XML::Hash::XS - Simple and fast hash to XML and XML to hash conversion written in C
use XML::Hash::XS; my $xmlstr = hash2xml \%hash; hash2xml \%hash, output => $fh; my $hash = xml2hash $xmlstr; my $hash = xml2hash \$xmlstr; my $hash = xml2hash 'test.xml', encoding => 'cp1251'; my $hash = xml2hash $fh; my $hash = xml2hash *STDIN;
Or OOP way:
use XML::Hash::XS qw(); my $conv = XML::Hash::XS->new(utf8 => 0, encoding => 'utf8') my $xmlstr = $conv->hash2xml(\%hash, utf8 => 1); my $hash = $conv->xml2hash($xmlstr, encoding => 'cp1251');
This module implements simple hash to XML and XML to hash conversion written in C.
During conversion uses minimum of memory, XML or hash is written directly without building DOM.
Some features are optional and are available with appropriate libraries:
XML::LibXML library is required in order to build DOM
ICU or iconv library is required in order to perform charset conversions
$hash is reference to hash
hash2xml { node1 => 'value1', node2 => [ 'value21', { node22 => 'value22' } ], node3 => \'value3', node4 => sub { return 'value4' }, node5 => sub { return { node51 => 'value51' } }, }, canonical => 1, indent => 2, ;
will convert to:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <root> <node1>value1</node1> <node2>value21</node2> <node2> <node22>value22</node22> </node2> <node3>value3</node3> <node4>value4</node4> <node5> <node51>value51</node51> </node5> </root>
and (use_attr=1):
hash2xml { node1 => 'value1', node2 => [ 'value21', { node22 => 'value22' } ], node3 => \'value3', node4 => sub { return 'value4' }, node5 => sub { return { node51 => 'value51' } }, }, use_attr => 1, canonical => 1, indent => 2, ;
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <root node1="value1" node3="value3" node4="value4"> <node2>value21</node2> <node2 node22="value22"/> <node5 node51="value51"/> </root>
$xml may be string, reference to string, file handle or tied file handle:
xml2hash '<root>text</root>'; # output: 'text' xml2hash '<root a="1" b="2">text</root>'; # output: { a => '1', b => '2', content => 'text' } open(my $fh, '<', 'test.xml'); xml2hash $fh; xml2hash *STDIN;
if doc is '1', then returned value is XML::LibXML::Document.
Root node name.
XML document version
XML input/output encoding
if indent great than "0", XML output should be indented according to its hierarchic structure. This value determines the number of spaces.
if indent is "0", XML output will all be on one line.
XML output method
if output is undefined, XML document dumped into string.
if output is FH, XML document writes directly to a filehandle or a stream.
if canonical is "1", converter will be write hashes sorted by key.
if canonical is "0", order of the element will be pseudo-randomly.
if use_attr is "1", converter will be use the attributes.
if use_attr is "0", converter will be use tags only.
if defined that the key name for the text content(used only if use_attr=1).
This option is similar to "ForceArray" from XMl::Simple module: https://metacpan.org/pod/XML::Simple#ForceArray-1-in---important.
This option is similar to "ForceContent" from XMl::Simple module: https://metacpan.org/pod/XML::Simple#ForceContent-1-in---seldom-used.
Setting this option to "1" will cause merge adjacent text nodes.
if xml_decl is "1", output will start with the XML declaration '<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>'.
if xml_decl is "0", XML declaration will not be output.
Trim leading and trailing whitespace from text nodes.
Turn on utf8 flag for strings if enabled.
Maximum recursion depth.
Buffer size for reading end encoding data.
Keep root element.
Filter nodes matched by pattern and return reference to array of nodes.
Sample:
my $xml = <<'XML'; <root> <item1>111</item1> <item2>222</item2> <item3>333</item3> </root> XML my $nodes = xml2hash($xml, filter => '/root/item1'); # $nodes = [ 111 ] my $nodes = xml2hash($xml, filter => ['/root/item1', '/root/item2']); # $nodes = [ 111, 222 ] my $nodes = xml2hash($xml, filter => qr[/root/item\d$]); # $nodes = [ 111, 222, 333 ]
It may be used to parse large XML because does not require a lot of memory.
This option is used in conjunction with "filter" option and defines callback that will called for each matched node.
xml2hash($xml, filter => qr[/root/item\d$], cb => sub { print $_[0], "\n"; }); # 111 # 222 # 333
experimental support the conversion methods other libraries
if method is 'LX' then conversion result is the same as using XML::Hash::LX library
Note: for 'LX' method following additional options are available: attr cdata text comm
In this case, the <toString> method of object is invoked in scalar context. It must return a single scalar that can be directly encoded into XML.
Example:
use XML::LibXML; local $XML::LibXML::skipXMLDeclaration = 1; my $doc = XML::LibXML->new->parse_string('<foo bar="1"/>'); print hash2xml({ doc => $doc }, indent => 2, xml_decl => 0); => <root> <doc><foo bar="1"/></doc> </root>
In this case, the <iternext> method method will invoke a few times until the return value is not undefined.
my $count = 0; my $o = bless {}, 'Iterator'; *Iterator::iternext = sub { $count++ < 3 ? { count => $count } : undef }; print hash2xml({ item => $o }, use_attr => 1, indent => 2, xml_decl => 0); => <root> <item count="1"/> <item count="2"/> <item count="3"/> </root>
This can be used to generate a large XML using minimum memory, example with DBI:
my $sth = $dbh->prepare('SELECT * FROM foo WHERE bar=?'); $sth->execute(...); my $o = bless {}, 'Iterator'; *Iterator::iternext = sub { $sth->fetchrow_hashref() }; open(my $fh, '>', 'data.xml'); hash2xml({ row => $o }, use_attr => 1, indent => 2, xml_decl => 0, output => $fh); => <root> <row bar="..." ... /> <row bar="..." ... /> ... </root>
Performance benchmark in comparison with some popular modules(hash2xml):
Rate XML::Hash XML::Hash::LX XML::Simple XML::Hash::XS XML::Hash 65.0/s -- -6% -37% -99% XML::Hash::LX 68.8/s 6% -- -33% -99% XML::Simple 103/s 58% 49% -- -98% XML::Hash::XS 4879/s 7404% 6988% 4658% --
Benchmark was done on http://search.cpan.org/uploads.rdf
Yuriy Ustushenko, <yoreek@yahoo.com>
Copyright (C) 2012-2017 Yuriy Ustushenko
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
To install XML::Hash::XS, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm XML::Hash::XS
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install XML::Hash::XS
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.