JHOVE

Digital object validation software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

JHOVE (JSTOR/Harvard Object Validation Environment) - pronounced "jove" - is a format-specific digital object validation API written in Java. JHOVE was a joint project of JSTOR and the Harvard University Library to develop an extensible framework for format validation. The Open Preservation Foundation took over stewardship of JHOVE in February 2015.

DevelopersJSTOR, Harvard University Library and Open Preservation Foundation
Stable release
1.22 / April 29, 2019; 6 years ago (2019-04-29)
Written inJava
Quick facts Developers, Stable release ...
JHOVE
DevelopersJSTOR, Harvard University Library and Open Preservation Foundation
Stable release
1.22 / April 29, 2019; 6 years ago (2019-04-29)
Written inJava
Operating systemCross-platform
LicenseGNU LGPL
Websitejhove.openpreservation.org Edit this on Wikidata
Repository
Close

JHOVE is currently available for downloading as version 1.22.[1] It is licensed under the LGPLv2. The download includes both a command line and a GUI version. It is designed so that third parties can attach different "heads" to the software, and so can be integrated with other applications that need to validate files. It can be run on any Unix, Windows, or Macintosh OS X platform which supports Java 1.6.[2]

Currently supported formats are AIFF, ASCII, Bytestream, GIF, HTML, JPEG, JPEG 2000, PDF, TIFF, UTF-8, WAV, and XML. Documents are analyzed and checked for being well-formed (consistent with the basic requirements of the format) and valid (generally signifying internal consistency). JHOVE notes when a file satisfies specific profiles within formats (e.g., PDF/X, HTML 4.0).

A successor called JHOVE2 is currently available; however, it has a completely separate code base, and was last updated in 2014.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI