20042012 Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved. The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License, Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/. Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License. xmerl UKH/L Bertil Karlsson 2004-06-16 D xmerl_ug.xml
Introduction
Features

The xmerl XML parser is able to parse XML documents according to the XML 1.0 standard. As default it performs well-formed parsing, (syntax checks and checks of well-formed constraints). Optionally one can also use xmerl as a validating parser, (validate according to referenced DTD and validating constraints). By means of for example the xmerl_xs module it is possible to transform the parsed result to other formats, e.g. text, HTML, XML etc.

Overview

This document does not give an introduction to XML. There are a lot of books available that describe XML from different views. At the www.W3.org site you will find the XML 1.0 specification and other related specs. One site were you can find tutorials on XML and related specs is ZVON.org.

However, here you will find some examples of how to use and to what you can use xmerl. A detailed description of the user interface can be found in the reference manual.

There are two known shortcomings in xmerl:

It cannot retrieve external entities on the Internet by a URL reference, only resources in the local file system. xmerl can parse Unicode encoded data. But, it fails on tag names, attribute names and other mark-up names that are encoded Unicode characters not mapping on ASCII.

By parsing an XML document you will get a record, displaying the structure of the document, as return value. The record also holds the data of the document. xmerl is convenient to use in for instance the following scenarios:

You need to retrieve data from XML documents. Your Erlang software can handle information from the XML document by extracting data from the data structure received by parsing.

It is also possible to do further processing of parsed XML with xmerl. If you want to change format of the XML document to for instance HTML, text or other XML format you can transform it. There is support for such transformations in xmerl.

One may also convert arbitrary data to XML. So it for instance is easy to make it readable by humans. In this case you first create xmerl data structures out of your data, then transform it to XML.

You can find examples of these three examples of usage below.

xmerl User Interface Data Structure

The following records used by xmerl to save the parsed data are defined in xmerl.hrl

The result of a successful parsing is a tuple {DataStructure,M}. M is the XML production Misc, which is the mark-up that comes after the element of the document. It is returned "as is". DataStructure is an xmlElement record, that among others have the fields name, parents, attributes and content like:

#xmlElement{name=Name,
            ...
            parents=Parents,
            ...
            attributes=Attrs,
            content=Content,
            ...}    

The name of the element is found in the name field. In the parents field is the names of the parent elements saved. Parents is a list of tuples where the first element in each tuple is the name of the parent element. The list is in reverse order.

The record xmlAttribute holds the name and value of an attribute in the fields name and value. All attributes of an element is a list of xmlAttribute in the field attributes of the xmlElement record.

The content field of the top element is a list of records that shows the structure and data of the document. If it is a simple document like:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dog>
Grand Danois
</dog>    

The parse result will be:

#xmlElement{name = dog,
            ...
            parents = [],
            ...
            attributes = [],
            content = [{xmlText,[{dog,1}],1,[],"\
Grand Danois\
",text}],
            ...
            }    

Where the content of the top element is: [{xmlText,[{dog,1}],1,[],"\ Grand Danois\ ",text}]. Text will be returned in xmlText records. Though, usually documents are more complex, and the content of the top element will in that case be a nested structure with xmlElement records that in turn may have complex content. All of this reflects the structure of the XML document.

Space characters between mark-up as space, tab and line feed are normalized and returned as xmlText records.

Errors

An unsuccessful parse results in an error, which may be a tuple {error,Reason} or an exit: {'EXIT',Reason}. According to the XML 1.0 standard there are fatal error and error situations. The fatal errors must be detected by a conforming parser while an error may be detected. Both categories of errors are reported as fatal errors by this version of xmerl, most often as an exit.

Getting Started

In the following examples we use the XML file "motorcycles.xml" and the corresponding DTD "motorcycles.dtd". motorcycles.xml looks like:

and motorcycles.dtd looks like:

If you want to parse the XML file motorcycles.xml you run it in the Erlang shell like:

3> {ParsResult,Misc}=xmerl_scan:file("motorcycles.xml"). 
{{xmlElement,motorcycles,
             motorcycles,
             [],
             {xmlNamespace,[],[]},
             [],
             1,
             [],
             [{xmlText,[{motorcycles,1}],1,[],"\
  ",text},
              {xmlElement,bike,
                          bike,
                          [],
                          {xmlNamespace,[],[]},
                          [{motorcycles,1}],
                          2,
                          [{xmlAttribute,year,[],[],[],[]|...},
                           {xmlAttribute,color,[],[],[]|...}],
                          [{xmlText,[{bike,2},{motorcycles|...}],
                                    1,
                                    []|...},
                           {xmlElement,name,name,[]|...},
                           {xmlText,[{...}|...],3|...},
                           {xmlElement,engine|...},
                           {xmlText|...},
                           {...}|...],
                          [],
                          ".",
                          undeclared},
              ...
              ],
             [],
             ".",
             undeclared},
 []}
4>     

If you instead receives the XML doc as a string you can parse it by xmerl_scan:string/1. Both file/2 and string/2 exists where the second argument is a list of options to the parser, see the reference manual.

