This is a Request For Comments on the Comprehensive Kerbal Archive Network (CKAN). Please open discussions in the issues list, and send pull requests to patch this document and associated files.
This document, and all associated files, are licensed under the MIT/Expat license.
The key words "must", "must not", "required", "shall", "shall not", "should", "should not", "recommended", "may" and "optional" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
There have been many comprehensive archive networks for various languages and platforms. While the original network was for TeX (the CTAN), the most successful has been for Perl (the CPAN), with over 11,000 contributors and 30,000 distributions.
The goal of the CKAN is to provide a network that is easy to use for both mod authors and end users. By providing a standardised way to release and install modules, it is hoped that many of the misinstall problems will be eliminated (reducing the workload on authors), and a more straightforward path of installing mods is provided (making it easier for users to use mods).
The fundamental design of the CKAN is as follows:
- Each distribution (a mod and its associated files) must have an associated meta-data file that describes its contents.
- The meta-data file must be detachable from the distribution itself. This facilities easy building of indexes, and means meta-data can be created independently of the distribution itself, easing adoption by authors.
- The meta-data file may be included in the distribution, to facilitate easier indexing. CKAN files may be placed anywhere inside a distribution.
- It is an error for a distribution (zipfile) to contain more than one CKAN file.
Presently the authoritative CKAN metadata repository is hosted on github.
A JSON Schema is provided for validation purposes. Any CKAN file must conform to this schema to be considered valid.
A CKAN file is designed to contain all the relevant meta-info about a mod, including its name, license, download location, dependencies, compatible versions of KSP, and the like. CKAN files are simply JSON files using UTF-8 as character-encoding.
Except where stated otherwise all strings should be printable unicode only.
CKAN files should have a naming scheme of their mod's identifier,
followed by a dash, followed by the version number, followed by
the extension .ckan
. For example: RealSolarSystem-7.3.ckan
.
The CKAN metadata spec is inspired by the CPAN metadata spec, the Debian Policy Manual and the KSP-RealSolarSystem-Bundler
{
"spec_version" : 1,
"name" : "Advanced Jet Engine (AJE)",
"abstract" : "Realistic jet engines for KSP",
"identifier" : "AJE",
"download" : "https://github.com/camlost2/AJE/archive/1.6.zip",
"license" : "LGPL-2.1",
"version" : "1.6",
"release_status" : "stable",
"ksp_version" : "0.25",
"resources" : {
"homepage" : "https://forum.kerbalspaceprogram.com/index.php?showtopic=139868",
"repository" : "https://github.com/camlost2/AJE"
},
"tags" : [
"physics",
"resources",
"atmospheric",
"engines",
"nasa-enginesim",
"b9-turbofans"
],
"install" : [
{
"file" : "AJE-1.6",
"install_to" : "GameData"
}
],
"depends" : [
{ "name" : "FerramAerospaceResearch" },
{ "name" : "ModuleManager", "min_version" : "2.3.5" }
],
"recommends" : [
{ "name" : "RealFuels" },
{ "name" : "HotRockets" }
]
}
The metadata file provides machine-readable information about a distribution.
The version number of the CKAN specification used to create this .ckan file.
A vx.x
string (eg: "v1.2"
), being the minimum version of the
reference CKAN client that will read this file.
For compatibility with pre-release clients, and the v1.0 client, the special
integer 1
should be used.
This document describes the CKAN specification 'v1.34'. Changes since spec 1
are marked with v1.2 through to v1.34 respectively. For maximum
compatibility, using older spec versions is preferred when newer features are
not required.
This is the globally unique identifier for the mod, and is how the mod
will be referred to by other CKAN documents. It may only consist of ASCII-letters, ASCII-digits and -
(dash). Eg: "FAR" or
"RealSolarSystem". This is the identifier that will be used whenever
the mod is referenced (by depends
, conflicts
, or elsewhere).
Identifiers must be both: case sensitive for machines, and unique regardless of capitalization for human consumption and case-ignorant systems. Example: MyMod must always be expressed as MyMod, but another module cannot assume the mymod identifier.
If the mod would generate a FOR
pass in ModuleManager, then the
identifier should be same as the ModuleManager name. For most mods,
this means the identifier should be the name of the directory in
GameData
in which the mod would be installed, or the name of the .dll
with any version and the .dll
suffix removed.
This is the human readable name of the mod, and may contain any printable characters. Eg: "Ferram Aërospace Research (FAR)", "Real Solar System".
