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XML::Compile::FAQ(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation XML::Compile::FAQ(3)

XML::Compile::FAQ - frequently asked questions

On this page, a wild collection of questions are answered. If you have contributions either in question or as answer, then please contribute via the mailinglist.

See also XML::Compile::SOAP::FAQ.

what do the cho_, seq_ and all_ start of labels mean?

X::C tries to give you a simple data-structure in Perl, however XML does not always map directly only that. One such situation is where you have blocks within a list of elements. In such case, the block gets a name which is composed by the type of block and the first element in the block. You will encounter these names in some error messages and when these block have a maxOccurs larger than 1.

Example. The name "cho_tic" is used to represent the following nameless choice block:

  <choice>
    <element name="tic" />
    <element name="tac" />
    <element name="toe" />
  </choice>

localName collission

In the default behavior, only the "local" names of the XML elements are used in the Perl structure. However, it is very well possible that the same name appears in more than on XML name-space, used within the same data structure. So see this often with substitutionGroups.

When collissions happen, you have to switch to use "key_rewrite => 'PREFIXED'" in the compile rules. All keys will now get rewritten: the name-space prefix will be prepended. The prefixes are defined by the mapping table provided with the "prefixes" option or by default from the XML schemas.

See "Key rewrite" in XML::Compile::Schema for the full list of options.

Overruling produced structures (writer)

You may encounter broken servers. Actually, I have seen even expensive server implementations and professional high-profile services which do not follow the rules...

On any location in the data structure you provide, you can give a value but also a fully prepared XML::LibXML node. For instance

   my $doc  = XML::LibXML::Document->new('1.1', 'UTF-8');
   my $node = $doc->createElement('field);
   $node->appendText(42);
   my $xml  = $schema->writer($type)->($doc, { field => $node });
   $doc->setDocumentElement($xml);
   
   print $xml->toString(1);   # perl string
   print $doc->toString(1);   # bytes

You will probably need more than one attempt to produce the correct output... Only use this when you are sure that the receiving party is broken.

Producting CDATA blocks (writer)

To get CDATA blocks, the solution is very close to the example in the previous section:

   my $doc   = XML::LibXML::Document->new('1.1', 'UTF-8');
   my $cdata = $doc->createCDATASection($content);
   my $xml   = $schema->writer($type)->($doc, { field => $cdata });
   $doc->setDocumentElement($xml);

The "$content" is a Perl string, which means that it needs to be utf8 when it is utf8. For instance:

   use File::Slurp::Tiny;
   my $content = read_file $filename, binmode => 'utf8';
   my $cdata   = $doc->createCDATASection($content);

Be aware that the "2001" schema specification is continuously under development. So, the namespace has not been changed over time, but the content has.

qualified elements

One of the more noticeable problems with schemas is the specification of the namespaces to be used for the schema. In older schema's, like many important protocols, there was no way to specify whether elements should be used qualified or not. Some schema's lack the target namespace declaration. Those fields did not exist in earlier versions of the "2001" spec; it was defined in the documentation.

So, what you may encounter is something like:

  <schema xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">

where (in the current syntax) it should have been

  <schema xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
    targetNamespace="http://my-namespace"
    elementFormDefault="qualified"
    attributeFormDefault="unqualified">

The default for "targetNamespace" is "namespace-less". The *FormDefault defaults are "unqualified", which is a pity: most schemas will use qualified elements.

Of course, you can add these fields to the schema file, but that violates the intergrity of that external resource. Therefore, use options:

  my $schema = XML::Compile::Schema->new;
  $schema->importDefinitions("schema.xsd"
     , target_namespace     => 'http://my-namespace'
     , element_form_default => 'qualified'
     );

You may also provide all these options with "new()" directly.

  my $schema = XML::Compile::Schema->new("schema.xsd"
     , target_namespace     => 'http://my-namespace'
     , element_form_default => 'qualified'
     );

If you use the XML::Compile::Cache object, which extends ::Schema, then you have a nice "printIndex" method which shows you what has been read.

schema location

The official idea about the use of schema's, is that you get the latest version of them on the moment you start the application. There are two major problems with that:

. you may not have (a working) internet connection on that moment
. remote changes in the spec may break your application unexpectedly

In general, IMO as author of the XML::Compile suite, you should never want this dynamic, unpredictable behavior!

Besides, the content of the "schemaLocation" attribute to "import", "include" and "schema" elements are usually broken, missing and/or flawed. You can better do it by hand.

Collect the schema's you need in a directory. The name of the schema file does not need to means anything useful. Then, add the location where the schema's are found:

   my $schema = XML::Compile::Cache->new;
   $schema->addSchemaDirs($my_schema_dir);

Add the mapping from namespaces to filenames (you may provide an ARRAY of names or use the same namespace multiple times). It is useful to have a constant defined for your namespace.

   use constant MY_NS => 'http://very-long';
   $schema->knownNamespace(&MY_NS => 'schemafile.xsd');
   $schema->importDefinitions(MY_NS, @options);

There is also a less clean solution:

   my $schema = XML::Compile::Cache->new('schemafile.xsd', @options);

When you have many xsd's to include, you may do this:

   my @xsds = glob "$my_schema_dir/*.xsd";
   my $schema = XML::Compile::Cache->new;
   $schema->knownNamespace(&MY_NS => \@xsds);
   $schema->importDefinitions(MY_NS, @options);

or

   my $schema = XML::Compile::Cache->new(\@xsds, @options);

fixing schemas

Many schema's are broken. XML::Compile is not a good tool to figure-out what is wrong with the schema. Have you tried "xmllint"? Sometimes, you get sufficient help adding to the top of your script:

   use Log::Report mode => 'DEBUG';

When you know what is wrong, you can overrule parts of the schema by redefining elements; simply: the last definition for an element wins. For instance:

   $schema->importDefinition(<<'_PATCH');
   <schema ....>
     <element name="has_bug">
        ...
     </element>
   _PATCH

Of course, you can also use an external file for this.

Example

This is a piece of code actually used. It shows various complications when an external schema is "loaded" "dynamically" into another schema.

  # In the top of your script
  my $schema_dir = '/usr/share/schemas';
  my $xyz_ns     = 'http://www.xyzeorder.com/workflow';
  my $xyz_xsd    = 'xyzSchema.xsd';

  # In the main part of your script
  my $schema     = XML::Compile::Cache->new(....);
  $schema->addSchemaDirs($schema_dir);
  $schema->importDefinitions($xyz_xsd, target_namespace => $xyz_ns);
  $schema->addPrefixes(xyz => $xyz_ns);
  $schema->addKeyRewrite('PREFIXED(xyz)');

The schema "forgets" to mention its "targetNamespace", so it is overruled. The ::Cache extension handles prefixes much nicer than the ::Schema base object. So, with reading/writing the hash keys which relate to the elements in this schema will have "xyz_" as prefix for clarity.

my data is not recognized

You do specify the data in your structure, but it seems not to be recognized. See "wrong error message"

wrong error message

You may get an error message about a "missing data item" on a higher structural level than where the problem actually is. This especially happens with unions and substitutionGroups. The problem is cause by the fact that on a certain structural level, multiple alternatives may appear which only differ many levels deep in structure. X::C needs to scan all the alternatives, and when all fail it does not know which of the alternatives was "the best" alternative.

Try turning on debugging with:

  use Log::Report  mode => "DEBUG";

This module is part of XML-Compile distribution version 1.63, built on July 02, 2019. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/xml-compile/

Copyrights 2006-2019 by [Mark Overmeer <markov@cpan.org>]. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/

2019-07-02 perl v5.32.1

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