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 | <h1 align="center">The XML C library for Gnome</h1> | 
 |  | 
 | <h1>Note: this is the flat content of the <a href="index.html">web | 
 | site</a></h1> | 
 |  | 
 | <h1 style="text-align: center">libxml, a.k.a. gnome-xml</h1> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml is the XML C library developped for the Gnome project.  XML itself | 
 | is a metalanguage to design markup languages, i.e. text language where | 
 | semantic and structure are added to the content using extra "markup" | 
 | information enclosed between angle bracket. HTML is the most well-known | 
 | markup language.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml2 implements a number of existing standards related to markup | 
 | languages:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>the XML standard: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml">http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml</a></li> | 
 |   <li>Namespaces in XML: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/</a></li> | 
 |   <li>XML Base: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlbase/">http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlbase/</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc2396.txt">RFC 2396</a> | 
 |      : Uniform Resource Identifiers <a | 
 |     href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt">http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt</a></li> | 
 |   <li>XML Path Language (XPath) 1.0: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath">http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath</a></li> | 
 |   <li>HTML4 parser: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/">http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/</a></li> | 
 |   <li>most of XML Pointer Language (XPointer) Version 1.0: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr">http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr</a></li> | 
 |   <li>XML Inclusions (XInclude) Version 1.0: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude/">http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude/</a></li> | 
 |   <li>[ISO-8859-1], <a | 
 |     href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc2044.txt">rfc2044</a> [UTF-8] | 
 |     and <a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc2781.txt">rfc2781</a> | 
 |     [UTF-16] core encodings</li> | 
 |   <li>part of SGML Open Technical Resolution TR9401:1997</li> | 
 |   <li>XML Catalogs Working Draft 06 August 2001: <a | 
 |     href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/spec-2001-08-06.html">http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/spec-2001-08-06.html</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In most cases libxml tries to implement the specifications in a relatively | 
 | strict way. To some extent libxml2 provide some support for the following | 
 | other specification but don't claim to implement them:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Document Object Model (DOM) <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/">http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/</a> | 
 |     it doesn't implement the API itself, gdome2 does this in top of | 
 |   libxml2</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc959.txt">RFC 959</a> | 
 |      : libxml implements a basic FTP client code</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc1945.txt">RFC 1945</a> | 
 |      : HTTP/1.0, again a basic HTTP client code</li> | 
 |   <li>SAX: a minimal SAX implementation compatible with early expat | 
 |   versions</li> | 
 |   <li>DocBook SGML v4: libxml2 includes a hackish parser to transition to | 
 |   XML</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Separate documents:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/">the libxslt page</a> | 
 |      providing an implementation of XSLT 1.0 and extensions on top of | 
 |   libxml2</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.cs.unibo.it/~casarini/gdome2/">the gdome2 page</a> | 
 |      : a standard DOM2 implementation based on libxml2</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Introducti">Introduction</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>This document describes libxml, the <a | 
 | href="http://www.w3.org/XML/">XML</a> C library developped for the <a | 
 | href="http://www.gnome.org/">Gnome</a> project. <a | 
 | href="http://www.w3.org/XML/">XML is a standard</a> for building tag-based | 
 | structured documents/data.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here are some key points about libxml:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Libxml exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for both XML and | 
 |     HTML.</li> | 
 |   <li>Libxml can do DTD validation at parse time, using a parsed document | 
 |     instance, or with an arbitrary DTD.</li> | 
 |   <li>Libxml now includes nearly complete <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath">XPath</a>, <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr">XPointer</a> and <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude">XInclude</a> implementations.</li> | 
 |   <li>It is written in plain C, making as few assumptions as possible, and | 
 |     sticking closely to ANSI C/POSIX for easy embedding. Works on | 
 |     Linux/Unix/Windows, ported to a number of other platforms.</li> | 
 |   <li>Basic support for HTTP and FTP client allowing aplications to fetch | 
 |     remote resources</li> | 
 |   <li>The design is modular, most of the extensions can be compiled out.</li> | 
 |   <li>The internal document repesentation is as close as possible to the <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/DOM/">DOM</a> interfaces.</li> | 
 |   <li>Libxml also has a <a href="http://www.megginson.com/SAX/index.html">SAX | 
 |     like interface</a>; the interface is designed to be compatible with <a | 
 |     href="http://www.jclark.com/xml/expat.html">Expat</a>.</li> | 
 |   <li>This library is released both under the <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/copyright-software-19980720.html">W3C | 
 |     IPR</a> and the <a href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html">GNU | 
 |     LGPL</a>. Use either at your convenience, basically this should make | 
 |     everybody happy, if not, drop me a mail.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Warning: unless you are forced to because your application links with a | 
 | Gnome library requiring it,  <strong><span | 
 | style="background-color: #FF0000">Do Not Use libxml1</span></strong>, use | 
 | libxml2</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="FAQ">FAQ</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Table of Content:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><a href="FAQ.html#Licence">Licence(s)</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="FAQ.html#Installati">Installation</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="FAQ.html#Compilatio">Compilation</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="FAQ.html#Developer">Developer corner</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Licence">Licence</a>(s)</h3> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><em>Licensing Terms for libxml</em> | 
 |     <p>libxml is released under 2 (compatible) licences:</p> | 
 |     <ul> | 
 |       <li>the <a href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lgpl.html">LGPL</a>: GNU | 
 |         Library General Public License</li> | 
 |       <li>the <a | 
 |         href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/copyright-software-19980720.html">W3C | 
 |         IPR</a>: very similar to the XWindow licence</li> | 
 |     </ul> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>Can I embed libxml in a proprietary application ?</em> | 
 |     <p>Yes. The W3C IPR allows you to also keep proprietary the changes you | 
 |     made to libxml, but it would be graceful to provide back bugfixes and | 
 |     improvements as patches for possible incorporation in the main | 
 |     development tree</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Installati">Installation</a></h3> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>Unless you are forced to because your application links with a Gnome | 
 |     library requiring it,  <strong><span style="background-color: #FF0000">Do | 
 |     Not Use libxml1</span></strong>, use libxml2</li> | 
 |   <li><em>Where can I get libxml</em> | 
 |      ? | 
 |     <p>The original distribution comes from <a | 
 |     href="ftp://rpmfind.net/pub/libxml/">rpmfind.net</a> or <a | 
 |     href="ftp://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/stable/sources/libxml/">gnome.org</a></p> | 
 |     <p>Most linux and Bsd distribution includes libxml, this is probably the | 
 |     safer way for end-users</p> | 
 |     <p>David Doolin provides precompiled Windows versions at <a | 
 |     href="http://www.ce.berkeley.edu/~doolin/code/libxmlwin32/         ">http://www.ce.berkeley.edu/~doolin/code/libxmlwin32/</a></p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>I see libxml and libxml2 releases, which one should I install ?</em> | 
 |     <ul> | 
 |       <li>If you are not concerned by any existing backward compatibility | 
 |         with existing application, install libxml2 only</li> | 
 |       <li>If you are not doing development, you can safely install both. | 
 |         usually the packages <a | 
 |         href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml.html">libxml</a> and <a | 
 |         href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2.html">libxml2</a> are | 
 |         compatible (this is not the case for development packages)</li> | 
 |       <li>If you are a developer and your system provides separate packaging | 
 |         for shared libraries and the development components, it is possible | 
 |         to install libxml and libxml2, and also <a | 
 |         href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml-devel.html">libxml-devel</a> | 
 |         and <a | 
 |         href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2-devel.html">libxml2-devel</a> | 
 |         too for libxml2 >= 2.3.0</li> | 
 |       <li>If you are developing a new application, please develop against | 
 |         libxml2(-devel)</li> | 
 |     </ul> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>I can't install the libxml package it conflicts with libxml0</em> | 
 |     <p>You probably have an old libxml0 package used to provide the shared | 
 |     library for libxml.so.0, you can probably safely remove it. Anyway the | 
 |     libxml packages provided on <a | 
 |     href="ftp://rpmfind.net/pub/libxml/">rpmfind.net</a> provides | 
 |     libxml.so.0</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>I can't install the libxml(2) RPM package due to failed | 
 |     dependancies</em> | 
 |     <p>The most generic solution is to refetch the latest src.rpm , and | 
 |     rebuild it locally with</p> | 
 |     <p><code>rpm --rebuild libxml(2)-xxx.src.rpm</code></p> | 
 |     <p>if everything goes well it will generate two binary rpm (one providing | 
 |     the shared libs and xmllint, and the other one, the -devel package | 
 |     providing includes, static libraries and scripts needed to build | 
 |     applications with libxml(2)) that you can install locally.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Compilatio">Compilation</a></h3> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><em>What is the process to compile libxml ?</em> | 
 |     <p>As most UNIX libraries libxml follows the "standard":</p> | 
 |     <p><code>gunzip -c xxx.tar.gz | tar xvf -</code></p> | 
 |     <p><code>cd libxml-xxxx</code></p> | 
 |     <p><code>./configure --help</code></p> | 
 |     <p>to see the options, then the compilation/installation proper</p> | 
 |     <p><code>./configure [possible options]</code></p> | 
 |     <p><code>make</code></p> | 
 |     <p><code>make install</code></p> | 
 |     <p>At that point you may have to rerun ldconfig or similar utility to | 
 |     update your list of installed shared libs.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>What other libraries are needed to compile/install libxml ?</em> | 
 |     <p>Libxml does not requires any other library, the normal C ANSI API | 
 |     should be sufficient (please report any violation to this rule you may | 
 |     find).</p> | 
 |     <p>However if found at configuration time libxml will detect and use the | 
 |     following libs:</p> | 
 |     <ul> | 
 |       <li><a href="http://www.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/zlib/">libz</a> | 
 |          : a highly portable and available widely compression library</li> | 
 |       <li>iconv: a powerful character encoding conversion library. It's | 
 |         included by default on recent glibc libraries, so it doesn't need to | 
 |         be installed specifically on linux. It seems it's now <a | 
 |         href="http://www.opennc.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xsh/iconv.html">part | 
 |         of the official UNIX</a> specification. Here is one <a | 
 |         href="http://clisp.cons.org/~haible/packages-libiconv.html">implementation | 
 |         of the library</a> which source can be found <a | 
 |         href="ftp://ftp.ilog.fr/pub/Users/haible/gnu/">here</a>.</li> | 
 |     </ul> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>libxml does not compile with HP-UX's optional ANSI-C compiler</em> | 
 |     <p>this is due to macro limitations. Try to add " -Wp,-H16800 -Ae" to the | 
 |     CFLAGS</p> | 
 |     <p>you can also install and use gcc instead or use a precompiled version | 
 |     of libxml, both available from the <a | 
 |     href="http://hpux.cae.wisc.edu/hppd/auto/summary_all.html">HP-UX Porting | 
 |     and Archive Centre</a></p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>make check fails on some platforms</em> | 
 |     <p>Sometime the regression tests results don't completely match the value | 
 |     produced by the parser, and the makefile uses diff to print the delta. On | 
 |     some platforms the diff return breaks the compilation process, if the | 
 |     diff is small this is probably not a serious problem</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>I use the CVS version and there is no configure script</em> | 
 |     <p>The configure (and other Makefiles) are generated. Use the autogen.sh | 
 |     script to regenerate the configure and Makefiles, like:</p> | 
 |     <p><code>./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --disable-shared</code></p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>I have troubles when running make tests with gcc-3.0</em> | 
 |     <p>It seems the initial release of gcc-3.0 has a problem with the | 
 |     optimizer which miscompiles the URI module. Please use another | 
 |     compiler</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Developer">Developer</a> corner</h3> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><em>xmlDocDump() generates output on one line</em> | 
 |     <p>libxml will not <strong>invent</strong> spaces in the content of a | 
 |     document since <strong>all spaces in the content of a document are | 
 |     significant</strong>. If you build a tree from the API and want | 
 |     indentation:</p> | 
 |     <ol> | 
 |       <li>the correct way is to generate those yourself too</li> | 
 |       <li>the dangerous way is to ask libxml to add those blanks to your | 
 |         content <strong>modifying the content of your document in the | 
 |         process</strong>. The result may not be what you expect. There is | 
 |         <strong>NO</strong> way to guarantee that such a modification won't | 
 |         impact other part of the content of your document. See <a | 
 |         href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html#XMLKEEPBLANKSDEFAULT">xmlKeepBlanksDefault | 
 |         ()</a> and <a | 
 |         href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-tree.html#XMLSAVEFORMATFILE">xmlSaveFormatFile | 
 |         ()</a></li> | 
 |     </ol> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>Extra nodes in the document: | 
 |     <p><em>For a XML file as below:</em></p> | 
 |     <pre><?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <PLAN xmlns="http://www.argus.ca/autotest/1.0/"> | 
 | <NODE CommFlag="0"/> | 
 | <NODE CommFlag="1"/> | 
 | </PLAN></pre> | 
 |     <p><em>after parsing it with the function | 
 |     pxmlDoc=xmlParseFile(...);</em></p> | 
 |     <p><em>I want to the get the content of the first node (node with the | 
 |     CommFlag="0")</em></p> | 
 |     <p><em>so I did it as following;</em></p> | 
 |     <pre>xmlNodePtr pode; | 
 | pnode=pxmlDoc->children->children;</pre> | 
 |     <p><em>but it does not work. If I change it to</em></p> | 
 |     <pre>pnode=pxmlDoc->children->children->next;</pre> | 
 |     <p><em>then it works.  Can someone explain it to me.</em></p> | 
 |     <p></p> | 
 |     <p>In XML all characters in the content of the document are significant | 
 |     <strong>including blanks and formatting line breaks</strong>.</p> | 
 |     <p>The extra nodes you are wondering about are just that, text nodes with | 
 |     the formatting spaces wich are part of the document but that people tend | 
 |     to forget. There is a function <a | 
 |     href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html">xmlKeepBlanksDefault | 
 |     ()</a>  to remove those at parse time, but that's an heuristic, and its | 
 |     use should be limited to case where you are sure there is no | 
 |     mixed-content in the document.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>I get compilation errors of existing code like when accessing | 
 |     <strong>root</strong> or <strong>childs fields</strong> of nodes</em> | 
 |     <p>You are compiling code developed for libxml version 1 and using a | 
 |     libxml2 development environment. Either switch back to libxml v1 devel or | 
 |     even better fix the code to compile with libxml2 (or both) by <a | 
 |     href="upgrade.html">following the instructions</a>.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>I get compilation errors about non existing | 
 |     <strong>xmlRootNode</strong> or <strong>xmlChildrenNode</strong> | 
 |     fields</em> | 
 |     <p>The source code you are using has been <a | 
 |     href="upgrade.html">upgraded</a> to be able to compile with both libxml | 
 |     and libxml2, but you need to install a more recent version: | 
 |     libxml(-devel) >= 1.8.8 or libxml2(-devel) >= 2.1.0</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>XPath implementation looks seriously broken</em> | 
 |     <p>XPath implementation prior to 2.3.0 was really incomplete, upgrade to | 
 |     a recent version, the implementation and debug of libxslt generated fixes | 
 |     for most obvious problems.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>The example provided in the web page does not compile</em> | 
 |     <p>It's hard to maintain the documentation in sync with the code | 
 |     <grin/> ...</p> | 
 |     <p>Check the previous points 1/ and 2/ raised before, and send | 
 |     patches.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><em>Where can I get more examples and informations than in the web | 
 |     page</em> | 
 |     <p>Ideally a libxml book would be nice. I have no such plan ... But you | 
 |     can:</p> | 
 |     <ul> | 
 |       <li>check more deeply the <a href="html/libxml-lib.html">existing | 
 |         generated doc</a></li> | 
 |       <li>looks for examples of use for libxml function using the Gnome code | 
 |         for example the following will query the full Gnome CVs base for the | 
 |         use of the <strong>xmlAddChild()</strong> function: | 
 |         <p><a | 
 |         href="http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/search?string=xmlAddChild">http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/search?string=xmlAddChild</a></p> | 
 |         <p>This may be slow, a large hardware donation to the gnome project | 
 |         could cure this :-)</p> | 
 |       </li> | 
 |       <li><a | 
 |         href="http://cvs.gnome.org/bonsai/rview.cgi?cvsroot=/cvs/gnome&dir=gnome-xml">Browse | 
 |         the libxml source</a> | 
 |          , I try to write code as clean and documented as possible, so | 
 |         looking at it may be helpful</li> | 
 |     </ul> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>What about C++ ? | 
 |     <p>libxml is written in pure C in order to allow easy reuse on a number | 
 |     of platforms, including embedded systems. I don't intend to convert to | 
 |     C++.</p> | 
 |     <p>There is however a C++ wrapper provided by Ari Johnson | 
 |     <ari@btigate.com> which may fullfill your needs:</p> | 
 |     <p>Website: <a | 
 |     href="http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/">http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/</a></p> | 
 |     <p>Download: <a | 
 |     href="http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/libxml++.tar.gz">http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/libxml++.tar.gz</a></p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>How to validate a document a posteriori ? | 
 |     <p>It is possible to validate documents which had not been validated at | 
 |     initial parsing time or documents who have been built from scratch using | 
 |     the API. Use the <a | 
 |     href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-valid.html#XMLVALIDATEDTD">xmlValidateDtd()</a> | 
 |     function. It is also possible to simply add a Dtd to an existing | 
 |     document:</p> | 
 |     <pre>xmlDocPtr doc; /* your existing document */ | 
 |         xmlDtdPtr dtd = xmlParseDTD(NULL, filename_of_dtd); /* parse the DTD */ | 
 |         dtd->name = xmlStrDup((xmlChar*)"root_name"); /* use the given root */ | 
 |  | 
 |         doc->intSubset = dtd; | 
 |         if (doc->children == NULL) xmlAddChild((xmlNodePtr)doc, (xmlNodePtr)dtd); | 
 |         else xmlAddPrevSibling(doc->children, (xmlNodePtr)dtd); | 
