Create a Custom Workflow

Creating custom workflows can be complex. Some members of the community have contributed their production workflows to a public repo.

Community Workflow Repository

Please feel free to contribute your workflows when you have Opencast in production!

This document will help you get started with creating your own Opencast workflows. For a list of available workflow operations, see:

List of Workflow Operation Handler

Overview

A Opencast workflow is an ordered list of operations. There is no limit to the number of operations or their repetition in a given workflow.

Workflow operations can be configured using configuration elements. The use of string replacement in configuration values allows workflows to dynamically adapt to a given input or user decision.

Document

Opencast workflows are defined in XML, or alternatively in YAML . The structure of a Opencast workflow looks like this:

<definition xmlns="http://workflow.opencastproject.org">

  <!-- Description -->
  <id></id>
  <title></title>
  <tags></tags>
  <description></description>
  <displayOrder></displayOrder>

  <!-- Operations -->
  <operations>
    <operation></operation>
    ...
  </operations>

</definition>

Create a Workflow

This section will walk you through creating a custom workflow, which will encode ingested tracks to defined output format.

Step 1: Encoding Profiles

First create or select the encoding profiles you want to use. For more details on this, have a look at the Encoding Profile Configuration Guide. For this guide we assume that we have an encoding profile mov-low.http which creates a distribution format definition for mp4 video and a feed-cover.http encoding profile to create thumbnail images for the videos.

Step 2: Describe the Workflow

Start by naming the workflow and giving it a meaningful description:

<definition xmlns="http://workflow.opencastproject.org">

  <!-- Description -->
  <id>example</id>
  <!-- Optionally specify an organization -->
  <organization>mh_default_org</organization>
  <!-- optionally specify roles for this workflow -->
  <roles>
    <role>ROLE_ADMIN</role>
  </roles>
  <title>Encode Mp4, Distribute and Publish</title>
  <tags>
    <!-- Tell the UI where to show this workflow -->
    <tag>upload</tag>
    <tag>schedule</tag>
    <tag>archive</tag>
  </tags>
  <description>
    1. Encode to Mp4 and thumbnail.

    2. Distribute to local repository.

    3. Publish to search index.
  </description>
  <displayOrder>10</displayOrder>

  <!-- Operations -->
  <operations></operations>

</definition>

Step 3: Inspect the Media

The first operation will be to inspect the media for technical metadata, such as format and length:

<definition xmlns="http://workflow.opencastproject.org">

  <!-- Description -->
  ...

  <!-- Operations -->
  <operations>

    <!-- inspect media -->
    <operation
      id="inspect"
      fail-on-error="true"
      exception-handler-workflow="error"
      description="Inspect media package">
    </operation>

  </operations>

</definition>

The fail-on-error attribute is a boolean determining whether the workflow will throw an error to the exception-handler-workflow or simply proceed with the remaining operations.

Step 4: Encoding

The next operations will encode the media to the Mp4 format:

<definition xmlns="http://workflow.opencastproject.org">

  <!-- Description -->
  ...

  <!-- Operations -->
  <operations>

    <!-- inspect media -->
    ...

    <!-- encode: mp4 -->
    <operation
      id="encode"
      fail-on-error="true"
      exception-handler-workflow="error"
      description="Encode camera to mp4">
      <configurations>
        <configuration key="source-flavor">presenter/source</configuration>
        <configuration key="target-flavor">presenter/delivery</configuration>
        <configuration key="target-tags">rss, atom</configuration>
        <configuration key="encoding-profile">mov-low.http</configuration>
      </configurations>
    </operation>

    <operation
      id="encode"
      fail-on-error="true"
      exception-handler-workflow="error"
      description="Encode screen to mp4">
      <configurations>
        <configuration key="source-flavor">presentation/source</configuration>
        <configuration key="target-flavor">presentation/delivery</configuration>
        <configuration key="target-tags">rss, atom</configuration>
        <configuration key="encoding-profile">mov-low.http</configuration>
      </configurations>
    </operation>

  </operations>

</definition>

Step 5: Encode to Thumbnail

The next operations will create thumbnails from the media:

<definition xmlns="http://workflow.opencastproject.org">
  ...
  <operations>
    ...
    <!-- encode: images -->
    <operation
      id="image"
      fail-on-error="true"
      exception-handler-workflow="error"
      description="Encode camera to thumbnail">
      <configurations>
        <configuration key="source-flavor">presenter/source</configuration>
        <configuration key="source-tags"></configuration>
        <configuration key="target-flavor">cover/source</configuration>
        <configuration key="target-tags">rss, atom</configuration>
        <configuration key="encoding-profile">feed-cover.http</configuration>
        <configuration key="time">1</configuration>
      </configurations>
    </operation>

    <operation
      id="image"
      fail-on-error="true"
      exception-handler-workflow="error"
      description="Encode screen to thumbnail">
      <configurations>
        <configuration key="source-flavor">presentation/source</configuration>
        <configuration key="source-tags"></configuration>
        <configuration key="target-flavor">cover/source</configuration>
        <configuration key="target-tags">rss, atom</configuration>
        <configuration key="encoding-profile">feed-cover.http</configuration>
        <configuration key="time">1</configuration>
      </configurations>
    </operation>

