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9<h1 align="center">The XML C parser and toolkit of Gnome</h1>
10
11<h1>Note: this is the flat content of the <a href="index.html">web
12site</a></h1>
13
14<h1 style="text-align: center">libxml, a.k.a. gnome-xml</h1>
15
16<p></p>
17
18<p
19style="text-align: right; font-style: italic; font-size: 10pt">"Programming
20with libxml2 is like the thrilling embrace of an exotic stranger." <a
21href="http://diveintomark.org/archives/2004/02/18/libxml2">Mark
22Pilgrim</a></p>
23
24<p>Libxml2 is the XML C parser and toolkit developed for the Gnome project
25(but usable outside of the Gnome platform), it is free software available
26under the <a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html">MIT
27License</a>. XML itself is a metalanguage to design markup languages, i.e.
28text language where semantic and structure are added to the content using
29extra "markup" information enclosed between angle brackets. HTML is the most
30well-known markup language. Though the library is written in C <a
31href="python.html">a variety of language bindings</a> make it available in
32other environments.</p>
33
34<p>Libxml2 is known to be very portable, the library should build and work
35without serious troubles on a variety of systems (Linux, Unix, Windows,
36CygWin, MacOS, MacOS X, RISC Os, OS/2, VMS, QNX, MVS, VxWorks, ...)</p>
37
38<p>Libxml2 implements a number of existing standards related to markup
39languages:</p>
40<ul>
41  <li>the XML standard: <a
42    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml">http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml</a></li>
43  <li>Namespaces in XML: <a
44    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/</a></li>
45  <li>XML Base: <a
46    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlbase/">http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlbase/</a></li>
47  <li><a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc2396.txt">RFC 2396</a> :
48    Uniform Resource Identifiers <a
49    href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt">http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt</a></li>
50  <li>XML Path Language (XPath) 1.0: <a
51    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath">http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath</a></li>
52  <li>HTML4 parser: <a
53    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/">http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/</a></li>
54  <li>XML Pointer Language (XPointer) Version 1.0: <a
55    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr">http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr</a></li>
56  <li>XML Inclusions (XInclude) Version 1.0: <a
57    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude/">http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude/</a></li>
58  <li>ISO-8859-x encodings, as well as <a
59    href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc2044.txt">rfc2044</a> [UTF-8]
60    and <a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc2781.txt">rfc2781</a>
61    [UTF-16] Unicode encodings, and more if using iconv support</li>
62  <li>part of SGML Open Technical Resolution TR9401:1997</li>
63  <li>XML Catalogs Working Draft 06 August 2001: <a
64    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>
65  <li>Canonical XML Version 1.0: <a
66    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-c14n">http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-c14n</a>
67    and the Exclusive XML Canonicalization CR draft <a
68    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-exc-c14n">http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-exc-c14n</a></li>
69  <li>Relax NG, ISO/IEC 19757-2:2003, <a
70    href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/relax-ng/spec-20011203.html">http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/relax-ng/spec-20011203.html</a></li>
71  <li>W3C XML Schemas Part 2: Datatypes <a
72    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xmlschema-2-20010502/">REC 02 May
73    2001</a></li>
74  <li>W3C <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-id/">xml:id</a> Working Draft 7
75    April 2004</li>
76</ul>
77
78<p>In most cases libxml2 tries to implement the specifications in a
79relatively strictly compliant way. As of release 2.4.16, libxml2 passed all
801800+ tests from the <a
81href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/xml-conformance/">OASIS XML Tests
82Suite</a>.</p>
83
84<p>To some extent libxml2 provides support for the following additional
85specifications but doesn't claim to implement them completely:</p>
86<ul>
87  <li>Document Object Model (DOM) <a
88    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/">http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/</a>
89    the document model, but it doesn't implement the API itself, gdome2 does
90    this on top of libxml2</li>
91  <li><a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc959.txt">RFC 959</a> :
92    libxml2 implements a basic FTP client code</li>
93  <li><a href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc1945.txt">RFC 1945</a> :
94    HTTP/1.0, again a basic HTTP client code</li>
95  <li>SAX: a SAX2 like interface and a minimal SAX1 implementation compatible
96    with early expat versions</li>
97</ul>
98
99<p>A partial implementation of <a
100href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xmlschema-1-20010502/">XML Schemas Part
1011: Structure</a> is being worked on but it would be far too early to make any
102conformance statement about it at the moment.</p>
103
104<p>Separate documents:</p>
105<ul>
106  <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/">the libxslt page</a> providing an
107    implementation of XSLT 1.0 and common extensions like EXSLT for
108  libxml2</li>
109  <li><a href="http://gdome2.cs.unibo.it/">the gdome2 page</a>
110    : a standard DOM2 implementation for libxml2</li>
111  <li><a href="http://www.aleksey.com/xmlsec/">the XMLSec page</a>: an
112    implementation of <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmldsig-core/">W3C XML
113    Digital Signature</a> for libxml2</li>
114  <li>also check the related links section for more related and active
115    projects.</li>
116</ul>
117<p> Hosting sponsored by <a href="http://www.aoemedia.de/opensource-cms.html"
118>Open Source CMS services</a> from AOE media.</p>
119
120<p>Logo designed by <a href="mailto:liyanage@access.ch">Marc Liyanage</a>.</p>
121
122<h2><a name="Introducti">Introduction</a></h2>
123
124<p>This document describes libxml, the <a
125href="http://www.w3.org/XML/">XML</a> C parser and toolkit developed for the
126<a href="http://www.gnome.org/">Gnome</a> project. <a
127href="http://www.w3.org/XML/">XML is a standard</a> for building tag-based
128structured documents/data.</p>
129
130<p>Here are some key points about libxml:</p>
131<ul>
132  <li>Libxml2 exports Push (progressive) and Pull (blocking) type parser
133    interfaces for both XML and HTML.</li>
134  <li>Libxml2 can do DTD validation at parse time, using a parsed document
135    instance, or with an arbitrary DTD.</li>
136  <li>Libxml2 includes complete <a
137    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath">XPath</a>, <a
138    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr">XPointer</a> and <a
139    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude">XInclude</a> implementations.</li>
140  <li>It is written in plain C, making as few assumptions as possible, and
141    sticking closely to ANSI C/POSIX for easy embedding. Works on
142    Linux/Unix/Windows, ported to a number of other platforms.</li>
143  <li>Basic support for HTTP and FTP client allowing applications to fetch
144    remote resources.</li>
145  <li>The design is modular, most of the extensions can be compiled out.</li>
146  <li>The internal document representation is as close as possible to the <a
147    href="http://www.w3.org/DOM/">DOM</a> interfaces.</li>
148  <li>Libxml2 also has a <a
149    href="http://www.megginson.com/SAX/index.html">SAX like interface</a>;
150    the interface is designed to be compatible with <a
151    href="http://www.jclark.com/xml/expat.html">Expat</a>.</li>
152  <li>This library is released under the <a
153    href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html">MIT
154    License</a>. See the Copyright file in the distribution for the precise
155    wording.</li>
156</ul>
157
158<p>Warning: unless you are forced to because your application links with a
159Gnome-1.X library requiring it,  <strong><span
160style="background-color: #FF0000">Do Not Use libxml1</span></strong>, use
161libxml2</p>
162
163<h2><a name="FAQ">FAQ</a></h2>
164
165<p>Table of Contents:</p>
166<ul>
167  <li><a href="FAQ.html#License">License(s)</a></li>
168  <li><a href="FAQ.html#Installati">Installation</a></li>
169  <li><a href="FAQ.html#Compilatio">Compilation</a></li>
170  <li><a href="FAQ.html#Developer">Developer corner</a></li>
171</ul>
172
173<h3><a name="License">License</a>(s)</h3>
174<ol>
175  <li><em>Licensing Terms for libxml</em>
176    <p>libxml2 is released under the <a
177    href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html">MIT
178    License</a>; see the file Copyright in the distribution for the precise
179    wording</p>
180  </li>
181  <li><em>Can I embed libxml2 in a proprietary application ?</em>
182    <p>Yes. The MIT License allows you to keep proprietary the changes you
183    made to libxml, but it would be graceful to send-back bug fixes and
184    improvements as patches for possible incorporation in the main
185    development tree.</p>
186  </li>
187</ol>
188
189<h3><a name="Installati">Installation</a></h3>
190<ol>
191  <li><strong><span style="background-color: #FF0000">Do Not Use
192    libxml1</span></strong>, use libxml2</li>
193  <p></p>
194  <li><em>Where can I get libxml</em> ?
