SLAXML
SAX-like streaming XML parser for Lua
Install / Use
/learn @Phrogz/SLAXMLREADME
SLAXML
SLAXML is a pure-Lua SAX-like streaming XML parser. It is more robust than
many (simpler) pattern-based parsers that exist (such as mine), properly
supporting code like <expr test="5 > 7" />, CDATA nodes, comments, namespaces,
and processing instructions.
It is currently not a truly valid XML parser, however, as it allows certain XML that is syntactically-invalid (not well-formed) to be parsed without reporting an error.
Features
- Pure Lua in a single file (two files if you use the DOM parser).
- Streaming parser does a single pass through the input and reports what it sees along the way.
- Supports processing instructions (
<?foo bar?>). - Supports comments (
<!-- hello world -->). - Supports CDATA sections (
<![CDATA[ whoa <xml> & other content as text ]]>). - Supports namespaces, resolving prefixes to the proper namespace URI (
<foo xmlns="bar">and<wrap xmlns:bar="bar"><bar:kittens/></wrap>). - Supports unescaped greater-than symbols in attribute content (a common failing for simpler pattern-based parsers).
- Unescapes named XML entities (
< > & " ') and numeric entities (e.g. ) in attributes and text nodes (but—properly—not in comments or CDATA). Properly handles edge cases like&amp;. - Optionally ignore whitespace-only text nodes (as appear when indenting XML markup).
- Includes an optional DOM parser that is both a convenient way to pull in XML to use as well as a nice example of using the streaming parser.
- DOM module also provides DOM-to-XML serialization, including options for pretty-printing and sorting (making plain-text diffs sane). Parse XML, modify Lua tables, and then round-trip the results back to XML.
- Does not add any keys to the global namespace.
Usage
local SLAXML = require 'slaxml'
local myxml = io.open('my.xml'):read('*all')
-- Specify as many/few of these as you like
parser = SLAXML:parser{
startElement = function(name,nsURI,nsPrefix) end, -- When "<foo" or <x:foo is seen
attribute = function(name,value,nsURI,nsPrefix) end, -- attribute found on current element
closeElement = function(name,nsURI) end, -- When "</foo>" or </x:foo> or "/>" is seen
text = function(text,cdata) end, -- text and CDATA nodes (cdata is true for cdata nodes)
comment = function(content) end, -- comments
pi = function(target,content) end, -- processing instructions e.g. "<?yes mon?>"
}
-- Ignore whitespace-only text nodes and strip leading/trailing whitespace from text
-- (does not strip leading/trailing whitespace from CDATA)
parser:parse(myxml,{stripWhitespace=true})
If you just want to see if it will parse your document correctly, you can simply do:
local SLAXML = require 'slaxml'
SLAXML:parse(myxml)
…which will cause SLAXML to use its built-in callbacks that print the results as they are seen.
DOM Builder
If you simply want to build tables from your XML, you can alternatively:
local SLAXML = require 'slaxdom' -- also requires slaxml.lua; be sure to copy both files
local doc = SLAXML:dom(myxml)
The returned table is a 'document' composed of tables for elements, attributes, text nodes, comments, and processing instructions. See the following documentation for what each supports.
DOM Table Features
- Document - the root table returned from the
SLAXML:dom()method.doc.type: the string"document"doc.name: the string"#doc"doc.kids: an array table of child processing instructions, the root element, and comment nodes.doc.root: the root element for the document
- Element
someEl.type: the string"element"someEl.name: the string name of the element (without any namespace prefix)someEl.nsURI: the namespace URI for this element;nilif no namespace is appliedsomeAttr.nsPrefix: the namespace prefix string;nilif no prefix is appliedsomeEl.attr: a table of attributes, indexed by name and indexlocal value = someEl.attr['attribute-name']: any namespace prefix of the attribute is not part of the namelocal someAttr = someEl.attr[1]: a single attribute table (see below); useful for iterating all attributes of an element, or for disambiguating attributes with the same name in different namespaces
someEl.kids: an array table of child elements, text nodes, comment nodes, and processing instructionssomeEl.el: an array table of child elements onlysomeEl.parent: reference to the parent element or document table
- Attribute
someAttr.type: the string"attribute"someAttr.name: the name of the attribute (without any namespace prefix)someAttr.value: the string value of the attribute (with XML and numeric entities unescaped)someAttr.nsURI: the namespace URI for the attribute;nilif no namespace is appliedsomeAttr.nsPrefix: the namespace prefix string;nilif no prefix is appliedsomeAttr.parent: reference to the owning element table
- Text - for both CDATA and normal text nodes
someText.type: the string"text"someText.name: the string"#text"someText.cdata:trueif the text was from a CDATA blocksomeText.value: the string content of the text node (with XML and numeric entities unescaped for non-CDATA elements)someText.parent: reference to the parent element table
- Comment
someComment.type: the string"comment"someComment.name: the string"#comment"someComment.value: the string content of the attributesomeComment.parent: reference to the parent element or document table
- Processing Instruction
somePI.type: the string"pi"somePI.name: the string name of the PI, e.g.<?foo …?>has a name of"foo"somePI.value: the string content of the PI, i.e. everything but the namesomePI.parent: reference to the parent element or document table
Finding Text for a DOM Element
The following function can be used to calculate the "inner text" for an element:
function elementText(el)
local pieces = {}
for _,n in ipairs(el.kids) do
if n.type=='element' then pieces[#pieces+1] = elementText(n)
elseif n.type=='text' then pieces[#pieces+1] = n.value
end
end
return table.concat(pieces)
end
local xml = [[<p>Hello <em>you crazy <b>World</b></em>!</p>]]
local para = SLAXML:dom(xml).root
print(elementText(para)) --> "Hello you crazy World!"
