go-libxml2
Interface to libxml2, with DOM interface.
WARNING
This repository has been moved to github.com/lestrrat-go/libxml2. This repository exists so that libraries pointing to this URL will keep functioning, but this repository will NOT be updated in the future. Please use the new import path.
Why?
I needed to write go-xmlsec. This means we need to build trees using libxml2, and then muck with it in xmlsec: Two separate packages in Go means we cannot (safely) pass around C.xmlFooPtr
objects (also, you pay a penalty for pointer types). This package carefully avoid references to C.xmlFooPtr
types and uses uintptr to pass data around, so other libraries that needs to interact with libxml2 can safely interact with it.
Status
- This library should be considered alpha grade. API may still change.
- Much of commonly used functionalities from libxml2 that I use are there already, and are known to be functional
Package Layout:
Name | Description |
---|
libxml2 | Globally available utility functions, such as ParseString |
types | Common data types, such as types.Node |
parser | Parser routines |
dom | DOM-like manipulation of XML document/nodes |
xpath | XPath related tools |
xsd | XML Schema related tools |
clib | Wrapper around C libxml2 library - DO NOT TOUCH IF UNSURE |
Features
Create XML documents using DOM-like interface:
d := dom.CreateDocument()
e, err := d.CreateElement("foo")
if err != nil {
println(err)
return
}
d.SetDocumentElement(e)
...
Parse documents:
d, err := libxml2.ParseString(xmlstring)
if err != nil {
println(err)
return
}
Use XPath to extract node values:
text := xpath.String(node.Find("//xpath/expression"))
Examples
Basic XML Example
import (
"log"
"net/http"
"github.com/lestrrat/go-libxml2"
"github.com/lestrrat/go-libxml2/parser"
"github.com/lestrrat/go-libxml2/types"
"github.com/lestrrat/go-libxml2/xpath"
)
func ExampleXML() {
res, err := http.Get("http://blog.golang.org/feed.atom")
if err != nil {
panic("failed to get blog.golang.org: " + err.Error())
}
p := parser.New()
doc, err := p.ParseReader(res.Body)
defer res.Body.Close()
if err != nil {
panic("failed to parse XML: " + err.Error())
}
defer doc.Free()
doc.Walk(func(n types.Node) error {
log.Printf(n.NodeName())
return nil
})
root, err := doc.DocumentElement()
if err != nil {
log.Printf("Failed to fetch document element: %s", err)
return
}
ctx, err := xpath.NewContext(root)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("Failed to create xpath context: %s", err)
return
}
defer ctx.Free()
ctx.RegisterNS("atom", "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom")
title := xpath.String(ctx.Find("/atom:feed/atom:title/text()"))
log.Printf("feed title = %s", title)
}
Basic HTML Example
func ExampleHTML() {
res, err := http.Get("http://golang.org")
if err != nil {
panic("failed to get golang.org: " + err.Error())
}
doc, err := libxml2.ParseHTMLReader(res.Body)
if err != nil {
panic("failed to parse HTML: " + err.Error())
}
defer doc.Free()
doc.Walk(func(n types.Node) error {
log.Printf(n.NodeName())
return nil
})
nodes := xpath.NodeList(doc.Find(`//div[@id="menu"]/a`))
for i := 0; i < len(nodes); i++ {
log.Printf("Found node: %s", nodes[i].NodeName())
}
}
XSD Validation
import (
"io/ioutil"
"log"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"github.com/lestrrat/go-libxml2"
"github.com/lestrrat/go-libxml2/xsd"
)
func ExampleXSD() {
xsdfile := filepath.Join("test", "xmldsig-core-schema.xsd")
f, err := os.Open(xsdfile)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("failed to open file: %s", err)
return
}
defer f.Close()
buf, err := ioutil.ReadAll(f)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("failed to read file: %s", err)
return
}
s, err := xsd.Parse(buf)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("failed to parse XSD: %s", err)
return
}
defer s.Free()
d, err := libxml2.ParseString(`<foo></foo>`)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("failed to parse XML: %s", err)
return
}
if err := s.Validate(d); err != nil {
for _, e := range err.(xsd.SchemaValidationError).Errors() {
log.Printf("error: %s", e.Error())
}
return
}
log.Printf("validation successful!")
}
Caveats
Other libraries
There exists many similar libraries. I want speed, I want DOM, and I want XPath.When all of these are met, I'd be happy to switch to another library.
For now my closest contender was xmlpath, but as of this writing it suffers in the speed (for xpath) area a bit:
shoebill% go test -v -run=none -benchmem -benchtime=5s -bench .
PASS
BenchmarkXmlpathXmlpath-4 500000 11737 ns/op 721 B/op 6 allocs/op
BenchmarkLibxml2Xmlpath-4 1000000 7627 ns/op 368 B/op 15 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncodingXMLDOM-4 2000000 4079 ns/op 4560 B/op 9 allocs/op
BenchmarkLibxml2DOM-4 1000000 11454 ns/op 264 B/op 7 allocs/op
ok github.com/lestrrat/go-libxml2 37.597s
See Also
Credits