= LibXML Ruby
== Overview
The libxml gem provides Ruby language bindings for GNOME's Libxml2
XML toolkit. It is free software, released under the MIT License.
We think libxml-ruby is the best XML library for Ruby because:
* Speed - Its much faster than REXML and Hpricot
* Features - It provides an amazing number of featues
* Conformance - It passes all 1800+ tests from the OASIS XML Tests Suite
== Requirements
libxml-ruby requires Ruby 3.0.0 or higher. It depends on libxml2 to
function properly. libxml2, in turn, depends on:
* libm (math routines: very standard)
* libz (zlib)
* libiconv
If you are running Linux or Unix you'll need a C compiler so the
extension can be compiled when it is installed. If you are running
Windows, then install the x64-mingw-ucr gem or build it yourself using (Ruby
for Windows)[https://rubyinstaller.org/] or directly with msys2[https://msys2.github.io/]
and ucrt64.
== Installation
The easiest way to install libxml-ruby is via RubyGems. To install:
gem install libxml-ruby
If the extension compile process cannot find libxml2, you may need to indicate
the location of the libxml2 configuration utility as it is used to find the
required header and include files. (If you need to indicate a location for the
libxml2 library or header files different than reported by xml2-config,
see the additional configuration options.)
This may be done with RubyGems:
gem install libxml-ruby -- --with-xml2-dir=/path/to/xml2-config
Or bundler:
bundle config build.libxml-ruby --with-xml2-config=/path/to/xml2-config
bundle install libxml-ruby
If you are running Windows, then install the libxml-ruby-x64-mingw32 gem.
The gem includes prebuilt extensions for Ruby 3.2 and 3.3.
The gem also includes a Microsoft VC++ solution and XCode project - these
are very useful for debugging.
libxml-ruby's source codes lives on GitHub[https://github.com/xml4r/libxml-ruby].
== Getting Started
Using libxml is easy. First decide what parser you want to use:
* Generally you'll want to use the LibXML::XML::Parser which provides a tree based API.
* For larger documents that don't fit into memory, or if you prefer an input based API, use the LibXML::XML::Reader.
* To parse HTML files use LibXML::XML::HTMLParser.
* If you are masochistic, then use the LibXML::XML::SaxParser, which provides a callback API.
Once you have chosen a parser, choose a datasource. Libxml can parse files, strings, URIs
and IO streams. For each data source you can specify an LibXML::XML::Encoding, a base uri and
various parser options. For more information, refer the LibXML::XML::Parser.document,
LibXML::XML::Parser.file, LibXML::XML::Parser.io or LibXML:::XML::Parser.string methods (the
same methods are defined on all four parser classes).
== Advanced Functionality
Beyond the basics of parsing and processing XML and HTML documents,
libxml provides a wealth of additional functionality.
Most commonly, you'll want to use its LibXML::XML::XPath support, which makes
it easy to find data inside an XML document. Although not as popular,
LibXML::XML::XPointer provides another API for finding data inside an XML document.
Often times you'll need to validate data before processing it. For example,
if you accept user generated content submitted over the Web, you'll
want to verify that it does not contain malicious code such as embedded scripts.
This can be done using libxml's powerful set of validators:
* DTDs (LibXML::XML::Dtd)
* Relax Schemas (LibXML::XML::RelaxNG)
* XML Schema (LibXML::XML::Schema)
Finally, if you'd like to use XSL Transformations to process data, then install
the {libxslt gem}[https://github.com/xml4r/libxslt-rubygem].
== Usage
For information about using libxml-ruby please refer to its
documentation[http://xml4r.github.io/libxml-ruby]. Some tutorials are also
available[https://github.com/xml4r/libxml-ruby/wiki].
All libxml classes are in the LibXML::XML module. The easiest
way to use libxml is to require 'xml'. This will mixin
the LibXML module into the global namespace, allowing you to
write code like this:
require 'xml'
document = XML::Document.new
However, when creating an application or library you plan to
redistribute, it is best to not add the LibXML module to the global
namespace, in which case you can either write your code like this:
require 'libxml'
document = LibXML::XML::Document.new
Or you can utilize a namespace for your own work and include LibXML into it.
For example:
require 'libxml'
module MyApplication
include LibXML
class MyClass
def some_method
document = XML::Document.new
end
end
end
For simplicity's sake, the documentation uses the xml module in its examples.
== Tests
To run tests you first need to build the shared libary:
rake compile
Once you have build the shared libary, you can then run tests using rake:
rake test
+Build status: {rdoc-image:https://github.com/xml4r/libxml-ruby/actions/workflows/mri.yml/badge.svg}[https://github.com/xml4r/libxml-ruby/actions/workflows/mri.yml]
== Performance
In addition to being feature rich and conformation, the main reason
people use libxml-ruby is for performance. Here are the results
of a couple simple benchmarks recently blogged about on the
Web (you can find them in the benchmark directory of the
libxml distribution).
From http://depixelate.com/2008/4/23/ruby-xml-parsing-benchmarks
user system total real
libxml 0.032000 0.000000 0.032000 ( 0.031000)
Hpricot 0.640000 0.031000 0.671000 ( 0.890000)
REXML 1.813000 0.047000 1.860000 ( 2.031000)
From https://svn.concord.org/svn/projects/trunk/common/ruby/xml_benchmarks/
user system total real
libxml 0.641000 0.031000 0.672000 ( 0.672000)
hpricot 5.359000 0.062000 5.421000 ( 5.516000)
rexml 22.859000 0.047000 22.906000 ( 23.203000)
== Documentation
Documentation is available via rdoc, and is installed automatically with the
gem.
libxml-ruby's {online
documentation}[https://xml4r.github.io/libxml-ruby/rdoc/index.html] is generated
using Hanna, which is a development gem dependency.
Note that older versions of Rdoc, which ship with Ruby 1.8.x, will report
a number of errors. To avoid them, install Rdoc 2.1 or higher. Once you have
installed the gem, you'll have to disable the version of Rdoc that Ruby 1.8.x
includes. An easy way to do that is rename the directory
ruby/lib/ruby/1.8/rdoc to
ruby/lib/ruby/1.8/rdoc_old.
== Support
If you have any questions about using libxml-ruby, please report an issue
on GitHub[https://github.com/xml4r/libxml-ruby/issues].
== Memory Management
libxml-ruby automatically manages memory associated with the
underlying libxml2 library. The bindings create a one-to-one mapping between
Ruby objects and libxml documents and libxml parent nodes (ie, nodes that do not
have a parent and do not belong to a document). In these cases,
the bindings manage the memory. They do this by installing a free
function and storing a back pointer to the Ruby object from the xmlnode
using the _private member on libxml structures. When the Ruby object
goes out of scope, the underlying libxml structure is freed. Libxml
itself then frees all child nodes (recursively).
For all other nodes (the vast majority), the bindings create temporary
Ruby objects that get freed once they go out of scope. Thus there can be
more than one Ruby object pointing to the same xml node. To mostly hide
this from a programmer on the Ruby side, the #eql? and #== methods are
overriden to check if two Ruby objects wrap the same xmlnode. If they do,
then the methods return true. During the mark phase, each of these temporary
objects marks its owning document, thereby keeping the Ruby document object
alive and thus the xmldoc tree.
In the sweep phase of the garbage collector, or when a program ends,
there is no order to how Ruby objects are freed. In fact, the Ruby document
object is almost always freed before any Ruby objects that wrap child nodes.
However, this is ok because those Ruby objects do not have a free function
and are no longer in scope (since if they were the document would not be freed).
== License
See LICENSE for license information.