The Readium Web Publication Manifest is a JSON-based document meant to represent and distribute publications over HTTPS.
It is the primary exchange format used in the Readium Architecture and serves as the main building block for OPDS 2.0.
Editors:
- Hadrien Gardeur (De Marque)
Participate:
- Example
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Syntax
- 3. Resources in the Reading Order
- 4. Media Type
- 5. Discovering a Manifest
- 6. Table of Contents
- 7. Cover
- 8. Extensibility
- 9. Packaging a Readium Web Publication
- Appendix A. JSON Schema
{
"@context": "https://readium.org/webpub-manifest/context.jsonld",
"metadata": {
"@type": "http://schema.org/Book",
"title": "Moby-Dick",
"author": "Herman Melville",
"identifier": "urn:isbn:978031600000X",
"language": "en",
"modified": "2015-09-29T17:00:00Z"
},
"links": [
{"rel": "self", "href": "https://example.com/manifest.json", "type": "application/webpub+json"},
{"rel": "alternate", "href": "https://example.com/publication.epub", "type": "application/epub+zip"},
{"rel": "search", "href": "https://example.com/search{?query}", "type": "text/html", "templated": true}
],
"readingOrder": [
{"href": "https://example.com/c001.html", "type": "text/html", "title": "Chapter 1"},
{"href": "https://example.com/c002.html", "type": "text/html", "title": "Chapter 2"}
],
"resources": [
{"rel": "cover", "href": "https://example.com/cover.jpg", "type": "image/jpeg", "height": 600, "width": 400},
{"href": "https://example.com/style.css", "type": "text/css"},
{"href": "https://example.com/whale.jpg", "type": "image/jpeg"},
{"href": "https://example.com/boat.svg", "type": "image/svg+xml"},
{"href": "https://example.com/notes.html", "type": "text/html"}
]
}
While the Web is the largest collection of interlinked documents ever created, it lacks a mechanism for expressing how a collection of resources, when grouped together can represent a publication.
Publication formats such as EPUB or CBZ/CBR group these documents together using a container format, making them easier to archive or transmit as a whole. But they also break an important promise of the Web: the resources of a publication are not available through HTTP to any client that would like to access them.
W3C has recently provided a definition for a Web Publication:
A Web Publication (WP) is a collection of one or more constituent resources, organized together in a uniquely identifiable grouping, and presented using standard Open Web Platform technologies.
It also provides a definition for a manifest in the context of a Web Publication:
[...] manifest refers to an abstract means to contain information necessary to the proper management, rendering, and so on, of a publication. This is opposed to metadata that contains information on the content of the publication like author, publication date, and so on. The precise format of how such a manifest is stored is not considered in this document.
The Readium Web Publication Manifest is an attempt to standardize a JSON based manifest format that follows both definitions.
To facilitate the interoperability between EPUB and Web Publications, this document also defines a number of extension points to fully support EPUB specific features.
- Collection
- A grouping of some variable number of data items. In the context of this specification, a collection is defined as a grouping of metadata, links and sub-collections.
- Full Collection
- A collection that contains at least two or more data items among metadata, links and sub-collections.
- Compact Collection
- A collection that contains one or more links, but doesn't contain any metadata or sub-collections.
- Manifest
- A manifest is a full collection that represents structured information about a publication.
The Readium Web Publication Manifest is based on a hypermedia model inspired by Atom, HAL, Siren and Collection+JSON among others.
Every Readium Web Publication Manifest is a collection that must contain:
This specification defines two collection roles that are the building blocks of any manifest:
Role | Definition | Compact Collection? | Required? |
---|---|---|---|
readingOrder |
Identifies a list of resources in reading order for the publication. | Yes | Yes |
resources |
Identifies resources that are necessary for rendering the publication. | Yes | No |
Both collections are compact collections, which means that they contain one or more Link Objects.
All additional collection roles are defined in the Collection Roles registry.
Extensions that are not registered in the registry must use a URI for their role.
A manifest must contain a readingOrder
sub-collection.
Other resources that are required to render the publication should be listed in resources
.
All resources listed in readingOrder
and resources
must indicate their media type using type
.
Example 1: Reading order and list of resources
{
"readingOrder": [
{"href": "/chapter1", "type": "text/html"},
{"href": "/chapter2", "type": "text/html"}
],
"resources": [
{"href": "/style.css", "type": "text/css"},
{"href": "/image1.jpg", "type": "image/jpeg"}
]
}
JSON-LD provides an easy and standard way to extend existing JSON document: through the addition of a context, we can associate keys in a document to Linked Data elements from various vocabularies.
The Web Publication Manifest relies on JSON-LD to provide a context for the metadata
object of the manifest.
While JSON-LD is very flexible and allows the context to be defined in-line (local context) or referenced (URI), the Web Publication Manifest restricts context definition strictly to references (URIs) at the top-level of the document.
The Web Publication Manifest defines an initial registry of well-known context documents, which currently includes the following references:
Name | URI | Description | Required? |
---|---|---|---|
Default Context | https://readium.org/webpub-manifest/context.jsonld | Default context definition used in every Web Publication Manifest. | Yes |
Context documents are all defined and listed in the Context Documents registry.
The Readium Web Publication Manifest has a single requirement in terms of metadata: all publications must include a title.
In addition all publications should include a @type
key to describe the nature of the publication.