195    <p>The original distribution comes from <a
196    href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/">xmlsoft.org</a> or <a
197    href="ftp://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/sources/libxml2/2.6/">gnome.org</a></p>
198    <p>Most Linux and BSD distributions include libxml, this is probably the
199    safer way for end-users to use libxml.</p>
200    <p>David Doolin provides precompiled Windows versions at <a
201    href="http://www.ce.berkeley.edu/~doolin/code/libxmlwin32/         ">http://www.ce.berkeley.edu/~doolin/code/libxmlwin32/</a></p>
202  </li>
203  <p></p>
204  <li><em>I see libxml and libxml2 releases, which one should I install ?</em>
205    <ul>
206      <li>If you are not constrained by backward compatibility issues with
207        existing applications, install libxml2 only</li>
208      <li>If you are not doing development, you can safely install both.
209        Usually the packages <a
210        href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml.html">libxml</a> and <a
211        href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2.html">libxml2</a> are
212        compatible (this is not the case for development packages).</li>
213      <li>If you are a developer and your system provides separate packaging
214        for shared libraries and the development components, it is possible
215        to install libxml and libxml2, and also <a
216        href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml-devel.html">libxml-devel</a>
217        and <a
218        href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2-devel.html">libxml2-devel</a>
219        too for libxml2 &gt;= 2.3.0</li>
220      <li>If you are developing a new application, please develop against
221        libxml2(-devel)</li>
222    </ul>
223  </li>
224  <li><em>I can't install the libxml package, it conflicts with libxml0</em>
225    <p>You probably have an old libxml0 package used to provide the shared
226    library for libxml.so.0, you can probably safely remove it. The libxml
227    packages provided on <a
228    href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/">xmlsoft.org</a> provide
229    libxml.so.0</p>
230  </li>
231  <li><em>I can't install the libxml(2) RPM package due to failed
232    dependencies</em>
233    <p>The most generic solution is to re-fetch the latest src.rpm , and
234    rebuild it locally with</p>
235    <p><code>rpm --rebuild libxml(2)-xxx.src.rpm</code>.</p>
236    <p>If everything goes well it will generate two binary rpm packages (one
237    providing the shared libs and xmllint, and the other one, the -devel
238    package, providing includes, static libraries and scripts needed to build
239    applications with libxml(2)) that you can install locally.</p>
240  </li>
241</ol>
242
243<h3><a name="Compilatio">Compilation</a></h3>
244<ol>
245  <li><em>What is the process to compile libxml2 ?</em>
246    <p>As most UNIX libraries libxml2 follows the "standard":</p>
247    <p><code>gunzip -c xxx.tar.gz | tar xvf -</code></p>
248    <p><code>cd libxml-xxxx</code></p>
249    <p><code>/configure --help</code></p>
250    <p>to see the options, then the compilation/installation proper</p>
251    <p><code>/configure [possible options]</code></p>
252    <p><code>make</code></p>
253    <p><code>make install</code></p>
254    <p>At that point you may have to rerun ldconfig or a similar utility to
255    update your list of installed shared libs.</p>
256  </li>
257  <li><em>What other libraries are needed to compile/install libxml2 ?</em>
258    <p>Libxml2 does not require any other library, the normal C ANSI API
259    should be sufficient (please report any violation to this rule you may
260    find).</p>
261    <p>However if found at configuration time libxml2 will detect and use the
262    following libs:</p>
263    <ul>
264      <li><a href="http://www.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/zlib/">libz</a> : a
265        highly portable and available widely compression library.</li>
266      <li>iconv: a powerful character encoding conversion library. It is
267        included by default in recent glibc libraries, so it doesn't need to
268        be installed specifically on Linux. It now seems a <a
269        href="http://www.opennc.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xsh/iconv.html">part
270        of the official UNIX</a> specification. Here is one <a
271        href="http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/">implementation of the
272        library</a> which source can be found <a
273        href="ftp://ftp.ilog.fr/pub/Users/haible/gnu/">here</a>.</li>
274    </ul>
275  </li>
276  <p></p>
277  <li><em>Make check fails on some platforms</em>
278    <p>Sometimes the regression tests' results don't completely match the
279    value produced by the parser, and the makefile uses diff to print the
280    delta. On some platforms the diff return breaks the compilation process;
281    if the diff is small this is probably not a serious problem.</p>
282    <p>Sometimes (especially on Solaris) make checks fail due to limitations
283    in make. Try using GNU-make instead.</p>
284  </li>
285  <li><em>I use the SVN version and there is no configure script</em>
286    <p>The configure script (and other Makefiles) are generated. Use the
287    autogen.sh script to regenerate the configure script and Makefiles,
288    like:</p>
289    <p><code>/autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --disable-shared</code></p>
290  </li>
291  <li><em>I have troubles when running make tests with gcc-3.0</em>
292    <p>It seems the initial release of gcc-3.0 has a problem with the
293    optimizer which miscompiles the URI module. Please use another
294    compiler.</p>
295  </li>
296</ol>
297
298<h3><a name="Developer">Developer</a> corner</h3>
299<ol>
300  <li><em>Troubles compiling or linking programs using libxml2</em>
301    <p>Usually the problem comes from the fact that the compiler doesn't get
302    the right compilation or linking flags. There is a small shell script
303    <code>xml2-config</code> which is installed as part of libxml2 usual
304    install process which provides those flags. Use</p>
305    <p><code>xml2-config --cflags</code></p>
306    <p>to get the compilation flags and</p>
307    <p><code>xml2-config --libs</code></p>
308    <p>to get the linker flags. Usually this is done directly from the
309    Makefile as:</p>
310    <p><code>CFLAGS=`xml2-config --cflags`</code></p>
311    <p><code>LIBS=`xml2-config --libs`</code></p>
312  </li>
313  <li><em>I want to install my own copy of libxml2 in my home directory and
314    link my programs against it, but it doesn't work</em>
315    <p>There are many different ways to accomplish this.  Here is one way to
316    do this under Linux.  Suppose your home directory is <code>/home/user.
317    </code>Then:</p>
318    <ul>
319      <li>Create a subdirectory, let's call it <code>myxml</code></li>
320      <li>unpack the libxml2 distribution into that subdirectory</li>
321      <li>chdir into the unpacked distribution
322        (<code>/home/user/myxml/libxml2 </code>)</li>
323      <li>configure the library using the "<code>--prefix</code>" switch,
324        specifying an installation subdirectory in
325        <code>/home/user/myxml</code>, e.g.
326        <p><code>/configure --prefix /home/user/myxml/xmlinst</code> {other
327        configuration options}</p>
328      </li>
329      <li>now run <code>make</code> followed by <code>make install</code></li>
330      <li>At this point, the installation subdirectory contains the complete
331        "private" include files, library files and binary program files (e.g.