A short, one line description of the mod and what it does.
The author, or list of authors, for this mod. No restrictions are placed upon this field.
This field was optional prior to v1.28, but this was more of an oversight than an intentional design decision. It should always have been populated, but the client didn't always enforce this.
A fully formed URL, indicating where a machine may download the
described version of the mod. Note: This field is not required if the kind
is metapackage
or dlc
.
May also be an array of URLs (v1.34), any of which may be used to download the mod.
The license (v1.0), or list of licenses (v1.8), under which the mod is released. The same rules as per the Debian license specification apply, with the following modifications:
- The
MIT
license is always taken to mean the Expat license. - The creative commons licenses are permitted without a version number, indicating the author did not specify which version applies.
- Stripping of trailing zeros is not recognised.
- (v1.2)
WTFPL
is recognised as a valid license. - (v1.18)
Unlicense
is recognised as a valid license.
The following license strings are also valid and indicate other licensing not described above:
open-source
: Other Open Source Initiative (OSI) approved licenserestricted
: Requires special permission from copyright holderunrestricted
: Not an OSI approved license, but not restrictedunknown
: License not provided in metadata
A single license (v1.0) , or list of licenses (v1.8) may be provided. The following are both valid, the first describing a mod released under the BSD license, the second under the user's choice of BSD-2-clause or GPL-2.0 licenses.
"license" : "BSD-2-clause"
"license" : [ "BSD-2-clause", "GPL-2.0" ]
If different assets in the mod have different licenses, the most restrictive
license should be specified, which may be restricted
.
A future version of the spec may provide for per-file licensing declarations.
The version of the mod. Versions have the format [epoch:]mod_version
.
epoch
is a single (generally small) unsigned integer. It may be omitted, in
which case zero is assumed.
It is provided to allow mistakes in the version numbers of older versions of a package, and also a package's previous version numbering schemes, to be left behind.
mod_version
is the main part of the version number. It is usually the version
number of the original mod from which the CKAN file is created. Usually this
will be in the same format as that specified by the mod author(s); however, it
may need to be reformatted to fit into the package management system's format
and comparison scheme.
The comparison behavior of the package management system with respect to the
mod_version
is described below. The mod_version
portion of the version
number is mandatory.
While the CKAN will accept any string as a mod_version
, mod authors are
encouraged to restrict version names to ASCII-letters, ASCII-digits, and the characters .
+
-
_
(full stop, plus, dash, underscore) and should start with a digit.
When comparing two version numbers, first the epoch
of each are compared, then
the mod_version
if epoch
is equal. epoch
is compared numerically. The
mod_version
part is compared by the package management system using the
following algorithm:
The strings are compared from left to right.
First the initial part of each string consisting entirely of non-digit characters is determined. These two parts (one of which may be empty) are compared lexically. If a difference is found it is returned. The lexical comparison is a comparison of ASCII values modified so that all the letters sort earlier than all the non-letters.
Then the initial part of the remainder of each string which consists entirely of digit characters is determined. The numerical values of these two parts are compared, and any difference found is returned as the result of the comparison. For these purposes an empty string (which can only occur at the end of one or both version strings being compared) counts as zero.
These two steps (comparing and removing initial non-digit strings and initial digit strings) are repeated until a difference is found or both strings are exhausted.
Note that the purpose of epochs is to allow us to leave behind mistakes in version numbering, and to cope with situations where the version numbering scheme changes. It is not intended to cope with version numbers containing strings of letters which the package management system cannot interpret (such as ALPHA or pre-), or with silly orderings.
A list of install directives for this mod, each must contain exactly one of three source directives:
file
: The file or directory root that this directive pertains to. All leading directories are stripped from the start of the filename during install. (Eg:MyMods/KSP/Foo
will be installed intoGameData/Foo
.)find
: (v1.4) Locate the top-most directory which exactly matches the name specified. This is particularly useful when distributions have structures which change based upon each release.find_regexp
: (v1.10) Locate the top-most directory which matches the specified regular expression. This is particularly useful when distributions have structures which change based upon each release, butfind
cannot be used because multiple directories or files contain the same name. Directories separators will have been normalised to forward-slashes first, and the trailing slash for each directory removed before the regular expression is run. Use sparingly and with caution, it's very easy to match the wrong thing with a regular expression.
