Hi,

I try to add a literal relationship with the object below to a fedora object. 
If running fedora on windows this throws an exception about invalid UTF-8 
characters in ValidationUtility.validateReservedDatastream, and on linux it 
succeeds but the relationship string gets corrupted. I noticed two suspicious 
lines in the Fedora source code in SimpleDOWriter#addRelationship:
String xmlContent = new String(out.toByteArray());
And
                newds.xmlContent = xmlContent.getBytes();
which both do seem to ignore the character set of the String.

The relationship object I want to add:

Apis mellifera capensis and Apis mellifera scutellata are very difficult to 
separate on morphological grounds - the best method seems to be to identify the 
geographical location of the source of the population.  Apis mellifera capensis 
is generally confined to the south west corner of South Africa and along the 
southern coast to Port Elizabeth; Apis mellifera scutellata can be found 
throughout most of the remaining areas of South Africa (See Figure 5 in Hepburn 
and Radloff in Weblinks)

 There appears to be three subspecies of Apis mellifera in South Africa -  A. 
m. capensis, A. m. scutellata and an unnamed "mountain form" (Hepburn & Radloff 
2002).

Workers of A. m. capensis have on average more than 5 ovarioles/ovaries and a 
spermathecal diameter of 0.30mm; the spermathecas of workers of other species 
of Apis are vestigial.

Apis mellifera capensis workers can invade the nests of African bee A. m. 
scutellata, parasitise these colonies, causing colony death.

The same relationship object retrieved back from fedora (on linux, not possible 
on Windows as fedora throws exception when adding):

Apis mellifera capensis and Apis mellifera scutellata are very difficult to 
separate on morphological grounds ??? the best method seems to be to identify 
the geographical location of the source of the population.  Apis mellifera 
capensis is generally confined to the south west corner of South Africa and 
along the southern coast to Port Elizabeth; Apis mellifera scutellata can be 
found throughout most of the remaining areas of South Africa (See Figure 5 in 
Hepburn and Radloff in Weblinks)

 There appears to be three subspecies of Apis mellifera in South Africa -  A. 
m. capensis, A. m. scutellata and an unnamed ???mountain form??? (Hepburn & 
Radloff 2002).

Workers of A. m. capensis have on average more than 5 ovarioles/ovaries and a 
spermathecal diameter of 0.30mm; the spermathecas of workers of other species 
of Apis are vestigial.

Apis mellifera capensis workers can invade the nests of African bee A. m. 
scutellata, parasitise these colonies, causing colony death.
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