RailTopoModel explained

RailTopoModel is a systemic data model for describing the topology-based railway infrastructure as needed by various applications. The RailTopoModel has been initially developed under patronage of the International Union of Railways (UIC) and was released as International Railway Standard (IRS) 30100 in April 2016.[1] It has been described as a common data model for the railway sector.[2] RailTopoModel is currently continued by UIC as RailSystemModel, a re-branding resulting from the extension of its scope.[3] On the other hand, RTM development (from RTM 1.2) went on as a fork iniitated by the railML community and managed by the organisation railML.org.

Motivation

In the field of railway networks, many non-standard descriptions are needed for addressing specific needs: RINF to describe infrastructure; ETCS for train control and protection; INSPIRE for spatial information. Network operators or suppliers took particular initiatives to harmonize their network representations for gathering, providing, or using network-related data. The purpose of RailTopoModel is to define a general, standard model for railway infrastructure.

History

The development of the RailTopoModel is a result of the ERIM project (abbreviation for European Rail Infrastructure Modelling, previously referred as European Rail Infrastructure Masterplan) within UIC that aimed at standardized data representation and exchange concerning railway networks.[4]

In 2013, starting from the assessment of a small group of Railway infrastructure managers about limitation of current exchange formats for ETCS, RINF, Inspire, and European projects based on network topology, the UIC ERIM feasibility study[5] was launched. The objective of this working group was to qualify the business needs, analyze the existing solutions and experiences, and propose a project plan to build a universal "language" to improve the railway data exchange, and support the design of an infrastructure data exchange format based on topology. Based on this study a topology model, the ‘UIC RailTopoModel’, was developed. In April 2015 RTM V1.0 was released.[6] ‘UIC RailTopoModel’ was released as an UIC recommendation called International Railway Standard (IRS 30100)[7] in spring 2016.

Version 1.2, re-branded RailSystemModel 1.2, was released in 2021 and published online in January 2022.[8]

railML.org, a European open source initiative providing a standard for data exchange in railway networks since 2001, has offered the first use case for RailTopoModel through a new version of its infrastructure schema, railML3.[9]

Under the leadership of railML.org the RailTopoModel was continued to be developed leading to the publishing of RailTopoModel 1.2 in 2018[10] and RailTopoModel 1.4 in 2022.[11]

Structure

RailTopoModel is based on connexity graph theory and it is defined in terms of UML.

Its emphasis lies on:

The model allows defining as many levels as is deemed useful, while ensuring consistency of data between levels.Ideally, standardisation should grant for references and switches between aggregation levels being bijective and different applications being able to exchange data.

Applications

Current applications are:

the topology core of railML's scheme version 3 will be defined on the basis of RailTopoModel.[13]

External links

References

  1. Web site: The Journey of the railML3 Development – railML.org (en) . railml.org . 2022-05-08.
  2. https://uic.org/com/enews/nr/365/article/uic-and-railml-act-for-creating-3939?page=modal_enews UIC and railML act to create the foundations for a Universal Infrastructure Data Exchange Format | UIC Communications
  3. https://rsm.uic.org/ Official UIC RSM website
  4. Web site: UIC e-news 362: The foundation for a Universal Infrastructure Data Exchange Format. November 30, 2014.
  5. Web site: Feasibility Study UIC RailTopoModel and data exchange format. trafIT solutions GmbH. Zurich, Switzerland. September 2013. documents.railml.org. 2022-05-08.
  6. Web site: RailTopoModel — Railway Network Description — A conceptual model to describe a railway network . documents.railml.org . Dresden, Germany. April 2016. 2022-05-08.
  7. Web site: 4th UIC RailTopoModel and railML Conference: Governanceby. UIC Paris and railML.org. April 28, 2015.
  8. Web site: RSM 1.2 .
  9. https://www.railml.org/en/public-relations/news/reader/functioning-of-railml-org-and-railtopomodel.html Functioning of railML.org and RailTopoModel
  10. https://www.railtopomodel.org/en/state-of-development.html State of development – Version Timeline
  11. https://www.railml.org/en/public-relations/news/reader/railml-v3-2-and-20-years.html railML® v3.2 release and 20-year anniversary
  12. Hlubuček . Adam . 2017-08-28 . RailTopoModel and railML 3 in overall context . Acta Polytechnica CTU Proceedings . 11/2017 . 16–21 . 10.14311/APP.2017.11.0016 . 2022-05-08. free .
  13. Web site: railML 3.1 released . Kolmorgen . Vasco Paul . railML.org e.V. . 2017-10-31 . railML.org . 2022-05-08.
  14. https://dataprep.eulynx.eu/2022-01/ EULYNX DataPrep model with RSM 1.2 usage