In addition a destination directive must be provided:
install_to
: The target location where the matched file or directory should be installed.- Valid values for this entry for KSP1 mods are
GameData
,Missions
(v1.25),Ships
,Ships/SPH
(v1.12),Ships/VAB
(v1.12),Ships/@thumbs/VAB
(v1.16),Ships/@thumbs/SPH
(v1.16),Ships/Script
(v1.29),Tutorial
,Scenarios
(v1.14), andGameRoot
(which should be used sparingly, if at all). - Valid values for this entry for KSP2 mods are
GameRoot
,BepInEx/plugins
(v1.32), andGameData/Mods
(v1.33) - A path to a given subfolder location can be specified only under
GameData
(v1.2); for example:GameData/MyMod/Plugins
. The client must check this path and abort the install if any attempts to traverse up directories are found (eg:GameData/../Example
). - Subfolder paths under a matched directory will be preserved, but directories will only
be created when installing to
GameData
,Tutorial
, orScenarios
.
- Valid values for this entry for KSP1 mods are
In addition, any number of optional directives may be provided:
as
: (v1.18) The name to give the matching directory or file when installed. Allows renaming directories or files.filter
: A string, or list of strings, of file parts that should not be installed. These are treated as literal things which must match a file name or directory. Examples of filters may beThumbs.db
, orSource
. Filters are considered case-insensitive.filter_regexp
: (v1.10) A string, or list of strings, which are treated as case-sensitive C# regular expressions which are matched against the full paths from the installing zip-file. If a file matches the regular expression, it is not installed.include_only
: (v1.24) A string, or list of strings, of file parts that should be installed. These are treated as literal things which must match a file name or directory. Examples of this may beSettings.cfg
, orPlugin
. These are considered case-insensitive.include_only_regexp
: (v1.24) A string, or list of strings, which are treated as case-sensitive C# regular expressions which are matched against the full paths from the installing zip-file. If a file matches the regular expression, it is installed.find_matches_files
: (v1.16) If set totrue
then bothfind
andfind_regexp
will match files in addition to directories.
If no install sections are provided, a CKAN client must find the
top-most directory in the archive that matches the module identifier,
and install that with a target of GameData
. In other words, the
default install section is:
"install": [
{
"find": "<identifier>",
"install_to": "GameData"
}
]
A comment field, if included, is ignored. It is not displayed to users, nor used by programs. Its primary use is to convey information to humans examining the CKAN file manually
A free form, long text description of the mod, suitable for displaying detailed information about the mod.
The release status of the mod, one of stable
, testing
or development
,
in order of decreasing stability. If not specified, a value of stable
is
assumed.
The version of KSP this mod is targeting. This may be the string "any",
a number (eg: 0.23.5
) or may only contain the first two parts of
the version string (eg: 0.25
). In the latter case, any release
starting with the ksp_version
is considered acceptable.
If no KSP target version is included, a default of "any" is assumed.
The minimum version of KSP the mod requires to operate correctly.
Same format as ksp_version
. It is an error to include both this
and the ksp_version
field.
The maximum version of KSP the mod requires to operate correctly.
Same format as ksp_version
. It is an error to include both this
and the ksp_version
field.
(v1.16)
If true
, the mod will only be installed if the user's KSP version is
exactly targeted by the mod.
If false
, the mod will be installed if the KSP version it targets is
"generally recognised" as being compatible with the KSP version
the user has installed. It is up to the CKAN client to determine what is
"generally recognised" as working.
As an example, a mod with a ksp_version
of 1.0.3
will also install in
KSP 1.0.4
(but not any other version) when ksp_version_strict
is false.
This field defaults to false
, including for spec_version
s less than
v1.16
, however CKAN clients prior to v1.16
would only perform strict
checking.
(v1.27) The tags
field describes keywords that a user or program may
use to classify or filter the mod in a list. These may include general tags
which define how the mod interacts with or alters KSP or specific tags
defining what has been added or changed from stock gameplay. Tags may
contain lowercase alphanumeric characters or hyphens.
All mods should have tags, but it is technically allowed to omit them to allow historical metadata to remain valid.
A mod's tags are shown in the mod info section of the client, and the mod list may be filtered to find all mods with a given tag.
Example tags:
"tags": [
"config",
"physics",
"parts",
"science"
]
Currently recommended tags are listed here:
https://github.com/KSP-CKAN/CKAN/wiki/Suggested-Tags
(v1.27)
A list of strings indicating the locales for which this module includes localizations, in KSP's naming convention.