 |           </pre> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>etc ...</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Documentat">Documentation</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>There are some on-line resources about using libxml:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>Check the <a href="FAQ.html">FAQ</a></li> | 
 |   <li>Check the <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-lib.html">extensive | 
 |     documentation</a> automatically extracted from code comments (using <a | 
 |     href="http://cvs.gnome.org/bonsai/rview.cgi?cvsroot=/cvs/gnome&dir=gtk-doc">gtk | 
 |     doc</a>).</li> | 
 |   <li>Look at the documentation about <a href="encoding.html">libxml | 
 |     internationalization support</a></li> | 
 |   <li>This page provides a global overview and <a href="#real">some | 
 |     examples</a> on how to use libxml.</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="mailto:james@daa.com.au">James Henstridge</a> | 
 |      wrote <a | 
 |     href="http://www.daa.com.au/~james/gnome/xml-sax/xml-sax.html">some nice | 
 |     documentation</a> explaining how to use the libxml SAX interface.</li> | 
 |   <li>George Lebl wrote <a | 
 |     href="http://www-4.ibm.com/software/developer/library/gnome3/">an article | 
 |     for IBM developerWorks</a> about using libxml.</li> | 
 |   <li>Check <a href="http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/source/gnome-xml/TODO">the TODO | 
 |     file</a></li> | 
 |   <li>Read the <a href="upgrade.html">1.x to 2.x upgrade path</a>. If you are | 
 |     starting a new project using libxml you should really use the 2.x | 
 |   version.</li> | 
 |   <li>And don't forget to look at the <a href="/messages/">mailing-list | 
 |     archive</a>.</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Reporting">Reporting bugs and getting help</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Well, bugs or missing features are always possible, and I will make a | 
 | point of fixing them in a timely fashion. The best way to report a bug is to | 
 | use the <a href="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?product=libxml">Gnome | 
 | bug tracking database</a> (make sure to use the "libxml" module name). I look | 
 | at reports there regularly and it's good to have a reminder when a bug is | 
 | still open. Be sure to specify that the bug is for the package libxml.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>There is also a mailing-list <a | 
 | href="mailto:xml@gnome.org">xml@gnome.org</a> for libxml, with an  <a | 
 | href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">on-line archive</a> (<a | 
 | href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages">old</a>). To subscribe to this list, | 
 | please visit the <a | 
 | href="http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/xml">associated Web</a> page and | 
 | follow the instructions. <strong>Do not send code, I won't debug it</strong> | 
 | (but patches are really appreciated!).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Check the following <strong><span style="color: #FF0000">before | 
 | posting</span></strong>:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>read the <a href="FAQ.html">FAQ</a></li> | 
 |   <li>make sure you are <a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/">using a recent | 
 |     version</a>, and that the problem still shows up in those</li> | 
 |   <li>check the <a href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">list | 
 |     archives</a> to see if the problem was reported already, in this case | 
 |     there is probably a fix available, similary check the <a | 
 |     href="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?product=libxml">registered | 
 |     open bugs</a></li> | 
 |   <li>make sure you can reproduce the bug with xmllint or one of the test | 
 |     programs found in source in the distribution</li> | 
 |   <li>Please send the command showing the error as well as the input (as an | 
 |     attachement)</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Then send the bug with associated informations to reproduce it to the <a | 
 | href="mailto:xml@gnome.org">xml@gnome.org</a> list; if it's really libxml | 
 | related I will approve it.. Please do not send me mail directly, it makes | 
 | things really harder to track and in some cases I'm not the best person to | 
 | answer a given question, ask the list instead.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Of course, bugs reported with a suggested patch for fixing them will | 
 | probably be processed faster.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>If you're looking for help, a quick look at <a | 
 | href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">the list archive</a> may actually | 
 | provide the answer, I usually send source samples when answering libxml usage | 
 | questions. The <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/book1.html">auto-generated | 
 | documentantion</a> is not as polished as I would like (i need to learn more | 
 | about Docbook), but it's a good starting point.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="help">How to help</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>You can help the project in various ways, the best thing to do first is to | 
 | subscribe to the mailing-list as explained before, check the <a | 
 | href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">archives </a>and the <a | 
 | href="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?product=libxml">Gnome bug | 
 | database:</a>:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>provide patches when you find problems</li> | 
 |   <li>provide the diffs when you port libxml to a new platform. They may not | 
 |     be integrated in all cases but help pinpointing portability problems | 
 |   and</li> | 
 |   <li>provide documentation fixes (either as patches to the code comments or | 
 |     as HTML diffs).</li> | 
 |   <li>provide new documentations pieces (translations, examples, etc ...)</li> | 
 |   <li>Check the TODO file and try to close one of the items</li> | 
 |   <li>take one of the points raised in the archive or the bug database and | 
 |     provide a fix. <a href="mailto:daniel@veillard.com">Get in touch with me | 
 |     </a>before to avoid synchronization problems and check that the suggested | 
 |     fix will fit in nicely :-)</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Downloads">Downloads</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The latest versions of libxml can be found on <a | 
 | href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/">xmlsoft.org</a> (<a | 
 | href="ftp://speakeasy.rpmfind.net/pub/libxml/">Seattle</a>, <a | 
 | href="ftp://fr.rpmfind.net/pub/libxml/">France</a>) or on the <a | 
 | href="ftp://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/MIRRORS.html">Gnome FTP server</a> either | 
 | as a <a href="ftp://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/stable/sources/libxml/">source | 
 | archive</a> or <a | 
 | href="ftp://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/stable/redhat/i386/libxml/">RPM | 
 | packages</a>. (NOTE that you need both the <a | 
 | href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2.html">libxml(2)</a> and <a | 
 | href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2-devel.html">libxml(2)-devel</a> | 
 | packages installed to compile applications using libxml.) <a | 
 | href="mailto:izlatkovic@daenet.de">Igor  Zlatkovic</a> is now the maintainer | 
 | of the Windows port, <a | 
 | href="http://www.fh-frankfurt.de/~igor/projects/libxml/index.html">he | 
 | provides binaries</a>. <a href="mailto:Gary.Pennington@sun.com">Gary | 
 | Pennington</a> provides <a | 
 | href="http://pages.eidosnet.co.uk/~garypen/libxml/">Solaris binaries</a>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><a name="Snapshot">Snapshot:</a></p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Code from the W3C cvs base libxml <a | 
 |     href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/cvs-snapshot.tar.gz">cvs-snapshot.tar.gz</a></li> | 
 |   <li>Docs, content of the web site, the list archive included <a | 
 |     href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml-docs.tar.gz">libxml-docs.tar.gz</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><a name="Contribs">Contributions:</a></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>I do accept external contributions, especially if compiling on another | 
 | platform,  get in touch with me to upload the package, wrappers for various | 
 | languages have been provided, and can be found in the <a | 
 | href="contribs.html">contrib section</a></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml is also available from CVS:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><p>The <a | 
 |     href="http://cvs.gnome.org/bonsai/rview.cgi?cvsroot=/cvs/gnome&dir=gnome-xml">Gnome | 
 |     CVS base</a>. Check the <a | 
 |     href="http://developer.gnome.org/tools/cvs.html">Gnome CVS Tools</a> | 
 |     page; the CVS module is <b>gnome-xml</b>.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>The <strong>libxslt</strong> module is also present there</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="News">News</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>CVS only : check the <a | 
 | href="http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/source/gnome-xml/ChangeLog">Changelog</a> file | 
 | for a really accurate description</h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Items floating around but not actively worked on, get in touch with me if | 
 | you want to test those</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Implementing <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT">XSLT</a>, this is done | 
 |     as a separate C library on top of libxml called libxslt</li> | 
 |   <li>Finishing up <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr">XPointer</a> and <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude">XInclude</a></li> | 
 |   <li>(seeems working but delayed from release) parsing/import of Docbook | 
 |     SGML docs</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.10: Nov 10 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>URI escaping fix (Joel Young)</li> | 
 |   <li>added xmlGetNodePath() (for paths or XPointers generation)</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixes namespace handling problems when using DTD and validation</li> | 
 |   <li>improvements on xmllint: Morus Walter patches for --format and | 
 |     --encode, Stefan Kost and Heiko Rupp improvements on the --shell</li> | 
 |   <li>fixes for xmlcatalog linking pointed by Weiqi Gao</li> | 
 |   <li>fixes to the HTML parser</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.9: Nov 6 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>fixes more catalog bugs</li> | 
 |   <li>avoid a compilation problem, improve xmlGetLineNo()</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.8: Nov 4 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>fixed SGML catalogs broken in previous release, updated xmlcatalog | 
 |   tool</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a compile errors and some includes troubles.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.7: Oct 30 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>exported some debugging interfaces</li> | 
 |   <li>serious rewrite of the catalog code</li> | 
 |   <li>integrated Gary Pennington thread safety patch, added configure option | 
 |     and regression tests</li> | 
 |   <li>removed an HTML parser bug</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a couple of potentially serious validation bugs</li> | 
 |   <li>integrated the SGML DocBook support in xmllint</li> | 
 |   <li>changed the nanoftp anonymous login passwd</li> | 
 |   <li>some I/O cleanup and a couple of interfaces for Perl wrapper</li> | 
 |   <li>general bug fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>updated xmllint man page by John Fleck</li> | 
 |   <li>some VMS and Windows updates</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.6: Oct 10 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>added an updated man pages by John Fleck</li> | 
 |   <li>portability and configure fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>an infinite loop on the HTML parser was removed (William)</li> | 
 |   <li>Windows makefile patches from Igor</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed half a dozen bugs reported fof libxml or libxslt</li> | 
 |   <li>updated xmlcatalog to be able to modify SGML super catalogs</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.5: Sep 14 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Remove a few annoying bugs in 2.4.4</li> | 
 |   <li>forces the HTML serializer to output decimal charrefs since some | 
 |     version of Netscape can't handle hexadecimal ones</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.16: Sep 14 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>maintenance release of the old libxml1 branch, couple of bug and | 
 |     portability fixes</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.4: Sep 12 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>added --convert to xmlcatalog, bug fixes and cleanups of XML | 
 |   Catalog</li> | 
 |   <li>a few bug fixes and some portability changes</li> | 
 |   <li>some documentation cleanups</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.3:  Aug 23 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>XML Catalog support see the doc</li> | 
 |   <li>New NaN/Infinity floating point code</li> | 
 |   <li>A few bug fixes</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.2:  Aug 15 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>adds xmlLineNumbersDefault() to control line number generation</li> | 
 |   <li>lot of bug fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>the Microsoft MSC projects files shuld now be up to date</li> | 
 |   <li>inheritance of namespaces from DTD defaulted attributes</li> | 
 |   <li>fixes a serious potential security bug</li> | 
 |   <li>added a --format option to xmllint</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.1:  July 24 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>possibility to keep line numbers in the tree</li> | 
 |   <li>some computation NaN fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>extension of the XPath API</li> | 
 |   <li>cleanup for alpha and ia64 targets</li> | 
 |   <li>patch to allow saving through HTTP PUT or POST</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.4.0: July 10 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Fixed a few bugs in XPath, validation, and tree handling.</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed XML Base implementation, added a coupel of examples to the | 
 |     regression tests</li> | 
 |   <li>A bit of cleanup</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.14: July 5 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>fixed some entities problems and reduce mem requirement when | 
 |     substituing them</li> | 
 |   <li>lots of improvements in the XPath queries interpreter can be | 
 |     substancially faster</li> | 
 |   <li>Makefiles and configure cleanups</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixes to XPath variable eval, and compare on empty node set</li> | 
 |   <li>HTML tag closing bug fixed</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed an URI reference computating problem when validating</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.13: June 28 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>2.3.12 configure.in was broken as well as the push mode XML parser</li> | 
 |   <li>a few more fixes for compilation on Windows MSC by Yon Derek</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.14: June 28 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Zbigniew Chyla gave a patch to use the old XML parser in push mode</li> | 
 |   <li>Small Makefile fix</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.12: June 26 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>lots of cleanup</li> | 
 |   <li>a couple of validation fix</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed line number counting</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed serious problems in the XInclude processing</li> | 
 |   <li>added support for UTF8 BOM at beginning of entities</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a strange gcc optimizer bugs in xpath handling of float, gcc-3.0 | 
 |     miscompile uri.c (William), Thomas Leitner provided a fix for the | 
 |     optimizer on Tru64</li> | 
 |   <li>incorporated Yon Derek and Igor Zlatkovic  fixes and improvements for | 
 |     compilation on Windows MSC</li> | 
 |   <li>update of libxml-doc.el (Felix Natter)</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed 2 bugs in URI normalization code</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.11: June 17 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>updates to trio, Makefiles and configure should fix some portability | 
 |     problems (alpha)</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed some HTML serialization problems (pre, script, and block/inline | 
 |     handling), added encoding aware APIs, cleanup of this code</li> | 
 |   <li>added xmlHasNsProp()</li> | 
 |   <li>implemented a specific PI for encoding support in the DocBook SGML | 
 |     parser</li> | 
 |   <li>some XPath fixes (-Infinity, / as a function parameter and namespaces | 
 |     node selection)</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a performance problem and an error in the validation code</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed XInclude routine to implement the recursive behaviour</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed xmlFreeNode problem when libxml is included statically twice</li> | 
 |   <li>added --version to xmllint for bug reports</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.10: June 1 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>fixed the SGML catalog support</li> | 
 |   <li>a number of reported bugs got fixed, in XPath, iconv detection, | 
 |     XInclude processing</li> | 
 |   <li>XPath string function should now handle unicode correctly</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.9: May 19 2001</h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Lots of bugfixes, and added a basic SGML catalog support:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>HTML push bugfix #54891 and another patch from Jonas Borgström</li> | 
 |   <li>some serious speed optimisation again</li> | 
 |   <li>some documentation cleanups</li> | 
 |   <li>trying to get better linking on solaris (-R)</li> | 
 |   <li>XPath API cleanup from Thomas Broyer</li> | 
 |   <li>Validation bug fixed #54631, added a patch from Gary Pennington, fixed | 
 |     xmlValidGetValidElements()</li> | 
 |   <li>Added an INSTALL file</li> | 
 |   <li>Attribute removal added to API: #54433</li> | 
 |   <li>added a basic support for SGML catalogs</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed xmlKeepBlanksDefault(0) API</li> | 
 |   <li>bugfix in xmlNodeGetLang()</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a small configure portability problem</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed an inversion of SYSTEM and PUBLIC identifier in HTML document</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.13: May 14 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>bugfixes release of the old libxml1 branch used by Gnome</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.8: May 3 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Integrated an SGML DocBook parser for the Gnome project</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed a few things in the HTML parser</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed some XPath bugs raised by XSLT use, tried to fix the floating | 
 |     point portability issue</li> | 
 |   <li>Speed improvement (8M/s for SAX, 3M/s for DOM, 1.5M/s for | 
 |     DOM+validation using the XML REC as input and a 700MHz celeron).</li> | 
 |   <li>incorporated more Windows cleanup</li> | 
 |   <li>added xmlSaveFormatFile()</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed problems in copying nodes with entities references (gdome)</li> | 
 |   <li>removed some troubles surrounding the new validation module</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.7: April 22 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>lots of small bug fixes, corrected XPointer</li> | 
 |   <li>Non determinist content model validation support</li> | 
 |   <li>added xmlDocCopyNode for gdome2</li> | 
 |   <li>revamped the way the HTML parser handles end of tags</li> | 
 |   <li>XPath: corrctions of namespacessupport and number formatting</li> | 
 |   <li>Windows: Igor Zlatkovic patches for MSC compilation</li> | 
 |   <li>HTML ouput fixes from P C Chow and William M. Brack</li> | 
 |   <li>Improved validation speed sensible for DocBook</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a big bug with ID declared in external parsed entities</li> | 
 |   <li>portability fixes, update of Trio from Bjorn Reese</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.6: April 8 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Code cleanup using extreme gcc compiler warning options, found and | 
 |     cleared half a dozen potential problem</li> | 
 |   <li>the Eazel team found an XML parser bug</li> | 
 |   <li>cleaned up the user of some of the string formatting function. used the | 
 |     trio library code to provide the one needed when the platform is missing | 
 |     them</li> | 
 |   <li>xpath: removed a memory leak and fixed the predicate evaluation | 
 |     problem, extended the testsuite and cleaned up the result. XPointer seems | 
 |     broken ...</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.5: Mar 23 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Biggest change is separate parsing and evaluation of XPath expressions, | 
 |     there is some new APIs for this too</li> | 
 |   <li>included a number of bug fixes(XML push parser, 51876, notations, | 
 |   52299)</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed some portability issues</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.4: Mar 10 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Fixed bugs #51860 and #51861</li> | 