Example 2: Minimal metadata
"metadata": {
"@type": "http://schema.org/Book",
"title": "Test Publication"
}
Links are expressed using the links
key that contains one or more Link Objects.
A manifest must contain at least one link using the self
relationship where href
is an absolute URI to the canonical location of the manifest.
Example 3: Link to the canonical location of a manifest
"links": [
{
"rel": "self",
"href": "http://example.org/manifest.json",
"type": "application/webpub+json"
}
]
A manifest may also contain other links, such as a alternate
link to an EPUB 3.2 version of the publication for example.
Link relations that are currently used in this specification and its extensions are listed in the Link Relations registry.
The Link Object is a core component of the Readium Web Publication Manifest JSON syntax.
It represents a link to a resource along with a set of metadata associated with that resource.
This specification defines the following keys for this JSON object:
Key | Definition | Format | Required? |
---|---|---|---|
href |
URI or URI template of the linked resource | URI or URI template | Yes |
templated |
Indicates that href is a URI template |
Boolean, defaults to false |
Only when href is a URI template |
type |
Media type of the linked resource | MIME Media Type | No |
title |
Title of the linked resource | String | No |
rel |
Relation between the resource and its containing collection | One or more Link Relations | No |
properties |
Properties associated to the linked resource | Properties Object | No |
height |
Height of the linked resource in pixels | Integer | No |
width |
Width of the linked resource in pixels | Integer | No |
duration |
Duration of the linked resource in seconds | Float | No |
bitrate |
Bit rate of the linked resource in kilobits per second | Float | No |
language |
Expected language of the linked resource | One or more BCP 47 Language Tag | No |
alternate |
Alternate resources for the linked resource | One or more Link Objects | No |
children |
Resources that are children of the linked resource, in the context of a given collection role | One or more Link Objects | No |
The readingOrder
of a manifest may contain references to any text, image, video or audio resource that can be opened in a Web browser.
This specification introduces a dedicated media type value to identify the Readium Web Publication Manifest: application/webpub+json
.
All HTTP responses for the manifest must indicate this media type in their headers.
The Readium Web Publication Manifest may be referenced by resources included in its readingOrder
or resources
using a link.
Such links must include:
application/webpub+json
as the media type of the manifestmanifest
as the relation of the link
Example 4: Link in HTML to a manifest
<link href="manifest.json" rel="manifest" type="application/webpub+json">
Example 5: Link in HTTP headers to a manifest
Link: <http://example.org/manifest.json>; rel="manifest";
type="application/webpub+json"
A Readium Web Publication Manifest may contain a reference to a table of contents.
In order to represent a table of contents in the manifest, this specification introduces an additional collection role:
Role | Definition | Compact Collection? | Required? |
---|---|---|---|
toc |
Identifies the collection that contains a table of contents. | Yes | No |
Example 6: Partial TOC for an audiobook
"toc": [
{
"href": "track1.mp3#t=71",
"title": "Part 1 - This World",
"children": [
{
"href": "track1.mp3#t=80",
"title": "Section 1 - Of the Nature of Flatland"
},
{
"href": "track1.mp3#t=415",
"title": "Section 2 - Of the Climate and Houses in Flatland"
},
{
"href": "track1.mp3#t=789",
"title": "Section 3 - Concerning the Inhabitants of Flatland"
}
]
}
]
As a fallback mechanism, a Readium Web Publication Manifest may identify an HTML or XHTML resource in readingOrder
or resources
as a table of contents using the contents
link relation.
Example 7: Reference to an HTML resource containing a TOC
{
"rel": "contents",
"href": "contents.html",
"type": "text/html"
}
A User Agent may also rely on the title
key included in each Link Object of the readingOrder
to extract a minimal table of contents.
The EPUB profile also defines additional collection roles for embedding navigation directly in the manifest.
A Readium Web Publication Manifest may contain a reference to a cover.
Link Objects in readingOrder
, resources
or links
can be identified as such using the cover
link relation.
All Link Objects containing the cover
link relation must reference an image directly. They should include a height
and width
to facilitate how they are processed by User Agents.
This specification recommends using one of the following media types: image/jpeg
, image/png
, image/gif
, image/webp
or image/svg+xml
.
Example 8: Reference to a cover
{
"rel": "cover",
"href": "cover.jpg",
"type": "image/jpeg",
"height": 600,
"width": 400
}
The manifest provides multiple extension points:
- additional collection roles using the registry of roles or URIs
- additional metadata using schema.org, terms from the registry of context documents or URIs (for individual terms)
- additional link relations from the IANA link registry or URIs
- additional properties using the registry of properties
In addition to these extension points, this specification defines both a profile registry and a module registry as well.
The initial registry, contains the following profiles:
Name | Description |
---|---|
Audiobook Profile | Defines a dedicated profile for audiobooks. |
Digital Visual Narratives Profile | Defines a dedicated profile for visual narratives (comics, manga and bandes dessinΓ©es). |
EPUB Profile | Additional metadata and collection roles for representing EPUB publications. |
A Readium Web Publication may be distributed unpackaged on the Web, but it may also be packaged for easy distribution as a single file. To achieve this goal, this specification defines the Readium Packaging Format (RPF).
A JSON Schema is available under version control at https://github.com/readium/webpub-manifest/tree/master/schema
For the purpose of validating a Readium Web Publication Manifest, use the following JSON Schema resource: https://readium.org/webpub-manifest/schema/publication.schema.json