"localizations": [
"en-us",
"es-es",
"fr-fr",
"zh-cn",
"ru"
]
If supplied, download_size
is the number of bytes to expect when
downloading from the download
URL. It is recommended that this field is
only generated by automated tools (where it is encouraged),
and not filled in by hand.
If supplied, download_hash
is an object of hash digests of the downloaded file.
Clients up to v1.34 require both sha1
and sha256
to be populated, but
later clients allow either or both to be omitted.
It is recommended that this field is only generated by automated
tools (where it is encouraged), and not filled in by hand.
"download_hash": {
"sha256": "E3B0C44298FC1C149AFBF4C8996FB92427AE41E4649B934CA495991B7852B855"
}
If supplied, download_content_type
is the content type of the file
downloaded from the download
URL. It is recommended that this field is
only generated by automated tools (where it is encouraged),
and not filled in by hand.
"download_content_type": "application/zip"
If supplied, install_size
is the number of bytes consumed by the module
when it is installed. It is recommended that this field is only generated
by automated tools (where it is encouraged), and not filled in by hand.
If supplied, release_date
is the timestamp when the described version
of the mod was released. The format is ISO 8601.
"release_date": "2019-11-30T14:54:45.995Z",
Relationships are optional fields which describe this mod's relationship to other mods. They can be used to ensure that a mod is installed with one of its graphics packs, or two mods with conflicting functionality are not installed at the same time.
At its most basic, this is an array of objects, each being a name and identifier:
"depends" : [
{ "name" : "ModuleManager" },
{ "name" : "RealFuels" },
{ "name" : "RealSolarSystem" }
]
Each relationship is an array of entries, each entry must
have a name
.
The optional fields min_version
, max_version
,
and version
, may more precisely describe which versions are needed:
"depends" : [
{ "name" : "ModuleManager", "min_version" : "2.1.5" },
{ "name" : "RealSolarSystem", "min_version" : "7.3" },
{ "name" : "RealFuels" }
]
It is an error to mix version
(which specifies an exact version) with
either min_version
or max_version
in the same object.
(v1.0) Clients implementing versions of the spec older than v1.8
must allow for the optional version fields to be present, but may choose
to treat them as if they were absent. (v1.8) Clients implementing the
v1.8
spec and above must respect the optional version fields if
present.
(v1.26) Clients implementing version v1.26
or later of the spec must support
an alternate form of relationship consisting of an any_of
key with a
value containing an array of relationships. This relationship is considered
satisfied if any of the specified modules are installed. It is intended for
situations in which a module supports multiple ways of providing functionality,
which are not in themselves mutually compatible enough to use the "provides"
property.
"depends": [
{
"any_of": [
{ "name": "TextureReplacer" },
{ "name": "TextureReplacerReplaced" },
{ "name": "SigmaReplacements-Skybox" },
{ "name": "DiRT" }
]
}
]
(v1.31) Clients implementing version v1.31
or later of the spec must support
the choice_help_text
property in a relationship. This string is presented to the user
if they must be prompted to choose between two or more mods to satisfy the relationship.
depends:
- name: VirtualIdentifier1
choice_help_text: Choose the HR option for high resolution
- any_of:
- name: ModA
- name: ModB
choice_help_text: Pick ModA if you prefer polka dots, ModB otherwise
(v1.34) Clients implementing version v1.34
or later of the spec must support
the suppress_recommendations
property in a relationship. If this property is true
,
then recommendations or suggestions will not be shown for the module satisfying this
relationship or its (sole) dependencies.
depends:
- name: OtherMod
suppress_recommendations: true
In the interest of the end-user experience, the relationship metadata should only be used when a game-related relationship exists between the mods. They do not have to directly interact, but the rationale should be apparent. It should not be used purely for promotional purposes. This is consistent with the Debian spec, which states:
tells the ... user that the listed packages are related to this one and can perhaps enhance its usefulness
A list of mods which are required for the current mod to operate. These mods must be installed along with the current mod being installed.
A list of mods which are recommended, but not required, for a typical user. This is a strong recommendation, and recommended mods will be installed unless the user requests otherwise.
A list of mods which are suggested for installation alongside this mod. This is a weak recommendation, and by default these mods will not be installed unless the user requests otherwise.
(v1.2) A list of mods which are supported by this mod. This is the reverse
of suggests
- when a supported mod is installed, this mod may also be
offered for installation. This is equivalent to the enhances specifier from
Debian.