 |   <li>Added a global variable xmlDefaultBufferSize to allow default buffer | 
 |     size to be application tunable.</li> | 
 |   <li>Some cleanup in the validation code, still a bug left and this part | 
 |     should probably be rewritten to support ambiguous content model :-\</li> | 
 |   <li>Fix a couple of serious bugs introduced or raised by changes in 2.3.3 | 
 |     parser</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed another bug in xmlNodeGetContent()</li> | 
 |   <li>Bjorn fixed XPath node collection and Number formatting</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed a loop reported in the HTML parsing</li> | 
 |   <li>blank space are reported even if the Dtd content model proves that they | 
 |     are formatting spaces, this is for XmL conformance</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.3: Mar 1 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>small change in XPath for XSLT</li> | 
 |   <li>documentation cleanups</li> | 
 |   <li>fix in validation by Gary Pennington</li> | 
 |   <li>serious parsing performances improvements</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.2: Feb 24 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>chasing XPath bugs, found a bunch, completed some TODO</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a Dtd parsing bug</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a bug in xmlNodeGetContent</li> | 
 |   <li>ID/IDREF support partly rewritten by Gary Pennington</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.1: Feb 15 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>some XPath and HTML bug fixes for XSLT</li> | 
 |   <li>small extension of the hash table interfaces for DOM gdome2 | 
 |     implementation</li> | 
 |   <li>A few bug fixes</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.3.0: Feb 8 2001 (2.2.12 was on 25 Jan but I didn't kept track)</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Lots of XPath bug fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>Add a mode with Dtd lookup but without validation error reporting for | 
 |     XSLT</li> | 
 |   <li>Add support for text node without escaping (XSLT)</li> | 
 |   <li>bug fixes for xmlCheckFilename</li> | 
 |   <li>validation code bug fixes from Gary Pennington</li> | 
 |   <li>Patch from Paul D. Smith correcting URI path normalization</li> | 
 |   <li>Patch to allow simultaneous install of libxml-devel and | 
 |   libxml2-devel</li> | 
 |   <li>the example Makefile is now fixed</li> | 
 |   <li>added HTML to the RPM packages</li> | 
 |   <li>tree copying bugfixes</li> | 
 |   <li>updates to Windows makefiles</li> | 
 |   <li>optimisation patch from Bjorn Reese</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.11: Jan 4 2001</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>bunch of bug fixes (memory I/O, xpath, ftp/http, ...)</li> | 
 |   <li>added htmlHandleOmittedElem()</li> | 
 |   <li>Applied Bjorn Reese's IPV6 first patch</li> | 
 |   <li>Applied Paul D. Smith patches for validation of XInclude results</li> | 
 |   <li>added XPointer xmlns() new scheme support</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.10: Nov 25 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Fix the Windows problems of 2.2.8</li> | 
 |   <li>integrate OpenVMS patches</li> | 
 |   <li>better handling of some nasty HTML input</li> | 
 |   <li>Improved the XPointer implementation</li> | 
 |   <li>integrate a number of provided patches</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.9: Nov 25 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>erroneous release :-(</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.8: Nov 13 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>First version of <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude">XInclude</a> | 
 |     support</li> | 
 |   <li>Patch in conditional section handling</li> | 
 |   <li>updated MS compiler project</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed some XPath problems</li> | 
 |   <li>added an URI escaping function</li> | 
 |   <li>some other bug fixes</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.7: Oct 31 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>added message redirection</li> | 
 |   <li>XPath improvements (thanks TOM !)</li> | 
 |   <li>xmlIOParseDTD() added</li> | 
 |   <li>various small fixes in the HTML, URI, HTTP and XPointer support</li> | 
 |   <li>some cleanup of the Makefile, autoconf and the distribution content</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.6: Oct 25 2000:</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Added an hash table module, migrated a number of internal structure to | 
 |     those</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed a posteriori validation problems</li> | 
 |   <li>HTTP module cleanups</li> | 
 |   <li>HTML parser improvements (tag errors, script/style handling, attribute | 
 |     normalization)</li> | 
 |   <li>coalescing of adjacent text nodes</li> | 
 |   <li>couple of XPath bug fixes, exported the internal API</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.5: Oct 15 2000:</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>XPointer implementation and testsuite</li> | 
 |   <li>Lot of XPath fixes, added variable and functions registration, more | 
 |     tests</li> | 
 |   <li>Portability fixes, lots of enhancements toward an easy Windows build | 
 |     and release</li> | 
 |   <li>Late validation fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>Integrated a lot of contributed patches</li> | 
 |   <li>added memory management docs</li> | 
 |   <li>a performance problem when using large buffer seems fixed</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.4: Oct 1 2000:</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>main XPath problem fixed</li> | 
 |   <li>Integrated portability patches for Windows</li> | 
 |   <li>Serious bug fixes on the URI and HTML code</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.3: Sep 17 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>bug fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>cleanup of entity handling code</li> | 
 |   <li>overall review of all loops in the parsers, all sprintf usage has been | 
 |     checked too</li> | 
 |   <li>Far better handling of larges Dtd. Validating against Docbook XML Dtd | 
 |     works smoothly now.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.10: Sep 6 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>bug fix release for some Gnome projects</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.2: August 12 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>mostly bug fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>started adding routines to access xml parser context options</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.1: July 21 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>a purely bug fixes release</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed an encoding support problem when parsing from a memory block</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a DOCTYPE parsing problem</li> | 
 |   <li>removed a bug in the function allowing to override the memory | 
 |     allocation routines</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.2.0: July 14 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>applied a lot of portability fixes</li> | 
 |   <li>better encoding support/cleanup and saving (content is now always | 
 |     encoded in UTF-8)</li> | 
 |   <li>the HTML parser now correctly handles encodings</li> | 
 |   <li>added xmlHasProp()</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a serious problem with &#38;</li> | 
 |   <li>propagated the fix to FTP client</li> | 
 |   <li>cleanup, bugfixes, etc ...</li> | 
 |   <li>Added a page about <a href="encoding.html">libxml Internationalization | 
 |     support</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.9:  July 9 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>fixed the spec the RPMs should be better</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a serious bug in the FTP implementation, released 1.8.9 to solve | 
 |     rpmfind users problem</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.1.1: July 1 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>fixes a couple of bugs in the 2.1.0 packaging</li> | 
 |   <li>improvements on the HTML parser</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.1.0 and 1.8.8: June 29 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>1.8.8 is mostly a comodity package for upgrading to libxml2 accoding to | 
 |     <a href="upgrade.html">new instructions</a>. It fixes a nasty problem | 
 |     about &#38; charref parsing</li> | 
 |   <li>2.1.0 also ease the upgrade from libxml v1 to the recent version. it | 
 |     also contains numerous fixes and enhancements: | 
 |     <ul> | 
 |       <li>added xmlStopParser() to stop parsing</li> | 
 |       <li>improved a lot parsing speed when there is large CDATA blocs</li> | 
 |       <li>includes XPath patches provided by Picdar Technology</li> | 
 |       <li>tried to fix as much as possible DtD validation and namespace | 
 |         related problems</li> | 
 |       <li>output to a given encoding has been added/tested</li> | 
 |       <li>lot of various fixes</li> | 
 |     </ul> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.0.0: Apr 12 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>First public release of libxml2. If you are using libxml, it's a good | 
 |     idea to check the 1.x to 2.x upgrade instructions. NOTE: while initally | 
 |     scheduled for Apr 3 the relase occured only on Apr 12 due to massive | 
 |     workload.</li> | 
 |   <li>The include are now located under $prefix/include/libxml (instead of | 
 |     $prefix/include/gnome-xml), they also are referenced by | 
 |     <pre>#include <libxml/xxx.h></pre> | 
 |     <p>instead of</p> | 
 |     <pre>#include "xxx.h"</pre> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>a new URI module for parsing URIs and following strictly RFC 2396</li> | 
 |   <li>the memory allocation routines used by libxml can now be overloaded | 
 |     dynamically by using xmlMemSetup()</li> | 
 |   <li>The previously CVS only tool tester has been renamed | 
 |     <strong>xmllint</strong> and is now installed as part of the libxml2 | 
 |     package</li> | 
 |   <li>The I/O interface has been revamped. There is now ways to plug in | 
 |     specific I/O modules, either at the URI scheme detection level using | 
 |     xmlRegisterInputCallbacks()  or by passing I/O functions when creating a | 
 |     parser context using xmlCreateIOParserCtxt()</li> | 
 |   <li>there is a C preprocessor macro LIBXML_VERSION providing the version | 
 |     number of the libxml module in use</li> | 
 |   <li>a number of optional features of libxml can now be excluded at | 
 |     configure time (FTP/HTTP/HTML/XPath/Debug)</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>2.0.0beta: Mar 14 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>This is a first Beta release of libxml version 2</li> | 
 |   <li>It's available only from<a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/">xmlsoft.org | 
 |     FTP</a>, it's packaged as libxml2-2.0.0beta and available as tar and | 
 |   RPMs</li> | 
 |   <li>This version is now the head in the Gnome CVS base, the old one is | 
 |     available under the tag LIB_XML_1_X</li> | 
 |   <li>This includes a very large set of changes. Froma  programmatic point of | 
 |     view applications should not have to be modified too much, check the <a | 
 |     href="upgrade.html">upgrade page</a></li> | 
 |   <li>Some interfaces may changes (especially a bit about encoding).</li> | 
 |   <li>the updates includes: | 
 |     <ul> | 
 |       <li>fix I18N support. ISO-Latin-x/UTF-8/UTF-16 (nearly) seems correctly | 
 |         handled now</li> | 
 |       <li>Better handling of entities, especially well formedness checking | 
 |         and proper PEref extensions in external subsets</li> | 
 |       <li>DTD conditional sections</li> | 
 |       <li>Validation now correcly handle entities content</li> | 
 |       <li><a href="http://rpmfind.net/tools/gdome/messages/0039.html">change | 
 |         structures to accomodate DOM</a></li> | 
 |     </ul> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>Serious progress were made toward compliance, <a | 
 |     href="conf/result.html">here are the result of the test</a> against the | 
 |     OASIS testsuite (except the japanese tests since I don't support that | 
 |     encoding yet). This URL is rebuilt every couple of hours using the CVS | 
 |     head version.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.7: Mar 6 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>This is a bug fix release:</li> | 
 |   <li>It is possible to disable the ignorable blanks heuristic used by | 
 |     libxml-1.x, a new function  xmlKeepBlanksDefault(0) will allow this. Note | 
 |     that for adherence to XML spec, this behaviour will be disabled by | 
 |     default in 2.x . The same function will allow to keep compatibility for | 
 |     old code.</li> | 
 |   <li>Blanks in <a>  </a> constructs are not ignored anymore, | 
 |     avoiding heuristic is really the Right Way :-\</li> | 
 |   <li>The unchecked use of snprintf which was breaking libxml-1.8.6 | 
 |     compilation on some platforms has been fixed</li> | 
 |   <li>nanoftp.c nanohttp.c: Fixed '#' and '?' stripping when processing | 
 |   URIs</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.6: Jan 31 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>added a nanoFTP transport module, debugged until the new version of <a | 
 |     href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/rpm2html/rpmfind.html">rpmfind</a> can use | 
 |     it without troubles</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.5: Jan 21 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>adding APIs to parse a well balanced chunk of XML (production <a | 
 |     href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#NT-content">[43] content</a> of the | 
 |     XML spec)</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a hideous bug in xmlGetProp pointed by Rune.Djurhuus@fast.no</li> | 
 |   <li>Jody Goldberg <jgoldberg@home.com> provided another patch trying | 
 |     to solve the zlib checks problems</li> | 
 |   <li>The current state in gnome CVS base is expected to ship as 1.8.5 with | 
 |     gnumeric soon</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.4: Jan 13 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>bug fixes, reintroduced xmlNewGlobalNs(), fixed xmlNewNs()</li> | 
 |   <li>all exit() call should have been removed from libxml</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a problem with INCLUDE_WINSOCK on WIN32 platform</li> | 
 |   <li>added newDocFragment()</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.3: Jan 5 2000</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>a Push interface for the XML and HTML parsers</li> | 
 |   <li>a shell-like interface to the document tree (try tester --shell :-)</li> | 
 |   <li>lots of bug fixes and improvement added over XMas hollidays</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed the DTD parsing code to work with the xhtml DTD</li> | 
 |   <li>added xmlRemoveProp(), xmlRemoveID() and xmlRemoveRef()</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed bugs in xmlNewNs()</li> | 
 |   <li>External entity loading code has been revamped, now it uses | 
 |     xmlLoadExternalEntity(), some fix on entities processing were added</li> | 
 |   <li>cleaned up WIN32 includes of socket stuff</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.2: Dec 21 1999</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>I got another problem with includes and C++, I hope this issue is fixed | 
 |     for good this time</li> | 
 |   <li>Added a few tree modification functions: xmlReplaceNode, | 
 |     xmlAddPrevSibling, xmlAddNextSibling, xmlNodeSetName and | 
 |     xmlDocSetRootElement</li> | 
 |   <li>Tried to improve the HTML output with help from <a | 
 |     href="mailto:clahey@umich.edu">Chris Lahey</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.1: Dec 18 1999</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>various patches to avoid troubles when using libxml with C++ compilers | 
 |     the "namespace" keyword and C escaping in include files</li> | 
 |   <li>a problem in one of the core macros IS_CHAR was corrected</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a bug introduced in 1.8.0 breaking default namespace processing, | 
 |     and more specifically the Dia application</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a posteriori validation (validation after parsing, or by using a | 
 |     Dtd not specified in the original document)</li> | 
 |   <li>fixed a bug in</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.8.0: Dec 12 1999</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>cleanup, especially memory wise</li> | 
 |   <li>the parser should be more reliable, especially the HTML one, it should | 
 |     not crash, whatever the input !</li> | 
 |   <li>Integrated various patches, especially a speedup improvement for large | 
 |     dataset from <a href="mailto:cnygard@bellatlantic.net">Carl Nygard</a>, | 
 |     configure with --with-buffers to enable them.</li> | 
 |   <li>attribute normalization, oops should have been added long ago !</li> | 
 |   <li>attributes defaulted from Dtds should be available, xmlSetProp() now | 
 |     does entities escapting by default.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.7.4: Oct 25 1999</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Lots of HTML improvement</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed some errors when saving both XML and HTML</li> | 
 |   <li>More examples, the regression tests should now look clean</li> | 
 |   <li>Fixed a bug with contiguous charref</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.7.3: Sep 29 1999</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>portability problems fixed</li> | 
 |   <li>snprintf was used unconditionnally, leading to link problems on system | 
 |     were it's not available, fixed</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.7.1: Sep 24 1999</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>The basic type for strings manipulated by libxml has been renamed in | 
 |     1.7.1 from <strong>CHAR</strong> to <strong>xmlChar</strong>. The reason | 
 |     is that CHAR was conflicting with a predefined type on Windows. However | 
 |     on non WIN32 environment, compatibility is provided by the way of  a | 
 |     <strong>#define </strong>.</li> | 
 |   <li>Changed another error : the use of a structure field called errno, and | 
 |     leading to troubles on platforms where it's a macro</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>1.7.0: sep 23 1999</h3> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Added the ability to fetch remote DTD or parsed entities, see the <a | 
 |     href="html/libxml-nanohttp.html">nanohttp</a> module.</li> | 
 |   <li>Added an errno to report errors by another mean than a simple printf | 
 |     like callback</li> | 
 |   <li>Finished ID/IDREF support and checking when validation</li> | 
 |   <li>Serious memory leaks fixed (there is now a <a | 
 |     href="html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">memory wrapper</a> module)</li> | 
 |   <li>Improvement of <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath">XPath</a> | 
 |     implementation</li> | 
 |   <li>Added an HTML parser front-end</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="XML">XML</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml">XML is a standard</a> for | 
 | markup-based structured documents. Here is <a name="example">an example XML | 
 | document</a>:</p> | 
 | <pre><?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <EXAMPLE prop1="gnome is great" prop2="&amp; linux too"> | 
 |   <head> | 
 |    <title>Welcome to Gnome</title> | 
 |   </head> | 
 |   <chapter> | 
 |    <title>The Linux adventure</title> | 
 |    <p>bla bla bla ...</p> | 
 |    <image href="linus.gif"/> | 
 |    <p>...</p> | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 | </EXAMPLE></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The first line specifies that it's an XML document and gives useful | 
 | information about its encoding. Then the document is a text format whose | 
 | structure is specified by tags between brackets. <strong>Each tag opened has | 
 | to be closed</strong>. XML is pedantic about this. However, if a tag is empty | 
 | (no content), a single tag can serve as both the opening and closing tag if | 
 | it ends with <code>/></code> rather than with <code>></code>. Note | 
 | that, for example, the image tag has no content (just an attribute) and is | 
 | closed by ending the tag with <code>/></code>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>XML can be applied sucessfully to a wide range of uses, from long term | 
 | structured document maintenance (where it follows the steps of SGML) to | 
 | simple data encoding mechanisms like configuration file formatting (glade), | 
 | spreadsheets (gnumeric), or even shorter lived documents such as WebDAV where | 
 | it is used to encode remote calls between a client and a server.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="XSLT">XSLT</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Check <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT">the separate libxslt page</a></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt">XSL Transformations</a>,  is a | 
 | language for transforming XML documents into other XML documents (or | 
 | HTML/textual output).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>A separate library called libxslt is being built on top of libxml2. This | 
 | module "libxslt" can be found in the Gnome CVS base too.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>You can check the <a | 
 | href="http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/source/libxslt/FEATURES">features</a> | 
 | supported and the progresses on the <a | 
