John, I am glad to hear that the bagit library will be enhanced.
At Georgetown, I have integrated the the bagit java library into our FileAnalyzer application. We use this application for a number of digitization related tasks. https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer/wiki/Bagit-automation Our real use case is to prepare bags for the APTrust preservation repository. https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer/wiki/Bagit-automation-for-Academic-Preservation-Trust-(APTrust) APTrust requires bags to be packaged as TAR files. This code creates some APTrust tag files and then packages the bag as a tar file. It would be useful to have a tar option built into the bagit library. Since we have a number of applications that are already in Java, we will continue to work with the Java version of the library. Terry On Wed, Mar 23, 2016 at 6:36 AM, Scancella, John <j...@loc.gov> wrote: > Hi All, > > I am currently rewriting the library so that it better conforms to the > spec, and to make it easier to extend and use. I was wondering if people > would be so kind as to provide any feedback on: > * How they currently use the bagit-java library > * Do you use the command line? > * If so what is stopping you from using the python version instead? > * Do you use the library in a java application? > * If so what functionality do you use? What do you wish it did? > * Trying out the latest version (you can see examples here > https://github.com/LibraryOfCongress/bagit-java/blob/master/README.md#examples > on how to use it) > > Thanks > > John > > Please note, all opinions expressed in this email are my own. > -- Terry Brady Applications Programmer Analyst Georgetown University Library Information Technology https://www.library.georgetown.edu/lit/code 425-298-5498 (Seattle, WA)