A list of mods which conflict with this mod. The current mod will not be installed if any of these mods are already on the system.
(v1.26) This is a way to mark a specific mod identifier as being obsoleted and tell the client what it has been replaced by. It contains a single mod that should be selected for installation if a replace command is performed on this mod, while this mod is uninstalled. If this mod identifier is brought back to life, an epoch change should be applied. A replaced_by relationship should be added to the final release of the mod being replaced. The listed mod should include a "provides" relationship either to this mod, or one of this mod's listed "provides".
replaced_by differs from other relationships in two ways:
- It is not an array. Only a single mod can be defined as the replacement.
- Only "version" and "min_version" are permitted as options.
The resources
field describes additional information that a user or
program may wish to know about the mod, but which are not required
for its installation or indexing. Presently the following fields
are described. Unless specified otherwise, these are URLs:
homepage
: The preferred landing page for the mod.bugtracker
: The mod's bugtracker if it exists.discussions
: The mod's discussions page if it exists.license
: The mod's license.repository
: The repository where the module source can be found.ci
: (v1.6) Continuous Integration (e.g. Jenkins) Server where the module is being built.x_ci
is an alias used in netkan.spacedock
: The mod on SpaceDock.curse
: (v1.20) The mod on Curse.manual
: The mod's manual, if it exists.metanetkan
: (v1.27) URL of the module's remote hosted netkanremote-avc
: URL of remote version file. If set in the netkan file, will be used to find the online copy of the version file. Otherwise theURL
property from the internal version file will be assigned to this field and used instead.remote-swinfo
: URL of remoteswinfo.json
file. Theversion_check
property from the internalswinfo.json
file will be assigned to this field.store
: (v1.28) URL where you can purchase a DLCsteamstore
: (v1.28) URL where you can purchase a DLC on Steam
Example resources:
"resources" : {
"homepage" : "https://tinyurl.com/DogeCoinFlag",
"bugtracker" : "https://github.com/pjf/DogeCoinFlag/issues",
"repository" : "https://github.com/pjf/DogeCoinFlag",
"ci" : "https://ksp.sarbian.com/jenkins/DogecoinFlag",
"spacedock" : "https://spacedock.info/mod/269/Dogecoin%20Flag",
"curse" : "https://kerbal.curseforge.com/projects/220221"
}
While all currently defined resources are URLs, future revisions of the spec may provide for more complex types.
It is permissible to have fields prefixed with an x_
. These are considered
custom use fields, and will be ignored. For example:
"x_twitter" : "https://twitter.com/pjf"
These fields are optional, and should only be used with good reason. Typical mods should not include these special use fields.
Specifies the type of package the .ckan file represents. Allowed values:
package
or empty - the default, a normal installable modulemetapackage
- a distributable .ckan file that has relationships to other mods while having nodownload
of its own. v1.6dlc
- A paid expansion from SQUAD, which CKAN can detect but not install. Also has nodownload
. v1.28
A list of identifiers, that this module provides. This field is intended for use in modules which require one of a selection of texture downloads, or one of a selection of mods which provide equivalent functionality. For example:
"provides" : [ "RealSolarSystemTextures" ]
It is recommended that this field be used sparingly, as all mods with
the same provides
string are essentially declaring they can be used
interchangeably.
It is considered acceptable to use this field if a mod is renamed,
and the old name of the mod is listed in the provides
field. This
allows for mods to be renamed without updating all other mods which
depend upon it.
A module may both provide functionality, and conflict
with the same
functionality. This allows relationships that ensure only one set
of assets are installed. (Eg: CustomBiomesRSS
and CustomBiomesKerbal
both provide and conflict with CustomBiomesData
, ensuring that both
cannot be installed at the same time.)
Any field starting with x_
(an x, followed by an underscore) is considered
an extension field. The CKAN tool-chain will ignore any such fields.
These fields may be used to include additional machine or human-readable
data in the files.
For example, one may have an x_maintained_by
field, to indicate the
maintainer of a CKAN file, or an x_generated_by
field to indicate
it's the result of a custom build process.
Extension fields are unrestricted, and may contain any sort of data, including lists and objects.
NetKAN is the name the tool which is used to automatically generate CKAN files from a variety of sources. NetKAN
consumes .netkan
files to produce .ckan
files. .netkan
files are a strict superset of .ckan
files. Every
.ckan
file is a valid .netkan
file but not vice versa. NetKAN uses the following fields to produce .ckan
files.