 | href="http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/source/libxslt/ChangeLog">Changelog</a></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="architecture">libxml architecture</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml is made of multiple components; some of them are optional, and most | 
 | of the block interfaces are public. The main components are:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>an Input/Output layer</li> | 
 |   <li>FTP and HTTP client layers (optional)</li> | 
 |   <li>an Internationalization layer managing the encodings support</li> | 
 |   <li>a URI module</li> | 
 |   <li>the XML parser and its basic SAX interface</li> | 
 |   <li>an HTML parser using the same SAX interface (optional)</li> | 
 |   <li>a SAX tree module to build an in-memory DOM representation</li> | 
 |   <li>a tree module to manipulate the DOM representation</li> | 
 |   <li>a validation module using the DOM representation (optional)</li> | 
 |   <li>an XPath module for global lookup in a DOM representation | 
 |   (optional)</li> | 
 |   <li>a debug module (optional)</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Graphically this gives the following:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><img src="libxml.gif" alt="a graphical view of the various"></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="tree">The tree output</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The parser returns a tree built during the document analysis. The value | 
 | returned is an <strong>xmlDocPtr</strong> (i.e., a pointer to an | 
 | <strong>xmlDoc</strong> structure). This structure contains information such | 
 | as the file name, the document type, and a <strong>children</strong> pointer | 
 | which is the root of the document (or more exactly the first child under the | 
 | root which is the document). The tree is made of <strong>xmlNode</strong>s, | 
 | chained in double-linked lists of siblings and with a children<->parent | 
 | relationship. An xmlNode can also carry properties (a chain of xmlAttr | 
 | structures). An attribute may have a value which is a list of TEXT or | 
 | ENTITY_REF nodes.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here is an example (erroneous with respect to the XML spec since there | 
 | should be only one ELEMENT under the root):</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><img src="structure.gif" alt=" structure.gif "></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In the source package there is a small program (not installed by default) | 
 | called <strong>xmllint</strong> which parses XML files given as argument and | 
 | prints them back as parsed. This is useful for detecting errors both in XML | 
 | code and in the XML parser itself. It has an option <strong>--debug</strong> | 
 | which prints the actual in-memory structure of the document; here is the | 
 | result with the <a href="#example">example</a> given before:</p> | 
 | <pre>DOCUMENT | 
 | version=1.0 | 
 | standalone=true | 
 |   ELEMENT EXAMPLE | 
 |     ATTRIBUTE prop1 | 
 |       TEXT | 
 |       content=gnome is great | 
 |     ATTRIBUTE prop2 | 
 |       ENTITY_REF | 
 |       TEXT | 
 |       content= linux too  | 
 |     ELEMENT head | 
 |       ELEMENT title | 
 |         TEXT | 
 |         content=Welcome to Gnome | 
 |     ELEMENT chapter | 
 |       ELEMENT title | 
 |         TEXT | 
 |         content=The Linux adventure | 
 |       ELEMENT p | 
 |         TEXT | 
 |         content=bla bla bla ... | 
 |       ELEMENT image | 
 |         ATTRIBUTE href | 
 |           TEXT | 
 |           content=linus.gif | 
 |       ELEMENT p | 
 |         TEXT | 
 |         content=...</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>This should be useful for learning the internal representation model.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="interface">The SAX interface</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Sometimes the DOM tree output is just too large to fit reasonably into | 
 | memory. In that case (and if you don't expect to save back the XML document | 
 | loaded using libxml), it's better to use the SAX interface of libxml. SAX is | 
 | a <strong>callback-based interface</strong> to the parser. Before parsing, | 
 | the application layer registers a customized set of callbacks which are | 
 | called by the library as it progresses through the XML input.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>To get more detailed step-by-step guidance on using the SAX interface of | 
 | libxml, see the <a | 
 | href="http://www.daa.com.au/~james/gnome/xml-sax/xml-sax.html">nice | 
 | documentation</a>.written by <a href="mailto:james@daa.com.au">James | 
 | Henstridge</a>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>You can debug the SAX behaviour by using the <strong>testSAX</strong> | 
 | program located in the gnome-xml module (it's usually not shipped in the | 
 | binary packages of libxml, but you can find it in the tar source | 
 | distribution). Here is the sequence of callbacks that would be reported by | 
 | testSAX when parsing the example XML document shown earlier:</p> | 
 | <pre>SAX.setDocumentLocator() | 
 | SAX.startDocument() | 
 | SAX.getEntity(amp) | 
 | SAX.startElement(EXAMPLE, prop1='gnome is great', prop2='&amp; linux too') | 
 | SAX.characters(   , 3) | 
 | SAX.startElement(head) | 
 | SAX.characters(    , 4) | 
 | SAX.startElement(title) | 
 | SAX.characters(Welcome to Gnome, 16) | 
 | SAX.endElement(title) | 
 | SAX.characters(   , 3) | 
 | SAX.endElement(head) | 
 | SAX.characters(   , 3) | 
 | SAX.startElement(chapter) | 
 | SAX.characters(    , 4) | 
 | SAX.startElement(title) | 
 | SAX.characters(The Linux adventure, 19) | 
 | SAX.endElement(title) | 
 | SAX.characters(    , 4) | 
 | SAX.startElement(p) | 
 | SAX.characters(bla bla bla ..., 15) | 
 | SAX.endElement(p) | 
 | SAX.characters(    , 4) | 
 | SAX.startElement(image, href='linus.gif') | 
 | SAX.endElement(image) | 
 | SAX.characters(    , 4) | 
 | SAX.startElement(p) | 
 | SAX.characters(..., 3) | 
 | SAX.endElement(p) | 
 | SAX.characters(   , 3) | 
 | SAX.endElement(chapter) | 
 | SAX.characters( , 1) | 
 | SAX.endElement(EXAMPLE) | 
 | SAX.endDocument()</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Most of the other interfaces of libxml are based on the DOM tree-building | 
 | facility, so nearly everything up to the end of this document presupposes the | 
 | use of the standard DOM tree build. Note that the DOM tree itself is built by | 
 | a set of registered default callbacks, without internal specific | 
 | interface.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Validation">Validation & DTDs</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Table of Content:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><a href="#General5">General overview</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#definition">The definition</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Simple">Simple rules</a> | 
 |     <ol> | 
 |       <li><a href="#reference">How to reference a DTD from a document</a></li> | 
 |       <li><a href="#Declaring">Declaring elements</a></li> | 
 |       <li><a href="#Declaring1">Declaring attributes</a></li> | 
 |     </ol> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Some">Some examples</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#validate">How to validate</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Other">Other resources</a></li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="General5">General overview</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Well what is validation and what is a DTD ?</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>DTD is the acronym for Document Type Definition. This is a description of | 
 | the content for a familly of XML files. This is part of the XML 1.0 | 
 | specification, and alows to describe and check that a given document instance | 
 | conforms to a set of rules detailing its structure and content.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Validation is the process of checking a document against a DTD (more | 
 | generally against a set of construction rules).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The validation process and building DTDs are the two most difficult parts | 
 | of the XML life cycle. Briefly a DTD defines all the possibles element to be | 
 | found within your document, what is the formal shape of your document tree | 
 | (by defining the allowed content of an element, either text, a regular | 
 | expression for the allowed list of children, or mixed content i.e. both text | 
 | and children). The DTD also defines the allowed attributes for all elements | 
 | and the types of the attributes.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="definition1">The definition</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml">W3C XML Recommendation</a> (<a | 
 | href="http://www.xml.com/axml/axml.html">Tim Bray's annotated version of | 
 | Rev1</a>):</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#elemdecls">Declaring | 
 |   elements</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#attdecls">Declaring | 
 |   attributes</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>(unfortunately) all this is inherited from the SGML world, the syntax is | 
 | ancient...</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Simple1">Simple rules</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Writing DTD can be done in multiple ways, the rules to build them if you | 
 | need something fixed or something which can evolve over time can be radically | 
 | different. Really complex DTD like Docbook ones are flexible but quite harder | 
 | to design. I will just focuse on DTDs for a formats with a fixed simple | 
 | structure. It is just a set of basic rules, and definitely not exhaustive nor | 
 | useable for complex DTD design.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4><a name="reference1">How to reference a DTD from a document</a>:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Assuming the top element of the document is <code>spec</code> and the dtd | 
 | is placed in the file <code>mydtd</code> in the subdirectory | 
 | <code>dtds</code> of the directory from where the document were loaded:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "dtds/mydtd"></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Notes:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>the system string is actually an URI-Reference (as defined in <a | 
 |     href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt">RFC 2396</a>) so you can use a | 
 |     full URL string indicating the location of your DTD on the Web, this is a | 
 |     really good thing to do if you want others to validate your document</li> | 
 |   <li>it is also possible to associate a <code>PUBLIC</code> identifier (a | 
 |     magic string) so that the DTd is looked up in catalogs on the client side | 
 |     without having to locate it on the web</li> | 
 |   <li>a dtd contains a set of elements and attributes declarations, but they | 
 |     don't define what the root of the document should be. This is explicitely | 
 |     told to the parser/validator as the first element of the | 
 |     <code>DOCTYPE</code> declaration.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4><a name="Declaring2">Declaring elements</a>:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The following declares an element <code>spec</code>:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!ELEMENT spec (front, body, back?)></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>it also expresses that the spec element contains one <code>front</code>, | 
 | one <code>body</code> and one optionnal <code>back</code> children elements | 
 | in this order. The declaration of one element of the structure and its | 
 | content are done in a single declaration. Similary the following declares | 
 | <code>div1</code> elements:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!ELEMENT div1 (head, (p | list | note)*, div2*)></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>means div1 contains one <code>head</code> then a series of optional | 
 | <code>p</code>, <code>list</code>s and <code>note</code>s and then an | 
 | optional <code>div2</code>. And last but not least an element can contain | 
 | text:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!ELEMENT b (#PCDATA)></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code>b</code> contains text or being of mixed content (text and elements | 
 | in no particular order):</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!ELEMENT p (#PCDATA|a|ul|b|i|em)*></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code>p </code>can contain text or <code>a</code>, <code>ul</code>, | 
 | <code>b</code>, <code>i </code>or <code>em</code> elements in no particular | 
 | order.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4><a name="Declaring1">Declaring attributes</a>:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>again the attributes declaration includes their content definition:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!ATTLIST termdef name CDATA #IMPLIED></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>means that the element <code>termdef</code> can have a <code>name</code> | 
 | attribute containing text (<code>CDATA</code>) and which is optionnal | 
 | (<code>#IMPLIED</code>). The attribute value can also be defined within a | 
 | set:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!ATTLIST list type (bullets|ordered|glossary) | 
 | "ordered"></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>means <code>list</code> element have a <code>type</code> attribute with 3 | 
 | allowed values "bullets", "ordered" or "glossary" and which default to | 
 | "ordered" if the attribute is not explicitely specified.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The content type of an attribute can be text (<code>CDATA</code>), | 
 | anchor/reference/references | 
 | (<code>ID</code>/<code>IDREF</code>/<code>IDREFS</code>), entity(ies) | 
 | (<code>ENTITY</code>/<code>ENTITIES</code>) or name(s) | 
 | (<code>NMTOKEN</code>/<code>NMTOKENS</code>). The following defines that a | 
 | <code>chapter</code> element can have an optional <code>id</code> attribute | 
 | of type <code>ID</code>, usable for reference from attribute of type | 
 | IDREF:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code><!ATTLIST chapter id ID #IMPLIED></code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The last value of an attribute definition can be <code>#REQUIRED | 
 | </code>meaning that the attribute has to be given, <code>#IMPLIED</code> | 
 | meaning that it is optional, or the default value (possibly prefixed by | 
 | <code>#FIXED</code> if it is the only allowed).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Notes:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>usually the attributes pertaining to a given element are declared in a | 
 |     single expression, but it is just a convention adopted by a lot of DTD | 
 |     writers: | 
 |     <pre><!ATTLIST termdef | 
 |           id      ID      #REQUIRED | 
 |           name    CDATA   #IMPLIED></pre> | 
 |     <p>The previous construct defines both <code>id</code> and | 
 |     <code>name</code> attributes for the element <code>termdef</code></p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Some1">Some examples</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The directory <code>test/valid/dtds/</code> in the libxml distribution | 
 | contains some complex DTD examples. The  <code>test/valid/dia.xml</code> | 
 | example shows an XML file where the simple DTD is directly included within | 
 | the document.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="validate1">How to validate</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The simplest is to use the xmllint program comming with libxml. The | 
 | <code>--valid</code> option turn on validation of the files given as input, | 
 | for example the following validates a copy of the first revision of the XML | 
 | 1.0 specification:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><code>xmllint --valid --noout test/valid/REC-xml-19980210.xml</code></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>the -- noout is used to not output the resulting tree.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The <code>--dtdvalid dtd</code> allows to validate the document(s) against | 
 | a given DTD.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml exports an API to handle DTDs and validation, check the <a | 
 | href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-valid.html">associated | 
 | description</a>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Other1">Other resources</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>DTDs are as old as SGML. So there may be a number of examples on-line, I | 
 | will just list one for now, others pointers welcome:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.xml101.com:8081/dtd/">XML-101 DTD</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>I suggest looking at the examples found under test/valid/dtd and any of | 
 | the large number of books available on XML. The dia example in test/valid | 
 | should be both simple and complete enough to allow you to build your own.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Memory">Memory Management</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Table of Content:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><a href="#General3">General overview</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#setting">Setting libxml set of memory routines</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#cleanup">Cleaning up after parsing</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Debugging">Debugging routines</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#General4">General memory requirements</a></li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="General3">General overview</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The module <code><a | 
 | href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlmemory.h</a></code> | 
 | provides the interfaces to the libxml memory system:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>libxml does not use the libc memory allocator directly but xmlFree(), | 
 |     xmlMalloc() and xmlRealloc()</li> | 
 |   <li>those routines can be reallocated to a specific set of routine, by | 
 |     default the libc ones i.e. free(), malloc() and realloc()</li> | 
 |   <li>the xmlmemory.c module includes a set of debugging routine</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="setting">Setting libxml set of memory routines</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>It is sometimes useful to not use the default memory allocator, either for | 
 | debugging, analysis or to implement a specific behaviour on memory management | 
 | (like on embedded systems). Two function calls are available to do so:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemGet ()</a> | 
 |      which return the current set of functions in use by the parser</li> | 
 |   <li><a | 
 |     href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemSetup()</a> | 
 |      which allow to set up a new set of memory allocation functions</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Of course a call to xmlMemSetup() should probably be done before calling | 
 | any other libxml routines (unless you are sure your allocations routines are | 
 | compatibles).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="cleanup">Cleaning up after parsing</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml is not stateless, there is a few set of memory structures needing | 
 | allocation before the parser is fully functionnal (some encoding structures | 
 | for example). This also mean that once parsing is finished there is a tiny | 
 | amount of memory (a few hundred bytes) which can be recollected if you don't | 
 | reuse the parser immediately:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html">xmlCleanupParser | 
 |     ()</a> | 
 |      is a centralized routine to free the parsing states. Note that it won't | 
 |     deallocate any produced tree if any (use the xmlFreeDoc() and related | 
 |     routines for this).</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html">xmlInitParser | 
 |     ()</a> | 
 |      is the dual routine allowing to preallocate the parsing state which can | 
 |     be useful for example to avoid initialization reentrancy problems when | 
 |     using libxml in multithreaded applications</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Generally xmlCleanupParser() is safe, if needed the state will be rebuild | 
 | at the next invocation of parser routines, but be careful of the consequences | 
 | in multithreaded applications.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Debugging">Debugging routines</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>When configured using --with-mem-debug flag (off by default), libxml uses | 
 | a set of memory allocation debugging routineskeeping track of all allocated | 
 | blocks and the location in the code where the routine was called. A couple of | 
 | other debugging routines allow to dump the memory allocated infos to a file | 
 | or call a specific routine when a given block number is allocated:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li><a | 
 |     href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMallocLoc()</a> | 
 |      <a | 
 |     href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlReallocLoc()</a> | 
 |     and <a | 
 |     href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemStrdupLoc()</a> | 
 |     are the memory debugging replacement allocation routines</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemoryDump | 
 |     ()</a> | 
 |      dumps all the informations about the allocated memory block lefts in the | 
 |     <code>.memdump</code> file</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>When developping libxml memory debug is enabled, the tests programs call | 
 | xmlMemoryDump () and the "make test" regression tests will check for any | 
 | memory leak during the full regression test sequence, this helps a lot | 
 | ensuring that libxml  does not leak memory and bullet proof memory | 
