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libxmlb ======= Introduction ------------ XML is slow to parse and strings inside the document cannot be memory mapped as they do not have a trailing NUL char. The libxmlb library takes XML source, and converts it to a structured binary representation with a deduplicated string table -- where the strings have the NULs included. This allows an application to mmap the binary XML file, do an XPath query and return some strings without actually parsing the entire document. This is all done using (almost) zero allocations and no actual copying of the binary data. As each node in the binary XML file encodes the 'next' node at the same level it makes skipping whole subtrees trivial. A 10Mb binary XML file can be loaded from disk **and** queried in less than a few milliseconds. The binary XML is not supposed to be small. It's usually about half the size of the text XML data where a lot of the tag content is duplicated, but can actually be larger than the original XML file. This isn't important; the fast query speed and the ability to mmap strings without copies more than makes up for the larger on-disk size. If you want to compress your XML, this library probably isn't for you -- just use gzip -- its gives you an almost a perfect compression ratio for data like this. For example: $ xb-tool compile fedora.xmlb fedora.xml.gz $ du -h fedora.xml* 12M fedora.xmlb 3.6M fedora.xml.gz $ xb-tool query fedora.xmlb "components/component[@type=desktop]/id[text()=firefox.desktop]" RESULT: firefox.desktop real 0m0.011s user 0m0.010s sys 0m0.001s XPath ===== This library only implements a tiny subset of XPath. See the examples for the full list, but it's basically restricted to element_name, attributes and text. We will use the following XML document in the examples below. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <bookstore> <book> <title lang="en">Harry Potter</title> <price>29.99</price> </book> <book percentage="99"> <title lang="en">Learning XML</title> <price>39.95</price> </book> </bookstore> Selecting Nodes --------------- XPath uses path expressions to select nodes in an XML document. The only thing that libxmlb can return are nodes. | Example | Description | Supported | | --- | --- | --- | | `/bookstore` | Returns the root bookstore element | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book` | Returns all `book` elements | ✔ | | `//book` | Returns books no matter where they are | ✖ | | `bookstore//book` | Returns books that are descendant of `bookstore` | ✖ | | `@lang` | Returns attributes that are named `lang` | ✖ | | `/bookstore/.` | Returns the `bookstore` node | ✖ | | `/bookstore/book/*` | Returns all `title` and `price` nodes of each `book` node | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/child::*` | Returns all `title` and `price` nodes of each `book` node | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/title/..` | Returns the `book` nodes with a title | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/parent::*` | Returns `bookstore`, the parent of `book` | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/parent::bookstore` | Returns the parent `bookstore` of `book` | ✖ | Predicates ---------- Predicates are used to find a specific node or a node that contains a specific value. Predicates are always embedded in square brackets. | Example | Description | Supported | | --- | --- | --- | | `/bookstore/book[1]` | Returns the first book element | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book[first()]` | Returns the first book element | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book[last()]` | Returns the last book element | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book[last()-1]` | Returns the last but one book element | ✖ | | `/bookstore/book[position()<3]` | Returns the first two books | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book[upper-case(text())=='HARRY POTTER']` | Returns the first book | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book[@percentage>=90]` | Returns the book with `>=` 90% completion | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/title[@lang]` | Returns titles with an attribute named `lang` | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/title[@lang='en']` | Returns titles that have a `lang`equal `en` | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/title[@lang!='en']` | Returns titles that have a `lang` not equal `en` | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book/title[@lang<='zz_ZZ']` | Returns titles that `lang` <= `zz_ZZ` | ✔ | | `/bookstore/book[price>35.00]` | Returns the books with a price greater than 35 | ✖ | | `/bookstore/book[price>35.00]/title` | Returns the titles that have a price greater than 35 | ✖ | | `/bookstore/book/title[text()='Learning XML']` | Returns the book node with matching content | ✔ | Compilation ---------- libxmlb is a standard meson project. It can be compiled using the following basic steps: ``` # meson build # ninja -C build # ninja -C build install # ldconfig ``` This will by default install the library into `/usr/local`. On some Linux distributions you may need to configure the linker path in `/etc/ld.so.conf` to be able to locate it. The call to `ldconfig` is needed to refresh the linker cache.