation  to use file URLs pointing to the
location of the content in the file system. This time the ingest
succeeded, but I got errors (500?) when I tried to edit or view the
content. I got the same error when I attempted to re-import it via the
Admin program. I was finally able to get the import to work after
purging the items.

 

This seems unreasonable as a process, so I would assume that I am
missing something critical.

 

Any suggestions?

Thanks

Rich

 

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