A Simpler DOM
If you want the DOM tables to be easier to inspect you can supply the simple option via:
local dom = SLAXML:dom(myXML,{ simple=true })
In this case the document will have no root property, no table will have a parent property, elements will not have the el collection, and the attr collection will be a simple array (without values accessible directly via attribute name). In short, the output will be a strict hierarchy with no internal references to other tables, and all data represented in exactly one spot.
Serializing the DOM
You can serialize any DOM table to an XML string by passing it to the SLAXML:xml() method:
local SLAXML = require 'slaxdom'
local doc = SLAXML:dom(myxml)
-- ...modify the document...
local xml = SLAXML:xml(doc)
The xml() method takes an optional table of options as its second argument:
local xml = SLAXML:xml(doc,{
indent = 2, -- each pi/comment/element/text node on its own line, indented by this many spaces
indent = '\t', -- ...or, supply a custom string to use for indentation
sort = true, -- sort attributes by name, with no-namespace attributes coming first
omit = {...} -- an array of namespace URIs; removes elements and attributes in these namespaces
})
When using the indent option, you likely want to ensure that you parsed your DOM using the stripWhitespace option. This will prevent you from having whitespace text nodes between elements that are then placed on their own indented line.
Some examples showing the serialization options:
local xml = [[
<!-- a simple document showing sorting and namespace culling -->
<r c="1" z="3" b="2" xmlns="uri1" xmlns:x="uri2" xmlns:a="uri3">
<e a:foo="f" x:alpha="a" a:bar="b" alpha="y" beta="beta" />
<a:wrap><f/></a:wrap>
</r>
]]
local dom = SLAXML:dom(xml, {stripWhitespace=true})
print(SLAXML:xml(dom))
--> <!-- a simple document showing sorting and namespace culling --><r c="1" z="3" b="2" xmlns="uri1" xmlns:x="uri2" xmlns:a="uri3"><e a:foo="f" x:alpha="a" a:bar="b" alpha="y" beta="beta"/><a:wrap><f/></a:wrap></r>
print(SLAXML:xml(dom, {indent=2}))
--> <!-- a simple document showing sorting and namespace culling -->
--> <r c="1" z="3" b="2" xmlns="uri1" xmlns:x="uri2" xmlns:a="uri3">
--> <e a:foo="f" x:alpha="a" a:bar="b" alpha="y" beta="beta"/>
--> <a:wrap>
--> <f/>
--> </a:wrap>
--> </r>
print(SLAXML:xml(dom.root.kids[2]))
--> <a:wrap><f/></a:wrap>
-- NOTE: you can serialize any DOM table node, not just documents
print(SLAXML:xml(dom.root.kids[1], {indent=2, sort=true}))
--> <e alpha="y" beta="beta" a:bar="b" a:foo="f" x:alpha="a"/>
-- NOTE: attributes with no namespace come first
print(SLAXML:xml(dom, {indent=2, omit={'uri3'}}))
--> <!-- a simple document showing sorting and namespace culling -->
--> <r c="1" z="3" b="2" xmlns="uri1" xmlns:x="uri2">
--> <e x:alpha="a" alpha="y" beta="beta"/>
--> </r>
-- NOTE: Omitting a namespace omits:
-- * namespace declaration(s) for that space
-- * attributes prefixed for that namespace
-- * elements in that namespace, INCLUDING DESCENDANTS
print(SLAXML:xml(dom, {indent=2, omit={'uri3', 'uri2'}}))
--> <!-- a simple document showing sorting