332        xmllint), located in
333        <p><code>/home/user/myxml/xmlinst/lib,
334        /home/user/myxml/xmlinst/include </code> and <code>
335        /home/user/myxml/xmlinst/bin</code></p>
336        respectively.</li>
337      <li>In order to use this "private" library, you should first add it to
338        the beginning of your default PATH (so that your own private program
339        files such as xmllint will be used instead of the normal system
340        ones).  To do this, the Bash command would be
341        <p><code>export PATH=/home/user/myxml/xmlinst/bin:$PATH</code></p>
342      </li>
343      <li>Now suppose you have a program <code>test1.c</code> that you would
344        like to compile with your "private" library.  Simply compile it using
345        the command
346        <p><code>gcc `xml2-config --cflags --libs` -o test test.c</code></p>
347        Note that, because your PATH has been set with <code>
348        /home/user/myxml/xmlinst/bin</code> at the beginning, the xml2-config
349        program which you just installed will be used instead of the system
350        default one, and this will <em>automatically</em> get the correct
351        libraries linked with your program.</li>
352    </ul>
353  </li>
354
355  <p></p>
356  <li><em>xmlDocDump() generates output on one line.</em>
357    <p>Libxml2 will not <strong>invent</strong> spaces in the content of a
358    document since <strong>all spaces in the content of a document are
359    significant</strong>. If you build a tree from the API and want
360    indentation:</p>
361    <ol>
362      <li>the correct way is to generate those yourself too.</li>
363      <li>the dangerous way is to ask libxml2 to add those blanks to your
364        content <strong>modifying the content of your document in the
365        process</strong>. The result may not be what you expect. There is
366        <strong>NO</strong> way to guarantee that such a modification won't
367        affect other parts of the content of your document. See <a
368        href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html#xmlKeepBlanksDefault">xmlKeepBlanksDefault
369        ()</a> and <a
370        href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-tree.html#xmlSaveFormatFile">xmlSaveFormatFile
371        ()</a></li>
372    </ol>
373  </li>
374  <p></p>
375  <li><em>Extra nodes in the document:</em>
376    <p><em>For an XML file as below:</em></p>
377    <pre>&lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
378&lt;PLAN xmlns="http://www.argus.ca/autotest/1.0/"&gt;
379&lt;NODE CommFlag="0"/&gt;
380&lt;NODE CommFlag="1"/&gt;
381&lt;/PLAN&gt;</pre>
382    <p><em>after parsing it with the function
383    pxmlDoc=xmlParseFile(...);</em></p>
384    <p><em>I want to the get the content of the first node (node with the
385    CommFlag="0")</em></p>
386    <p><em>so I did it as following;</em></p>
387    <pre>xmlNodePtr pnode;
388pnode=pxmlDoc-&gt;children-&gt;children;</pre>
389    <p><em>but it does not work. If I change it to</em></p>
390    <pre>pnode=pxmlDoc-&gt;children-&gt;children-&gt;next;</pre>
391    <p><em>then it works.  Can someone explain it to me.</em></p>
392    <p></p>
393    <p>In XML all characters in the content of the document are significant
394    <strong>including blanks and formatting line breaks</strong>.</p>
395    <p>The extra nodes you are wondering about are just that, text nodes with
396    the formatting spaces which are part of the document but that people tend
397    to forget. There is a function <a
398    href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html">xmlKeepBlanksDefault
399    ()</a>  to remove those at parse time, but that's an heuristic, and its
400    use should be limited to cases where you are certain there is no
401    mixed-content in the document.</p>
402  </li>
403  <li><em>I get compilation errors of existing code like when accessing
404    <strong>root</strong> or <strong>child fields</strong> of nodes.</em>
405    <p>You are compiling code developed for libxml version 1 and using a
406    libxml2 development environment. Either switch back to libxml v1 devel or
407    even better fix the code to compile with libxml2 (or both) by <a
408    href="upgrade.html">following the instructions</a>.</p>
409  </li>
410  <li><em>I get compilation errors about non existing
411    <strong>xmlRootNode</strong> or <strong>xmlChildrenNode</strong>
412    fields.</em>
413    <p>The source code you are using has been <a
414    href="upgrade.html">upgraded</a> to be able to compile with both libxml
415    and libxml2, but you need to install a more recent version:
416    libxml(-devel) &gt;= 1.8.8 or libxml2(-devel) &gt;= 2.1.0</p>
417  </li>
418  <li><em>Random crashes in threaded applications</em>
419    <p>Read and follow all advices on the <a href="threads.html">thread
420    safety</a> page, and make 100% sure you never call xmlCleanupParser()
421    while the library or an XML document might still be in use by another
422    thread.</p>
423  </li>
424  <li><em>The example provided in the web page does not compile.</em>
425    <p>It's hard to maintain the documentation in sync with the code
426    &lt;grin/&gt; ...</p>
427    <p>Check the previous points 1/ and 2/ raised before, and please send
428    patches.</p>
429  </li>
430  <li><em>Where can I get more examples and information than provided on the
431    web page?</em>
432    <p>Ideally a libxml2 book would be nice. I have no such plan ... But you
433    can:</p>
434    <ul>
435      <li>check more deeply the <a href="html/libxml-lib.html">existing
436        generated doc</a></li>
437      <li>have a look at <a href="examples/index.html">the set of
438        examples</a>.</li>
439      <li>look for examples of use for libxml2 function using the Gnome code
440          or by asking on Google.</li>
441      <li><a
442        href="http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/libxml2/trunk/">Browse
443        the libxml2 source</a> , I try to write code as clean and documented
444        as possible, so looking at it may be helpful. In particular the code
445        of <a href="http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/libxml2/trunk/xmllint.c?view=markup">xmllint.c</a> and of the various testXXX.c test programs should
446        provide good examples of how to do things with the library.</li>
447    </ul>
448  </li>
449  <p></p>
450  <li><em>What about C++ ?</em>
451    <p>libxml2 is written in pure C in order to allow easy reuse on a number
452    of platforms, including embedded systems. I don't intend to convert to
453    C++.</p>
454    <p>There is however a C++ wrapper which may fulfill your needs:</p>
455    <ul>
456      <li>by Ari Johnson &lt;ari@btigate.com&gt;:
457        <p>Website: <a
458        href="http://libxmlplusplus.sourceforge.net/">http://libxmlplusplus.sourceforge.net/</a></p>
459        <p>Download: <a
460        href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=12999">http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=12999</a></p>
461      </li>
462    </ul>
463  </li>
464  <li><em>How to validate a document a posteriori ?</em>
465    <p>It is possible to validate documents which had not been validated at
466    initial parsing time or documents which have been built from scratch
467    using the API. Use the <a
468    href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-valid.html#xmlValidateDtd">xmlValidateDtd()</a>
469    function. It is also possible to simply add a DTD to an existing
470    document:</p>
471    <pre>xmlDocPtr doc; /* your existing document */
472xmlDtdPtr dtd = xmlParseDTD(NULL, filename_of_dtd); /* parse the DTD */
473
474        dtd-&gt;name = xmlStrDup((xmlChar*)"root_name"); /* use the given root */
475
476        doc-&gt;intSubset = dtd;
477        if (doc-&gt;children == NULL) xmlAddChild((xmlNodePtr)doc, (xmlNodePtr)dtd);
478        else xmlAddPrevSibling(doc-&gt;children, (xmlNodePtr)dtd);
479          </pre>
480  </li>
481  <li><em>So what is this funky "xmlChar" used all the time?</em>
482    <p>It is a null terminated sequence of utf-8 characters. And only utf-8!
