Provided by: lire-devel-doc_2.1.1-2.1_all 

NAME
Lire::ReportParser - Lire::XMLParser which parses XML reports
SYNOPSIS
package MyParser;
use base qw/ Lire::ReportParser /;
sub parse_end {
return "Finished";
}
package main::
my $parser = new MyParser;
my $result = eval { $parser->parsefile( "report.xml" ) };
croak "Error parsing report.xml: $@" if $@
print $result, "\n";
DESCRIPTION
This is a Lire::XMLParser(3pm) subclass which handle XML document adhering to the Lire Report Markup
Language format. It's primary purpose is to write custom handlers for the Lire XML Report format.
USAGE
You create an instance of a subclass of Lire::ReportParser and use either one of the parse() or
parsefile() methods to process the XML reports. You'll probably never use the Lire::ReportParser module
directly; you'll likely use one subclass which actually does something when processing the document.
new( %args )
my $parser = new Lire::ReportParser::ReportBuilder();
The new() method takes parameters in the form of 'key' => value pairs. The available parameters are
specific to each processor. There are no generic parameters.
WRITING AN XML REPORT PROCESSOR
Using Lire::ReportParser, one can write an XML report processor.
The programming model is similar to the expat event-based interface or the well-known SAX model. The
principal difference with those models is that this module offers hooks specifically tailored for Lire's
XML reports. For example, instead of having one generic element-start event, you have methods for each
specific type of element, making it easy to hook on only the elements you're interested in. It also
offers some functions that make it easy to determine the context (always a difficulty in event-based
programming).
If you are uncomfortable with that kind of programming, there is also an object-oriented API available to
the XML reports. That API is more similar to DOM type of programming. Its principal drawback is that its
less performant since it has to parse the whole XML document in memory to build an object representation.
But if you need to "navigate" the document, it's a lot better than the event-based API.
The main way of using that API to write a custom XML report handler is by subclassing the
Lire::ReportParser module and overriding the functions related to the elements you are interested in.
There are 3 categories of methods you can override.
Customization Methods
Those are methods that customize the way the Lire::ReportParser will operate. The most important one
is the new() "constructor".
Generic element methods
Those are methods that are invoked on each element before the more specific or higher ones and can be
used to hook before the other events are synthesized.
HIGH-LEVEL EVENT METHODS
For each element defined, an element_name_start() and an element_name_end() method are invoked. For
elements that contains character data, an element_name_char() method will also be invoked altough, you
probably want to hook onto the easier handle_element_name() methods in these cases.
When you override any of those mehod (except the handle_element_name() one), you must invoke the parent
method also:
sub subreport_start {
my ( $self, $name, $attr ) = @_;
$self->SUPER::subreport_start( $name, $attr );
# Processor specific handling.
}
report_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the report element start tag is encountered.
The only defined attribute is "version". The current version is 2.0, but older 1.0 report can still be
parsed.
report_end( $name )
Called when the report element end tag is encountered.
handle_title( $title )
Method invoked after the "title" element was processed. The $title parameter contains the content of the
element. This can be a report's, subreport's or section's title. You'll need to use the in_element()
method to determine the context.
handle_description( $docbook_desc )
Unless the description_start and description_end events are overriden the content of the description will
be collected and will be available in the handle_description() method.
handle_date( $date, $date_epoch )
Called after the "date" element was parsed. The formatted date is available in the $date parameter, the
date in number of seconds since the epoch is available in the $date_epoch parameter.
This can be the report's or a subreport's date, you'll need to use the in_element() method to determine
the appropriate context.
handle_timespan( $timespan, $epoch_start, $epoch_end, $period )
Called after the "timespan" element was parsed. The formatted timespan is available in the $timespan
parameter, starting and ending dates of the timespan are available as number of seconds since the epoch
in the $epoch_start and $epoch_end parameters. The $period parameter contians the timespan's period
attribute.
This can be the timespan of the report or the subreport, you'll need to use the in_element() method to
determine the appropriate context.
section_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the opening tag of a "section" element is encountered.
section_end( $name )
Called when the closing tag of a "section" element is encountered.
missing_subreport_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the opening tag of a "missing-subreport" element is encountered. The "superservice" attribute
contains the superservice's of the subreport, the "type" attribute contains the report specification ID
and the "reason" attribute will contains the reason why the subreport is missing.
missing_subreport_end( $name )
Called when the closing tag of a "missing-subreport" element is encountered.
subreport_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the opening tag of the "subreport" element is encountered. The "superservice" attribute
contains the subreport's superservice and the "type" attribute contains the ID of the report
specification that was used to generate that subreport.
subreport_end( $name )
Called when the "subreport"'s closing tag is encountered.
table_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the opening tag of the "table" element is encountered. The "show" attribute contains the
maximum number of entries that should be displayed (there may more entries than this number).
table_end( $name )
Called when the "table"'s closing tag is encountered.
table_info_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the "table-info"'s closing tag is encountered.