 | allocations use (some libc implementations are known to be far too permissive | 
 | resulting in major portability problems!).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>If the .memdump reports a leak, it displays the allocation function and | 
 | also tries to give some informations about the content and structure of the | 
 | allocated blocks left. This is sufficient in most cases to find the culprit, | 
 | but not always. Assuming the allocation problem is reproductible, it is | 
 | possible to find more easilly:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>write down the block number xxxx not allocated</li> | 
 |   <li>export the environement variable XML_MEM_BREAKPOINT=xxxx</li> | 
 |   <li>run the program under a debugger and set a breakpoint on | 
 |     xmlMallocBreakpoint() a specific function called when this precise block | 
 |     is allocated</li> | 
 |   <li>when the breakpoint is reached you can then do a fine analysis of the | 
 |     allocation an step  to see the condition resulting in the missing | 
 |     deallocation.</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>I used to use a commercial tool to debug libxml memory problems but after | 
 | noticing that it was not detecting memory leaks that simple mechanism was | 
 | used and proved extremely efficient until now.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="General4">General memory requirements</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>How much libxml memory require ? It's hard to tell in average it depends | 
 | of a number of things:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>the parser itself should work  in a fixed amout of memory, except for | 
 |     information maintained about the stacks of names and  entities locations. | 
 |     The I/O and encoding handlers will probably account for a few KBytes. | 
 |     This is true for both the XML and HTML parser (though the HTML parser | 
 |     need more state).</li> | 
 |   <li>If you are generating the DOM tree then memory requirements will grow | 
 |     nearly lineary with the size of the data. In general for a balanced | 
 |     textual document the internal memory requirement is about 4 times the | 
 |     size of the UTF8 serialization of this document (exmple the XML-1.0 | 
 |     recommendation is a bit more of 150KBytes and takes 650KBytes of main | 
 |     memory when parsed). Validation will add a amount of memory required for | 
 |     maintaining the external Dtd state which should be linear with the | 
 |     complexity of the content model defined by the Dtd</li> | 
 |   <li>If you don't care about the advanced features of libxml like | 
 |     validation, DOM, XPath or XPointer, but really need to work fixed memory | 
 |     requirements, then the SAX interface should be used.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Encodings">Encodings support</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Table of Content:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><a href="encoding.html#What">What does internationalization support | 
 |     mean ?</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="encoding.html#internal">The internal encoding, how and | 
 |   why</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="encoding.html#implemente">How is it implemented ?</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="encoding.html#Default">Default supported encodings</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="encoding.html#extend">How to extend the existing | 
 |   support</a></li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="What">What does internationalization support mean ?</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>XML was designed from the start to allow the support of any character set | 
 | by using Unicode. Any conformant XML parser has to support the UTF-8 and | 
 | UTF-16 default encodings which can both express the full unicode ranges. UTF8 | 
 | is a variable length encoding whose greatest point are to resuse the same | 
 | emcoding for ASCII and to save space for Western encodings, but it is a bit | 
 | more complex to handle in practice. UTF-16 use 2 bytes per characters (and | 
 | sometimes combines two pairs), it makes implementation easier, but looks a | 
 | bit overkill for Western languages encoding. Moreover the XML specification | 
 | allows document to be encoded in other encodings at the condition that they | 
 | are clearly labelled as such. For example the following is a wellformed XML | 
 | document encoded in ISO-8859 1 and using accentuated letter that we French | 
 | likes for both markup and content:</p> | 
 | <pre><?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> | 
 | <très>là</très></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Having internationalization support in libxml means the foolowing:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>the document is properly parsed</li> | 
 |   <li>informations about it's encoding are saved</li> | 
 |   <li>it can be modified</li> | 
 |   <li>it can be saved in its original encoding</li> | 
 |   <li>it can also be saved in another encoding supported by libxml (for | 
 |     example straight UTF8 or even an ASCII form)</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Another very important point is that the whole libxml API, with the | 
 | exception of a few routines to read with a specific encoding or save to a | 
 | specific encoding, is completely agnostic about the original encoding of the | 
 | document.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>It should be noted too that the HTML parser embedded in libxml now obbey | 
 | the same rules too, the following document will be (as of 2.2.2) handled  in | 
 | an internationalized fashion by libxml too:</p> | 
 | <pre><!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" | 
 |                       "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd"> | 
 | <html lang="fr"> | 
 | <head> | 
 |   <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> | 
 | </head> | 
 | <body> | 
 | <p>W3C crée des standards pour le Web.</body> | 
 | </html></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="internal">The internal encoding, how and why</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>One of the core decision was to force all documents to be converted to a | 
 | default internal encoding, and that encoding to be UTF-8, here are the | 
 | rationale for those choices:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>keeping the native encoding in the internal form would force the libxml | 
 |     users (or the code associated) to be fully aware of the encoding of the | 
 |     original document, for examples when adding a text node to a document, | 
 |     the content would have to be provided in the document encoding, i.e. the | 
 |     client code would have to check it before hand, make sure it's conformant | 
 |     to the encoding, etc ... Very hard in practice, though in some specific | 
 |     cases this may make sense.</li> | 
 |   <li>the second decision was which encoding. From the XML spec only UTF8 and | 
 |     UTF16 really makes sense as being the two only encodings for which there | 
 |     is amndatory support. UCS-4 (32 bits fixed size encoding) could be | 
 |     considered an intelligent choice too since it's a direct Unicode mapping | 
 |     support. I selected UTF-8 on the basis of efficiency and compatibility | 
 |     with surrounding software: | 
 |     <ul> | 
 |       <li>UTF-8 while a bit more complex to convert from/to (i.e. slightly | 
 |         more costly to import and export CPU wise) is also far more compact | 
 |         than UTF-16 (and UCS-4) for a majority of the documents I see it used | 
 |         for right now (RPM RDF catalogs, advogato data, various configuration | 
 |         file formats, etc.) and the key point for today's computer | 
 |         architecture is efficient uses of caches. If one nearly double the | 
 |         memory requirement to store the same amount of data, this will trash | 
 |         caches (main memory/external caches/internal caches) and my take is | 
 |         that this harms the system far more than the CPU requirements needed | 
 |         for the conversion to UTF-8</li> | 
 |       <li>Most of libxml version 1 users were using it with straight ASCII | 
 |         most of the time, doing the conversion with an internal encoding | 
 |         requiring all their code to be rewritten was a serious show-stopper | 
 |         for using UTF-16 or UCS-4.</li> | 
 |       <li>UTF-8 is being used as the de-facto internal encoding standard for | 
 |         related code like the <a href="http://www.pango.org/">pango</a> | 
 |         upcoming Gnome text widget, and a lot of Unix code (yep another place | 
 |         where Unix programmer base takes a different approach from Microsoft | 
 |         - they are using UTF-16)</li> | 
 |     </ul> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>What does this mean in practice for the libxml user:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>xmlChar, the libxml data type is a byte, those bytes must be assembled | 
 |     as UTF-8 valid strings. The proper way to terminate an xmlChar * string | 
 |     is simply to append 0 byte, as usual.</li> | 
 |   <li>One just need to make sure that when using chars outside the ASCII set, | 
 |     the values has been properly converted to UTF-8</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="implemente">How is it implemented ?</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Let's describe how all this works within libxml, basically the I18N | 
 | (internationalization) support get triggered only during I/O operation, i.e. | 
 | when reading a document or saving one. Let's look first at the reading | 
 | sequence:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>when a document is processed, we usually don't know the encoding, a | 
 |     simple heuristic allows to detect UTF-18 and UCS-4 from whose where the | 
 |     ASCII range (0-0x7F) maps with ASCII</li> | 
 |   <li>the xml declaration if available is parsed, including the encoding | 
 |     declaration. At that point, if the autodetected encoding is different | 
 |     from the one declared a call to xmlSwitchEncoding() is issued.</li> | 
 |   <li>If there is no encoding declaration, then the input has to be in either | 
 |     UTF-8 or UTF-16, if it is not then at some point when processing the | 
 |     input, the converter/checker of UTF-8 form will raise an encoding error. | 
 |     You may end-up with a garbled document, or no document at all ! Example: | 
 |     <pre>~/XML -> ./xmllint err.xml  | 
 | err.xml:1: error: Input is not proper UTF-8, indicate encoding ! | 
 | <très>là</très> | 
 |    ^ | 
 | err.xml:1: error: Bytes: 0xE8 0x73 0x3E 0x6C | 
 | <très>là</très> | 
 |    ^</pre> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>xmlSwitchEncoding() does an encoding name lookup, canonalize it, and | 
 |     then search the default registered encoding converters for that encoding. | 
 |     If it's not within the default set and iconv() support has been compiled | 
 |     it, it will ask iconv for such an encoder. If this fails then the parser | 
 |     will report an error and stops processing: | 
 |     <pre>~/XML -> ./xmllint err2.xml  | 
 | err2.xml:1: error: Unsupported encoding UnsupportedEnc | 
 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UnsupportedEnc"?> | 
 |                                              ^</pre> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>From that point the encoder process progressingly the input (it is | 
 |     plugged as a front-end to the I/O module) for that entity. It captures | 
 |     and convert on-the-fly the document to be parsed to UTF-8. The parser | 
 |     itself just does UTF-8 checking of this input and process it | 
 |     transparently. The only difference is that the encoding information has | 
 |     been added to the parsing context (more precisely to the input | 
 |     corresponding to this entity).</li> | 
 |   <li>The result (when using DOM) is an internal form completely in UTF-8 | 
 |     with just an encoding information on the document node.</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Ok then what's happen when saving the document (assuming you | 
 | colllected/built an xmlDoc DOM like structure) ? It depends on the function | 
 | called, xmlSaveFile() will just try to save in the original encoding, while | 
 | xmlSaveFileTo() and xmlSaveFileEnc() can optionally save to a given | 
 | encoding:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>if no encoding is given, libxml will look for an encoding value | 
 |     associated to the document and if it exists will try to save to that | 
 |     encoding, | 
 |     <p>otherwise everything is written in the internal form, i.e. UTF-8</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>so if an encoding was specified, either at the API level or on the | 
 |     document, libxml will again canonalize the encoding name, lookup for a | 
 |     converter in the registered set or through iconv. If not found the | 
 |     function will return an error code</li> | 
 |   <li>the converter is placed before the I/O buffer layer, as another kind of | 
 |     buffer, then libxml will simply push the UTF-8 serialization to through | 
 |     that buffer, which will then progressively be converted and pushed onto | 
 |     the I/O layer.</li> | 
 |   <li>It is possible that the converter code fails on some input, for example | 
 |     trying to push an UTF-8 encoded chinese character through the UTF-8 to | 
 |     ISO-8859-1 converter won't work. Since the encoders are progressive they | 
 |     will just report the error and the number of bytes converted, at that | 
 |     point libxml will decode the offending character, remove it from the | 
 |     buffer and replace it with the associated charRef encoding &#123; and | 
 |     resume the convertion. This guarante that any document will be saved | 
 |     without losses (except for markup names where this is not legal, this is | 
 |     a problem in the current version, in pactice avoid using non-ascci | 
 |     characters for tags or attributes names  @@). A special "ascii" encoding | 
 |     name is used to save documents to a pure ascii form can be used when | 
 |     portability is really crucial</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here is a few examples based on the same test document:</p> | 
 | <pre>~/XML -> ./xmllint isolat1  | 
 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> | 
 | <très>là</très> | 
 | ~/XML -> ./xmllint --encode UTF-8 isolat1  | 
 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | 
 | <très>là  </très> | 
 | ~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The same processing is applied (and reuse most of the code) for HTML I18N | 
 | processing. Looking up and modifying the content encoding is a bit more | 
 | difficult since it is located in a <meta> tag under the <head>, | 
 | so a couple of functions htmlGetMetaEncoding() and htmlSetMetaEncoding() have | 
 | been provided. The parser also attempts to switch encoding on the fly when | 
 | detecting such a tag on input. Except for that the processing is the same | 
 | (and again reuses the same code).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Default">Default supported encodings</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>libxml has a set of default converters for the following encodings | 
 | (located in encoding.c):</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>UTF-8 is supported by default (null handlers)</li> | 
 |   <li>UTF-16, both little and big endian</li> | 
 |   <li>ISO-Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1) covering most western languages</li> | 
 |   <li>ASCII, useful mostly for saving</li> | 
 |   <li>HTML, a specific handler for the conversion of UTF-8 to ASCII with HTML | 
 |     predefined entities like &copy; for the Copyright sign.</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>More over when compiled on an Unix platfor with iconv support the full set | 
 | of encodings supported by iconv can be instantly be used by libxml. On a | 
 | linux machine with glibc-2.1 the list of supported encodings and aliases fill | 
 | 3 full pages, and include UCS-4, the full set of ISO-Latin encodings, and the | 
 | various Japanese ones.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4>Encoding aliases</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>From 2.2.3, libxml has support to register encoding names aliases. The | 
 | goal is to be able to parse document whose encoding is supported but where | 
 | the name differs (for example from the default set of names accepted by | 
 | iconv). The following functions allow to register and handle new aliases for | 
 | existing encodings. Once registered libxml will automatically lookup the | 
 | aliases when handling a document:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>int xmlAddEncodingAlias(const char *name, const char *alias);</li> | 
 |   <li>int xmlDelEncodingAlias(const char *alias);</li> | 
 |   <li>const char * xmlGetEncodingAlias(const char *alias);</li> | 
 |   <li>void xmlCleanupEncodingAliases(void);</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="extend">How to extend the existing support</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Well adding support for new encoding, or overriding one of the encoders | 
 | (assuming it is buggy) should not be hard, just write an input and output | 
 | conversion routines to/from UTF-8, and register them using | 
 | xmlNewCharEncodingHandler(name, xxxToUTF8, UTF8Toxxx),  and they will be | 
 | called automatically if the parser(s) encounter such an encoding name | 
 | (register it uppercase, this will help). The description of the encoders, | 
 | their arguments and expected return values are described in the encoding.h | 
 | header.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>A quick note on the topic of subverting the parser to use a different | 
 | internal encoding than UTF-8, in some case people will absolutely want to | 
 | keep the internal encoding different, I think it's still possible (but the | 
 | encoding must be compliant with ASCII on the same subrange) though I didn't | 
 | tried it. The key is to override the default conversion routines (by | 
 | registering null encoders/decoders for your charsets), and bypass the UTF-8 | 
 | checking of the parser by setting the parser context charset | 
 | (ctxt->charset) to something different than XML_CHAR_ENCODING_UTF8, but | 
 | there is no guarantee taht this will work. You may also have some troubles | 
 | saving back.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Basically proper I18N support is important, this requires at least | 
 | libxml-2.0.0, but a lot of features and corrections are really available only | 
 | starting 2.2.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="IO">I/O Interfaces</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Table of Content:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><a href="#General1">General overview</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#basic">The basic buffer type</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Input">Input I/O handlers</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Output">Output I/O handlers</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#entities">The entities loader</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Example2">Example of customized I/O</a></li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="General1">General overview</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The module <code><a | 
 | href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlio.html">xmlIO.h</a></code> provides | 
 | the interfaces to the libxml I/O system. This consists of 4 main parts:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Entities loader, this is a routine which tries to fetch the entities | 
 |     (files) based on their PUBLIC and SYSTEM identifiers. The default loader | 
 |     don't look at the public identifier since libxml do not maintain a | 
 |     catalog. You can redefine you own entity loader by using | 
 |     <code>xmlGetExternalEntityLoader()</code> and | 
 |     <code>xmlSetExternalEntityLoader()</code>. <a href="#entities">Check the | 
 |     example</a>.</li> | 
 |   <li>Input I/O buffers which are a commodity structure used by the parser(s) | 
 |     input layer to handle fetching the informations to feed the parser. This | 
 |     provides buffering and is also a placeholder where the encoding | 
 |     convertors to UTF8 are piggy-backed.</li> | 
 |   <li>Output I/O buffers are similar to the Input ones and fulfill similar | 
 |     task but when generating a serialization from a tree.</li> | 
 |   <li>A mechanism to register sets of I/O callbacks and associate them with | 
 |     specific naming schemes like the protocol part of the URIs. | 
 |     <p>This affect the default I/O operations and allows to use specific I/O | 
 |     handlers for certain names.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The general mechanism used when loading http://rpmfind.net/xml.html for | 
 | example in the HTML parser is the following:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>The default entity loader calls <code>xmlNewInputFromFile()</code> with | 
 |     the parsing context and the URI string.</li> | 
 |   <li>the URI string is checked against the existing registered handlers | 
 |     using their match() callback function, if the HTTP module was compiled | 
 |     in, it is registered and its match() function will succeeds</li> | 
 |   <li>the open() function of the handler is called and if successful will | 
 |     return an I/O Input buffer</li> | 
 |   <li>the parser will the start reading from this buffer and progressively | 
 |     fetch information from the resource, calling the read() function of the | 
 |     handler until the resource is exhausted</li> | 
 |   <li>if an encoding change is detected it will be installed on the input | 
 |     buffer, providing buffering and efficient use of the conversion | 
 |   routines</li> | 