483    You need to convert strings encoded in different ways to utf-8 before
484    passing them to the API.  This can be accomplished with the iconv library
485    for instance.</p>
486  </li>
487  <li>etc ...</li>
488</ol>
489
490<p></p>
491
492<h2><a name="Documentat">Developer Menu</a></h2>
493
494<p>There are several on-line resources related to using libxml:</p>
495<ol>
496  <li>Use the <a href="search.php">search engine</a> to look up
497  information.</li>
498  <li>Check the <a href="FAQ.html">FAQ.</a></li>
499  <li>Check the <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-lib.html">extensive
500    documentation</a> automatically extracted from code comments.</li>
501  <li>Look at the documentation about <a href="encoding.html">libxml
502    internationalization support</a>.</li>
503  <li>This page provides a global overview and <a href="example.html">some
504    examples</a> on how to use libxml.</li>
505  <li><a href="examples/index.html">Code examples</a></li>
506  <li>John Fleck's libxml2 tutorial: <a href="tutorial/index.html">html</a>
507    or <a href="tutorial/xmltutorial.pdf">pdf</a>.</li>
508  <li>If you need to parse large files, check the <a
509    href="xmlreader.html">xmlReader</a> API tutorial</li>
510  <li><a href="mailto:james@daa.com.au">James Henstridge</a> wrote <a
511    href="http://www.daa.com.au/~james/gnome/xml-sax/xml-sax.html">some nice
512    documentation</a> explaining how to use the libxml SAX interface.</li>
513  <li>George Lebl wrote <a
514    href="http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/library/l-gnome3/">an article
515    for IBM developerWorks</a> about using libxml.</li>
516  <li>Check <a href="http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/libxml2/trunk/TODO?view=markup">the TODO
517    file</a>.</li>
518  <li>Read the <a href="upgrade.html">1.x to 2.x upgrade path</a>
519    description. If you are starting a new project using libxml you should
520    really use the 2.x version.</li>
521  <li>And don't forget to look at the <a
522    href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">mailing-list archive</a>.</li>
523</ol>
524
525<h2><a name="Reporting">Reporting bugs and getting help</a></h2>
526
527<p>Well, bugs or missing features are always possible, and I will make a
528point of fixing them in a timely fashion. The best way to report a bug is to
529use the <a href="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?product=libxml2">Gnome
530bug tracking database</a> (make sure to use the "libxml2" module name). I
531look at reports there regularly and it's good to have a reminder when a bug
532is still open. Be sure to specify that the bug is for the package libxml2.</p>
533
534<p>For small problems you can try to get help on IRC, the #xml channel on
535irc.gnome.org (port 6667) usually have a few person subscribed which may help
536(but there is no guarantee and if a real issue is raised it should go on the
537mailing-list for archival).</p>
538
539<p>There is also a mailing-list <a
540href="mailto:xml@gnome.org">xml@gnome.org</a> for libxml, with an  <a
541href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">on-line archive</a> (<a
542href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages">old</a>). To subscribe to this list,
543please visit the <a
544href="http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/xml">associated Web</a> page and
545follow the instructions. <strong>Do not send code, I won't debug it</strong>
546(but patches are really appreciated!).</p>
547
548<p>Please note that with the current amount of virus and SPAM, sending mail
549to the list without being subscribed won't work. There is *far too many
550bounces* (in the order of a thousand a day !) I cannot approve them manually
551anymore. If your mail to the list bounced waiting for administrator approval,
552it is LOST ! Repost it and fix the problem triggering the error. Also please
553note that <span style="color: #FF0000; background-color: #FFFFFF">emails with
554a legal warning asking to not copy or redistribute freely the information
555they contain</span> are <strong>NOT</strong> acceptable for the mailing-list,
556such mail will as much as possible be discarded automatically, and are less
557likely to be answered if they made it to the list, <strong>DO NOT</strong>
558post to the list from an email address where such legal requirements are
559automatically added, get private paying support if you can't share
560information.</p>
561
562<p>Check the following <strong><span style="color: #FF0000">before
563posting</span></strong>:</p>
564<ul>
565  <li>Read the <a href="FAQ.html">FAQ</a> and <a href="search.php">use the
566    search engine</a> to get information related to your problem.</li>
567  <li>Make sure you are <a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/">using a recent
568    version</a>, and that the problem still shows up in a recent version.</li>
569  <li>Check the <a href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">list
570    archives</a> to see if the problem was reported already. In this case
571    there is probably a fix available, similarly check the <a
572    href="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?product=libxml2">registered
573    open bugs</a>.</li>
574  <li>Make sure you can reproduce the bug with xmllint or one of the test
575    programs found in source in the distribution.</li>
576  <li>Please send the command showing the error as well as the input (as an
577    attachment)</li>
578</ul>
579
580<p>Then send the bug with associated information to reproduce it to the <a
581href="mailto:xml@gnome.org">xml@gnome.org</a> list; if it's really libxml
582related I will approve it. Please do not send mail to me directly, it makes
583things really hard to track and in some cases I am not the best person to
584answer a given question, ask on the list.</p>
585
586<p>To <span style="color: #E50000">be really clear about support</span>:</p>
587<ul>
588  <li>Support or help <span style="color: #E50000">requests MUST be sent to
589    the list or on bugzilla</span> in case of problems, so that the Question
590    and Answers can be shared publicly. Failing to do so carries the implicit
591    message "I want free support but I don't want to share the benefits with
592    others" and is not welcome. I will automatically Carbon-Copy the
593    xml@gnome.org mailing list for any technical reply made about libxml2 or
594    libxslt.</li>
595  <li>There is <span style="color: #E50000">no guarantee of support</span>. If
596    your question remains unanswered after a week, repost it, making sure you
597    gave all the detail needed and the information requested.</li>
598  <li>Failing to provide information as requested or double checking first
599    for prior feedback also carries the implicit message "the time of the
600    library maintainers is less valuable than my time" and might not be
601    welcome.</li>
602</ul>
603
604<p>Of course, bugs reported with a suggested patch for fixing them will
605probably be processed faster than those without.</p>
606
607<p>If you're looking for help, a quick look at <a
608href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">the list archive</a> may actually
609provide the answer. I usually send source samples when answering libxml2
610usage questions. The <a
611href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/book1.html">auto-generated documentation</a> is
612not as polished as I would like (i need to learn more about DocBook), but
613it's a good starting point.</p>
614
615<h2><a name="help">How to help</a></h2>
616
617<p>You can help the project in various ways, the best thing to do first is to
618subscribe to the mailing-list as explained before, check the <a
619href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">archives </a>and the <a
620href="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?product=libxml2">Gnome bug
621database</a>:</p>
622<ol>
623  <li>Provide patches when you find problems.</li>
624  <li>Provide the diffs when you port libxml2 to a new platform. They may not
625    be integrated in all cases but help pinpointing portability problems
626  and</li>
627  <li>Provide documentation fixes (either as patches to the code comments or
628    as HTML diffs).</li>
629  <li>Provide new documentations pieces (translations, examples, etc
630  ...).</li>
631  <li>Check the TODO file and try to close one of the items.</li>
632  <li>Take one of the points raised in the archive or the bug database and
633    provide a fix. <a href="mailto:daniel@veillard.com">Get in touch with me
634    </a>before to avoid synchronization problems and check that the suggested
635    fix will fit in nicely :-)</li>
636</ol>
637
638<h2><a name="Downloads">Downloads</a></h2>
639
640<p>The latest versions of libxml2 can be found on the <a
641href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/">xmlsoft.org</a> server ( <a
642href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/">FTP</a> and rsync are available), there are also
643mirrors (<a href="ftp://fr.rpmfind.net/pub/libxml/">France</a> and
644Antonin Sprinzl also provide <a href="ftp://gd.tuwien.ac.at/pub/libxml/">a
645mirror in Austria</a>). (NOTE that you need both the <a
646href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2.html">libxml(2)</a> and <a
647href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/libxml2-devel.html">libxml(2)-devel</a>
648packages installed to compile applications using libxml if using RPMs.)</p>
649
650<p>You can find all the history of libxml(2) and libxslt releases in the <a
651href="http://xmlsoft.org/sources/old/">old</a> directory. The precompiled
652Windows binaries made by Igor Zlatovic are available in the <a
653href="http://xmlsoft.org/sources/win32/">win32</a> directory.</p>
654
655<p>Binary ports:</p>
656<ul>
657  <li>RPMs for x86_64 are available directly on <a
658    href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/">xmlsoft.org</a>, the source RPM will compile on
659    any architecture supported.</li>
660  <li><a href="mailto:igor@zlatkovic.com">Igor Zlatkovic</a> is now the
661    maintainer of the Windows port, <a
662    href="http://www.zlatkovic.com/projects/libxml/index.html">he provides
663    binaries</a>.</li>
664  <li>OpenCSW provides <a
665    href="http://opencsw.org/packages/libxml2">Solaris
666  binaries</a>.</li>
667  <li><a href="mailto:Steve.Ball@explain.com.au">Steve Ball</a> provides <a
668    href="http://www.explain.com.au/oss/libxml2xslt.html">Mac Os X
669    binaries</a>.</li>
670  <li>The HP-UX porting center provides <a
671    href="http://hpux.connect.org.uk/hppd/hpux/Gnome/">HP-UX binaries</a></li>
672  <li>Bull provides precompiled <a
673    href="http://gnome.bullfreeware.com/new_index.html">RPMs for AIX</a> as
674    patr of their GNOME packages</li>
675</ul>
676
677<p>If you know other supported binary ports, please <a
678href="http://veillard.com/">contact me</a>.</p>
679
680<p><a name="Snapshot">Snapshot:</a></p>
681<ul>
682  <li>Code from the GNOME GIT base libxml2 module, updated hourly <a
683    href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/libxml2-git-snapshot.tar.gz">libxml2-git-snapshot.tar.gz</a>.</li>
684  <li>Docs, content of the web site, the list archive included <a
685    href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/libxml-docs.tar.gz">libxml-docs.tar.gz</a>.</li>
686</ul>
687
688<p><a name="Contribs">Contributions:</a></p>
689
690<p>I do accept external contributions, especially if compiling on another
691platform,  get in touch with the list to upload the package, wrappers for
692various languages have been provided, and can be found in the <a
693href="python.html">bindings section</a></p>
694
695<p>Libxml2 is also available from GIT:</p>
696<ul>
697  <li><p>See <a href="http://git.gnome.org/browse/libxml2/">libxml2 Git web</a>.
