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- <title>Libxml2 XmlTextReader Interface tutorial</title>
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- <h1 align="center">Libxml2 XmlTextReader Interface tutorial</h1>
- <p></p>
- <p>This document describes the use of the XmlTextReader streaming API added
- to libxml2 in version 2.5.0 . This API is closely modeled after the <a
- href="http://dotgnu.org/pnetlib-doc/System/Xml/XmlTextReader.html">XmlTextReader</a>
- and <a
- href="http://dotgnu.org/pnetlib-doc/System/Xml/XmlReader.html">XmlReader</a>
- classes of the C# language.</p>
- <p>This tutorial will present the key points of this API, and working
- examples using both C and the Python bindings:</p>
- <p>Table of content:</p>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#Introducti">Introduction: why a new API</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Walking">Walking a simple tree</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Extracting">Extracting informations for the current
- node</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Extracting1">Extracting informations for the
- attributes</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Validating">Validating a document</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Entities">Entities substitution</a></li>
- <li><a href="#L1142">Relax-NG Validation</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Mixing">Mixing the reader and tree or XPath
- operations</a></li>
- </ul>
- <p></p>
- <h2><a name="Introducti">Introduction: why a new API</a></h2>
- <p>Libxml2 <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-tree.html">main API is
- tree based</a>, where the parsing operation results in a document loaded
- completely in memory, and expose it as a tree of nodes all availble at the
- same time. This is very simple and quite powerful, but has the major
- limitation that the size of the document that can be hamdled is limited by
- the size of the memory available. Libxml2 also provide a <a
- href="http://www.saxproject.org/">SAX</a> based API, but that version was
- designed upon one of the early <a
- href="http://www.jclark.com/xml/expat.html">expat</a> version of SAX, SAX is
- also not formally defined for C. SAX basically work by registering callbacks
- which are called directly by the parser as it progresses through the document
- streams. The problem is that this programming model is relatively complex,
- not well standardized, cannot provide validation directly, makes entity,
- namespace and base processing relatively hard.</p>
- <p>The <a
- href="http://dotgnu.org/pnetlib-doc/System/Xml/XmlTextReader.html">XmlTextReader
- API from C#</a> provides a far simpler programming model. The API acts as a
- cursor going forward on the document stream and stopping at each node in the
- way. The user's code keeps control of the progress and simply calls a
- Read() function repeatedly to progress to each node in sequence in document
- order. There is direct support for namespaces, xml:base, entity handling and
- adding DTD validation on top of it was relatively simple. This API is really
- close to the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/">DOM Core
- specification</a> This provides a far more standard, easy to use and powerful
- API than the existing SAX. Moreover integrating extension features based on
- the tree seems relatively easy.</p>
- <p>In a nutshell the XmlTextReader API provides a simpler, more standard and
- more extensible interface to handle large documents than the existing SAX
- version.</p>
- <h2><a name="Walking">Walking a simple tree</a></h2>
- <p>Basically the XmlTextReader API is a forward only tree walking interface.
- The basic steps are:</p>
- <ol>
- <li>prepare a reader context operating on some input</li>
- <li>run a loop iterating over all nodes in the document</li>
- <li>free up the reader context</li>
- </ol>
- <p>Here is a basic C sample doing this:</p>
- <pre>#include <libxml/xmlreader.h>
- void processNode(xmlTextReaderPtr reader) {
- /* handling of a node in the tree */
- }
- int streamFile(char *filename) {
- xmlTextReaderPtr reader;
- int ret;
- reader = xmlNewTextReaderFilename(filename);
- if (reader != NULL) {
- ret = xmlTextReaderRead(reader);
- while (ret == 1) {
- processNode(reader);
- ret = xmlTextReaderRead(reader);
- }
- xmlFreeTextReader(reader);
- if (ret != 0) {
- printf("%s : failed to parse\n", filename);
- }
- } else {
- printf("Unable to open %s\n", filename);
- }
- }</pre>
- <p>A few things to notice:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>the include file needed : <code>libxml/xmlreader.h</code></li>
- <li>the creation of the reader using a filename</li>
- <li>the repeated call to xmlTextReaderRead() and how any return value
- different from 1 should stop the loop</li>
- <li>that a negative return means a parsing error</li>
- <li>how xmlFreeTextReader() should be used to free up the resources used by
