This page is part of the FHIR Specification (v3.0.2: STU 3). The current version which supercedes this version is 5.0.0. For a full list of available versions, see the Directory of published versions . Page versions: R5 R4B R4 R3
FHIR Infrastructure Work Group | Maturity Level: 0 (Draft) | Ballot Status: Trial Use |
The FHIR Specification includes a mapping language. The mapping language has a concrete syntax, defined and described in this page, and an abstract syntax, which is found in the StructureMap resource (and there is an antlr grammar for the concrete syntax). See also the Tutorial.
The mapping language describes how one set of Directed Acyclic Graphs (an instance) is transformed to another set of directed acyclic graphs. It is not necessary for the instances to have formal declarations and/or be strongly typed - just that they have named children that themselves have properties. On the other hand, when the instances are strongly typed - specifically, when they have formal definitions that are represented as Structure Definitions, the mapping language can use additional type related features.
The mapping language addresses two very different kinds of transformations:
A map has 6 parts:
Maps are executed by a mapping engine. This takes one or more inputs of instances (directed acyclic graphs) and a map, and produces a set of outputs as specified by the map. The exact details of the form that the instances take are a matter for the map engine / application API. This language assumes that the engine can query an element in the instance for its children, its primitive value, and (optionally) its type. The language also assumes that the engine has application support for the following operations:
These functions constitute a Mapping Support API that makes maps portable between different systems
Generally, it is assumed the invocation of the engine follows some pattern like this:
Some host applications may be able to determine how to combine maps and inputs on the fly based on their metadata, and require minimal configuration, while others may require manual arrangements in order to manage the map execution process.
Mapping files are always plain text in unicode. Whitespace is any unicode whitespace, and the particular whitespace used is not significant, except that unicode end of line characters terminate a comment. Comments are started by the characters "//".
The abstract model includes documentation for each item. The canonical text representation is for each item to be on its own line, with documentation at the end of the line as a comment.
All names defined by the map language - group, rule and variable names - must be valid ids (1-64 characters, upper and lowercase letters, numbers, dashes, dots and underscores), and must start with a letter. The special boolean values 'true' and 'false' are not allowed as variable names.
The first part of the mapping syntax establishes the name of the mapping:
map "[url]" = "[name]"
The letters "map" are the first non-whitespace non-comment characters in the source. This is followed by the canonical URL that identifies the map uniquely, and then a human readable name for the map.
todo: add additional metadata?
The next section of the map references the set of structure definitions that are used or produced by this map.
uses "[url]" (alias name) as [mode] // documentation
This optional section lists one or more structure definitions that the map makes use of, and indicates for each structure definition, how it is used. It may also provide an Alias - a name used for the type inside the mapping language - this may be necessary when transforming from source to target where both source and target use overlapping type names (not unusual).
Any kind of structure definition may be referenced, including data types, resources, constraints on those, and logical models.
There are 4 modes in which a structure definition may be used:
The simplest case, which is common, is where a single structure is converted to another single structure. in this case, the map specifies one target, and one source. Such maps are easy to use automatically - the host application has content in one format, creates an empty instance of the target, and asks the mapping engine to convert.
However, many mappings are not so simple. For instance, converting from a single CDA document to FHIR typically creates a set of resources. In this case, there is a single target - a Bundle, but it is also useful to specify a set of other structure definitions for resources that may be created as part of the bundle. Alternatively converting from one source model to another might involve looking up other information in other instances of data.
It's also possible for a map not so specify any structure definition dependencies. A map that doesn't indicate any structure definitions can still be used, but the type features of the map language can't be used, and such maps typically require special development to integrate the execution of the map into an application.
This section references additional maps that are used by this map:
imports "[url]" // documentation
Typically, maps that are imported are type based, such as a CDA --> FHIR map that makes use of a CD --> CodeableConcept map. How imported maps are actually used is discussed below.
The [url] may contain a "*" as a wildcard character to include any matching maps that are available to the mapping engine.
Each Mapping source contains one or more groups of rules. Each group defines a set of related mapping rules that take the same input and output variables, that define exactly which instances are passed to the mapping, and provides names by which they may be passed when invoking the map:
group (for type) [group-name] (extends [other-group]) input [name] : [type] as [mode] // documentation
Each group has a name, which is how the mapping is invoked. The first group is special, in that this is the group invoked if no name is provided (e.g. starting the mapping by a host application).
The inputs of a group are also referred to (below) as its input parameters, or just as parameters; or as input variables.
Each input to the group has a name. This is the name that applications use when passing the instance to the invocation engine, or that rules use when invoking the group. Inputs may have a type - and should have (see the discussion above), but are not required to. Input variables also have a mode, which may be one of source or target (see above). There must be at least two input variables (source and target) - else there's nothing to map. Maps may have additional input or output inputs, where that's necessary.
Groups may extend other groups, which means that the rules in the other group also apply (typically, this is used with specialising classes in an OO context). When a group extends another group, it SHALL have the same input parameters (by name, type and mode) though their order may differ, and it MAY have additional parameters.
The key word for
is used to indicate that this group provides a
set of mappings that are intended to be used as the default way to map from
source to target. There are 2 variants:
for types
: Use this by default when a [source] of the specified type must be converted to a [target] of the specified type, and no specific dependent rules (see below) are specified. for type+types
: in addition, to the above use, when a [source] of the specified type must be converted to a [target] and the type of the target is not fixed, use this groupIn both these cases, the group SHALL have 2 parameters, a source, and a target, in that order, and both SHALL have specified types for the inputs.
The main portion of a map consists of a set of transform rules that describe how source content is transformed into target content. The full format for a rule looks like this:
name_of_rule: for src_context.field as new_variable where condition make tgt_context.field as new_variable = create([type]) then [details].