698         To checkout a local tree use:</p>
699       <pre>git clone git://git.gnome.org/libxml2</pre>
700  </li>
701  <li>The <strong>libxslt</strong> module is also present 
702      <a href="http://git.gnome.org/browse/libxslt/">there</a>.</li>
703</ul>
704
705<h2><a name="News">Releases</a></h2>
706
707<p>Items not finished and worked on, get in touch with the list if you want
708to help those</p>
709<ul>
710  <li>More testing on RelaxNG</li>
711  <li>Finishing up <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-1/">XML
712  Schemas</a></li>
713</ul>
714
715<p>The <a href="ChangeLog.html">change log</a> describes the recents commits
716to the <a href="http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/libxml2/trunk/">SVN</a> code base.</p>
717
718<p>Here is the list of public releases:</p>
719
720<h3>2.7.8: Nov 4 2010</h3>
721<ul>
722  <li> Features:
723    480323 add code to plug in ICU converters by default (Giuseppe Iuculano),
724    Add xmlSaveOption XML_SAVE_WSNONSIG (Adam Spragg)
725  </li>
726  <li> Documentation:
727    Fix devhelp documentation installation (Mike Hommey),
728    Fix web site encoding problems (Daniel Veillard),
729    Fix a couple of typo in HTML parser error messages (Michael Day),
730    Forgot to update the news page for 0.7.7 (Daniel Veillard)
731  </li>
732  <li> Portability:
733    607273 Fix python detection on MSys/Windows (LRN),
734    614087 Fix Socket API usage to allow Windows64 compilation (Ozkan Sezer),
735    Fix compilation with Clang (Koop Mast),
736    Fix Win32 build (Rob Richards)
737  </li>
738  <li> Bug Fixes:
739    595789 fix a remaining potential Solaris problem (Daniel Veillard),
740    617468 fix progressive HTML parsing with style using "'" (Denis Pauk),
741    616478 Fix xmllint shell write command (Gwenn Kahz),
742    614005 Possible erroneous HTML parsing on unterminated script (Pierre Belzile),
743    627987 Fix XSD IDC errors in imported schemas (Jim Panetta),
744    629325 XPath rounding errors first cleanup (Phil Shafer),
745    630140 fix iso995x encoding error (Daniel Veillard),
746    make sure htmlCtxtReset do reset the disableSAX field (Daniel Veillard),
747    Fix a change of semantic on XPath preceding and following axis (Daniel Veillard),
748    Fix a potential segfault due to weak symbols on pthreads (Mike Hommey),
749    Fix a leak in XPath compilation (Daniel Veillard),
750    Fix the semantic of XPath axis for namespace/attribute context nodes (Daniel Veillard),
751    Avoid a descriptor leak in catalog loading code (Carlo Bramini),
752    Fix a small bug in XPath evaluation code (Marius Wachtler),
753    Fix handling of XML-1.0 XML namespace declaration (Daniel Veillard),
754    Fix errors in XSD double validation check (Csaba Raduly),
755    Fix handling of apos in URIs (Daniel Veillard),
756    xmlTextReaderReadOuterXml should handle DTD (Rob Richards),
757    Autogen.sh needs to create m4 directory (Rob Richards)
758  </li>
759  <li> Improvements:
760    606592 update language ID parser to RFC 5646 (Daniel Veillard),
761    Sort python generated stubs (Mike Hommey),
762    Add an HTML parser option to avoid a default doctype (Daniel Veillard)
763  </li>
764  <li> Cleanups:
765    618831 don't ship generated files in git (Adrian Bunk),
766    Switch from the obsolete mkinstalldirs to AC_PROG_MKDIR_P (Adrian Bunk),
767    Various cleanups on encoding handling (Daniel Veillard),
768    Fix xmllint to use format=1 for default formatting (Adam Spragg),
769    Force _xmlSaveCtxt.format to be 0 or 1 (Adam Spragg),
770    Cleanup encoding pointer comparison (Nikolay Sivov),
771    Small code cleanup on previous patch (Daniel Veillard)
772  </li>
773</ul>
774<h3>2.7.7: Mar 15 2010</h3>
775<ul>
776  <li> Improvements:
777    Adding a --xpath option to xmllint (Daniel Veillard),
778    Make HTML parser non-recursive (Eugene Pimenov)
779  </li>
780  <li> Portability:
781    relaxng.c: cast to allow compilation with sun studio 11 (Ben Walton),
782    Fix build failure on Sparc solaris (Roumen Petrov),
783    use autoreconf in autogen.sh (Daniel Veillard),
784    Fix build with mingw (Roumen Petrov),
785    Upgrade some of the configure and autogen (Daniel Veillard),
786    Fix relaxNG tests in runtest for Windows runtest.c: initialize ret (Rob Richards),
787    Fix a const warning in xmlNodeSetBase (Martin Trappel),
788    Fix python generator to not use deprecated xmllib (Daniel Veillard),
789    Update some automake files (Daniel Veillard),
790    598785 Fix nanohttp on Windows (spadix)
791  </li>
792  <li> Bug Fixes:
793    libxml violates the zlib interface and crashes (Mark Adler),
794    Fix broken escape behaviour in regexp ranges (Daniel Veillard),
795    Fix  missing win32 libraries in libxml-2.0.pc (Volker Grabsch),
796    Fix detection of python linker flags (Daniel Macks),
797    fix build error in libxml2/python (Paul Smith),
798    ChunkParser: Incorrect decoding of small xml files (Raul Hudea),
799    htmlCheckEncoding doesn't update input-end after shrink (Eugene Pimenov),
800    Fix a missing #ifdef (Daniel Veillard),
801    Fix encoding selection for xmlParseInNodeContext (Daniel Veillard),
802    xmlPreviousElementSibling mistake (François Delyon),
803    608773 add a missing check in xmlGROW (Daniel Veillard),
804    Fix xmlParseInNodeContext for HTML content (Daniel Veillard),
805    Fix lost namespace when copying node * tree.c: reconcile namespace if not found (Rob Richards),
806    Fix some missing commas in HTML element lists (Eugene Pimenov),
807    Correct variable type to unsigned (Nikolay Sivov),
808    Recognize ID attribute in HTML without DOCTYPE (Daniel Veillard),
809    Fix memory leak in xmlXPathEvalExpression() (Martin),
810    Fix an init bug in global.c (Kai Henning),
811    Fix xmlNodeSetBase() comment (Daniel Veillard),
812    Fix broken escape behaviour in regexp ranges (Daniel Veillard),
813    Don't give default HTML boolean attribute values in parser (Daniel Veillard),
814    xmlCtxtResetLastError should reset ctxt-errNo (Daniel Veillard)
815  </li>
816  <li> Cleanups:
817    Cleanup a couple of weirdness in HTML parser (Eugene Pimenov)
818  </li>
819</ul>
820<h3>2.7.6: Oct  6 2009</h3>
821<ul>
822  <li> Bug Fixes:
823     Restore thread support in default configuration (Andrew W. Nosenko),
824     URI with no path parsing problem (Daniel Veillard),
825     Minor patch for conditional defines in threads.c (Eric Zurcher)
826  </li>
827</ul>
828<h3>2.7.5: Sep 24 2009</h3>
829<ul>
830  <li> Bug Fixes:
831    Restore behavior of --with-threads without argument (Andrew W. Nosenko),
832    Fix memory leak when doc is NULL (Rob Richards),
833    595792 fixing a RelaxNG bug introduced in 2.7.4 (Daniel Veillard),
834    Fix a Relaxng bug raised by libvirt test suite (Daniel Veillard),
835    Fix a parsing problem with little data at startup (Daniel Veillard),
836    link python module with python library (Frederic Crozat),
837    594874 Forgot an fclose in xmllint (Daniel Veillard)
838  </li>
839  <li> Cleanup:
840    Adding symbols.xml to EXTRA_DIST (Daniel Veillard)
841  </li>
842</ul>
843<h3>2.7.4: Sep 10 2009</h3>
844<ul>
845  <li>Improvements:
846    Switch to GIT (GNOME),
847    Add symbol versioning to libxml2 shared libs (Daniel Veillard)