Example: Extracting Data From XML Content

In this example consider the situation where you want to examine a particular data in the XML file. For instance, you want to check for how long each motorcycle have been recorded.

Take a look at the DTD and observe that the structure of an XML document that is conformant to this DTD must have one motorcycles element (the root element). The motorcycles element must have at least one bike element. After each bike element it may be a date element. The content of the date element is #PCDATA (Parsed Character DATA), i.e. raw text. Observe that if #PCDATA must have a or a character it must be written as and respectively. Also other character entities exists similar to the ones in HTML and SGML.

If you successfully parse the XML file with the validation on as in: xmerl_scan:file('motorcycles.xml',[{validation,true}]) you know that the XML document is valid and has the structure according to the DTD.

Thus, knowing the allowed structure it is easy to write a program that traverses the data structure and picks the information in the xmlElements records with name date.

Observe that white space: each space, tab or line feed, between mark-up results in an xmlText record.

Example: Create XML Out Of Arbitrary Data

For this task there are more than one way to go. The "brute force" method is to create the records you need and feed your data in the content and attribute fields of the appropriate element.

There is support for this in xmerl by the "simple-form" format. You can put your data in a simple-form data structure and feed it into xmerl:export_simple(Content,Callback,RootAttributes). Content may be a mixture of simple-form and xmerl records as xmlElement and xmlText.

The Types are:

Content = [Element] Callback = atom() RootAttributes = [Attributes]

Element is any of:

{Tag, Attributes, Content} {Tag, Content} Tag IOString #xmlText{} #xmlElement{} #xmlPI{} #xmlComment{} #xmlDecl{}

The simple-form structure is any of {Tag, Attributes, Content}, {Tag, Content} or Tag where:

Tag = atom() Attributes = [{Name, Value}| #xmlAttribute{}] Name = atom() Value = IOString | atom() | integer()

See also reference manual for xmerl

If you want to add the information about a black Harley Davidsson 1200 cc Sportster motorcycle from 2003 that is in shape as new in the motorcycles.xml document you can put the data in a simple-form data structure like:

Data =
  {bike,
     [{year,"2003"},{color,"black"},{condition,"new"}],
     [{name,
         [{manufacturer,["Harley Davidsson"]},
          {brandName,["XL1200C"]},
          {additionalName,["Sportster"]}]},
      {engine,
         ["V-engine, 2-cylinders, 1200 cc"]},
      {kind,["custom"]},
      {drive,["belt"]}]}    

In order to append this data to the end of the motorcycles.xml document you have to parse the file and add Data to the end of the root element content.

    {RootEl,Misc}=xmerl_scan:file('motorcycles.xml'),
    #xmlElement{content=Content} = RootEl,
    NewContent=Content++lists:flatten([Data]),
    NewRootEl=RootEl#xmlElement{content=NewContent},    

Then you can run it through the export_simple/2 function:

    {ok,IOF}=file:open('new_motorcycles.xml',[write]),
    Export=xmerl:export_simple([NewRootEl],xmerl_xml),
    io:format(IOF,"~s~n",[lists:flatten(Export)]),    

The result would be:

If it is important to get similar indentation and newlines as in the original document you have to add #xmlText{} records with space and newline values in appropriate places. It may also be necessary to keep the original prolog where the DTD is referenced. If so, it is possible to pass a RootAttribute {prolog,Value} to export_simple/3. The following example code fixes those changes in the previous example:

    Data =
      [#xmlText{value="  "},
       {bike,[{year,"2003"},{color,"black"},{condition,"new"}],
             [#xmlText{value="\
    "},
              {name,[#xmlText{value="\
      "},
                     {manufacturer,["Harley Davidsson"]},
                     #xmlText{value="\
      "},
                     {brandName,["XL1200C"]},
                     #xmlText{value="\
      "},
                     {additionalName,["Sportster"]},
                     #xmlText{value="\
    "}]},
              {engine,["V-engine, 2-cylinders, 1200 cc"]},
              #xmlText{value="\
    "},
              {kind,["custom"]},
              #xmlText{value="\
    "},
              {drive,["belt"]},
              #xmlText{value="\
  "}]},
       #xmlText{value="\
"}],
    ...
    NewContent=Content++lists:flatten([Data]),
    NewRootEl=RootEl#xmlElement{content=NewContent},
    ...
    Prolog = ["<?xml version=\\"1.0\\" encoding=\\"utf-8\\" ?>
<!DOCTYPE motorcycles SYSTEM \\"motorcycles.dtd\\">\
"],
    Export=xmerl:export_simple([NewRootEl],xmerl_xml,[{prolog,Prolog}]),
    ...    