If a mod is hosted on multiple servers, a .netkan
file may contain multiple metadata documents
(separated by ---
in YAML or separate top-level {}
object blocks in JSON), one per server.
These will all be checked for new releases and the results merged based on the value of their version
properties,
resulting in a download
property containing an array of multiple download URLs.
A .netkan
file may be in either JSON or YAML format. All examples shown below assume YAML, but the JSON equivalents will work the same way.
Note that #
is the comment character in YAML, so even if you choose YAML syntax, you still can't omit the quotes around a value that includes #
, such as typical values of $kref
and $vref
:
$kref: "#/ckan/spacedock/1234"
$vref: "#/ckan/ksp-avc"
If a module's download contains a file with a .ckan
extension, this file will be parsed and its contents added to the module's metadata. This can be a convenient way to handle metadata values that can change from one version to the next, such as dependencies.
An internal .ckan
file may be in either JSON or YAML format.
The $kref
field indicates that data should be filled in from an external service provider. The following $kref
values are understood. Only one $kref
field may be present in a .netkan
file.
Indicates that data should be fetched from SpaceDock, using the :sdid
provided. For example: #/ckan/spacedock/269
.
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
name
license
abstract
author
version
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
resources.homepage
resources.spacedock
resources.repository
resources.bugtracker
resources.x_screenshot
ksp_version
release_date
The Curse API that we used to use was sunsetted, so Curse is no longer supported.
Expand to see the old info
Indicates that data should be fetched from Curse, using the :cid
provided. The :cid
may be a number for modules indexed prior to March 2018, or the name from the Curse URL otherwise. For example: #/ckan/curse/220221
or #/ckan/curse/photonsail
.
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
name
license
author
version
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
resources.curse
ksp_version
Indicates that data should be fetched from GitHub, using the :user
and :repo
provided.
For example: #/ckan/github/pjf/DogeCoinFlag
.
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
name
license
(v1.26)abstract
author
version
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
resources.repository
resources.bugtracker
release_date
Optionally, one of asset_match
with :filter_regexp
or version_from_asset
with :version_regexp
may be provided:
asset_match
withfilter_regexp
: A string which is treated as case-sensitive C# regular expressions which are matched against the name of the released artifact.version_from_asset
with:version_regexp
: A string which is treated as case-sensitive C# regular expressions which are matched against the names of all release artifacts. Every matching artifact will result in a separate metadata output. The:version_regexp
must have a named capturing groupversion
, which is used as theversion
of each asset's module.
An example .netkan
excerpt:
$kref: '#/ckan/github/pjf/DogeCoinFlag/version_from_asset/^DogeCoinFlag-(?<version>.+).zip$'
An x_netkan_github
field may be provided to customize how the metadata is fetched from GitHub. It is an object
with the following fields:
use_source_archive
(type:boolean
) (default:false
)
Specifies that the source ZIP of the repository itself will be used instead of any assets in the release.
Indicates that data should be fetched from GitLab, using the :user
and :repo
provided.
For example: #/ckan/gitlab/Ailex-/starilex-mk1-iva
.
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
name
abstract
author
version
resources.repository
resources.bugtracker
resources.manual
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
release_date
An example .netkan
excerpt:
$kref: '#/ckan/gitlab/Ailex-/starilex-mk1-iva'
An x_netkan_gitlab
field must be provided to customize how the metadata is fetched from GitLab. It is an object
with the following fields:
use_source_archive
(type:boolean
) (default:false
)
Specifies that the source ZIP of the release will be used instead of any discrete assets.
Note that this must betrue
! GitLab only offers source ZIP assets, so we can only index mods that use them. If at some point in the future GitLab adds support for non-source assets, we will be able to add support for setting this property tofalse
or omitting it.
Indicates that data should be fetched from SourceForge using the :repo
provided.
For example: '#/ckan/sourceforge/ksre
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
name
resources.homepage
resources.repository
resources.bugtracker
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
release_date
An example .netkan
excerpt:
$kref: '#/ckan/sourceforge/ksre'
Indicates data should be fetched from a Jenkins CI server using the :joburl
provided. For
example: #/ckan/jenkins/https://jenkins.kspmods.example/job/AwesomeMod/
.