848  </li>
849  <li>Portability:
850    593857 try to work around thread pbm MinGW 4.4 (Daniel Veillard),
851    594250 rename ATTRIBUTE_ALLOC_SIZE to avoid clashes (Daniel Veillard),
852    Fix Windows build * relaxng.c: fix windows build (Rob Richards),
853    Fix the globals.h to use XMLPUBFUN (Paul Smith),
854    Problem with extern extern in header (Daniel Veillard),
855    Add -lnetwork for compiling on Haiku (Scott McCreary),
856    Runtest portability patch for Solaris (Tim Rice),
857    Small patch to accomodate the Haiku OS (Scott McCreary),
858    584605 package VxWorks folder in the distribution (Daniel Veillard),
859    574017 Realloc too expensive on most platform (Daniel Veillard),
860    Fix windows build (Rob Richards),
861    545579 doesn't compile without schema support (Daniel Veillard),
862    xmllint use xmlGetNodePath when not compiled in (Daniel Veillard),
863    Try to avoid __imp__xmlFree link trouble on msys (Daniel Veillard),
864    Allow to select the threading system on Windows (LRN),
865    Fix Solaris binary links, cleanups (Daniel Veillard),
866    Bug 571059 â MSVC doesn't work with the bakefile (Intron),
867    fix ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF header clash (Belgabor and Mike Hommey),
868    fixes for Borland/CodeGear/Embarcadero compilers (Eric Zurcher)
869  </li>
870  <li>Documentation:
871    544910 typo: "renciliateNs" (Leonid Evdokimov),
872    Add VxWorks to list of OSes (Daniel Veillard),
873    Regenerate the documentation and update for git (Daniel Veillard),
874    560524 ¿ xmlTextReaderLocalName description (Daniel Veillard),
875    Added sponsoring by AOE media for the server (Daniel Veillard),
876    updated URLs for GNOME (Vincent Lefevre),
877    more warnings about xmlCleanupThreads and xmlCleanupParser (Daniel Veillard)
878  </li>
879  <li>Bug fixes:
880    594514 memory leaks - duplicate initialization (MOD),
881    Wrong block opening in htmlNodeDumpOutputInternal (Daniel Veillard),
882    492317 Fix  Relax-NG validation problems (Daniel Veillard),
883    558452 fight with reg test and error report (Daniel Veillard),
884    558452 RNG compilation of optional multiple child (Daniel Veillard),
885    579746 XSD validation not correct / nilable groups (Daniel Veillard),
886    502960 provide namespace stack when parsing entity (Daniel Veillard),
887    566012 part 2 fix regresion tests and push mode (Daniel Veillard),
888    566012 autodetected encoding and encoding conflict (Daniel Veillard),
889    584220 xpointer(/) and xinclude problems (Daniel Veillard),
890    587663 Incorrect Attribute-Value Normalization (Daniel Veillard),
891    444994 HTML chunked failure for attribute with &lt;&gt; (Daniel Veillard),
892    Fix end of buffer char being split in XML parser (Daniel Veillard),
893    Non ASCII character may be split at buffer end (Adiel Mittmann),
894    440226 Add xmlXIncludeProcessTreeFlagsData API (Stefan Behnel),
895    572129 speed up parsing of large HTML text nodes (Markus Kull),
896    Fix HTML parsing with 0 character in CDATA (Daniel Veillard),
897    Fix SetGenericErrorFunc and SetStructured clash (Wang Lam),
898    566012  Incomplete EBCDIC parsing support (Martin Kogler),
899    541335 HTML avoid creating 2 head or 2 body element (Daniel Veillard),
900    541237 error correcting missing end tags in HTML (Daniel Veillard),
901    583439 missing line numbers in push mode (Daniel Veillard),
902    587867 xmllint --html --xmlout serializing as HTML (Daniel Veillard),
903    559501 avoid select and use poll for nanohttp (Raphael Prevost),
904    559410 -  Regexp bug on (...)? constructs (Daniel Veillard),
905    Fix a small problem on previous HTML parser patch (Daniel Veillard),
906    592430 -  HTML parser runs into endless loop (Daniel Veillard),
907    447899 potential double free in xmlFreeTextReader (Daniel Veillard),
908    446613 small validation bug mixed content with NS (Daniel Veillard),
909    Fix the problem of revalidating a doc with RNG (Daniel Veillard),
910    Fix xmlKeepBlanksDefault to not break indent (Nick Wellnhofer),
911    512131 refs from externalRef part need to be added (Daniel Veillard),
912    512131 crash in xmlRelaxNGValidateFullElement (Daniel Veillard),
913    588441 allow '.' in HTML Names even if invalid (Daniel Veillard),
914    582913 Fix htmlSetMetaEncoding() to be nicer (Daniel Veillard),
915    579317 Try to find the HTML encoding information (Daniel Veillard),
916    575875 don't output charset=html (Daniel Veillard),
917    571271 fix semantic of xsd:all with minOccurs=0 (Daniel Veillard),
918    570702 fix a bug in regexp determinism checking (Daniel Veillard),
919    567619 xmlValidateNotationUse missing param test (Daniel Veillard),
920    574393 ¿ utf-8 filename magic for compressed files (Hans Breuer),
921    Fix a couple of problems in the parser (Daniel Veillard),
922    585505 ¿ Document ids and refs populated by XSD (Wayne Jensen),
923    582906 XSD validating multiple imports of the same schema (Jason Childs),
924    Bug 582887 ¿ problems validating complex schemas (Jason Childs),
925    Bug 579729 ¿ fix XSD schemas parsing crash (Miroslav Bajtos),
926    576368 ¿ htmlChunkParser with special attributes (Jiri Netolicky),
927    Bug 565747 ¿ relax anyURI data character checking (Vincent Lefevre),
928    Preserve attributes of include start on tree copy (Petr Pajas),
929    Skip silently unrecognized XPointer schemes (Jakub Wilk),
930    Fix leak on SAX1, xmllint --sax1 option and debug (Daniel Veillard),
931    potential NULL dereference on non-glibc (Jim Meyering),
932    Fix an XSD validation crash (Daniel Veillard),
933    Fix a regression in streaming entities support (Daniel Veillard),
934    Fix a couple of ABI issues with C14N 1.1 (Aleksey Sanin),
935    Aleksey Sanin support for c14n 1.1 (Aleksey Sanin),
936    reader bug fix with entities (Daniel Veillard),
937    use options from current parser ctxt for external entities (Rob Richards),
938    581612 use %s to printf strings (Christian Persch),
939    584605 change the threading initialization sequence (Igor Novoseltsev),
940    580705 keep line numbers in HTML parser (Aaron Patterson),
941    581803 broken HTML table attributes init (Roland Steiner),
942    do not set error code in xmlNsWarn (Rob Richards),
943    564217 fix structured error handling problems,
944    reuse options from current parser for entities (Rob Richards),
945    xmlXPathRegisterNs should not allow enpty prefixes (Daniel Veillard),
946    add a missing check in xmlAddSibling (Kris Breuker),
947    avoid leaks on errors (Jinmei Tatuya)
948  </li>
949  <li>Cleanup:
950    Chasing dead assignments reported by clang-scan (Daniel Veillard),
951    A few more safety cleanup raised by scan (Daniel Veillard),
952    Fixing assorted potential problems raised by scan (Daniel Veillard),
953    Potential uninitialized arguments raised by scan (Daniel Veillard),
954    Fix a bunch of scan 'dead increments' and cleanup (Daniel Veillard),
955    Remove a pedantic warning (Daniel Veillard),
956    555833 always use rm -f in uninstall-local (Daniel Veillard),
957    542394 xmlRegisterOutputCallbacks MAX_INPUT_CALLBACK (Daniel Veillard),
958    Autoregenerate libxml2.syms automated checkings (Daniel Veillard),