  </operations>

</definition>

Step 6: Distribute the Media

The next operation copies the encoded media to the Opencast distribution channel:

<definition xmlns="http://workflow.opencastproject.org">
  ...
  <operations>

    <!-- distribute: local -->
    <operation
      id="publish-engage"
      fail-on-error="true"
      exception-handler-workflow="error"
      description="Distribute media to the local distribution channel">
      <configurations>
        <configuration key="download-source-tags">publish,rss,atom</configuration>
        <configuration key="streaming-source-tags"></configuration>
        <configuration key="check-availability">true</configuration>
      </configurations>
    </operation>

  </operations>

</definition>

Accept User Input

Workflow definitions may optionally include variables to be replaced by user input. For instance, this may be used to select optional parts of a workflow. To enable user control of individual workflow instances, the workflow definition must:

Here is an example of a configurable operation:

<operation id="..." if="${somevar}">
  ...
</operation>

The attribute if specifies the execution condition in means of the operation only being executed if that condition evaluates to true. You can find more details on conditional execution in the next section.

Once the operation is configured to accept a variable, we need to describe how to gather the value from the administrative user. The <configuration_panel> element of a workflow definitions describes this user interface snippet. A simple configuration panel could look like this:

<configuration_panel>
  <![CDATA[
    <input id="someaction" name="someaction" type="checkbox" value="true" />
    <label for="someaction">Execute some operation?</label>
  ]]>
</configuration_panel>

The checkbox in this <configuration_panel> will now be displayed in the administrative tools, and the user's selection will be used to replace the ${someaction} variable in the workflow.

This input can also be sent by capture agents, using the ingest endpoints. Please note that capture agents usually do not load the configuration panel. Hence defaults set in the user interface will not apply to ingests. To circumvent this, the defaults operation can be used.

Organisation Properties

Workflows can access organisation properties stored as prop.* in the organisation configuration (etc/org.opencastproject.organization-mh_default_org.cfg for the default organisation mh_default_org). This allows for organisation specific configuration of your workflow. To access the property use the org_ prefix, e.g. prop.my.var can be access using ${org_my.var}.

Conditional Execution

The attribute if of the operation element can be used to specify a condition to control whether the workflow operation should be executed. This so-called execution condition is a boolean expression of the following form:

<expression> ::= <term> ["OR" <expression>]
<term> ::= <value> ["AND" <term>]
<value> ::= ["NOT"]* ( "(" <expression> ")" | <relation> | <bool-literal> )
<relation> ::= <relation-factor> <rel-literal> <relation-factor>
<relation-factor> ::= <operation> | <atom>
<operation> ::= <atom> <op-literal> <atom>
<rel-literal> ::= ">=" | ">" | "<=" | "<" | "==" | "!="
<op-literal> ::= "+" | "-" | "*" | "/"
<bool-literal> ::= "true" | "false"
<atom> ::= <number> | <string>

As the formal description above explains, such boolean expressions may contain…

Example for simple boolean expressions:

<operation id="..." if="${variableName1} AND NOT (${variableName2} OR ${variableName3})">
  …
</operation>

Example for string comparisons:

<operation id="..." if="${captureAgentVendor} == 'ACME Corporation'">
  …
</operation>

Note that operations containing strings and numbers are somewhat well-behaved, for example, the following operation gets executed because 3 is converted to a string and then added to the string '4':

<operation id="..." if="3+'4' == '34'">
  …
</operation>

Note that XML requires certain characters like the < and > operators to be written as XML entities. Even if they are used quoted in attributes. The following table shows all those characters:

"  →  &quot;
'  →  &apos;
<  →  &lt;
>  →  &gt;
&  →  &amp;

Example:

<operation id="..." if="${yresolution} &gt; 720">
  …
</operation>

Thumbnail Support

The Admin UI comes with explicit support for thumbnails that are supposed to represent events visually, e.g. in lists of events as commonly used in video portals and other similar systems. To make it possible to implement the required processing and retain flexibility, the Admin UI will store the following information in variables of workflow instances:

Variable Description
thumbnailType The type of the thumbnail as number (see table below)
thumbnailPosition The time position in case of snapshot thumbnails
thumbnailTrack The source track in case of snapshot thumbnails
Thumbnail Type Description
0 The default thumbnail shall be extracted at a configured time position
1 The thumbnail has been uploaded and is stored in the asset manager as media package attachment
2 The thumbnail shall be extracted at a given time position from a given track

To fully support the thumbnail feature, your workflows should take care of creating the different types of thumbnails and be consistent to the Admin UI thumbnail configuration (see Thumbnail Configuration)

Test the Workflow

The easiest way to test a workflow is to just put it into the workflow folder where it will be picked up by Opencast automatically and will be available in Opencast a few seconds later.

Using YAML Files with Workflows

As an alternative to XML workflow configuration files, it is possible to use YAML files with the following structure.

YAML Workflow Definition Structure

---
id:
title:
tags: []
displayOrder:
description:
operations: []
state-mappings:
  - state:
    value:

YAML Operation Structure

- id:
  if:
  fail-on-error:
  exception-handler-workflow:
  description:
  configurations:
    - key1: value1
    - key2: value2