EPrints

EPrints is a free and open-source software package for building open access repositories that are compliant with the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH). It shares many of the features commonly seen in document management systems, but is primarily used for institutional repositories and scientific journals.[2] EPrints has been developed at the University of Southampton School of Electronics and Computer Science and released under the GPL-3.0-or-later license.[3]

Eprints
Developer(s)University of Southampton
Stable release
3.4.5[1] / 2023-05-25[±]
Repository
Written inPerl
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeInstitutional repository software
LicenseGPL-3.0-or-later
Websiteeprints.org

The EPrints software is not to be confused with "Eprints" (or "e-prints"), which are preprints (before peer review) and postprints (after peer review), of research journal articles (eprints = preprints + postprints).

History

EPrints was created in 2000[4] as a direct outcome of the 1999 Santa Fe meeting[5] that launched what eventually became the OAI-PMH.

The EPrints software was enthusiastically received[6] and became the first and one of the most widely used[7] free open access, institutional repository software, and it has since inspired the development of other software that fulfil a similar purpose,[8] notably DSpace.

Version 3 of the software was officially released on 24 January 2007 at the Open Repositories 2007 Conference[9] and was described by its developers as "a major leap forward in functionality, giving even more control and flexibility to repository managers, depositors, researchers and technical administrators".[10]

Technology

EPrints is a Web and command-line application based on the LAMP architecture (but is written in Perl rather than PHP). It has been successfully run under Linux, Solaris and Mac OS X.[11] A version for Microsoft Windows was released 17 May 2010.[12]

Version 3 of the software introduced a (Perl-based) plugin architecture for importing and exporting data, converting objects (for search engine indexing) and user interface widgets.[13]

Configuring an EPrints repository involves modifying configuration files written in Perl or XML. The appearance of a repository is controlled by HTML templates, CSS stylesheets and inline images. While EPrints is shipped with an English translation it has been translated to other languages through (redistributable) language-specific XML phrase files. Existing translations include Bulgarian, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Russian, Spanish and Ukrainian.[14]

References

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