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Semantic Web Flask

This application is for local querying of RDF data. You can drop your files into the rdf directory, run the application, open up a browser and SPARQL query your data.

Pre-requirements

  1. Install Jena-Fuseki on your machine
  2. Create database 'Musei' on Fuseki (capital M)
  3. Upload MuseiODB4.owl to fuseki
  4. Run the app below

Requirements

Requirements are all Python3.4+ and can be installed with pipenv. If you don't have pipenv yet, install that first. The last command here activates your virtual environment. The top-level dependencies are Flask, Flask-WTF, Flask-Bootstrap, BeautifulSoup4, RDFLib and requests.

pip3 install pipenv
pipenv --three install
pipenv shell

if some packages are missing install via pipenv.

Running the app

The main entry point to the application is run.py. Before you run the app, you should put some RDF files into the rdf directory. This path to this directory can be configured in config.py if you wish to change it. The app will search all sub-directories of the rdf directory for data and it will injest them all.

python run.py

Note

Be aware that currently all the data is loaded into memory with RDFLib, this operation takes a second so keep an eye on your command line to know when the application is ready to use. The advantage of this is the application is pure Python, no need for an external data base and once the data is loaded it is adequately fast. This is not a production solution, just a local app.

Querying the data

In a browser go to http://127.0.0.1:5000, this is the home page and query page. You can input SPARQL queries here, some prefixes have been predefined for you. More namespaces can be defined in config.py, you should define all the prefixes for your data here so that invalid SPARQL queries can be properly debugged.

Note

There is a limit to how many triples a query can return, this is only a little, local Python application, not a production system. Beware, it is possible to crash the application with a query that'll return many, many triples.

Example query:

This will return all the instances (?subject) of all the classes (?object).

SELECT ?subject ?object
WHERE {
    ?subject rdf:type ?object .
}

Credits

Vincenzo Russo

Andrea Sarto