Provided by: libxml-simple-perl_2.20-1_all bug

NAME

       XML::Simple::FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions about XML::Simple

Basics

   What is XML::Simple designed to be used for?
       XML::Simple is a Perl module that was originally developed as a tool for reading and
       writing configuration data in XML format.  You can use it for many other purposes that
       involve storing and retrieving structured data in XML.

       You might also find XML::Simple a good starting point for playing with XML from Perl.  It
       doesn't have a steep learning curve and if you outgrow its capabilities there are plenty
       of other Perl/XML modules to 'step up' to.

   Why store configuration data in XML anyway?
       The many advantages of using XML format for configuration data include:

       •   Using existing XML parsing tools requires less development time, is easier and more
           robust than developing your own config file parsing code

       •   XML can represent relationships between pieces of data, such as nesting of sections to
           arbitrary levels (not easily done with .INI files for example)

       •   XML is basically just text, so you can easily edit a config file (easier than editing
           a Win32 registry)

       •   XML provides standard solutions for handling character sets and encoding beyond basic
           ASCII (important for internationalization)

       •   If it becomes necessary to change your configuration file format, there are many tools
           available for performing transformations on XML files

       •   XML is an open standard (the world does not need more proprietary binary file formats)

       •   Taking the extra step of developing a DTD allows the format of configuration files to
           be validated before your program reads them (not directly supported by XML::Simple)

       •   Combining a DTD with a good XML editor can give you a GUI config editor for minimal
           coding effort

   What isn't XML::Simple good for?
       The main limitation of XML::Simple is that it does not work with 'mixed content' (see the
       next question).  If you consider your XML files contain marked up text rather than
       structured data, you should probably use another module.

       If you are working with very large XML files, XML::Simple's approach of representing the
       whole file in memory as a 'tree' data structure may not be suitable.

   What is mixed content?
       Consider this example XML:

         <document>
           <para>This is <em>mixed</em> content.</para>
         </document>

       This is said to be mixed content, because the <para> element contains both character data
       (text content) and nested elements.

       Here's some more XML:

         <person>
           <first_name>Joe</first_name>
           <last_name>Bloggs</last_name>
           <dob>25-April-1969</dob>
         </person>

       This second example is not generally considered to be mixed content.  The <first_name>,
       <last_name> and <dob> elements contain only character data and the  <person> element
       contains only nested elements.  (Note: Strictly speaking, the whitespace between the
       nested elements is character data, but it is ignored by XML::Simple).

   Why doesn't XML::Simple handle mixed content?
       Because if it did, it would no longer be simple :-)

       Seriously though, there are plenty of excellent modules that allow you to work with mixed
       content in a variety of ways.  Handling mixed content correctly is not easy and by
       ignoring these issues, XML::Simple is able to present an API without a steep learning
       curve.

   Which Perl modules do handle mixed content?
       Every one of them except XML::Simple :-)

       If you're looking for a recommendation, I'd suggest you look at the Perl-XML FAQ at:

         http://perl-xml.sourceforge.net/faq/

Installation

   How do I install XML::Simple?
       If you're running ActiveState Perl, you've probably already got XML::Simple (although you
       may want to upgrade to version 1.09 or better for SAX support).

       If you do need to install XML::Simple, you'll need to install an XML parser module first.
       Install either XML::Parser (which you may have already) or XML::SAX.  If you install both,
       XML::SAX will be used by default.

       Once you have a parser installed ...

       On Unix systems, try:

         perl -MCPAN -e 'install XML::Simple'

       If that doesn't work, download the latest distribution from
       ftp://ftp.cpan.org/pub/CPAN/authors/id/G/GR/GRANTM , unpack it and run these commands:

         perl Makefile.PL
         make
         make test
         make install

       On Win32, if you have a recent build of ActiveState Perl (618 or better) try this command:

         ppm install XML::Simple

       If that doesn't work, you really only need the Simple.pm file, so extract it from the
       .tar.gz file (eg: using WinZIP) and save it in the \site\lib\XML directory under your Perl
       installation (typically C:\Perl).