 |   <li>once the parser has finished, the close() function of the handler is | 
 |     called once and the Input buffer and associed resources are | 
 |   deallocated.</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The user defined callbacks are checked first to allow overriding of the | 
 | default libxml I/O routines.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="basic">The basic buffer type</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>All the buffer manipulation handling is done using the | 
 | <code>xmlBuffer</code> type define in <code><a | 
 | href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-tree.html">tree.h</a> </code>which is a | 
 | resizable memory buffer. The buffer allocation strategy can be selected to be | 
 | either best-fit or use an exponential doubling one (CPU vs. memory use | 
 | tradeoff). The values are <code>XML_BUFFER_ALLOC_EXACT</code> and | 
 | <code>XML_BUFFER_ALLOC_DOUBLEIT</code>, and can be set individually or on a | 
 | system wide basis using <code>xmlBufferSetAllocationScheme()</code>. A number | 
 | of functions allows to manipulate buffers with names starting with the | 
 | <code>xmlBuffer...</code> prefix.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Input">Input I/O handlers</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>An Input I/O handler is a simple structure | 
 | <code>xmlParserInputBuffer</code> containing a context associated to the | 
 | resource (file descriptor, or pointer to a protocol handler), the read() and | 
 | close() callbacks to use and an xmlBuffer. And extra xmlBuffer and a charset | 
 | encoding handler are also present to support charset conversion when | 
 | needed.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Output">Output I/O handlers</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>An Output handler <code>xmlOutputBuffer</code> is completely similar to an | 
 | Input one except the callbacks are write() and close().</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="entities">The entities loader</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The entity loader resolves requests for new entities and create inputs for | 
 | the parser. Creating an input from a filename or an URI string is done | 
 | through the xmlNewInputFromFile() routine.  The default entity loader do not | 
 | handle the PUBLIC identifier associated with an entity (if any). So it just | 
 | calls xmlNewInputFromFile() with the SYSTEM identifier (which is mandatory in | 
 | XML).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>If you want to hook up a catalog mechanism then you simply need to | 
 | override the default entity loader, here is an example:</p> | 
 | <pre>#include <libxml/xmlIO.h> | 
 |  | 
 | xmlExternalEntityLoader defaultLoader = NULL; | 
 |  | 
 | xmlParserInputPtr | 
 | xmlMyExternalEntityLoader(const char *URL, const char *ID, | 
 |                                xmlParserCtxtPtr ctxt) { | 
 |     xmlParserInputPtr ret; | 
 |     const char *fileID = NULL; | 
 |     /* lookup for the fileID depending on ID */ | 
 |  | 
 |     ret = xmlNewInputFromFile(ctxt, fileID); | 
 |     if (ret != NULL) | 
 |         return(ret); | 
 |     if (defaultLoader != NULL) | 
 |         ret = defaultLoader(URL, ID, ctxt); | 
 |     return(ret); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int main(..) { | 
 |     ... | 
 |  | 
 |     /* | 
 |      * Install our own entity loader | 
 |      */ | 
 |     defaultLoader = xmlGetExternalEntityLoader(); | 
 |     xmlSetExternalEntityLoader(xmlMyExternalEntityLoader); | 
 |  | 
 |     ... | 
 | }</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Example2">Example of customized I/O</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>This example come from <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages/0708.html">a | 
 | real use case</a>,  xmlDocDump() closes the FILE * passed by the application | 
 | and this was a problem. The <a | 
 | href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages/0711.html">solution</a> was to redefine a | 
 | new output handler with the closing call deactivated:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>First define a new I/O ouput allocator where the output don't close the | 
 |     file: | 
 |     <pre>xmlOutputBufferPtr | 
 | xmlOutputBufferCreateOwn(FILE *file, xmlCharEncodingHandlerPtr encoder) { | 
 |     xmlOutputBufferPtr ret; | 
 |      | 
 |     if (xmlOutputCallbackInitialized == 0) | 
 |         xmlRegisterDefaultOutputCallbacks(); | 
 |  | 
 |     if (file == NULL) return(NULL); | 
 |     ret = xmlAllocOutputBuffer(encoder); | 
 |     if (ret != NULL) { | 
 |         ret->context = file; | 
 |         ret->writecallback = xmlFileWrite; | 
 |         ret->closecallback = NULL;  /* No close callback */ | 
 |     } | 
 |     return(ret); <br> | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | } </pre> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>And then use it to save the document: | 
 |     <pre>FILE *f; | 
 | xmlOutputBufferPtr output; | 
 | xmlDocPtr doc; | 
 | int res; | 
 |  | 
 | f = ... | 
 | doc = .... | 
 |  | 
 | output = xmlOutputBufferCreateOwn(f, NULL); | 
 | res = xmlSaveFileTo(output, doc, NULL); | 
 |     </pre> | 
 |   </li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Catalog">Catalog support</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Table of Content:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li><a href="General2">General overview</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#definition">The definition</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Simple">Using catalogs</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Some">Some examples</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#reference">How to tune  catalog usage</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#validate">How to debug catalog processing</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Declaring">How to create and maintain catalogs</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#implemento">The implementor corner quick review of the | 
 |   API</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="#Other">Other resources</a></li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="General2">General overview</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>What is a catalog? Basically it's a lookup mechanism used when an entity | 
 | (a file or a remote resource) references another entity. The catalog lookup | 
 | is inserted between the moment the reference is recognized by the software | 
 | (XML parser, stylesheet processing, or even images referenced for inclusion | 
 | in a rendering) and the time where loading that resource is actually | 
 | started.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>It is basically used for 3 things:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>mapping from "logical" names, the public identifiers and a more | 
 |     concrete name usable for download (and URI). For example it can associate | 
 |     the logical name | 
 |     <p>"-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"</p> | 
 |     <p>of the DocBook 4.1.2 XML DTD with the actual URL where it can be | 
 |     downloaded</p> | 
 |     <p>http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>remapping from a given URL to another one, like an HTTP indirection | 
 |     saying that | 
 |     <p>"http://www.oasis-open.org/committes/tr.xsl"</p> | 
 |     <p>should really be looked at</p> | 
 |     <p>"http://www.oasis-open.org/committes/entity/stylesheets/base/tr.xsl"</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>providing a local cache mechanism allowing to load the entities | 
 |     associated to public identifiers or remote resources, this is a really | 
 |     important feature for any significant deployment of XML or SGML since it | 
 |     allows to avoid the aleas and delays associated to fetching remote | 
 |     resources.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="definition">The definitions</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml, as of 2.4.3 implements 2 kind of catalogs:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>the older SGML catalogs, the official spec is  SGML Open Technical | 
 |     Resolution TR9401:1997, but is better understood by reading <a | 
 |     href="http://www.jclark.com/sp/catalog.htm">the SP Catalog page</a> from | 
 |     James Clark. This is relatively old and not the preferred mode of | 
 |     operation of libxml.</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/spec.html">XML | 
 |     Catalogs</a> | 
 |      is far more flexible, more recent, uses an XML syntax and should scale | 
 |     quite better. This is the default option of libxml.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Simple">Using catalog</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In a normal environment libxml will by default check the presence of a | 
 | catalog in /etc/xml/catalog, and assuming it has been correctly populated, | 
 | the processing is completely transparent to the document user. To take a | 
 | concrete example, suppose you are authoring a DocBook document, this one | 
 | starts with the following DOCTYPE definition:</p> | 
 | <pre><?xml version='1.0'?> | 
 | <!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//Norman Walsh//DTD DocBk XML V3.1.4//EN" | 
 |           "http://nwalsh.com/docbook/xml/3.1.4/db3xml.dtd"></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>When validating the document with libxml, the catalog will be | 
 | automatically consulted to lookup the public identifier "-//Norman Walsh//DTD | 
 | DocBk XML V3.1.4//EN" and the system identifier | 
 | "http://nwalsh.com/docbook/xml/3.1.4/db3xml.dtd", and if these entities have | 
 | been installed on your system and the catalogs actually point to them, libxml | 
 | will fetch them from the local disk.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p style="font-size: 10pt"><strong>Note</strong>: Really don't use this | 
 | DOCTYPE example it's a really old version, but is fine as an example.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Libxml will check the catalog each time that it is requested to load an | 
 | entity, this includes DTD, external parsed entities, stylesheets, etc ... If | 
 | your system is correctly configured all the authoring phase and processing | 
 | should use only local files, even if your document stays portable because it | 
 | uses the canonical public and system ID, referencing the remote document.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Some">Some examples:</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here is a couple of fragments from XML Catalogs used in libxml early | 
 | regression tests in <code>test/catalogs</code> :</p> | 
 | <pre><?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC  | 
 |    "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN" | 
 |    "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"> | 
 | <catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"> | 
 |   <public publicId="-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" | 
 |    uri="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd"/> | 
 | ...</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>This is the beginning of a catalog for DocBook 4.1.2, XML Catalogs are | 
 | written in XML,  there is a specific namespace for catalog elements | 
 | "urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog". The first entry in this | 
 | catalog is a <code>public</code> mapping it allows to associate a Public | 
 | Identifier with an URI.</p> | 
 | <pre>... | 
 |     <rewriteSystem systemIdStartString="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/" | 
 |                    rewritePrefix="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook/"/> | 
 | ...</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>A <code>rewriteSystem</code> is a very powerful instruction, it says that | 
 | any URI starting with a given prefix should be looked at another  URI | 
 | constructed by replacing the prefix with an new one. In effect this acts like | 
 | a cache system for a full area of the Web. In practice it is extremely useful | 
 | with a file prefix if you have installed a copy of those resources on your | 
 | local system.</p> | 
 | <pre>... | 
 | <delegatePublic publicIdStartString="-//OASIS//DTD XML Catalog //" | 
 |                 catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/> | 
 | <delegatePublic publicIdStartString="-//OASIS//ENTITIES DocBook XML" | 
 |                 catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/> | 
 | <delegatePublic publicIdStartString="-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML" | 
 |                 catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/> | 
 | <delegateSystem systemIdStartString="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/" | 
 |                 catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/> | 
 | <delegateURI uriStartString="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/" | 
 |                 catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/> | 
 | ...</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Delegation is the core features which allows to build a tree of catalogs, | 
 | easier to maintain than a single catalog, based on Public Identifier, System | 
 | Identifier or URI prefixes it instructs the catalog software to look up | 
 | entries in another resource. This feature allow to build hierarchies of | 
 | catalogs, the set of entries presented should be sufficient to redirect the | 
 | resolution of all DocBook references to the specific catalog in | 
 | <code>/usr/share/xml/docbook.xml</code> this one in turn could delegate all | 
 | references for DocBook 4.2.1 to a specific catalog installed at the same time | 
 | as the DocBook resources on the local machine.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="reference">How to tune catalog usage:</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The user can change the default catalog behaviour by redirecting queries | 
 | to its own set of catalogs, this can be done by setting the | 
 | <code>XML_CATALOG_FILES</code> environment variable to a list of catalogs, an | 
 | empty one should deactivate loading the default <code>/etc/xml/catalog</code> | 
 | default catalog</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="validate">How to debug catalog processing:</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Setting up the <code>XML_DEBUG_CATALOG</code> environment variable will | 
 | make libxml output debugging informations for each catalog operations, for | 
 | example:</p> | 
 | <pre>orchis:~/XML -> xmllint --memory --noout test/ent2 | 
 | warning: failed to load external entity "title.xml" | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> export XML_DEBUG_CATALOG= | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> xmllint --memory --noout test/ent2 | 
 | Failed to parse catalog /etc/xml/catalog | 
 | Failed to parse catalog /etc/xml/catalog | 
 | warning: failed to load external entity "title.xml" | 
 | Catalogs cleanup | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The test/ent2 references an entity, running the parser from memory makes | 
 | the base URI unavailable and the the "title.xml" entity cannot be loaded. | 
 | Setting up the debug environment variable allows to detect that an attempt is | 
 | made to load the <code>/etc/xml/catalog</code> but since it's not present the | 
 | resolution fails.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>But the most advanced way to debug XML catalog processing is to use the | 
 | <strong>xmlcatalog</strong> command shipped with libxml2, it allows to load | 
 | catalogs and make resolution queries to see what is going on. This is also | 
 | used for the regression tests:</p> | 
 | <pre>orchis:~/XML -> ./xmlcatalog test/catalogs/docbook.xml \ | 
 |                    "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" | 
 | http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>For debugging what is going on, adding one -v flags increase the verbosity | 
 | level to indicate the processing done (adding a second flag also indicate | 
 | what elements are recognized at parsing):</p> | 
 | <pre>orchis:~/XML -> ./xmlcatalog -v test/catalogs/docbook.xml \ | 
 |                    "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" | 
 | Parsing catalog test/catalogs/docbook.xml's content | 
 | Found public match -//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN | 
 | http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd | 
 | Catalogs cleanup | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>A shell interface is also available to debug and process multiple queries | 
 | (and for regression tests):</p> | 
 | <pre>orchis:~/XML -> ./xmlcatalog -shell test/catalogs/docbook.xml \ | 
 |                    "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" | 
 | > help    | 
 | Commands available: | 
 | public PublicID: make a PUBLIC identifier lookup | 
 | system SystemID: make a SYSTEM identifier lookup | 
 | resolve PublicID SystemID: do a full resolver lookup | 
 | add 'type' 'orig' 'replace' : add an entry | 
 | del 'values' : remove values | 
 | dump: print the current catalog state | 
 | debug: increase the verbosity level | 
 | quiet: decrease the verbosity level | 
 | exit:  quit the shell | 
 | > public "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" | 
 | http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd | 
 | > quit | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>This should be sufficient for most debugging purpose, this was actually | 
 | used heavily to debug the XML Catalog implementation itself.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Declaring">How to create and maintain</a> catalogs:</h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Basically XML Catalogs are XML files, you can either use XML tools to | 
 | manage them or use  <strong>xmlcatalog</strong> for this. The basic step is | 
 | to create a catalog the -create option provide this facility:</p> | 
 | <pre>orchis:~/XML -> ./xmlcatalog --create tst.xml | 
 | <?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN" | 
 |          "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"> | 
 | <catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"/> | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>By default xmlcatalog does not overwrite the original catalog and save the | 
 | result on the standard output, this can be overridden using the -noout | 
 | option. The <code>-add</code> command allows to add entries in the | 
 | catalog:</p> | 
 | <pre>orchis:~/XML -> ./xmlcatalog --noout --create --add "public" \ | 
 |   "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" \ | 
 |   http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd tst.xml | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> cat tst.xml | 
 | <?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN" \ | 
 |   "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"> | 
 | <catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"> | 
 | <public publicId="-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" | 
 |         uri="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd"/> | 
 | </catalog> | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The <code>-add</code> option will always take 3 parameters even if some of | 
 | the XML Catalog constructs (like nextCatalog) will have only a single | 
 | argument, just pass a third empty string, it will be ignored.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Similarly the <code>-del</code> option remove matching entries from the | 
 | catalog:</p> | 
 | <pre>orchis:~/XML -> ./xmlcatalog --del \ | 
 |   "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" tst.xml | 
 | <?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN" | 
 |     "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"> | 
 | <catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"/> | 
 | orchis:~/XML -> </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The catalog is now empty. Note that the matching of <code>-del</code> is | 
 | exact and would have worked in a similar fashion with the Public ID | 
 | string.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>This is rudimentary but should be sufficient to manage a not too complex | 
 | catalog tree of resources.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="implemento">The implementor corner quick review of the | 
 | API:</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>First, and like for every other module of libxml, there is an | 
 | automatically generated <a href="html/libxml-catalog.html">API page for | 
 | catalog support</a>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The header for the catalog interfaces should be included as:</p> | 
 | <pre>#include <libxml/catalog.h></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The API is voluntarily kept very simple. First it is not obvious that | 
 | applications really need access to it since it is the default behaviour of | 
 | libxml (Note: it is possible to completely override libxml default catalog by | 
 | using <a href="html/libxml-parser.html">xmlSetExternalEntityLoader</a> to | 
 | plug an application specific resolver).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Basically libxml support 2 catalog lists:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>the default one, global shared by all the application</li> | 
 |   <li>a per-document catalog, this one is built if the document uses the | 
 |     <code>oasis-xml-catalog</code> PIs to specify its own catalog list, it is | 
 |     associated to the parser context and destroyed when the parsing context | 
 |     is destroyed.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>the document one will be used first if it exists.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4>Initialization routines:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>xmlInitializeCatalog(), xmlLoadCatalog() and xmlLoadCatalogs() should be | 
 | used at startup to initialize the catalog, if the catalog should be | 
 | initialized with specific values xmlLoadCatalog()  or xmlLoadCatalogs() | 
