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EARL Reporting Format

Contribute An Implementation

If you developed an accessibility tool or a testing methodology and would like to have your implementation included in the WAI website, there are two ways you can do so.

  1. If you have a tool that can return a data format, you will need to run your tests against the test cases and submit a report.

  2. If you have a manual test methodology where you fill results into some report template or semi-automated tool, you can use the ACT Implementation Generator instead to produce implementation reports.

Understanding the Reporting format

To display an accessibility test tool or methodology on the WAI website, use the Evaluation And Reporting Language expressed using JSON-LD. Tool developers that have an EARL reporter should be able to provide their existing reports. If you don’t already have an EARL reporter, we provided a basic data structure that you can use.

Context And Graph

On the top level object, there should be a @context and @graph. The @context is a URL to a definition file that describes the data structure. The @graph property contains an array of TestSubject objects.

{
  "@context": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/earl-context.json",
  "@graph": [ ... ]
}

Test Subject

Create a single test subject for each test case. The TestSubject has three required properties:

{
  "@context": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/earl-context.json",
  "@graph": [{
    "@type": "TestSubject",
    "source": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/testcases/73f2c2/eabc191efa65e6613739042a0ae21937cda02428.html",
    "assertions": [ ... ]
  }]
}

Advanced: assertions is a @reverse of earl:subject, to group assertions by test subject. When the JSON-LD is framed, the structure is flattened back to earl:subject. Using earl:subject and a flat array of Assertions works as well.

Assertion

Add an Assertion object to the assertions array for each outcome provided by any of the rules / test procedures in your implementation. Generally, test cases are atomic enough that every implemented rule would only have a single outcome, although in some cases (such as duplicate IDs) a rule may return more than one outcome. In such cases, there should be multiple Assertions, one for each outcome.

The following properties are required for each Assertion:

{
	"@context": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/earl-context.json",
	"@graph": [
		{
			"@type": "TestSubject",
			"source": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/testcases/73f2c2/eabc191efa65e6613739042a0ae21937cda02428.html",
			"assertions": [
				{
					"@type": "Assertion",
					"result": { "outcome": "earl:passed" },
					"test": { ... },
				}
			]
		}
	]
}

Test Criterion

For each result, we’ll need to know which rule or procedure in the tool reported it, and which WCAG success criteria were failed. To do so, on the test property, add an object. This must include:

{
	"@context": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/earl-context.json",
	"@graph": [
		{
			"@type": "TestSubject",
			"source": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/testcases/73f2c2/eabc191efa65e6613739042a0ae21937cda02428.html",
			"assertions": [
				{
					"@type": "Assertion",
					"result": { "outcome": "earl:passed" },
					"test": {
						"title": "image-button-has-name",
						"isPartOf": ["WCAG2:non-text-content", "WCAG2:name-role-value"]
					}
				}
			]
		}
	]
}

Note: The IDs of WCAG success criteria can be found in sc-urls.json, on the scId property. These are the IDs introduced in WCAG 2.1, and continued in WCAG 2.2. Use these IDs, even when reporting for WCAG 2.0.

isPartOf

Alternatively, it is possible to specify WCAG 2 success criteria by number instead of by ID. This can be done in the following format:

{
	"@context": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/earl-context.json",
	"@graph": [
		{
			"@type": "TestSubject",
			"source": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/testcases/73f2c2/eabc191efa65e6613739042a0ae21937cda02428.html",
			"assertions": [
				{
					"@type": "Assertion",
					"result": { "outcome": "earl:passed" },
					"test": {
						"title": "image-button-has-name",
						"isPartOf": [
							{ "title": "WCAG 2: 1.1.1" },
							{ "title": "WCAG 2: 4.1.2" }
						]
					}
				}
			]
		}
	]
}

The format of the title property in the isPartOf array is fairly permissive. To be recognized as a success criterion, the string WCAG 2 or WCAG2, and the success criterion number (separated with dots) must be included. For example WCAG 2.1 criterion 1.1.1 Non-text content would be recognized. To explicitly add the success criterion ID the @id property can be used.

Advanced: All required properties map to EARL, except for isPartOf, title, and source which are properties of Dublin Core. Property names can be anything, as long as they can be expanded to the correct URL.

Assertor

An Assertor object can be used to provide information about the tool or test methodology which produced the results. While EARL supports different assertions having different assertors, for the ACT format only the first assertor in an EARL report will be used. Declaring the Assertor is particularly useful for dynamic information such as a version number. The Assertor takes the following format:

{
	"@context": "https://www.w3.org/WAI/content-assets/wcag-act-rules/earl-context.json",
	"@graph": [
		/// ... other data
		{
			"@type": "Assertor",
			"name": "My Accessibility Solution",
			"release": {
				"@type": "Version",
				"revision": "1.0"
			},
		}
	]
}
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