- the reader.</li>
- </ul>
- <p>Here is similar code in python for exactly the same processing:</p>
- <pre>import libxml2
- def processNode(reader):
- pass
- def streamFile(filename):
- try:
- reader = libxml2.newTextReaderFilename(filename)
- except:
- print "unable to open %s" % (filename)
- return
- ret = reader.Read()
- while ret == 1:
- processNode(reader)
- ret = reader.Read()
- if ret != 0:
- print "%s : failed to parse" % (filename)</pre>
- <p>The only things worth adding are that the <a
- href="http://dotgnu.org/pnetlib-doc/System/Xml/XmlTextReader.html">xmlTextReader
- is abstracted as a class like in C#</a> with the same method names (but the
- properties are currently accessed with methods) and that one doesn't need to
- free the reader at the end of the processing. It will get garbage collected
- once all references have disapeared.</p>
- <h2><a name="Extracting">Extracting information for the current node</a></h2>
- <p>So far the example code did not indicate how information was extracted
- from the reader. It was abstrated as a call to the processNode() routine,
- with the reader as the argument. At each invocation, the parser is stopped on
- a given node and the reader can be used to query those node properties. Each
- <em>Property</em> is available at the C level as a function taking a single
- xmlTextReaderPtr argument whose name is
- <code>xmlTextReader</code><em>Property</em> , if the return type is an
- <code>xmlChar *</code> string then it must be deallocated with
- <code>xmlFree()</code> to avoid leaks. For the Python interface, there is a
- <em>Property</em> method to the reader class that can be called on the
- instance. The list of the properties is based on the <a
- href="http://dotgnu.org/pnetlib-doc/System/Xml/XmlTextReader.html">C#
- XmlTextReader class</a> set of properties and methods:</p>
- <ul>
- <li><em>NodeType</em>: The node type, 1 for start element, 15 for end of
- element, 2 for attributes, 3 for text nodes, 4 for CData sections, 5 for
- entity references, 6 for entity declarations, 7 for PIs, 8 for comments,
- 9 for the document nodes, 10 for DTD/Doctype nodes, 11 for document
- fragment and 12 for notation nodes.</li>
- <li><em>Name</em>: the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/#ns-qualnames">qualified
- name</a> of the node, equal to (<em>Prefix</em>:)<em>LocalName</em>.</li>
- <li><em>LocalName</em>: the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/#NT-LocalPart">local name</a> of
- the node.</li>
- <li><em>Prefix</em>: a shorthand reference to the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">namespace</a> associated with
- the node.</li>
- <li><em>NamespaceUri</em>: the URI defining the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">namespace</a> associated with
- the node.</li>
- <li><em>BaseUri:</em> the base URI of the node. See the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlbase/">XML Base W3C specification</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Depth:</em> the depth of the node in the tree, starts at 0 for the
- root node.</li>
- <li><em>HasAttributes</em>: whether the node has attributes.</li>
- <li><em>HasValue</em>: whether the node can have a text value.</li>
- <li><em>Value</em>: provides the text value of the node if present.</li>
- <li><em>IsDefault</em>: whether an Attribute node was generated from the
- default value defined in the DTD or schema (<em>unsupported
- yet</em>).</li>
- <li><em>XmlLang</em>: the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#sec-lang-tag">xml:lang</a> scope
- within which the node resides.</li>
- <li><em>IsEmptyElement</em>: check if the current node is empty, this is a
- bit bizarre in the sense that <code><a/></code> will be considered
- empty while <code><a></a></code> will not.</li>
- <li><em>AttributeCount</em>: provides the number of attributes of the
- current node.</li>
- </ul>
- <p>Let's look first at a small example to get this in practice by redefining
- the processNode() function in the Python example:</p>
- <pre>def processNode(reader):
- print "%d %d %s %d" % (reader.Depth(), reader.NodeType(),
- reader.Name(), reader.IsEmptyElement())</pre>
- <p>and look at the result of calling streamFile("tst.xml") for various
- content of the XML test file.</p>
- <p>For the minimal document "<code><doc/></code>" we get:</p>
- <pre>0 1 doc 1</pre>
- <p>Only one node is found, its depth is 0, type 1 indicate an element start,
- of name "doc" and it is empty. Trying now with
- "<code><doc></doc></code>" instead leads to:</p>
- <pre>0 1 doc 0
- 0 15 doc 0</pre>
- <p>The document root node is not flagged as empty anymore and both a start
- and an end of element are detected. The following document shows how
- character data are reported:</p>
- <pre><doc><a/><b>some text</b>
- <c/></doc></pre>
- <p>We modifying the processNode() function to also report the node Value:</p>
- <pre>def processNode(reader):