Each rule has 4 main sections:
Rules in a group may be applied in any order; there is no sense of sequentially applying one rule after another.
Each rule is assigned a name. The name is used when specifying rule links, and in traces (a record generated by the conversion engine recording the transform process). Names must be unique within the context of the map.
Each rule specifies one or more elements taken from the source that define variables that can be used when specifying target content, or re-used in subsequent transforms on the rule. Multiple source elements are separated by a comma, like this:
rule_name: for [source], [source], make ...
Each [source] contains the following items:
context.element { : type {min..max}} {default [value]} { list-option } as variable where [FHIRPath] check [FHIRPath]
If all the source elements have a match the rule applies for the permutation of the source elements (e.g. if there are 2 elements, each with 2 matches, the rule applies 4 times, one for each combination). Typically, if there is more than one source element, only one of the elements can repeat.
Once the source statement is evaluated, the engine performing the evaluation has a list of variables, each of which contains a single value for each named variable. These variables are now mapped into the target structures in the target transformation.
Each rule specifies zero or more elements to be created in the target structure. These targets can also be assigned to variables that can be used in subsequent transform rules. If no targets are specified, there are not created targets, just newly defined source variables. Multiple target elements are separated by a comma, like this:
... make [target], [target] then by...
Each [target] contains the following items:
make context.element = transform_code(parameters...) as variable {list_modes}
Context and Element are optional as a pair. If no context/element is specified, then a variable must be defined, and the created value is only available in the variable.
Each time the rule is applied, the engine determines the value from the transforms, considers the list mode, if required, and creates that specified content in the target instance. Within a given transform url, the targets are processed in order, so that a transform rule may refer to a variable defined by a prior transform rule.
The following list specifies that transforms that can be specified. Each transform takes one or more parameters:
Name | parameters | Documentation |
copy | source | simply copy the source to the target as is (only allowed when the types in source and target match- typically for primitive types). In the concrete syntax, this is simply represented as the source variable |
create | type | use the standard API to create a new instance of data. Where structure definitions have been provided, the type parameter must be a string which is a known type of a root element. Where they haven't, the application must know the name somehow |
truncate | source, length | source must be some stringy type that has some meaningful length property |
escape | source, format1, format2 | Change the internal escaping of a string element. Note: this is not often needed, as mostly the escaping is done on the base format |
cast | source, type? | cast source from one type to another. target type can be left as implicit if there is one and only one target type known |
append | source... | source is element or string - just append them all together |
translate | source, map_uri, output | use the translate operation. The source is some type of code or coded datatype, and the source and map_uri are passed to the translate operation. The output determines what value from the translate operation is used for the result of the operation (code, system, display, Coding, or CodeableConcept) |
reference | source | return a string that references the provided tree properly |
dateOp | ?? | Perform a date operation. Parameters to be documented |
uuid | n/a | Generate a random UUID (in lowercase). No Parameters |
pointer | resource | Return the appropriate string to put in a Reference that refers to the resource provided as a parameter |
evaluate | resource | Execute the supplied FHIRPath expression and use the value returned by that. The 2nd parameter - FHIRPath expression - is evaluated in the context of the first parameter, and the result used as the value. In the concrete syntax, there is a short hand for this operation, by supplying () around the parameter. In this case, there is no context for the FHIRPath expression, and it must start with a reference to one of the defined variables |
cc | (text) or (system. Code[, display]) | Create a CodeableConcept from the parameters provided |
c | system. Code[, display] | Create a Coding from the parameters provided |
qty | (text) or (value, unit, [system, code]) | Create a quantity. Parameters = (text) or (value, unit, [system, code]) where text =s the natural represenation e.g. [comparator]value[space]unit |
id | system, value[, type] | Create an identifier. where type is a code from the identifier type value set |
cp | (value) or (system, value) | Create a contact details. If no system is provided, the system should be inferred from the content of the value |
TODO: explain how optional parameters work with transforms (append only?), document list mode
Once the source elements are evaluated, and any specifed targets created, the engine has a set of variables that represent source and target contexts in which further mapping may occur. The set of variables includes those provided to the group that contains the rule, and those created by the application of the rule. For some created elements that are primitive types, that's the end of the road - there's nothing more to do with them. But if either or both the source and target types are complex, there are usually additional mapping rules that need to apply to the newly created variables.
Transform rules specify what additional rules are evaluated when the rule is complete, by containing other rules:,
.. then { .. other rules... }
When a rule contains other rules, the variables from the containing rules are all available to the contained rules. Alternatively, a rule can nominating another group of rules from the same or an imported mapping. Each rule or group is listed by name, and then a set of parameters are provided.
.. then rule(param, param)
The parameters provided must match the parameters required by the dependenct rule, in order. In addition, the mode of the variable must match - inputs that are targets must be target variables. Note, though, that target variables can be treated as source for a group.
Groups are resolved by name by looking through all the groups in all the available maps referened by the uses (see above) statements. The name must be unique within the scope of these maps.
If no dependent rules are specified, and if the is only one source and target, and they both speecify a variable, the rule can be written in an abbreviated form:
"name" : for src.element make tgt.element
This is implicitly the same as
"name" : for src.element as vvs make create([type]) tgt.element as vvt then [typeGroup](vvs, vvt)
Where type
and typeGroup
are determined by the context of src.element
and tgt.element:
typeGroup
is determined by looking through the available rule groups labeled as "for types" or "for type+types" and checking the types of their inputs
looking for a match to the type of src.element, and [type]type
is determined by the type of tgt.element. If tgt.element can have more than one type, then the
type is inferred by looking through the available groups labeled "for type+types" for a match to the type of
src.elementtodo
todo