= Synopsis Ruby openEHR implementation project. * http://github.com/skoba/ruby-impl-openehr = Version Release-0.6.0 = Requirements * Ruby 1.8.7 or higher, 1.9.2 reccomended * RubyGems * Tested with Ruby 1.9.2 on Linux and FreeBSD. * If you use Ruby 1.6, you should prepare racc runtime environment and some adjustment * It should work on other platforms with Ruby support as well. == DESCRIPTION: This is the version 0.6.0 release of Ruby openEHR implementation project. This release is still experimental preview of our work based on openEHR specification release 1.0.2. We implemented almost half of the specifications of the openEHR. The work is still in progress. The intention is to have complete implementation of openEHR Reference Model and some of the Archetype Object Models, with support for archetype based object creation and validation. Parser and Seriarizer are also primitive, we are challanging to descrive archetype as another formalism such as YAML, instead of ADL. Almost all classes passed the test constructed by rspec or test/unit. This test cases are under /spec. Some specifications are not well determined yet, such as rm/security and so on. We postponed to implement such classes. Terminology and Demographic server will be implemented in other project. = Authors Akimichi Tatsukawa, Shinji Kobayashi openEHR.jp, = Copyright The software, including all files in this directory and subdirectories is copyrighted to the original authors and contributors, 2008 All Rights Reserved. = License This product is under openEHR Open Source Software License The openEHR Foundation uses the Mozilla Tri-license 1.1 on all software copyrighted to the Foundation. This licence essentially provides the user a choice of licence conditions under which to operate with any given piece of software, being: the Mozilla Public licence (MPL), and the Free Software Foundation GNU General Public Licence (GPL) and Lesser GNU General Public Licence (LGPL). See the Mozilla relicensing FAQ for details of this license. This in no way constrains the way in which software created by other organisations is licenced.