There should be no reason for subclasses to override this method. The Lire::ReportParser takes care of
parsing the "table-info" content and offers that information through a Lire::Report::TableInfo object
which is accessible through the current_table_info() method.
table_info_end( $name )
Called when the "table-info"'s closing tag is encountered. See table_info_start() documentation for
important comments.
group_info_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the "group-info"'s opening tag is encountered. See table_info_start() documentation for
important comments.
group_info_end( $name )
Called when the "group-info"'s closing tag is encountered. See table_info_start() documentation for
important comments.
column_info_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the "column-info"'s opening tag is encountered. See table_info_start() documentation for
important comments.
column_info_end( $name )
Called when the "column-info"'s closing tag is encountered. See table_info_start() documentation for
important comments.
group_summary_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the "group-summary"'s opening tag is encountered.
group_summary_end( $name )
Called when the "group-summary"'s closing tag is encountered.
group_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the opening tag of the "group" element is encountered. "group" elements introduce a kind of
nested table. The "show" attribute contains the maximum number of entries that should be displayed,
altough more entries may be present in the report.
group_end( $name )
Called when the "group"'s closing tag is encountered.
entry_start( $name, $attr )
Called when the opening tag of an "entry" element is encountered.
entry_end( $name )
Called when the "entry"'s closing tag is encountered.
handle_name( $name_rec )
Called after a "name" element was parsed. The $name_rec parameter is an hash reference which contains the
different values of the name datum. Keys that are defined in this hash:
content
That's the actual content of the name element. This contains the name in a format suitable for
display.
value
This contains the unformatted value of the name. For example, when the name is a time string, this
attribute will contains the time in seconds since epoch.
range
For some names, the actual content express a range (time, size, etc.). This attribute contains the
length of the range.
col_info
The Lire::ColumnInfo object describing the column in which this name appears.
handle_value( $value_rec )
Called after a "value" element was parsed. The $value_rec parameter is an hash reference which contains
the different values of the value datum. Keys that are defined in this hash:
content
That's the actual content of the value element. This contains the value in a format suitable for
display.
value
This contains the unformatted value. For example, when bytes are displayed using "1M" or "1.1G", this
will contains the value in bytes.
total
This is used by values that represent an average. It contains the total which makes up the average.
n This is used by values that represent an average. It contains the total which was used in the
division to compute the average.
col_info
The Lire::ColumnInfo object describing the column in which this name appears.
handle_summary_value( $value_rec )
Called after a "value" element located in the group-summary element was parsed. The $value_rec parameter
is identical than in the handle_value() method.
handle_chart_configs( $configs )
If the Subreport contained chart configurations, an array reference of Lire::Report::ChartConfig objects
will be passed to this event handler.
CONTEXT METHODS
Finally, here a bunch of additional methods that can be used to query some context information when
processing elements.
current_subreport_count( )
Returns the number of subreport that are present to date in the report. That number is equals to the
number of processed "subreport" elements, i.e. the current subreport isn't counted untill the closing tag
was processed.
current_section_subreport_count( )
Returns the number of subreport that are present to date in the section. That number is equals to the
number of processed "subreport" elements, i.e. the current subreport isn't counted untill the closing tag
was processed.
current_date( )
Returns the content of the "date" element that applies to the current element. This will either be the
current subreport's date or the default one taken from the "report" element.
The date is returned as an hash reference which will contain the formatted date in the "date" key and the
date in seconds since epoch in the "time" key.
current_timespan( )
Returns the content of the "timespan" element that applies to the current element. This will either be
the current subreport's date or the default one taken from the "report" element.
The timespan is returned as an hash reference which will contain the formatted timespan in the "timespan"
key. The starting and ending date of the timespan are available as seconds since epoch in the "start" and
"end" keys. The "period" key contains the report's timespan.
current_superservice( )
Useful in "subreport" context, it returns the superservice's of the current subreport.
current_type( )
Useful in "subreport" context, it returns the ID of the report specification that was used to generate
the current subreport.
current_table_info()
Useful when processing "group" and "entry", this returns a Lire::Report;:TableInfo object which describes
the layout of the current table.
current_group_entry_show( )
Useful in "table" and "group" context, it returns the maximum number of entries that should be displayed.
show_current_entry( )
Useful in "entry" context , this can be used to test whether or not the current "entry" should be
displayed based on the current entry index and the parent's "show" attribute.
current_table_entry_count( )
Useful in "table" context, it returns the number of entries that were processed so far. This only reports
the entries in the "table" element, not counting the one in the nested "group".
SEE ALSO
Lire::Report(3pm), Lire::XMLParser(3pm)
Lire::ReportParser::AsciiDocBookFormatter(3pm),
Lire::ReportParser::AsciiWriter(3pm),
Lire::ReportParser::HTMLDocBookFormatter(3pm),
Lire::ReportParser::HTMLWriter(3pm),
Lire::ReportParser::ReportBuilder(3pm),
Lire::ReportParser::ExcelWriter(3pm),
Lire::Report::TableInfo(3pm)
AUTHOR
Francis J. Lacoste <flacoste@logreport.org>
VERSION
$Id: ReportParser.pm,v 1.52 2006/07/23 13:16:29 vanbaal Exp $
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Stichting LogReport Foundation LogReport@LogReport.org
This file is part of Lire.
Lire is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program (see COPYING);
if not, check with http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html.
Lire 2.1.1 2013-08-27 ReportParser(3pm)