Provided by: libsoap-wsdl-perl_2.00.10-2_all bug

NAME

       SOAP::WSDL::Manual::Parser - How SOAP::WSDL parses XML messages

Which XML message does SOAP::WSDL parse ?

       Naturally, there are two kinds of XML documents (or messages) SOAP::WSDL has to parse:

       •   WSDL definitions

       •   SOAP messages

       There are different parser implementations available for SOAP messages and WSDL
       definitions.

WSDL definitions parser

   SOAP::WSDL::Expat::WSDLParser
       A parser for WSDL definitions based on XML::Parser::Expat.

        my $parser = SOAP::WSDL::Expat::WSDLParser->new();
        my $wsdl = $parser->parse_file( $filename );

       The WSDL parser creates a tree of perl objects, whose root is a SOAP::WSDL::Definitions
       element.

SOAP messages parser

   SOAP::WSDL::Expat::MessageParser
       SOAP::WSDL::Expat::MessageParser converts SOAP messages to SOAP::WSDL::XSD object trees.

       It uses a class resolvers for finding out which class a particular XML element should be
       of, and type libs containing these classes.

       Creating a class resolver

       The easiest way for creating a class resolver is to run SOAP::WSDL's generator.

       See wsdl2perl.

       The class resolver must implement a class method "get_class", which is passed a list ref
       of the current element's XPath (relative to Body), split by /.

       This method must return a class name appropriate for a XML element.

       A class resolver package might look like this:

        package ClassResolver;

        my %class_list = (
           'EnqueueMessage' => 'Typelib::TEnqueueMessage',
           'EnqueueMessage/MMessage' => 'Typelib::TMessage',
           'EnqueueMessage/MMessage/MRecipientURI' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Builtin::anyURI',
           'EnqueueMessage/MMessage/MMessageContent' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Builtin::string',
        );

        sub new { return bless {}, 'ClassResolver' };

        sub get_class {
           my $name = join('/', @{ $_[1] });
           return ($class_list{ $name }) ? $class_list{ $name }
               : warn "no class found for $name";
        };
        1;

       Skipping unwanted items

       Sometimes there's unnecessary information transported in SOAP messages.

       To skip XML nodes (including all child nodes), just edit the type map for the message and
       set the type map entry to '__SKIP__'.

       In the example above, EnqueueMessage/StuffIDontNeed and all child elements are skipped.

        my %class_list = (
           'EnqueueMessage' => 'Typelib::TEnqueueMessage',
           'EnqueueMessage/MMessage' => 'Typelib::TMessage',
           'EnqueueMessage/MMessage/MRecipientURI' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Builtin::anyURI',
           'EnqueueMessage/MMessage/MMessageContent' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Builtin::string',
           'EnqueueMessage/StuffIDontNeed' => '__SKIP__',
           'EnqueueMessage/StuffIDontNeed/Foo' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Builtin::string',
           'EnqueueMessage/StuffIDontNeed/Bar' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Builtin::string',
        );

       Note that only SOAP::WSDL::Expat::MessageParser implements skipping elements at the time
       of writing.

       Creating type lib classes

       Every element must have a correspondent one in the type library.

       Builtin types should be resolved as SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Builtin::* classes

       Creating a type lib is easy: Just run SOAP::WSDL's generator - it will create both a
       typemap and the type lib classes for a WSDL file.

       Sometimes it is nessecary to create type lib classes by hand - not all WSDL definitions
       are complete.

       For writing your own lib classes, see SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Typelib::Element,
       SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Typelib::ComplexType and SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Typelib::SimpleType.

   SOAP::WSDL::Expat::Message2Hash
       Transforms a SOAP message into a perl hash refs. Using this parser is usually triggered by
       calling the "outputhash" method of SOAP::WSDL, or by using SOAP::WSDL::Deserializer::Hash.

       Acts somewhat like XML::Simple, but faster.

       The following restrictions apply:

       •   Ignores all namespaces

       •   Ignores all attributes

       •   Does not handle mixed content

       •   The SOAP header is ignored

OLD SAX HANDLER

       Historically, SOAP::WSDL used SAX for parsing XML. The SAX handlers were implemented as
       XML::LibXML handlers, which also worked with XML::SAX::ParserFactory.

       Support for SAX and XML::LibXML in SOAP::WSDL is discontinued for the following reasons:

       •   Speed

           XML::Parser::Expat is faster than XML::LibXML - at least when optimized for speed.

           High parsing speed is one of the key requirements for a SOAP toolkit - if XML
           serializing and (more important) deserializing are not fast enough, the whole toolkit
           is unusable.

       •   Availability

           XML::Parser is more popular than XML::LibXML.

       •   Stability

           XML::LibXML is based on the libxml2 library. Several versions of libxml2 are known to
           have specific bugs. As a workaround, there are often several versions of libxml2
           installed on one system. This may lead to problems on operating systems which cannot
           load more than one version of a shared library simultaneously.

           XML::LibXML is also still under development, while XML::Parser has had time to
           stabilize.

       •   SOAP::Lite uses XML::Parser

           SOAP::Lite uses XML::Parser if available.  SOAP::WSDL should not require users to
           install both XML::Parser and XML::LibXML.

       The old SAX handler historically used in SOAP::WSDL are not included in the SOAP::WSDL
       package any more.

       However, they may be obtained from the "attic" directory in SOAP::WSDL's SVN repository at

       https://soap-wsdl.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/soap-wsdl/SOAP-WSDL/trunk/attic

       •   SOAP::WSDL::SAX::WSDLHandler

           This is a SAX handler for parsing WSDL files into object trees SOAP::WSDL works with.

           It's built as a native handler for XML::LibXML, but will also work with
           XML::SAX::ParserFactory.

           To parse a WSDL file, use one of the following variants:

            my $parser = XML::LibXML->new();
            my $handler = SOAP::WSDL::SAX::WSDLHandler->new();
            $parser->set_handler( $handler );
            $parser->parse( $xml );
            my $data = $handler->get_data();

            my $handler = SOAP::WSDL::SAX::WSDLHandler->new({
                   base => 'XML::SAX::Base'
            });
            my $parser = XML::SAX::ParserFactor->parser(
               Handler => $handler
            );
            $parser->parse( $xml );
            my $data = $handler->get_data();

       •   SOAP::WSDL::SAX::MessageHandler

           This is a SAX handler for parsing WSDL files into object trees SOAP::WSDL works with.

           It's built as a native handler for XML::LibXML, but will also work with
           XML::SAX::ParserFactory.

           Can be used for parsing both streams (chunks) and documents.

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2007 Martin Kutter.

       This file is part of SOAP-WSDL. You may distribute/modify it under the same terms as perl
       itself.

AUTHOR

       Martin Kutter <martin.kutter fen-net.de>

REPOSITORY INFORMATION

        $Rev: 391 $
        $LastChangedBy: kutterma $
        $Id: Parser.pod 391 2007-11-17 21:56:13Z kutterma $
        $HeadURL: https://soap-wsdl.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/soap-wsdl/SOAP-WSDL/trunk/lib/SOAP/WSDL/Manual/Parser.pod $