WRLC Storage Journal Deduplication Procedure
WRLC Storage Journal Deduplication Procedure
1. Rationale
2. Identifying duplicate volumes
A duplicate periodical volume is one which contains precisely the same content as a volume already in storage. All of the content of a volume sent for processing must be included in the stored copy for that volume to be considered a duplicate. Where a volume in storage has some of the content of an incoming volume, but not all, the incoming volume is not considered a duplicate.
Examples:
Incoming volume |
Stored volume |
|
v.65 1970 |
v.65 1970 |
Duplicate; same content |
v.65 no.1-2 1970 |
v.65 no.1-2 1970 |
Duplicate; same content |
v.65 1970 |
v.64-65 1969-70 |
Duplicate; all content in stored copy |
v.65-66 1970-71 |
v.65 1970 v.66 1971 |
Duplicate; all content in stored copies |
v.65 1970 |
v.65 no.1-2 (1970) v.65 no. 2-4 (1970) |
Possible duplicate; set aside for review (no.1-4 may be complete, but don’t know how many numbers are in a volume) |
v.65 1970 |
v.65 no.2-4 (1970) |
Not a duplicate; stored volume is incomplete |
v.65 1970 |
v.65 1970 (inc.) |
Not a duplicate; stored volume is incomplete |
v.65-66 1970-71 |
v.65 1970 |
Not a duplicate; all content not in stored copy |
v.65 & index |
v.65 1970 |
Not a duplicate; all content not in stored copy |
v.65 & supplement |
v.65 1970 |
Not a duplicate; all content not in stored copy |
Incoming volume: new items that need to be processed.
Stored Volume: items already in storage.
3. Procedures
A. Periodicals will be run through the deduplication process on unpacking, before sorting by size (there will be no need to sort duplicate volumes by size as they will not be processed into the storage facility).
B. For each periodical, a list of the volumes already in storage will be pulled up using the Journal Volume Overlap reports. The list will be scanned to determine if a volume in storage matches the volume in hand. The report is generated by scanning the volume’s barcode number (normally found inside the back cover; in same cases it will be on the outside of the cover).
1. Go to web page, Journal Volume Overlap - Barcode
2. Scan volume barcode
3. Check the “Volume” column of the report to see if the same volume is listed (as per the guidelines in section 2 above). The report will be sorted by volume number.
a. The sort is a computer sort rather than a numerical sort; all volumes beginning with 1 precede all volumes beginning with 2, etc. So the order will appear as:
1, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 2, 20, 21, 22…..
1, 10, 101, 2, 20, 201, 3, 30, 301…..
4. If the same volume is listed on the report as the volume in hand, the volume is a duplicate and should be placed on the “Discards” cart to be disposed.
Note: If the only volume listed on the report is from the same library as the volume in hand, then it is probably not a duplicate. Compare the barcode on the item to the barcode on the volume. If they match, the volume is not a duplicate. If they do not match, the volume is a duplicate.
5. If the volume in hand is not listed on the report, then it is not a duplicate and should be placed on the “accessions” cart to be processed into storage.
6. If there is any doubt (as in the fourth example in section 2) the volume should be placed on the “Review” cart so a supervisor can make the determination.
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