959    Make xmlRecoverDoc const (Martin Trappel) (Daniel Veillard),
960    Both args of xmlStrcasestr are const (Daniel Veillard),
961    hide the nbParse* variables used for debugging (Mike Hommey),
962    570806 changed include of config.h (William M. Brack),
963    cleanups and error reports when xmlTextWriterVSprintf fails (Jinmei Tatuya)
964  </li>
965</ul>
966<h3>2.7.3: Jan 18 2009</h3>
967<ul>
968  <li>Build fix: fix build when HTML support is not included.</li>
969  <li>Bug fixes: avoid memory overflow in gigantic text nodes,
970      indentation problem on the writed (Rob Richards),
971      xmlAddChildList pointer problem (Rob Richards and Kevin Milburn),
972      xmlAddChild problem with attribute (Rob Richards and Kris Breuker),
973      avoid a memory leak in an edge case (Daniel Zimmermann),
974      deallocate some pthread data (Alex Ott).</li>
975  <li>Improvements: configure option to avoid rebuilding docs (Adrian Bunk),
976      limit text nodes to 10MB max by default, add element traversal
977      APIs, add a parser option to enable pre 2.7 SAX behavior (Rob Richards),
978      add gcc malloc checking (Marcus Meissner), add gcc printf like functions
979      parameters checking (Marcus Meissner).</li>
980</ul>
981<h3>2.7.2: Oct 3 2008</h3>
982<ul>
983    <li>Portability fix: fix solaris compilation problem, fix compilation
984        if XPath is not configured in</li>
985    <li>Bug fixes: nasty entity bug introduced in 2.7.0, restore old behaviour
986        when saving an HTML doc with an xml dump function, HTML UTF-8 parsing
987        bug, fix reader custom error handlers (Riccardo Scussat)
988    <li>Improvement: xmlSave options for more flexibility to save as
989        XML/HTML/XHTML, handle leading BOM in HTML documents</li>
990</ul>
991
992<h3>2.7.1: Sep 1 2008</h3>
993<ul>
994    <li>Portability fix: Borland C fix (Moritz Both)</li>
995    <li>Bug fixes: python serialization wrappers, XPath QName corner
996        case handking and leaks (Martin)</li>
997    <li>Improvement: extend the xmlSave to handle HTML documents and trees</li>
998    <li>Cleanup: python serialization wrappers</li>
999</ul>
1000
1001<h3>2.7.0: Aug 30 2008</h3>
1002<ul>
1003  <li>Documentation: switch ChangeLog to UTF-8, improve mutithreads and
1004      xmlParserCleanup docs</li>
1005  <li>Portability fixes: Older Win32 platforms (Rob Richards), MSVC
1006      porting fix (Rob Richards), Mac OS X regression tests (Sven Herzberg),
1007      non GNUCC builds (Rob Richards), compilation on Haiku (Andreas Färber)
1008      </li>
1009  <li>Bug fixes: various realloc problems (Ashwin), potential double-free
1010      (Ashwin), regexp crash, icrash with invalid whitespace facets (Rob
1011      Richards), pattern fix when streaming (William Brack), various XML
1012      parsing and validation fixes based on the W3C regression tests, reader
1013      tree skipping function fix (Ashwin), Schemas regexps escaping fix
1014      (Volker Grabsch), handling of entity push errors (Ashwin), fix a slowdown
1015      when encoder cant serialize characters on output</li>
1016  <li>Code cleanup: compilation fix without the reader, without the output
1017      (Robert Schwebel), python whitespace (Martin), many space/tabs cleanups,
1018      serious cleanup of the entity handling code</li>
1019  <li>Improvement: switch parser to XML-1.0 5th edition, add parsing flags
1020      for old versions, switch URI parsing to RFC 3986,
1021      add xmlSchemaValidCtxtGetParserCtxt (Holger Kaelberer),
1022      new hashing functions for dictionnaries (based on Stefan Behnel work),
1023      improve handling of misplaced html/head/body in HTML parser, better
1024      regression test tools and code coverage display, better algorithms
1025      to detect various versions of the billion laughts attacks, make
1026      arbitrary parser limits avoidable as a parser option</li>
1027</ul>
1028<h3>2.6.32: Apr 8 2008</h3>
1029<ul>
1030  <li>Documentation: returning heap memory to kernel (Wolfram Sang),
1031      trying to clarify xmlCleanupParser() use, xmlXPathContext improvement
1032      (Jack Jansen), improve the *Recover* functions documentation,
1033      XmlNodeType doc link fix (Martijn Arts)</li>
1034  <li>Bug fixes: internal subset memory leak (Ashwin), avoid problem with
1035      paths starting with // (Petr Sumbera), streaming XSD validation callback
1036      patches (Ashwin), fix redirection on port other than 80 (William Brack),
1037      SAX2 leak (Ashwin), XInclude fragment of own document (Chris Ryan),
1038      regexp bug with '.' (Andrew Tosh), flush the writer at the end of the
1039      document (Alfred Mickautsch), output I/O bug fix (William Brack),
1040      writer CDATA output after a text node (Alex Khesin), UTF-16 encoding
1041      detection (William Brack), fix handling of empty CDATA nodes for Safari
1042      team, python binding problem with namespace nodes, improve HTML parsing
1043      (Arnold Hendriks), regexp automata build bug, memory leak fix (Vasily
1044      Chekalkin), XSD test crash, weird system parameter entity parsing problem,
1045      allow save to file:///X:/ windows paths, various attribute normalisation
1046      problems, externalSubsetSplit fix (Ashwin), attribute redefinition in
1047      the DTD (Ashwin), fix in char ref parsing check (Alex Khesin), many
1048      out of memory handling fixes (Ashwin), XPath out of memory handling fixes
1049      (Alvaro Herrera), various realloc problems (Ashwin), UCS4 encoding
1050      conversion buffer size (Christian Fruth), problems with EatName
1051      functions on memory errors, BOM handling in external parsed entities
1052      (Mark Rowe)</li>
1053  <li>Code cleanup: fix build under VS 2008 (David Wimsey), remove useless
1054      mutex in xmlDict (Florent Guilian), Mingw32 compilation fix (Carlo
1055      Bramini), Win and MacOS EOL cleanups (Florent Guiliani), iconv need
1056      a const detection (Roumen Petrov), simplify xmlSetProp (Julien Charbon),
1057      cross compilation fixes for Mingw (Roumen Petrov), SCO Openserver build
1058      fix (Florent Guiliani), iconv uses const on Win32 (Rob Richards),
1059      duplicate code removal (Ashwin), missing malloc test and error reports
1060      (Ashwin), VMS makefile fix (Tycho Hilhorst)</li>
1061  <li>improvements: better plug of schematron in the normal error handling
1062      (Tobias Minich)</li>
1063</ul>
1064
1065<h3>2.6.31: Jan 11 2008</h3>
1066<ul>
1067  <li>Security fix: missing of checks in UTF-8 parsing</li>
1068  <li>Bug fixes: regexp bug, dump attribute from XHTML document, fix
1069      xmlFree(NULL) to not crash in debug mode, Schematron parsing crash
1070      (Rob Richards), global lock free on Windows (Marc-Antoine Ruel),
1071      XSD crash due to double free (Rob Richards), indentation fix in
1072      xmlTextWriterFullEndElement (Felipe Pena), error in attribute type
1073      parsing if attribute redeclared, avoid crash in hash list scanner if
1074      deleting elements, column counter bug fix (Christian Schmidt),
1075      HTML embed element saving fix (Stefan Behnel), avoid -L/usr/lib
1076      output from xml2-config (Fred Crozat), avoid an xmllint crash 
1077      (Stefan Kost), don't stop HTML parsing on out of range chars.