   I'm trying to install XML::Simple and 'make test' fails
       Is the directory where you've unpacked XML::Simple mounted from a file server using NFS,
       SMB or some other network file sharing?  If so, that may cause errors in the the following
       test scripts:

         3_Storable.t
         4_MemShare.t
         5_MemCopy.t

       The test suite is designed to exercise the boundary conditions of all XML::Simple's
       functionality and these three scripts exercise the caching functions.  If XML::Simple is
       asked to parse a file for which it has a cached copy of a previous parse, then it compares
       the timestamp on the XML file with the timestamp on the cached copy.  If the cached copy
       is *newer* then it will be used.  If the cached copy is older or the same age then the
       file is re-parsed.  The test scripts will get confused by networked filesystems if the
       workstation and server system clocks are not synchronised (to the second).

       If you get an error in one of these three test scripts but you don't plan to use the
       caching options (they're not enabled by default), then go right ahead and run 'make
       install'.  If you do plan to use caching, then try unpacking the distribution on local
       disk and doing the build/test there.

       It's probably not a good idea to use the caching options with networked filesystems in
       production.  If the file server's clock is ahead of the local clock, XML::Simple will re-
       parse files when it could have used the cached copy.  However if the local clock is ahead
       of the file server clock and a file is changed immediately after it is cached, the old
       cached copy will be used.

       Is one of the three test scripts (above) failing but you're not running on a network
       filesystem?  Are you running Win32?  If so, you may be seeing a bug in Win32 where writes
       to a file do not affect its modfication timestamp.

       If none of these scenarios match your situation, please confirm you're running the latest
       version of XML::Simple and then email the output of 'make test' to me at grantm@cpan.org

   Why is XML::Simple so slow?
       If you find that XML::Simple is very slow reading XML, the most likely reason is that you
       have XML::SAX installed but no additional SAX parser module.  The XML::SAX distribution
       includes an XML parser written entirely in Perl.  This is very portable but not very fast.
       For better performance install either XML::SAX::Expat or XML::LibXML.

Usage

   How do I use XML::Simple?
       If you had an XML document called /etc/appconfig/foo.xml you could 'slurp' it into a
       simple data structure (typically a hashref) with these lines of code:

         use XML::Simple;

         my $config = XMLin('/etc/appconfig/foo.xml');

       The XMLin() function accepts options after the filename.

   There are so many options, which ones do I really need to know about?
       Although you can get by without using any options, you shouldn't even consider using
       XML::Simple in production until you know what these two options do:

       •   forcearray

       •   keyattr

       The reason you really need to read about them is because the default values for these
       options will trip you up if you don't.  Although everyone agrees that these defaults are
       not ideal, there is not wide agreement on what they should be changed to.  The answer
       therefore is to read about them (see below) and select values which are right for you.

   What is the forcearray option all about?
       Consider this XML in a file called ./person.xml:

         <person>
           <first_name>Joe</first_name>
           <last_name>Bloggs</last_name>
           <hobbie>bungy jumping</hobbie>
           <hobbie>sky diving</hobbie>
           <hobbie>knitting</hobbie>
         </person>

       You could read it in with this line:

         my $person = XMLin('./person.xml');

       Which would give you a data structure like this:

         $person = {
           'first_name' => 'Joe',
           'last_name'  => 'Bloggs',
           'hobbie'     => [ 'bungy jumping', 'sky diving', 'knitting' ]
         };

       The <first_name> and <last_name> elements are represented as simple scalar values which
       you could refer to like this:

         print "$person->{first_name} $person->{last_name}\n";

       The <hobbie> elements are represented as an array - since there is more than one.  You
       could refer to the first one like this:

         print $person->{hobbie}->[0], "\n";

       Or the whole lot like this:

         print join(', ', @{$person->{hobbie}} ), "\n";

       The catch is, that these last two lines of code will only work for people who have more
       than one hobbie.  If there is only one <hobbie> element, it will be represented as a
       simple scalar (just like <first_name> and <last_name>).  Which might lead you to write
       code like this:

         if(ref($person->{hobbie})) {
           print join(', ', @{$person->{hobbie}} ), "\n";
         }
         else {
           print $person->{hobbie}, "\n";
         }

       Don't do that.