 | should be called before xmlInitializeCatalog() which would otherwise do a | 
 | default initialization first.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The xmlCatalogAddLocal() call is used by the parser to grow the document | 
 | own catalog list if needed.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4>Preferences setup:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The XML Catalog spec requires the possibility to select default | 
 | preferences between  public and system delegation, | 
 | xmlCatalogSetDefaultPrefer() allows this, xmlCatalogSetDefaults() and | 
 | xmlCatalogGetDefaults() allow to control  if XML Catalogs resolution should | 
 | be forbidden, allowed for global catalog, for document catalog or both, the | 
 | default is to allow both.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>And of course xmlCatalogSetDebug() allows to generate debug messages | 
 | (through the xmlGenericError() mechanism).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4>Querying routines:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>xmlCatalogResolve(), xmlCatalogResolveSystem(), xmlCatalogResolvePublic() | 
 | and xmlCatalogResolveURI() are relatively explicit if you read the XML | 
 | Catalog specification they correspond to section 7 algorithms, they should | 
 | also work if you have loaded an SGML catalog with a simplified semantic.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>xmlCatalogLocalResolve() and xmlCatalogLocalResolveURI() are the same but | 
 | operate on the document catalog list</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4>Cleanup and Miscellaneous:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>xmlCatalogCleanup() free-up the global catalog, xmlCatalogFreeLocal() is | 
 | the per-document equivalent.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>xmlCatalogAdd() and xmlCatalogRemove() are used to dynamically modify the | 
 | first catalog in the global list, and xmlCatalogDump() allows to dump a | 
 | catalog state, those routines are primarily designed for xmlcatalog, I'm not | 
 | sure that exposing more complex interfaces (like navigation ones) would be | 
 | really useful.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The xmlParseCatalogFile() is a function used to load XML Catalog files, | 
 | it's similar as xmlParseFile() except it bypass all catalog lookups, it's | 
 | provided because this functionality may be useful for client tools.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h4>threaded environments:</h4> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Since the catalog tree is built progressively, some care has been taken to | 
 | try to avoid troubles in multithreaded environments. The code is now thread | 
 | safe assuming that the libxml library has been compiled with threads | 
 | support.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Other">Other resources</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The XML Catalog specification is relatively recent so there isn't much | 
 | literature to point at:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>You can find an good rant from Norm Walsh about <a | 
 |     href="http://www.arbortext.com/Think_Tank/XML_Resources/Issue_Three/issue_three.html">the | 
 |     need for catalogs</a>, it provides a lot of context informations even if | 
 |     I don't agree with everything presented.</li> | 
 |   <li>An <a href="http://home.ccil.org/~cowan/XML/XCatalog.html">old XML | 
 |     catalog proposal</a> from John Cowan</li> | 
 |   <li>The <a href="http://www.rddl.org/">Resource Directory Description | 
 |     Language</a> (RDDL) another catalog system but more oriented toward | 
 |     providing metadata for XML namespaces.</li> | 
 |   <li>the page from the OASIS Technical <a | 
 |     href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/">Committee on Entity | 
 |     Resolution</a> who maintains XML Catalog, you will find pointers to the | 
 |     specification update, some background and pointers to others tools | 
 |     providing XML Catalog support</li> | 
 |   <li>I have uploaded <a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/test/dbk412catalog.tar.gz">a | 
 |     mall tarball</a> containing XML Catalogs for DocBook 4.1.2 which seems to | 
 |     work fine for me</li> | 
 |   <li>The <a href="http://www.xmlsoft.org/xmlcatalog_man.html">xmlcatalog | 
 |     manual page</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>If you have suggestions for corrections or additions, simply contact | 
 | me:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="library">The parser interfaces</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>This section is directly intended to help programmers getting bootstrapped | 
 | using the XML library from the C language. It is not intended to be | 
 | extensive. I hope the automatically generated documents will provide the | 
 | completeness required, but as a separate set of documents. The interfaces of | 
 | the XML library are by principle low level, there is nearly zero abstraction. | 
 | Those interested in a higher level API should <a href="#DOM">look at | 
 | DOM</a>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The <a href="html/libxml-parser.html">parser interfaces for XML</a> are | 
 | separated from the <a href="html/libxml-htmlparser.html">HTML parser | 
 | interfaces</a>.  Let's have a look at how the XML parser can be called:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Invoking">Invoking the parser : the pull method</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Usually, the first thing to do is to read an XML input. The parser accepts | 
 | documents either from in-memory strings or from files.  The functions are | 
 | defined in "parser.h":</p> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>xmlDocPtr xmlParseMemory(char *buffer, int size);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Parse a null-terminated string containing the document.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>xmlDocPtr xmlParseFile(const char *filename);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Parse an XML document contained in a (possibly compressed) | 
 |       file.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The parser returns a pointer to the document structure (or NULL in case of | 
 | failure).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3 id="Invoking1">Invoking the parser: the push method</h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In order for the application to keep the control when the document is | 
 | being fetched (which is common for GUI based programs) libxml provides a push | 
 | interface, too, as of version 1.8.3. Here are the interface functions:</p> | 
 | <pre>xmlParserCtxtPtr xmlCreatePushParserCtxt(xmlSAXHandlerPtr sax, | 
 |                                          void *user_data, | 
 |                                          const char *chunk, | 
 |                                          int size, | 
 |                                          const char *filename); | 
 | int              xmlParseChunk          (xmlParserCtxtPtr ctxt, | 
 |                                          const char *chunk, | 
 |                                          int size, | 
 |                                          int terminate);</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>and here is a simple example showing how to use the interface:</p> | 
 | <pre>            FILE *f; | 
 |  | 
 |             f = fopen(filename, "r"); | 
 |             if (f != NULL) { | 
 |                 int res, size = 1024; | 
 |                 char chars[1024]; | 
 |                 xmlParserCtxtPtr ctxt; | 
 |  | 
 |                 res = fread(chars, 1, 4, f); | 
 |                 if (res > 0) { | 
 |                     ctxt = xmlCreatePushParserCtxt(NULL, NULL, | 
 |                                 chars, res, filename); | 
 |                     while ((res = fread(chars, 1, size, f)) > 0) { | 
 |                         xmlParseChunk(ctxt, chars, res, 0); | 
 |                     } | 
 |                     xmlParseChunk(ctxt, chars, 0, 1); | 
 |                     doc = ctxt->myDoc; | 
 |                     xmlFreeParserCtxt(ctxt); | 
 |                 } | 
 |             }</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The HTML parser embedded into libxml also has a push interface; the | 
 | functions are just prefixed by "html" rather than "xml".</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3 id="Invoking2">Invoking the parser: the SAX interface</h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The tree-building interface makes the parser memory-hungry, first loading | 
 | the document in memory and then building the tree itself. Reading a document | 
 | without building the tree is possible using the SAX interfaces (see SAX.h and | 
 | <a href="http://www.daa.com.au/~james/gnome/xml-sax/xml-sax.html">James | 
 | Henstridge's documentation</a>). Note also that the push interface can be | 
 | limited to SAX: just use the two first arguments of | 
 | <code>xmlCreatePushParserCtxt()</code>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Building">Building a tree from scratch</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The other way to get an XML tree in memory is by building it. Basically | 
 | there is a set of functions dedicated to building new elements. (These are | 
 | also described in <libxml/tree.h>.) For example, here is a piece of | 
 | code that produces the XML document used in the previous examples:</p> | 
 | <pre>    #include <libxml/tree.h> | 
 |     xmlDocPtr doc; | 
 |     xmlNodePtr tree, subtree; | 
 |  | 
 |     doc = xmlNewDoc("1.0"); | 
 |     doc->children = xmlNewDocNode(doc, NULL, "EXAMPLE", NULL); | 
 |     xmlSetProp(doc->children, "prop1", "gnome is great"); | 
 |     xmlSetProp(doc->children, "prop2", "& linux too"); | 
 |     tree = xmlNewChild(doc->children, NULL, "head", NULL); | 
 |     subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "title", "Welcome to Gnome"); | 
 |     tree = xmlNewChild(doc->children, NULL, "chapter", NULL); | 
 |     subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "title", "The Linux adventure"); | 
 |     subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "p", "bla bla bla ..."); | 
 |     subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "image", NULL); | 
 |     xmlSetProp(subtree, "href", "linus.gif");</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Not really rocket science ...</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Traversing">Traversing the tree</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Basically by <a href="html/libxml-tree.html">including "tree.h"</a> your | 
 | code has access to the internal structure of all the elements of the tree. | 
 | The names should be somewhat simple like <strong>parent</strong>, | 
 | <strong>children</strong>, <strong>next</strong>, <strong>prev</strong>, | 
 | <strong>properties</strong>, etc... For example, still with the previous | 
 | example:</p> | 
 | <pre><code>doc->children->children->children</code></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>points to the title element,</p> | 
 | <pre>doc->children->children->next->children->children</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>points to the text node containing the chapter title "The Linux | 
 | adventure".</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><strong>NOTE</strong>: XML allows <em>PI</em>s and <em>comments</em> to be | 
 | present before the document root, so <code>doc->children</code> may point | 
 | to an element which is not the document Root Element; a function | 
 | <code>xmlDocGetRootElement()</code> was added for this purpose.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Modifying">Modifying the tree</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Functions are provided for reading and writing the document content. Here | 
 | is an excerpt from the <a href="html/libxml-tree.html">tree API</a>:</p> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>xmlAttrPtr xmlSetProp(xmlNodePtr node, const xmlChar *name, const | 
 |   xmlChar *value);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>This sets (or changes) an attribute carried by an ELEMENT node. | 
 |       The value can be NULL.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>const xmlChar *xmlGetProp(xmlNodePtr node, const xmlChar | 
 |   *name);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>This function returns a pointer to new copy of the property | 
 |       content. Note that the user must deallocate the result.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Two functions are provided for reading and writing the text associated | 
 | with elements:</p> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>xmlNodePtr xmlStringGetNodeList(xmlDocPtr doc, const xmlChar | 
 |   *value);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>This function takes an "external" string and converts it to one | 
 |       text node or possibly to a list of entity and text nodes. All | 
 |       non-predefined entity references like &Gnome; will be stored | 
 |       internally as entity nodes, hence the result of the function may not be | 
 |       a single node.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>xmlChar *xmlNodeListGetString(xmlDocPtr doc, xmlNodePtr list, int | 
 |   inLine);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>This function is the inverse of | 
 |       <code>xmlStringGetNodeList()</code>. It generates a new string | 
 |       containing the content of the text and entity nodes. Note the extra | 
 |       argument inLine. If this argument is set to 1, the function will expand | 
 |       entity references.  For example, instead of returning the &Gnome; | 
 |       XML encoding in the string, it will substitute it with its value (say, | 
 |       "GNU Network Object Model Environment").</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Saving">Saving a tree</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Basically 3 options are possible:</p> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>void xmlDocDumpMemory(xmlDocPtr cur, xmlChar**mem, int | 
 |   *size);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Returns a buffer into which the document has been saved.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>extern void xmlDocDump(FILE *f, xmlDocPtr doc);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Dumps a document to an open file descriptor.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>int xmlSaveFile(const char *filename, xmlDocPtr cur);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Saves the document to a file. In this case, the compression | 
 |       interface is triggered if it has been turned on.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3><a name="Compressio">Compression</a></h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The library transparently handles compression when doing file-based | 
 | accesses. The level of compression on saves can be turned on either globally | 
 | or individually for one file:</p> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>int  xmlGetDocCompressMode (xmlDocPtr doc);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Gets the document compression ratio (0-9).</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>void xmlSetDocCompressMode (xmlDocPtr doc, int mode);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Sets the document compression ratio.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>int  xmlGetCompressMode(void);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Gets the default compression ratio.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 | <dl> | 
 |   <dt><code>void xmlSetCompressMode(int mode);</code></dt> | 
 |     <dd><p>Sets the default compression ratio.</p> | 
 |     </dd> | 
 | </dl> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Entities">Entities or no entities</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Entities in principle are similar to simple C macros. An entity defines an | 
 | abbreviation for a given string that you can reuse many times throughout the | 
 | content of your document. Entities are especially useful when a given string | 
 | may occur frequently within a document, or to confine the change needed to a | 
 | document to a restricted area in the internal subset of the document (at the | 
 | beginning). Example:</p> | 
 | <pre>1 <?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | 2 <!DOCTYPE EXAMPLE SYSTEM "example.dtd" [ | 
 | 3 <!ENTITY xml "Extensible Markup Language"> | 
 | 4 ]> | 
 | 5 <EXAMPLE> | 
 | 6    &xml; | 
 | 7 </EXAMPLE></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Line 3 declares the xml entity. Line 6 uses the xml entity, by prefixing | 
 | its name with '&' and following it by ';' without any spaces added. There | 
 | are 5 predefined entities in libxml allowing you to escape charaters with | 
 | predefined meaning in some parts of the xml document content: | 
 | <strong>&lt;</strong> for the character '<', <strong>&gt;</strong> | 
 | for the character '>',  <strong>&apos;</strong> for the character ''', | 
 | <strong>&quot;</strong> for the character '"', and | 
 | <strong>&amp;</strong> for the character '&'.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>One of the problems related to entities is that you may want the parser to | 
 | substitute an entity's content so that you can see the replacement text in | 
 | your application. Or you may prefer to keep entity references as such in the | 
 | content to be able to save the document back without losing this usually | 
 | precious information (if the user went through the pain of explicitly | 
 | defining entities, he may have a a rather negative attitude if you blindly | 
 | susbtitute them as saving time). The <a | 
 | href="html/libxml-parser.html#XMLSUBSTITUTEENTITIESDEFAULT">xmlSubstituteEntitiesDefault()</a> | 
 | function allows you to check and change the behaviour, which is to not | 
 | substitute entities by default.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here is the DOM tree built by libxml for the previous document in the | 
 | default case:</p> | 
 | <pre>/gnome/src/gnome-xml -> ./xmllint --debug test/ent1 | 
 | DOCUMENT | 
 | version=1.0 | 
 |    ELEMENT EXAMPLE | 
 |      TEXT | 
 |      content= | 
 |      ENTITY_REF | 
 |        INTERNAL_GENERAL_ENTITY xml | 
 |        content=Extensible Markup Language | 
 |      TEXT | 
 |      content=</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>And here is the result when substituting entities:</p> | 
 | <pre>/gnome/src/gnome-xml -> ./tester --debug --noent test/ent1 | 
 | DOCUMENT | 
 | version=1.0 | 
 |    ELEMENT EXAMPLE | 
 |      TEXT | 
 |      content=     Extensible Markup Language</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>So, entities or no entities? Basically, it depends on your use case. I | 
 | suggest that you keep the non-substituting default behaviour and avoid using | 
 | entities in your XML document or data if you are not willing to handle the | 
 | entity references elements in the DOM tree.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Note that at save time libxml enforces the conversion of the predefined | 
 | entities where necessary to prevent well-formedness problems, and will also | 
 | transparently replace those with chars (i.e. it will not generate entity | 
 | reference elements in the DOM tree or call the reference() SAX callback when | 
 | finding them in the input).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><span style="background-color: #FF0000">WARNING</span>: handling entities | 
 | on top of the libxml SAX interface is difficult!!! If you plan to use | 
 | non-predefined entities in your documents, then the learning cuvre to handle | 
 | then using the SAX API may be long. If you plan to use complex documents, I | 
 | strongly suggest you consider using the DOM interface instead and let libxml | 
 | deal with the complexity rather than trying to do it yourself.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Namespaces">Namespaces</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The libxml library implements <a | 
 | href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">XML namespaces</a> support by | 
 | recognizing namespace contructs in the input, and does namespace lookup | 
 | automatically when building the DOM tree. A namespace declaration is | 
 | associated with an in-memory structure and all elements or attributes within | 
 | that namespace point to it. Hence testing the namespace is a simple and fast | 
 | equality operation at the user level.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>I suggest that people using libxml use a namespace, and declare it in the | 
 | root element of their document as the default namespace. Then they don't need | 
 | to use the prefix in the content but we will have a basis for future semantic | 
 | refinement and  merging of data from different sources. This doesn't increase | 
 | the size of the XML output significantly, but significantly increases its | 
 | value in the long-term. Example:</p> | 
 | <pre><mydoc xmlns="http://mydoc.example.org/schemas/"> | 
 |    <elem1>...</elem1> | 
 |    <elem2>...</elem2> | 
 | </mydoc></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The namespace value has to be an absolute URL, but the URL doesn't have to | 
 | point to any existing resource on the Web. It will bind all the element and | 
 | atributes with that URL. I suggest to use an URL within a domain you control, | 
 | and that the URL should contain some kind of version information if possible. | 
 | For example, <code>"http://www.gnome.org/gnumeric/1.0/"</code> is a good | 
 | namespace scheme.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Then when you load a file, make sure that a namespace carrying the | 
 | version-independent prefix is installed on the root element of your document, | 
 | and if the version information don't match something you know, warn the user | 
 | and be liberal in what you accept as the input. Also do *not* try to base | 
 | namespace checking on the prefix value. <foo:text> may be exactly the | 
 | same as <bar:text> in another document. What really matters is the URI | 
