Open Source Library Management for Universities
An LGPLv3-licensed Integrated Library System (ILS) for university libraries that need source-code transparency, standards-compliant cataloging, and the freedom to customize for research and special collections — without negotiating away data sovereignty.
Open source library management for universities is an Integrated Library System (ILS) distributed under an OSI-approved license — giving university librarians source-code access, standards-compliant cataloging (MARC21, BIBFRAME, RDA, Dublin Core), and full control over patron, holdings, and circulation data. Unlike closed academic platforms, it lets institutions modify, audit, and self-host the stack while preserving interoperability with consortia, ILL networks, and institutional repositories.
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LGPLv3 source-code transparency
OpenEduCat's library module ships under LGPLv3. Library systems staff can audit cataloging logic, circulation rules, and patron-data handling line-by-line — satisfying institutional security review, FERPA data-flow audits, and ALA open-source policy guidance that academic libraries retain meaningful control over their software stack.
MARC21, BIBFRAME, RDA & Dublin Core compliance
Native cataloging in MARC21 with crosswalks to BIBFRAME 2.0 for linked-data initiatives, RDA-aligned descriptive fields for monographs and serials, and Dublin Core export for institutional repository handoff. Import OCLC WorldCat records via Z39.50 search, then refine locally without losing standards conformance.
ERM integration via KBART, COUNTER & SUSHI
Track e-resource subscriptions, license terms, and renewal dates with KBART-formatted holdings feeds. Pull COUNTER 5 usage reports from publishers automatically via SUSHI harvesting so collection-development librarians can cost-per-use analysis without manual CSV wrangling each renewal cycle.
Z39.50, SIP2 & NCIP for ILL and self-check
Connect to OCLC WorldCat, Orbis Cascade Alliance, MOBIUS, and other ILL networks via Z39.50 federated search. SIP2 endpoints integrate with 3M, Bibliotheca, and Envisionware self-check kiosks and RFID gates. NCIP messaging supports reciprocal borrowing across consortium partners.
Customizable cataloging for research & special collections
Extend the MARC record schema with locally-defined 9XX fields for archival provenance, rare-book condition notes, thesis embargo flags, or dataset DOIs. Build custom search facets for digital humanities collections, music scores, or government documents without forking the upstream codebase or breaking future upgrades.
Institutional repository integration (DSpace, Fedora, Samvera)
OAI-PMH endpoints expose catalog records to your DSpace, Fedora, or Samvera-based institutional repository. SWORD deposit protocol pushes ETDs, faculty preprints, and research datasets from the ILS into the IR. Single discovery layer (VuFind, Blacklight) can index both.
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What does 'open source' actually mean here — is it just 'free'?
Open source and free-of-charge are different things. OpenEduCat's library module is distributed under LGPLv3, an OSI-approved open-source license that grants four rights: to use, study, modify, and redistribute the source. 'Free' (gratis) ILS products often ship as freeware binaries with no source access, no modification rights, and no community governance. The ALA's open-source policy statement specifically distinguishes these — academic libraries adopting open source gain auditability and exit rights that freeware cannot offer, regardless of price tag.
How does this compare to Koha — the most-adopted open-source academic ILS?
Koha is a dedicated, mature open-source ILS with a 25-year track record at ARL and consortium libraries, and remains the right choice if you need only library management. OpenEduCat differs by integrating the library module with student information, courses, and circulation tied to enrollment records — useful when course reserves, textbook adoption, and patron records all need to stay in sync with the registrar. Many institutions run Koha for the main library and OpenEduCat where library workflows intersect with academic systems. Both are LGPL/GPL family.
How does it compare to Ex Libris Alma, SirsiDynix Symphony, and OCLC WMS?
Proprietary academic platforms — Alma, Symphony, WMS — offer deeper ERM, fulfillment network, and analytics tooling than any open-source ILS today, and are the realistic choice for R1 research universities with complex e-resource portfolios. The trade-off is annual subscription costs of $40k–$250k+, vendor lock-in on data formats, and limited customization. Open source suits universities that prioritize data sovereignty, in-house customization capacity, or budget discipline over turnkey ERM depth.
Is it suitable for an R1 or ARL-member research library?
Honestly: it's a stretch without supplementation. ARL-tier libraries typically need the ERM workflow depth, link-resolver ecosystem, and analytics that Alma or FOLIO provide. OpenEduCat's library module fits best at mid-sized universities (5k–30k students), liberal-arts colleges, and branch/departmental libraries. R1 libraries sometimes deploy it for specific collections (law library, music library, archives) alongside their primary ILS rather than as the institutional system of record.
Can we still participate in OCLC, Orbis Cascade Alliance, or MOBIUS consortia?
Yes — consortium membership depends on protocol conformance, not vendor identity. Z39.50 federated search lets your catalog appear in WorldCat Discovery and partner OPACs. NCIP messaging supports reciprocal borrowing and ILL request routing across consortium partners. SIP2 connects self-check and RFID hardware. Bibliographic record exchange uses MARC21 via MARCXML or ISO 2709. Verify with the specific consortium's technical requirements, but the standards are all supported.
How do we customize without losing the ability to upgrade?
OpenEduCat uses Odoo's module inheritance pattern, so local customizations live in a separate module that extends — rather than overwrites — core code. Custom MARC fields, local circulation rules, and special-collections schemas stay in your institutional module. When the upstream library module releases an update, your overlay continues to apply. This is the same separation-of-concerns model that ACRL standards encourage: institutional control over local policy without sacrificing the benefits of a shared codebase.
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