postgresql/contrib/xml
Bruce Momjian 92288a1cf9 Change made to elog:
o  Change all current CVS messages of NOTICE to WARNING.  We were going
to do this just before 7.3 beta but it has to be done now, as you will
see below.

o Change current INFO messages that should be controlled by
client_min_messages to NOTICE.

o Force remaining INFO messages, like from EXPLAIN, VACUUM VERBOSE, etc.
to always go to the client.

o Remove INFO from the client_min_messages options and add NOTICE.

Seems we do need three non-ERROR elog levels to handle the various
behaviors we need for these messages.

Regression passed.
2002-03-06 06:10:59 +00:00
..
Makefile
pgxml_dom.c Change made to elog: 2002-03-06 06:10:59 +00:00
pgxml_dom.source
pgxml.c Change made to elog: 2002-03-06 06:10:59 +00:00
pgxml.h New pgindent run with fixes suggested by Tom. Patch manually reviewed, 2001-11-05 17:46:40 +00:00
pgxml.source
README
TODO

This package contains some simple routines for manipulating XML
documents stored in PostgreSQL. This is a work-in-progress and
somewhat basic at the moment (see the file TODO for some outline of
what remains to be done).

At present, two modules (based on different XML handling libraries)
are provided.

Prerequisite:

pgxml.c:
expat parser 1.95.0 or newer (http://expat.sourceforge.net)

or

pgxml_dom.c:
libxml2 (http://xmlsoft.org)

The libxml2 version provides more complete XPath functionality, and
seems like a good way to go. I've left the old versions in there for
comparison.

Compiling and loading:
----------------------

The Makefile only builds the libxml2 version.

To compile, just type make.

Then you can use psql to load the two function definitions: 
\i pgxml_dom.sql


Function documentation and usage:
---------------------------------

pgxml_parse(text) returns bool
  parses the provided text and returns true or false if it is 
well-formed or not. It returns NULL if the parser couldn't be
created for any reason.

pgxml_xpath (XQuery functions) - differs between the versions:

pgxml.c (expat version) has:

pgxml_xpath(text doc, text xpath, int n) returns text
  parses doc and returns the cdata of the nth occurence of
the "simple path" entry. 

However, the remainder of this document will cover the pgxml_dom.c version.

pgxml_xpath(text doc, text xpath, text toptag, text septag) returns text
  evaluates xpath on doc, and returns the result wrapped in
<toptag>...</toptag> and each result node wrapped in
<septag></septag>. toptag and septag may be empty strings, in which
case the respective tag will be omitted.

Example:

Given a  table docstore:

 Attribute |  Type   | Modifier 
-----------+---------+----------
 docid     | integer | 
 document  | text    | 

containing documents such as (these are archaeological site
descriptions, in case anyone is wondering):

<?XML version="1.0"?>
<site provider="Foundations" sitecode="ak97" version="1">
   <name>Church Farm, Ashton Keynes</name>
   <invtype>watching brief</invtype>
   <location scheme="osgb">SU04209424</location>
</site>

one can type:

select docid, 
pgxml_xpath(document,'//site/name/text()','','') as sitename,
pgxml_xpath(document,'//site/location/text()','','') as location
 from docstore;
 
and get as output:

 docid |               sitename               |  location  
-------+--------------------------------------+------------
     1 | Church Farm, Ashton Keynes           | SU04209424
     2 | Glebe Farm, Long Itchington          | SP41506500
     3 | The Bungalow, Thames Lane, Cricklade | SU10229362
(3 rows)

or, to illustrate the use of the extra tags:

select docid as id,
pgxml_xpath(document,'//find/type/text()','set','findtype') 
from docstore;

 id |                               pgxml_xpath                               
----+-------------------------------------------------------------------------
  1 | <set></set>
  2 | <set><findtype>Urn</findtype></set>
  3 | <set><findtype>Pottery</findtype><findtype>Animal bone</findtype></set>
(3 rows)

Which produces a new, well-formed document. Note that document 1 had
no matching instances, so the set returned contains no
elements. document 2 has 1 matching element and document 3 has 2.

This is just scratching the surface because XPath allows all sorts of
operations.

Note: I've only implemented the return of nodeset and string values so
far. This covers (I think) many types of queries, however.

John Gray <jgray@azuli.co.uk>  16 August 2001