       One alternative approach is to set the forcearray option to a true value:

         my $person = XMLin('./person.xml', forcearray => 1);

       Which will give you a data structure like this:

         $person = {
           'first_name' => [ 'Joe' ],
           'last_name'  => [ 'Bloggs' ],
           'hobbie'     => [ 'bungy jumping', 'sky diving', 'knitting' ]
         };

       Then you can use this line to refer to all the list of hobbies even if there was only one:

         print join(', ', @{$person->{hobbie}} ), "\n";

       The downside of this approach is that the <first_name> and <last_name> elements will also
       always be represented as arrays even though there will never be more than one:

         print "$person->{first_name}->[0] $person->{last_name}->[0]\n";

       This might be OK if you change the XML to use attributes for things that will always be
       singular and nested elements for things that may be plural:

         <person first_name="Jane" last_name="Bloggs">
           <hobbie>motorcycle maintenance</hobbie>
         </person>

       On the other hand, if you prefer not to use attributes, then you could specify that any
       <hobbie> elements should always be represented as arrays and all other nested elements
       should be simple scalar values unless there is more than one:

         my $person = XMLin('./person.xml', forcearray => [ 'hobbie' ]);

       The forcearray option accepts a list of element names which should always be forced to an
       array representation:

         forcearray => [ qw(hobbie qualification childs_name) ]

       See the XML::Simple manual page for more information.

   What is the keyattr option all about?
       Consider this sample XML:

         <catalog>
           <part partnum="1842334" desc="High pressure flange" price="24.50" />
           <part partnum="9344675" desc="Threaded gasket"      price="9.25" />
           <part partnum="5634896" desc="Low voltage washer"   price="12.00" />
         </catalog>

       You could slurp it in with this code:

         my $catalog = XMLin('./catalog.xml');

       Which would return a data structure like this:

         $catalog = {
             'part' => [
                 {
                   'partnum' => '1842334',
                   'desc'    => 'High pressure flange',
                   'price'   => '24.50'
                 },
                 {
                   'partnum' => '9344675',
                   'desc'    => 'Threaded gasket',
                   'price'   => '9.25'
                 },
                 {
                   'partnum' => '5634896',
                   'desc'    => 'Low voltage washer',
                   'price'   => '12.00'
                 }
             ]
         };

       Then you could access the description of the first part in the catalog with this code:

         print $catalog->{part}->[0]->{desc}, "\n";

       However, if you wanted to access the description of the part with the part number of
       "9344675" then you'd have to code a loop like this:

         foreach my $part (@{$catalog->{part}}) {
           if($part->{partnum} eq '9344675') {
             print $part->{desc}, "\n";
             last;
           }
         }

       The knowledge that each <part> element has a unique partnum attribute allows you to
       eliminate this search.  You can pass this knowledge on to XML::Simple like this:

         my $catalog = XMLin($xml, keyattr => ['partnum']);

       Which will return a data structure like this:

         $catalog = {
           'part' => {
             '5634896' => { 'desc' => 'Low voltage washer',   'price' => '12.00' },
             '1842334' => { 'desc' => 'High pressure flange', 'price' => '24.50' },
             '9344675' => { 'desc' => 'Threaded gasket',      'price' => '9.25'  }
           }
         };

       XML::Simple has been able to transform $catalog->{part} from an arrayref to a hashref
       (keyed on partnum).  This transformation is called 'array folding'.

       Through the use of array folding, you can now index directly to the description of the
       part you want:

         print $catalog->{part}->{9344675}->{desc}, "\n";

       The 'keyattr' option also enables array folding when the unique key is in a nested element
       rather than an attribute.  eg:

         <catalog>
           <part>
             <partnum>1842334</partnum>
             <desc>High pressure flange</desc>
             <price>24.50</price>
           </part>
           <part>
             <partnum>9344675</partnum>
             <desc>Threaded gasket</desc>
             <price>9.25</price>
           </part>
           <part>
             <partnum>5634896</partnum>
             <desc>Low voltage washer</desc>
             <price>12.00</price>
           </part>
         </catalog>

       See the XML::Simple manual page for more information.

   So what's the catch with 'keyattr'?
       One thing to watch out for is that you might get array folding even if you don't supply
       the keyattr option.  The default value for this option is:

         [ 'name', 'key', 'id']

       Which means if your XML elements have a 'name', 'key' or 'id' attribute (or nested
       element) then they may get folded on those values.  This means that you can take advantage
       of array folding simply through careful choice of attribute names.  On the hand, if you
       really don't want array folding at all, you'll need to set 'key attr to an empty list:

         my $ref = XMLin($xml, keyattr => []);

       A second 'gotcha' is that array folding only works on arrays.  That might seem obvious,
       but if there's only one record in your XML and you didn't set the 'forcearray' option then
       it won't be represented as an array and consequently won't get folded into a hash.  The
       moral is that if you're using array folding, you should always turn on the forcearray
       option.