The following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
version
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
resources.ci
release_date
An x_netkan_jenkins
field may be provided to customize how the metadata is fetched from the Jenkins server. It is
an object
with the following fields:
build
(type:string
, enumerated) (default:"stable"
)
Specifies the type of build to use. Possible values are"any"
,"completed"
,"failed"
,"stable"
,"successful"
,"unstable"
, or"unsuccessful"
. Many of these values do not make sense to use in practice but are provided for completeness.asset_match
(type:string
, regex) (default:\.zip$
)
Specifies a regex which selects which artifact to use by filename (case-insensitively). Not having exactly one matching asset is an error.use_filename_version
(type:boolean
, default:false
)
Specifies if the filename of the matched artifact should be used as the value of theversion
property. Combined with thex_netkan_version_edit
property this allows the version to be extracted from the filename itself. Otherwise the expectation is that the archive will have an AVC.version
file which will be used to generate theversion
value.
If any options are not present their default values are used.
An example .netkan
excerpt:
$kref: '#/ckan/jenkins/https://jenkins.kspmods.example/job/AwesomeMod/'
x_netkan_jenkins:
build: stable
asset_match: \.zip$
use_filename_version: false
Indicates data should be fetched from a HTTP server, using the :url
provided. For example:
$kref: '#/ckan/http/https://mysite.com/download_my_mod'
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
This method depends on the existence of an AVC .version
file in the download file
to determine:
version
Indicates that data should be fetched from a KSP-AVC .version file at the :url
provided. The file should be in the KSP-AVC JSON file format, see the KSP-AVC spec. The DOWNLOAD
property of the file is used to find the download. For example: #/ckan/ksp-avc/http://taniwha.org/~bill/EL.version
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
name
download
download_size
download_hash
download_content_type
resources.repository
version
ksp_version
ksp_version_min
ksp_version_max
Indicates that data should be fetched from another .netkan
file hosted remotely.
For example: #/ckan/netkan/https://www.kspmods.example/AwesomeMod.netkan
.
The remote .netkan
file is downloaded and used as if it were the original. .netkan
files which contain such a
reference are known as recursive netkans or metanetkans. They are primarily used so that mod authors can provide
authoritative metadata.
A metanetkan may be in either JSON or YAML format.
The following conditions apply:
- A metanekan may not reference another metanetkan, otherwise an error is produced.
- Any fields specified in the metanetkan will override any fields in the target netkan file.
When used, the following fields will be auto-filled if not already present:
resources.metanetkan
An example .netkan
including all required fields for a valid metanetkan:
spec_version: 1,
identifier: AwesomeMod
$kref: '#/ckan/netkan/https://www.kspmods.example/AwesomeMod.netkan'
The $vref
field indicates that version data should be filled in from an external service provider. Only one
$vref
field may be present in a document.
If present, a $vref
symbol of #/ckan/ksp-avc
states that version
information should be retrieved from an embedded KSP-AVC .version
file in the
file downloaded by the download
field. The following conditions apply:
- Only
.version
files that would be installed for this mod are considered. (In theory. Transformer ordering may cause files outside the installed folders being considered) - It is an error if more than one
.version
file would be considered. - It is an error if the
.version
file does not validate according to the KSP-AVC spec. - The
KSP_VERSION
field for the.version
file will be ignored if theKSP_VERSION_MIN
andKSP_VERSION_MAX
fields are set. - Netkan will first attempt to use anything after
ksp-avc
as a literal path within the zip file, and if that fails, will use the string as a regexp to search for a matching file to use.
When used, the following fields are auto-generated:
ksp_version
ksp_version_min
ksp_version_max
resources.remote-avc
(if theURL
property is present in the version file)
Version information is generated in such a way as to ensure maximum compatibility. For example if the .version
file
specifies that the mod is compatible with KSP version 1.0.2
but the existing version
specifies 1.0.5
then the
version information generated will give a ksp_version_min
of 1.0.2
and a ksp_version_max
of 1.0.5
.
If (and only if) no mod version number has been identified (eg a #/ckan/http/:url
), then the following field will also be auto-generated:
version
If present, a $vref
symbol of #/ckan/space-warp
states that version
information should be retrieved from an embedded SpaceWarp swinfo.json
file in the
file downloaded by the download
field.
When used, the following fields are auto-generated:
ksp_version
ksp_version_min
ksp_version_max
name
author
abstract
version
resources.remote-swinfo
(if theversion_check
property is present in theswinfo.json
file)
The x_netkan_epoch
field is used to specify a minimum epoch
number manually in the version
field. Its value should be
an unsigned 32-bit integer.