 | associated with the element or the attribute, not the prefix string (which is | 
 | just a shortcut for the full URI). In libxml, element and attributes have an | 
 | <code>ns</code> field pointing to an xmlNs structure detailing the namespace | 
 | prefix and its URI.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>@@Interfaces@@</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>@@Examples@@</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Usually people object to using namespaces together with validity checking. | 
 | I will try to make sure that using namespaces won't break validity checking, | 
 | so even if you plan to use or currently are using validation I strongly | 
 | suggest adding namespaces to your document. A default namespace scheme | 
 | <code>xmlns="http://...."</code> should not break validity even on less | 
 | flexible parsers. Using namespaces to mix and differentiate content coming | 
 | from multiple DTDs will certainly break current validation schemes. I will | 
 | try to provide ways to do this, but this may not be portable or | 
 | standardized.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Upgrading">Upgrading 1.x code</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Incompatible changes:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Version 2 of libxml is the first version introducing serious backward | 
 | incompatible changes. The main goals were:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>a general cleanup. A number of mistakes inherited from the very early | 
 |     versions couldn't be changed due to compatibility constraints. Example | 
 |     the "childs" element in the nodes.</li> | 
 |   <li>Uniformization of the various nodes, at least for their header and link | 
 |     parts (doc, parent, children, prev, next), the goal is a simpler | 
 |     programming model and simplifying the task of the DOM implementors.</li> | 
 |   <li>better conformances to the XML specification, for example version 1.x | 
 |     had an heuristic to try to detect ignorable white spaces. As a result the | 
 |     SAX event generated were ignorableWhitespace() while the spec requires | 
 |     character() in that case. This also mean that a number of DOM node | 
 |     containing blank text may populate the DOM tree which were not present | 
 |     before.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>How to fix libxml-1.x code:</h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>So client code of libxml designed to run with version 1.x may have to be | 
 | changed to compile against version 2.x of libxml. Here is a list of changes | 
 | that I have collected, they may not be sufficient, so in case you find other | 
 | change which are required, <a href="mailto:Daniel.Ïeillardw3.org">drop me a | 
 | mail</a>:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>The package name have changed from libxml to libxml2, the library name | 
 |     is now -lxml2 . There is a new xml2-config script which should be used to | 
 |     select the right parameters libxml2</li> | 
 |   <li>Node <strong>childs</strong> field has been renamed | 
 |     <strong>children</strong> so s/childs/children/g should be  applied | 
 |     (probablility of having "childs" anywere else is close to 0+</li> | 
 |   <li>The document don't have anymore a <strong>root</strong> element it has | 
 |     been replaced by <strong>children</strong> and usually you will get a | 
 |     list of element here. For example a Dtd element for the internal subset | 
 |     and it's declaration may be found in that list, as well as processing | 
 |     instructions or comments found before or after the document root element. | 
 |     Use <strong>xmlDocGetRootElement(doc)</strong> to get the root element of | 
 |     a document. Alternatively if you are sure to not reference Dtds nor have | 
 |     PIs or comments before or after the root element | 
 |     s/->root/->children/g will probably do it.</li> | 
 |   <li>The white space issue, this one is more complex, unless special case of | 
 |     validating parsing, the line breaks and spaces usually used for indenting | 
 |     and formatting the document content becomes significant. So they are | 
 |     reported by SAX and if your using the DOM tree, corresponding nodes are | 
 |     generated. Too approach can be taken: | 
 |     <ol> | 
 |       <li>lazy one, use the compatibility call | 
 |         <strong>xmlKeepBlanksDefault(0)</strong> but be aware that you are | 
 |         relying on a special (and possibly broken) set of heuristics of | 
 |         libxml to detect ignorable blanks. Don't complain if it breaks or | 
 |         make your application not 100% clean w.r.t. to it's input.</li> | 
 |       <li>the Right Way: change you code to accept possibly unsignificant | 
 |         blanks characters, or have your tree populated with weird blank text | 
 |         nodes. You can spot them using the comodity function | 
 |         <strong>xmlIsBlankNode(node)</strong> returning 1 for such blank | 
 |         nodes.</li> | 
 |     </ol> | 
 |     <p>Note also that with the new default the output functions don't add any | 
 |     extra indentation when saving a tree in order to be able to round trip | 
 |     (read and save) without inflating the document with extra formatting | 
 |     chars.</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>The include path has changed to $prefix/libxml/ and the includes | 
 |     themselves uses this new prefix in includes instructions... If you are | 
 |     using (as expected) the | 
 |     <pre>xml2-config --cflags</pre> | 
 |     <p>output to generate you compile commands this will probably work out of | 
 |     the box</p> | 
 |   </li> | 
 |   <li>xmlDetectCharEncoding takes an extra argument indicating the lenght in | 
 |     byte of the head of the document available for character detection.</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <h3>Ensuring both libxml-1.x and libxml-2.x compatibility</h3> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Two new version of libxml (1.8.11) and libxml2 (2.3.4) have been released | 
 | to allow smoth upgrade of existing libxml v1code while retaining | 
 | compatibility. They offers the following:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>similar include naming, one should use | 
 |     <strong>#include<libxml/...></strong> in both cases.</li> | 
 |   <li>similar identifiers defined via macros for the child and root fields: | 
 |     respectively <strong>xmlChildrenNode</strong> and | 
 |     <strong>xmlRootNode</strong></li> | 
 |   <li>a new macro <strong>LIBXML_TEST_VERSION</strong> which should be | 
 |     inserted once in the client code</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>So the roadmap to upgrade your existing libxml applications is the | 
 | following:</p> | 
 | <ol> | 
 |   <li>install the  libxml-1.8.8 (and libxml-devel-1.8.8) packages</li> | 
 |   <li>find all occurences where the xmlDoc <strong>root</strong> field is | 
 |     used and change it to <strong>xmlRootNode</strong></li> | 
 |   <li>similary find all occurences where the xmlNode <strong>childs</strong> | 
 |     field is used and change it to <strong>xmlChildrenNode</strong></li> | 
 |   <li>add a <strong>LIBXML_TEST_VERSION</strong> macro somewhere in your | 
 |     <strong>main()</strong> or in the library init entry point</li> | 
 |   <li>Recompile, check compatibility, it should still work</li> | 
 |   <li>Change your configure script to look first for xml2-config and fallback | 
 |     using xml-config . Use the --cflags and --libs ouptut of the command as | 
 |     the Include and Linking parameters needed to use libxml.</li> | 
 |   <li>install libxml2-2.3.x and  libxml2-devel-2.3.x (libxml-1.8.y and | 
 |     libxml-devel-1.8.y can be kept simultaneously)</li> | 
 |   <li>remove your config.cache, relaunch your configuration mechanism, and | 
 |     recompile, if steps 2 and 3 were done right it should compile as-is</li> | 
 |   <li>Test that your application is still running correctly, if not this may | 
 |     be due to extra empty nodes due to formating spaces being kept in libxml2 | 
 |     contrary to libxml1, in that case insert xmlKeepBlanksDefault(1) in your | 
 |     code before calling the parser (next to | 
 |     <strong>LIBXML_TEST_VERSION</strong> is a fine place).</li> | 
 | </ol> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Following those steps should work. It worked for some of my own code.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Let me put some emphasis on the fact that there is far more changes from | 
 | libxml 1.x to 2.x than the ones you may have to patch for. The overall code | 
 | has been considerably cleaned up and the conformance to the XML specification | 
 | has been drastically improved too. Don't take those changes as an excuse to | 
 | not upgrade, it may cost a lot on the long term ...</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Thread">Thread safety</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Starting with 2.4.7, libxml makes provisions to ensure that concurent | 
 | threads can safely work in parallel parsing different documents. There is | 
 | however a couple of things to do to ensure it:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>configure the library accordingly using the --with-threads options</li> | 
 |   <li>call xmlInitParser() in the "main" thread before using any of the | 
 |     libxml API (except possibly selecting a different memory allocator)</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Note that the thread safety cannot be ensured for multiple threads sharing | 
 | the same document, the locking must be done at the application level, libxml | 
 | exports a basic mutex and reentrant mutexes API in <libxml/threads.h>. | 
 | The parts of the library checked for thread safety are:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>concurrent loading</li> | 
 |   <li>file access resolution</li> | 
 |   <li>catalog access</li> | 
 |   <li>catalog building</li> | 
 |   <li>entities lookup/accesses</li> | 
 |   <li>validation</li> | 
 |   <li>global variables per-thread override</li> | 
 |   <li>memory handling</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>XPath is supposed to be thread safe now, but this wasn't tested | 
 | seriously.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="DOM"></a><a name="Principles">DOM Principles</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p><a href="http://www.w3.org/DOM/">DOM</a> stands for the <em>Document | 
 | Object Model</em>; this is an API for accessing XML or HTML structured | 
 | documents. Native support for DOM in Gnome is on the way (module gnome-dom), | 
 | and will be based on gnome-xml. This will be a far cleaner interface to | 
 | manipulate XML files within Gnome since it won't expose the internal | 
 | structure.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The current DOM implementation on top of libxml is the <a | 
 | href="http://cvs.gnome.org/lxr/source/gdome2/">gdome2 Gnome module</a>, this | 
 | is a full DOM interface, thanks to Paolo Casarini, check the <a | 
 | href="http://www.cs.unibo.it/~casarini/gdome2/">Gdome2 homepage</a> for more | 
 | informations.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Example"></a><a name="real">A real example</a></h2> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here is a real size example, where the actual content of the application | 
 | data is not kept in the DOM tree but uses internal structures. It is based on | 
 | a proposal to keep a database of jobs related to Gnome, with an XML based | 
 | storage structure. Here is an <a href="gjobs.xml">XML encoded jobs | 
 | base</a>:</p> | 
 | <pre><?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <gjob:Helping xmlns:gjob="http://www.gnome.org/some-location"> | 
 |   <gjob:Jobs> | 
 |  | 
 |     <gjob:Job> | 
 |       <gjob:Project ID="3"/> | 
 |       <gjob:Application>GBackup</gjob:Application> | 
 |       <gjob:Category>Development</gjob:Category> | 
 |  | 
 |       <gjob:Update> | 
 |         <gjob:Status>Open</gjob:Status> | 
 |         <gjob:Modified>Mon, 07 Jun 1999 20:27:45 -0400 MET DST</gjob:Modified> | 
 |         <gjob:Salary>USD 0.00</gjob:Salary> | 
 |       </gjob:Update> | 
 |  | 
 |       <gjob:Developers> | 
 |         <gjob:Developer> | 
 |         </gjob:Developer> | 
 |       </gjob:Developers> | 
 |  | 
 |       <gjob:Contact> | 
 |         <gjob:Person>Nathan Clemons</gjob:Person> | 
 |         <gjob:Email>nathan@windsofstorm.net</gjob:Email> | 
 |         <gjob:Company> | 
 |         </gjob:Company> | 
 |         <gjob:Organisation> | 
 |         </gjob:Organisation> | 
 |         <gjob:Webpage> | 
 |         </gjob:Webpage> | 
 |         <gjob:Snailmail> | 
 |         </gjob:Snailmail> | 
 |         <gjob:Phone> | 
 |         </gjob:Phone> | 
 |       </gjob:Contact> | 
 |  | 
 |       <gjob:Requirements> | 
 |       The program should be released as free software, under the GPL. | 
 |       </gjob:Requirements> | 
 |  | 
 |       <gjob:Skills> | 
 |       </gjob:Skills> | 
 |  | 
 |       <gjob:Details> | 
 |       A GNOME based system that will allow a superuser to configure  | 
 |       compressed and uncompressed files and/or file systems to be backed  | 
 |       up with a supported media in the system.  This should be able to  | 
 |       perform via find commands generating a list of files that are passed  | 
 |       to tar, dd, cpio, cp, gzip, etc., to be directed to the tape machine  | 
 |       or via operations performed on the filesystem itself. Email  | 
 |       notification and GUI status display very important. | 
 |       </gjob:Details> | 
 |  | 
 |     </gjob:Job> | 
 |  | 
 |   </gjob:Jobs> | 
 | </gjob:Helping></pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>While loading the XML file into an internal DOM tree is a matter of | 
 | calling only a couple of functions, browsing the tree to gather the ata and | 
 | generate the internal structures is harder, and more error prone.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The suggested principle is to be tolerant with respect to the input | 
 | structure. For example, the ordering of the attributes is not significant, | 
 | the XML specification is clear about it. It's also usually a good idea not to | 
 | depend on the order of the children of a given node, unless it really makes | 
 | things harder. Here is some code to parse the information for a person:</p> | 
 | <pre>/* | 
 |  * A person record | 
 |  */ | 
 | typedef struct person { | 
 |     char *name; | 
 |     char *email; | 
 |     char *company; | 
 |     char *organisation; | 
 |     char *smail; | 
 |     char *webPage; | 
 |     char *phone; | 
 | } person, *personPtr; | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * And the code needed to parse it | 
 |  */ | 
 | personPtr parsePerson(xmlDocPtr doc, xmlNsPtr ns, xmlNodePtr cur) { | 
 |     personPtr ret = NULL; | 
 |  | 
 | DEBUG("parsePerson\n"); | 
 |     /* | 
 |      * allocate the struct | 
 |      */ | 
 |     ret = (personPtr) malloc(sizeof(person)); | 
 |     if (ret == NULL) { | 
 |         fprintf(stderr,"out of memory\n"); | 
 |         return(NULL); | 
 |     } | 
 |     memset(ret, 0, sizeof(person)); | 
 |  | 
 |     /* We don't care what the top level element name is */ | 
 |     cur = cur->xmlChildrenNode; | 
 |     while (cur != NULL) { | 
 |         if ((!strcmp(cur->name, "Person")) && (cur->ns == ns)) | 
 |             ret->name = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur->xmlChildrenNode, 1); | 
 |         if ((!strcmp(cur->name, "Email")) && (cur->ns == ns)) | 
 |             ret->email = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur->xmlChildrenNode, 1); | 
 |         cur = cur->next; | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     return(ret); | 
 | }</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here are a couple of things to notice:</p> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Usually a recursive parsing style is the more convenient one: XML data | 
 |     is by nature subject to repetitive constructs and usually exibits highly | 
 |     stuctured patterns.</li> | 
 |   <li>The two arguments of type <em>xmlDocPtr</em> and <em>xmlNsPtr</em>, | 
 |     i.e. the pointer to the global XML document and the namespace reserved to | 
 |     the application. Document wide information are needed for example to | 
 |     decode entities and it's a good coding practice to define a namespace for | 
 |     your application set of data and test that the element and attributes | 
 |     you're analyzing actually pertains to your application space. This is | 
 |     done by a simple equality test (cur->ns == ns).</li> | 
 |   <li>To retrieve text and attributes value, you can use the function | 
 |     <em>xmlNodeListGetString</em> to gather all the text and entity reference | 
 |     nodes generated by the DOM output and produce an single text string.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here is another piece of code used to parse another level of the | 
 | structure:</p> | 
 | <pre>#include <libxml/tree.h> | 
 | /* | 
 |  * a Description for a Job | 
 |  */ | 
 | typedef struct job { | 
 |     char *projectID; | 
 |     char *application; | 
 |     char *category; | 
 |     personPtr contact; | 
 |     int nbDevelopers; | 
 |     personPtr developers[100]; /* using dynamic alloc is left as an exercise */ | 
 | } job, *jobPtr; | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * And the code needed to parse it | 
 |  */ | 
 | jobPtr parseJob(xmlDocPtr doc, xmlNsPtr ns, xmlNodePtr cur) { | 
 |     jobPtr ret = NULL; | 
 |  | 
 | DEBUG("parseJob\n"); | 
 |     /* | 
 |      * allocate the struct | 
 |      */ | 
 |     ret = (jobPtr) malloc(sizeof(job)); | 
 |     if (ret == NULL) { | 
 |         fprintf(stderr,"out of memory\n"); | 
 |         return(NULL); | 
 |     } | 
 |     memset(ret, 0, sizeof(job)); | 
 |  | 
 |     /* We don't care what the top level element name is */ | 
 |     cur = cur->xmlChildrenNode; | 
 |     while (cur != NULL) { | 
 |          | 
 |         if ((!strcmp(cur->name, "Project")) && (cur->ns == ns)) { | 
 |             ret->projectID = xmlGetProp(cur, "ID"); | 
 |             if (ret->projectID == NULL) { | 
 |                 fprintf(stderr, "Project has no ID\n"); | 
 |             } | 
 |         } | 
 |         if ((!strcmp(cur->name, "Application")) && (cur->ns == ns)) | 
 |             ret->application = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur->xmlChildrenNode, 1); | 
 |         if ((!strcmp(cur->name, "Category")) && (cur->ns == ns)) | 
 |             ret->category = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur->xmlChildrenNode, 1); | 
 |         if ((!strcmp(cur->name, "Contact")) && (cur->ns == ns)) | 
 |             ret->contact = parsePerson(doc, ns, cur); | 
 |         cur = cur->next; | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     return(ret); | 
 | }</pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Once you are used to it, writing this kind of code is quite simple, but | 
 | boring. Ultimately, it could be possble to write stubbers taking either C | 
 | data structure definitions, a set of XML examples or an XML DTD and produce | 
 | the code needed to import and export the content between C data and XML | 
 | storage. This is left as an exercise to the reader :-)</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Feel free to use <a href="example/gjobread.c">the code for the full C | 
 | parsing example</a> as a template, it is also available with Makefile in the | 
 | Gnome CVS base under gnome-xml/example</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <h2><a name="Contributi">Contributions</a></h2> | 
 | <ul> | 
 |   <li>Bjorn Reese, William Brack and Thomas Broyer have provided a number of | 
 |     patches, Gary Pennington worked on the validation API, threading support | 
 |     and Solaris port.</li> | 
 |   <li>John Fleck helps maintaining the documentation and man pages.</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="mailto:ari@lusis.org">Ari Johnson</a> | 
 |      provides a  C++ wrapper for libxml:<br> | 
 |     Website: <a | 
 |     href="http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/">http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/</a><br> | 
 |     Download: <a | 
 |     href="http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/libxml++.tar.gz">http://lusis.org/~ari/xml++/libxml++.tar.gz</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="mailto:izlatkovic@daenet.de">Igor  Zlatkovic</a> | 
 |      is now the maintainer of the Windows port, <a | 
 |     href="http://www.fh-frankfurt.de/~igor/projects/libxml/index.html">he | 
 |     provides binaries</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="mailto:Gary.Pennington@sun.com">Gary Pennington</a> | 
 |      provides <a href="http://pages.eidosnet.co.uk/~garypen/libxml/">Solaris | 
 |     binaries</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a | 
 |     href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/2001-March/msg00014.html">Matt | 
 |     Sergeant</a> | 
 |      developped <a href="http://axkit.org/download/">XML::LibXSLT</a>, a perl | 
 |     wrapper for libxml2/libxslt as part of the <a | 
 |     href="http://axkit.com/">AxKit XML application server</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="mailto:fnatter@gmx.net">Felix Natter</a> | 
 |      and <a href="mailto:geertk@ai.rug.nl">Geert Kloosterman</a> provide <a | 
 |     href="libxml-doc.el">an emacs module</a> to lookup libxml(2) functions | 
 |     documentation</li> | 
 |   <li><a href="mailto:sherwin@nlm.nih.gov">Ziying Sherwin</a> | 
 |      provided <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages/0488.html">man | 
 |   pages</a></li> | 
 |   <li>there is a module for <a | 
 |     href="http://acs-misc.sourceforge.net/nsxml.html">libxml/libxslt support | 
 |     in OpenNSD/AOLServer</a></li> | 
 |   <li><a href="mailto:dkuhlman@cutter.rexx.com">Dave Kuhlman</a> | 
 |      provides libxml/libxslt <a href="http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman">wrappers | 
 |     for Python</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p></p> | 
 | </body> | 
 | </html> |