       You probably want to be as specific as you can be too.  For instance, the safest way to
       parse the <catalog> example above would be:

         my $catalog = XMLin($xml, keyattr => { part => 'partnum'},
                                   forcearray => ['part']);

       By using the hashref for keyattr, you can specify that only <part> elements should be
       folded on the 'partnum' attribute (and that the <part> elements should not be folded on
       any other attribute).

       By supplying a list of element names for forcearray, you're ensuring that folding will
       work even if there's only one <part>.  You're also ensuring that if the 'partnum' unique
       key is supplied in a nested element then that element won't get forced to an array too.

   How do I know what my data structure should look like?
       The rules are fairly straightforward:

       •   each element gets represented as a hash

       •   unless it contains only text, in which case it'll be a simple scalar value

       •   or unless there's more than one element with the same name, in which case they'll be
           represented as an array

       •   unless you've got array folding enabled, in which case they'll be folded into a hash

       •   empty elements (no text contents and no attributes) will either be represented as an
           empty hash, an empty string or undef - depending on the value of the 'suppressempty'
           option.

       If you're in any doubt, use Data::Dumper, eg:

         use XML::Simple;
         use Data::Dumper;

         my $ref = XMLin($xml);

         print Dumper($ref);

   I'm getting 'Use of uninitialized value' warnings
       You're probably trying to index into a non-existant hash key - try Data::Dumper.

   I'm getting a 'Not an ARRAY reference' error
       Something that you expect to be an array is not.  The two most likely causes are that you
       forgot to use 'forcearray' or that the array got folded into a hash - try Data::Dumper.

   I'm getting a 'No such array field' error
       Something that you expect to be a hash is actually an array.  Perhaps array folding failed
       because one element was missing the key attribute - try Data::Dumper.

   I'm getting an 'Out of memory' error
       Something in the data structure is not as you expect and Perl may be trying unsuccessfully
       to autovivify things - try Data::Dumper.

       If you're already using Data::Dumper, try calling Dumper() immediately after XMLin() - ie:
       before you attempt to access anything in the data structure.

   My element order is getting jumbled up
       If you read an XML file with XMLin() and then write it back out with XMLout(), the order
       of the elements will likely be different.  (However, if you read the file back in with
       XMLin() you'll get the same Perl data structure).

       The reordering happens because XML::Simple uses hashrefs to store your data and Perl
       hashes do not really have any order.

       It is possible that a future version of XML::Simple will use Tie::IxHash to store the data
       in hashrefs which do retain the order.  However this will not fix all cases of element
       order being lost.

       If your application really is sensitive to element order, don't use XML::Simple (and don't
       put order-sensitive values in attributes).

   XML::Simple turns nested elements into attributes
       If you read an XML file with XMLin() and then write it back out with XMLout(), some data
       which was originally stored in nested elements may end up in attributes.  (However, if you
       read the file back in with XMLin() you'll get the same Perl data structure).

       There are a number of ways you might handle this:

       •   use the 'forcearray' option with XMLin()

       •   use the 'noattr' option with XMLout()

       •   live with it

       •   don't use XML::Simple

   Why does XMLout() insert <name> elements (or attributes)?
       Try setting keyattr => [].

       When you call XMLin() to read XML, the 'keyattr' option controls whether arrays get
       'folded' into hashes.  Similarly, when you call XMLout(), the 'keyattr' option controls
       whether hashes get 'unfolded' into arrays.  As described above, 'keyattr' is enabled by
       default.

   Why are empty elements represented as empty hashes?
       An element is always represented as a hash unless it contains only text, in which case it
       is represented as a scalar string.

       If you would prefer empty elements to be represented as empty strings or the undefined
       value, set the 'suppressempty' option to '' or undef respectively.

   Why is ParserOpts deprecated?
       The "ParserOpts" option is a remnant of the time when XML::Simple only worked with the
       XML::Parser API.  Its value is completely ignored if you're using a SAX parser, so writing
       code which relied on it would bar you from taking advantage of SAX.

       Even if you are using XML::Parser, it is seldom necessary to pass options to the parser
       object.  A number of people have written to say they use this option to set XML::Parser's
       "ProtocolEncoding" option.  Don't do that, it's wrong, Wrong, WRONG!  Fix the XML document
       so that it's well-formed and you won't have a problem.

       Having said all of that, as long as XML::Simple continues to support the XML::Parser API,
       this option will not be removed.  There are currently no plans to remove support for the
       XML::Parser API.