Note that an epoch can be added without this property or incremented automatically, if the auto-indexer detects an out-of-order release.
An example .netkan
excerpt:
x_netkan_epoch: 1
If true, then this module allows a freshly released version to have a version number smaller than previously existing releases.
This should be used for modules that intentionally release "backport" versions, to disable automatic incrementing of epochs for out of order releases. Typical mods should not use this property, to allow their version epochs to be automatically incremented if they release an out of order version.
An example .netkan
excerpt:
x_netkan_allow_out_of_order: true
The x_netkan_force_v
field is used to specify that a v
should be prepended to the version
field. It is a
boolean
field.
A combination of x_netkan_epoch
and x_netkan_version_edit
should be used instead to ensure that the version
field only contains the actual version string.
An example .netkan
excerpt:
x_netkan_force_v: true
The x_netkan_version_edit
field is used to edit the final value of the version
field. x_netkan_version_edit
is
an object
with the following fields:
find
(type:string
, regex) (default: none)
A regex to match against the existingversion
field.replace
(type:string
, regex substitution) (default:"${version}"
)
Specifies a regex substitution string which will be used as the value of the newversion
field. The following special variables are supported and will be filled in by various metadata aggregated during inflation:${tag}
($kref #/ckan/github
only): Replaced with the release tag from GitHub.
strict
(type:boolean
, default:true
)
Specifies if NetKAN should produce an error iffind
fails to produce a match against theversion
field.
x_netkan_version_edit
can also be a string
in which case its value is treated as the value the find
field and
the default values for the replace
and strict
fields are used.
An example .netkan
excerpt:
$kref: '#/ckan/jenkins/https://jenkins.kspmods.example/job/AwesomeMod/'
x_netkan_version_edit:
find: ^[vV]?(?<version>.+)$
replace: ${version}
strict: true
The x_netkan_override
field is used to override field values based on the value of the version
field.
x_netkan_override
is an array
of object
s. Each object
may have the following fields:
version
(type:array
ofstring
, version comparison)
An array of version comparison strings that are used to match againstversion
. Version comparison strings are of the form"[operator]<version>"
whereoperator
is one of=
,<
,>
,<=
, or>=
. If nooperator
is given it is equivalent to specifying=
. In order for the override to match all the comparisons must be true. Therefore a range may be specified as such:[ ">=1.0", "<2.0" ]
. Astring
may also be specified instead of anarray
in which case it is treated as an array with a single element equal to the value of the string.before
(type:string
, transformation name)
The name of a transformation this override to happen directly before.after
(type: `string:, transformation name)
The name of a transformation this override to happen directly after.override
(type:object
)
An object whose fields will override the fields already present if a match occurs. No merging of values occurs, the values of the fields are entirely replaced.delete
(type:array
ofstring
)
An array of strings which are the names of fields to remove if a match occurs.
The possible values of before
and after
are:
$none
$all
avc
download_attributes
epoch
forced_v
generated_by
github
http
internal_ckan
jenkins
metanetkan
optimus_prime
property_sort
spacedock
curse
strip_netkan_metadata
version_edit
versioned_override
If no before
or after
is specified then the override occurs at a "reasonable" point in the transformation process.
Most overrides should not specify a before
or after
unless there is a specific need to.
When any metadata changes occur which are version specific, for example a new dependency is added, overrides are the recommended means of specifying them. Overrides may also be used to stage metadata changes, for example when new dependencies are anticipated to be added in yet unreleased versions of a mod. This allows mod metadata to be up-to-date as soon as possible without requiring excessive coordination.
These properties alter the way the NetKAN-bot pushes updated metadata for a module. Normally, a new or changed .ckan file
will be committed and pushed to CKAN-meta's master
branch, which makes it immediately available to users. If there is a
chance that such an update will contain incorrect metadata, for example if the game compatibility is hard-coded in the
netkan and changes upstream, then a manual review step may be advisable.
If x_netkan_staging
is set to true
, changed metadata files for this module will be committed to a separate
module-specific branch and a pull request will be created to merge this branch to master
. This allows CKAN team members
to check manually that the changes are correct before they are released to users.
To make the review process easier, set x_netkan_staging_reason
to a string explaining why staging is enabled. This will
be inserted into the body of the pull request as a reminder of the manual checks that should be performed before merging.
For example, you may advise reviewers to check a module's game compatibility metadata against its forum thread.