The result will be:

Example: Transforming XML To HTML

Assume that you want to transform the motorcycles.xml document to HTML. If you want the same structure and tags of the resulting HTML document as of the XML document then you can use the xmerl:export/2 function. The following:

2> {Doc,Misc}=xmerl_scan:file('motorcycles.xml').
{{xmlElement,motorcycles,
             motorcycles,
             [],
             {xmlNamespace,[],[]},
             [],
             1,
             [],
             [{xmlText,[{motorcycles,1}],1,[],"\
  ",text},
              {xmlElement,bike,
...
3> DocHtml=xmerl:export([Doc],xmerl_html).
["<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC \\"",
 "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN",
 "\\"",
 [],
 ">\
",
 [[["<","motorcycles",">"],
   ["\
  ",
    [["<",
      "bike",
      [[" ","year","=\\"","2000","\\""],[" ","color","=\\"","black","\\""]],
      ">"],
...    

Will give the result result_export.html

Perhaps you want to do something more arranged for human reading. Suppose that you want to list all different brands in the beginning with links to each group of motorcycles. You also want all motorcycles sorted by brand, then some flashy colors on top of it. Thus you rearrange the order of the elements and put in arbitrary HTML tags. This is possible to do by means of the XSL Transformation (XSLT) like functionality in xmerl.

Even though the following example shows one way to transform data from XML to HTML it also applies to transformations to other formats.

xmerl_xs does not implement the entire XSLT specification but the basic functionality. For all details see the reference manual

First, some words about the xmerl_xs functionality:

You need to write template functions to be able to control what kind of output you want. Thus if you want to encapsulate a bike element in <p> tags you simply write a function:

template(E = #xmlElement{name='bike'}) ->
    ["<p>",xslapply(fun template/1,E),"</p>"];    

With xslapply you tell the XSLT processor in which order it should traverse the XML structure. By default it goes in preorder traversal, but with the following we make a deliberate choice to break that order:

template(E = #xmlElement{name='bike'}) ->
    ["<p>",xslapply(fun template/1,select("bike/name/manufacturer")),"</p>"];    

If you want to output the content of an XML element or an attribute you will get the value as a string by the value_of function:

template(E = #xmlElement{name='motorcycles'}) ->
    ["<p>",value_of(select("bike/name/manufacturer",E),"</p>"];    

In the xmerl_xs functions you can provide a select(String) call, which is an XPath functionality. For more details see the xmerl_xs tutorial.

Now, back to the example where we wanted to make the output more arranged. With the template:

template(E = #xmlElement{name='motorcycles'}) ->
    [    "<head>\
<title>motorcycles</title>\
</head>\
",
         "<body>\
",
\011 "<h1>Used Motorcycles</h1>\
",
\011 "<ul>\
",
\011 remove_duplicates(value_of(select("bike/name/manufacturer",E))),
\011 "\
</ul>\
",
\011 sort_by_manufacturer(xslapply(fun template/1, E)),
         "</body>\
",
\011 "</html>\
"];    

We match on the top element and embed the inner parts in an HTML body. Then we extract the string values of all motorcycle brands, sort them and removes duplicates by remove_duplicates(value_of(select("bike/name/manufacturer", E))). We also process the substructure of the top element and pass it to a function that sorts all motorcycle information by brand according to the task formulation in the beginning of this example.

The next template matches on the bike element:

template(E = #xmlElement{name='bike'}) ->
    {value_of(select("name/manufacturer",E)),["<dt>",xslapply(fun template/1,select("name",E)),"</dt>",
    "<dd><ul>\
",
    "<li style="color:green">Manufacturing year: ",xslapply(fun template/1,select("@year",E)),"</li>\
",
    "<li style="color:red">Color: ",xslapply(fun template/1,select("@color",E)),"</li>\
",
    "<li style="color:blue">Shape : ",xslapply(fun template/1,select("@condition",E)),"</li>\
",
    "</ul></dd>\
"]};    

This creates a tuple with the brand of the motorcycle and the output format. We use the brand name only for sorting purpose. We have to end the template function with the "built in clause" template(E) -> built_in_rules(fun template/1, E).

The entire program is motorcycles2html.erl:

If we run it like this: motorcycles2html:process_to_file('result_xs.html', 'motorcycles2.xml'). The result will be result_xs.html. When the input file is of the same structure as the previous "motorcycles" XML files but it has a little more 'bike' elements and the 'manufacturer' elements are not in order.