- print "%d %d %s %d %s" % (reader.Depth(), reader.NodeType(),
- reader.Name(), reader.IsEmptyElement(),
- reader.Value())</pre>
- <p>The result of the test is:</p>
- <pre>0 1 doc 0 None
- 1 1 a 1 None
- 1 1 b 0 None
- 2 3 #text 0 some text
- 1 15 b 0 None
- 1 3 #text 0
- 1 1 c 1 None
- 0 15 doc 0 None</pre>
- <p>There are a few things to note:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>the increase of the depth value (first row) as children nodes are
- explored</li>
- <li>the text node child of the b element, of type 3 and its content</li>
- <li>the text node containing the line return between elements b and c</li>
- <li>that elements have the Value None (or NULL in C)</li>
- </ul>
- <p>The equivalent routine for <code>processNode()</code> as used by
- <code>xmllint --stream --debug</code> is the following and can be found in
- the xmllint.c module in the source distribution:</p>
- <pre>static void processNode(xmlTextReaderPtr reader) {
- xmlChar *name, *value;
- name = xmlTextReaderName(reader);
- if (name == NULL)
- name = xmlStrdup(BAD_CAST "--");
- value = xmlTextReaderValue(reader);
- printf("%d %d %s %d",
- xmlTextReaderDepth(reader),
- xmlTextReaderNodeType(reader),
- name,
- xmlTextReaderIsEmptyElement(reader));
- xmlFree(name);
- if (value == NULL)
- printf("\n");
- else {
- printf(" %s\n", value);
- xmlFree(value);
- }
- }</pre>
- <h2><a name="Extracting1">Extracting information for the attributes</a></h2>
- <p>The previous examples don't indicate how attributes are processed. The
- simple test "<code><doc a="b"/></code>" provides the following
- result:</p>
- <pre>0 1 doc 1 None</pre>
- <p>This proves that attribute nodes are not traversed by default. The
- <em>HasAttributes</em> property allow to detect their presence. To check
- their content the API has special instructions. Basically two kinds of operations
- are possible:</p>
- <ol>
- <li>to move the reader to the attribute nodes of the current element, in
- that case the cursor is positionned on the attribute node</li>
- <li>to directly query the element node for the attribute value</li>
- </ol>
- <p>In both case the attribute can be designed either by its position in the
- list of attribute (<em>MoveToAttributeNo</em> or <em>GetAttributeNo</em>) or
- by their name (and namespace):</p>
- <ul>
- <li><em>GetAttributeNo</em>(no): provides the value of the attribute with
- the specified index no relative to the containing element.</li>
- <li><em>GetAttribute</em>(name): provides the value of the attribute with
- the specified qualified name.</li>
- <li>GetAttributeNs(localName, namespaceURI): provides the value of the
- attribute with the specified local name and namespace URI.</li>
- <li><em>MoveToAttributeNo</em>(no): moves the position of the current
- instance to the attribute with the specified index relative to the
- containing element.</li>
- <li><em>MoveToAttribute</em>(name): moves the position of the current
- instance to the attribute with the specified qualified name.</li>
- <li><em>MoveToAttributeNs</em>(localName, namespaceURI): moves the position
- of the current instance to the attribute with the specified local name
- and namespace URI.</li>
- <li><em>MoveToFirstAttribute</em>: moves the position of the current
- instance to the first attribute associated with the current node.</li>
- <li><em>MoveToNextAttribute</em>: moves the position of the current
- instance to the next attribute associated with the current node.</li>
- <li><em>MoveToElement</em>: moves the position of the current instance to
- the node that contains the current Attribute node.</li>
- </ul>
- <p>After modifying the processNode() function to show attributes:</p>
- <pre>def processNode(reader):
- print "%d %d %s %d %s" % (reader.Depth(), reader.NodeType(),
- reader.Name(), reader.IsEmptyElement(),
- reader.Value())
- if reader.NodeType() == 1: # Element
- while reader.MoveToNextAttribute():
- print "-- %d %d (%s) [%s]" % (reader.Depth(), reader.NodeType(),
- reader.Name(),reader.Value())</pre>
- <p>The output for the same input document reflects the attribute:</p>
- <pre>0 1 doc 1 None
- -- 1 2 (a) [b]</pre>
- <p>There are a couple of things to note on the attribute processing:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Their depth is the one of the carrying element plus one.</li>
- <li>Namespace declarations are seen as attributes, as in DOM.</li>
- </ul>
- <h2><a name="Validating">Validating a document</a></h2>
- <p>Libxml2 implementation adds some extra features on top of the XmlTextReader
- API. The main one is the ability to DTD validate the parsed document
- progressively. This is simply the activation of the associated feature of the
- parser used by the reader structure. There are a few options available
- defined as the enum xmlParserProperties in the libxml/xmlreader.h header
- file:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>XML_PARSER_LOADDTD: force loading the DTD (without validating)</li>
- <li>XML_PARSER_DEFAULTATTRS: force attribute defaulting (this also imply
- loading the DTD)</li>
- <li>XML_PARSER_VALIDATE: activate DTD validation (this also imply loading
- the DTD)</li>
- <li>XML_PARSER_SUBST_ENTITIES: substitute entities on the fly, entity
- reference nodes are not generated and are replaced by their expanded
- content.</li>
- <li>more settings might be added, those were the one available at the 2.5.0
- release...</li>
- </ul>
- <p>The GetParserProp() and SetParserProp() methods can then be used to get
- and set the values of those parser properties of the reader. For example</p>
- <pre>def parseAndValidate(file):
- reader = libxml2.newTextReaderFilename(file)
- reader.SetParserProp(libxml2.PARSER_VALIDATE, 1)
- ret = reader.Read()
- while ret == 1:
- ret = reader.Read()
- if ret != 0:
- print "Error parsing and validating %s" % (file)</pre>
- <p>This routine will parse and validate the file. Error messages can be
- captured by registering an error handler. See python/tests/reader2.py for
- more complete Python examples. At the C level the equivalent call to cativate
- the validation feature is just:</p>
- <pre>ret = xmlTextReaderSetParserProp(reader, XML_PARSER_VALIDATE, 1)</pre>
- <p>and a return value of 0 indicates success.</p>
- <h2><a name="Entities">Entities substitution</a></h2>
- <p>By default the xmlReader will report entities as such and not replace them
- with their content. This default behaviour can however be overriden using:</p>
- <p><code>reader.SetParserProp(libxml2.PARSER_SUBST_ENTITIES,1)</code></p>
- <h2><a name="L1142">Relax-NG Validation</a></h2>
- <p style="font-size: 10pt">Introduced in version 2.5.7</p>
- <p>Libxml2 can now validate the document being read using the xmlReader using
- Relax-NG schemas. While the Relax NG validator can't always work in a
- streamable mode, only subsets which cannot be reduced to regular expressions
- need to have their subtree expanded for validation. In practice it means
- that, unless the schemas for the top level element content is not expressable
- as a regexp, only chunk of the document needs to be parsed while
- validating.</p>
- <p>The steps to do so are:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>create a reader working on a document as usual</li>
- <li>before any call to read associate it to a Relax NG schemas, either the
- preparsed schemas or the URL to the schemas to use</li>
- <li>errors will be reported the usual way, and the validity status can be
- obtained using the IsValid() interface of the reader like for DTDs.</li>
- </ul>
- <p>Example, assuming the reader has already being created and that the schema
- string contains the Relax-NG schemas:</p>
- <pre><code>rngp = libxml2.relaxNGNewMemParserCtxt(schema, len(schema))<br>
- rngs = rngp.relaxNGParse()<br>
- reader.RelaxNGSetSchema(rngs)<br>
- ret = reader.Read()<br>
- while ret == 1:<br>
- ret = reader.Read()<br>
- if ret != 0:<br>
- print "Error parsing the document"<br>
- if reader.IsValid() != 1:<br>
- print "Document failed to validate"</code><br>
- </pre>
- <p>See <code>reader6.py</code> in the sources or documentation for a complete
- example.</p>
- <h2><a name="Mixing">Mixing the reader and tree or XPath operations</a></h2>
- <p style="font-size: 10pt">Introduced in version 2.5.7</p>
- <p>While the reader is a streaming interface, its underlying implementation
- is based on the DOM builder of libxml2. As a result it is relatively simple
- to mix operations based on both models under some constraints. To do so the
- reader has an Expand() operation allowing to grow the subtree under the
- current node. It returns a pointer to a standard node which can be
- manipulated in the usual ways. The node will get all its ancestors and the
- full subtree available. Usual operations like XPath queries can be used on
- that reduced view of the document. Here is an example extracted from
- reader5.py in the sources which extract and prints the bibliography for the
- "Dragon" compiler book from the XML 1.0 recommendation:</p>
- <pre>f = open('../../test/valid/REC-xml-19980210.xml')
- input = libxml2.inputBuffer(f)
- reader = input.newTextReader("REC")
- res=""
- while reader.Read():
- while reader.Name() == 'bibl':
- node = reader.Expand() # expand the subtree
- if node.xpathEval("@id = 'Aho'"): # use XPath on it
- res = res + node.serialize()
- if reader.Next() != 1: # skip the subtree
- break;</pre>
- <p>Note, however that the node instance returned by the Expand() call is only
- valid until the next Read() operation. The Expand() operation does not
- affects the Read() ones, however usually once processed the full subtree is
- not useful anymore, and the Next() operation allows to skip it completely and
- process to the successor or return 0 if the document end is reached.</p>
- <p><a href="mailto:xml@gnome.org">Daniel Veillard</a></p>
- <p>$Id$</p>
- <p></p>
- </body>
- </html>
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