1078      </li>
1079  <li>Code cleanup: fix open() call third argument, regexp cut'n paste
1080      copy error, unused variable in __xmlGlobalInitMutexLock (Hannes Eder),
1081      some make distcheck realted fixes (John Carr)</li>
1082  <li>Improvements: HTTP Header: includes port number (William Brack),
1083      testURI --debug option, </li>
1084</ul>
1085<h3>2.6.30: Aug 23 2007</h3>
1086<ul>
1087  <li>Portability: Solaris crash on error handling, windows path fixes
1088      (Roland Schwarz and Rob Richards), mingw build (Roland Schwarz)</li>
1089  <li>Bugfixes: xmlXPathNodeSetSort problem (William Brack), leak when
1090      reusing a writer for a new document (Dodji Seketeli), Schemas
1091      xsi:nil handling patch (Frank Gross), relative URI build problem
1092      (Patrik Fimml), crash in xmlDocFormatDump, invalid char in comment
1093      detection bug, fix disparity with xmlSAXUserParseMemory, automata
1094      generation for complex regexp counts problems, Schemas IDC import
1095      problems (Frank Gross), xpath predicate evailation error handling
1096      (William Brack)</li>
1097</ul>
1098<h3>2.6.29: Jun 12 2007</h3>
1099<ul>
1100  <li>Portability: patches from Andreas Stricke for WinCEi,
1101      fix compilation warnings (William Brack), avoid warnings on Apple OS/X
1102      (Wendy Doyle and Mark Rowe), Windows compilation and threading
1103      improvements (Rob Richards), compilation against old Python versions,
1104      new GNU tar changes (Ryan Hill)</li>
1105  <li>Documentation: xmlURIUnescapeString comment, </li>
1106  <li>Bugfixes: xmlBufferAdd problem (Richard Jones), 'make valgrind'
1107      flag fix (Richard Jones), regexp interpretation of \,
1108      htmlCreateDocParserCtxt (Jean-Daniel Dupas), configure.in
1109      typo (Bjorn Reese), entity content failure, xmlListAppend() fix
1110      (Georges-André Silber), XPath number serialization (William Brack),
1111      nanohttp gzipped stream fix (William Brack and Alex Cornejo),
1112      xmlCharEncFirstLine typo (Mark Rowe), uri bug (François Delyon),
1113      XPath string value of PI nodes (William Brack), XPath node set
1114      sorting bugs (William Brack), avoid outputting namespace decl
1115      dups in the writer (Rob Richards), xmlCtxtReset bug, UTF-8 encoding
1116      error handling, recustion on next in catalogs, fix a Relax-NG crash,
1117      workaround wrong file: URIs, htmlNodeDumpFormatOutput on attributes,
1118      invalid character in attribute detection bug, big comments before 
1119      internal subset streaming bug, HTML parsing of attributes with : in
1120      the name, IDness of name in HTML (Dagfinn I. Mannsåker) </li>
1121  <li>Improvement: keep URI query parts in raw form (Richard Jones),
1122      embed tag support in HTML (Michael Day) </li>
1123</ul>
1124
1125<h3>2.6.28: Apr 17 2007</h3>
1126<ul>
1127  <li>Documentation: comment fixes (Markus Keim), xpath comments fixes too
1128      (James Dennett)</li>
1129  <li>Bug fixes: XPath bug (William Brack), HTML parser autoclose stack usage
1130      (Usamah Malik), various regexp bug fixes (DV and William), path conversion
1131      on Windows (Igor Zlatkovic), htmlCtxtReset fix (Michael Day), XPath
1132      principal node of axis bug, HTML serialization of some codepoint
1133      (Steven Rainwater), user data propagation in XInclude (Michael Day),
1134      standalone and XML decl detection (Michael Day), Python id ouptut
1135      for some id, fix the big python string memory leak, URI parsing fixes
1136      (Stéphane Bidoul and William), long comments parsing bug (William),
1137      concurrent threads initialization (Ted Phelps), invalid char
1138      in text XInclude (William), XPath memory leak (William), tab in
1139      python problems (Andreas Hanke), XPath node comparison error
1140      (Oleg Paraschenko), cleanup patch for reader (Julien Reichel),
1141      XML Schemas attribute group (William), HTML parsing problem (William),
1142      fix char 0x2d in regexps (William), regexp quantifier range with
1143      min occurs of 0 (William), HTML script/style parsing (Mike Day)</li>
1144  <li>Improvement: make xmlTextReaderSetup() public</li>
1145  <li>Compilation and postability: fix a missing include problem (William),
1146      __ss_familly on AIX again (Björn Wiberg), compilation without zlib
1147      (Michael Day), catalog patch for Win32 (Christian Ehrlicher),
1148      Windows CE fixes (Andreas Stricke)</li>
1149  <li>Various CVS to SVN infrastructure changes</li>
1150</ul>
1151<h3>2.6.27: Oct 25 2006</h3>
1152<ul>
1153  <li>Portability fixes: file names on windows (Roland Schwingel, 
1154      Emelyanov Alexey), windows compile fixup (Rob Richards), 
1155      AIX iconv() is apparently case sensitive</li>
1156  <li>improvements: Python XPath types mapping (Nic Ferrier), XPath optimization
1157      (Kasimier), add xmlXPathCompiledEvalToBoolean (Kasimier), Python node
1158      equality and comparison (Andreas Pakulat), xmlXPathCollectAndTest
1159      improvememt (Kasimier), expose if library was compiled with zlib 
1160      support (Andrew Nosenko), cache for xmlSchemaIDCMatcher structs
1161      (Kasimier), xmlTextConcat should work with comments and PIs (Rob
1162      Richards), export htmlNewParserCtxt needed by Michael Day, refactoring
1163      of catalog entity loaders (Michael Day), add XPointer support to 
1164      python bindings (Ross Reedstrom, Brian West and Stefan Anca), 
1165      try to sort out most file path to URI conversions and xmlPathToUri,
1166      add --html --memory case to xmllint</li>
1167  <li>building fix: fix --with-minimum (Felipe Contreras), VMS fix, 
1168      const'ification of HTML parser structures (Matthias Clasen),
1169      portability fix (Emelyanov Alexey), wget autodetection (Peter
1170      Breitenlohner),  remove the build path recorded in the python
1171      shared module, separate library flags for shared and static builds
1172      (Mikhail Zabaluev), fix --with-minimum --with-sax1 builds, fix
1173      --with-minimum --with-schemas builds</li>
1174  <li>bug fix: xmlGetNodePath fix (Kasimier), xmlDOMWrapAdoptNode and
1175      attribute (Kasimier), crash when using the recover mode, 
1176      xmlXPathEvalExpr problem (Kasimier), xmlXPathCompExprAdd bug (Kasimier),
1177      missing destry in xmlFreeRMutex (Andrew Nosenko), XML Schemas fixes
1178      (Kasimier), warning on entities processing, XHTML script and style
1179      serialization (Kasimier), python generator for long types, bug in
1180      xmlSchemaClearValidCtxt (Bertrand Fritsch), xmlSchemaXPathEvaluate
1181      allocation bug (Marton Illes), error message end of line (Rob Richards),
1182      fix attribute serialization in writer (Rob Richards), PHP4 DTD validation
1183      crasher, parser safety patch (Ben Darnell), _private context propagation
1184      when parsing entities (with Michael Day), fix entities behaviour when 
1185      using SAX, URI to file path fix (Mikhail Zabaluev), disapearing validity
1186      context, arg error in SAX callback (Mike Hommey), fix mixed-content
1187      autodetect when using --noblanks, fix xmlIOParseDTD error handling,
1188      fix bug in xmlSplitQName on special Names, fix Relax-NG element content
1189      validation bug, fix xmlReconciliateNs bug, fix potential attribute 
1190      XML parsing bug, fix line/column accounting in XML parser, chunking bug
1191      in the HTML parser on script, try to detect obviously buggy HTML
1192      meta encoding indications, bugs with encoding BOM and xmlSaveDoc, 
1193      HTML entities in attributes parsing, HTML minimized attribute values,
1194      htmlReadDoc and htmlReadIO were broken, error handling bug in
1195      xmlXPathEvalExpression (Olaf Walkowiak), fix a problem in
1196      htmlCtxtUseOptions, xmlNewInputFromFile could leak (Marius Konitzer),
1197      bug on misformed SSD regexps (Christopher Boumenot)
1198      </li>
1199  <li>documentation: warning about XML_PARSE_COMPACT (Kasimier Buchcik),
1200      fix xmlXPathCastToString documentation, improve man pages for
1201      xmllitn and xmlcatalog (Daniel Leidert), fixed comments of a few
1202      functions</li>
1203</ul>
1204<h3>2.6.26: Jun 6 2006</h3>
1205<ul>
1206  <li>portability fixes: Python detection (Joseph Sacco), compilation
1207    error(William Brack and Graham Bennett), LynxOS patch (Olli Savia)</li>
1208  <li>bug fixes: encoding buffer problem, mix of code and data in
1209    xmlIO.c(Kjartan Maraas), entities in XSD validation (Kasimier Buchcik),
1210    variousXSD validation fixes (Kasimier), memory leak in pattern (Rob
1211    Richards andKasimier), attribute with colon in name (Rob Richards), XPath
1212    leak inerror reporting (Aleksey Sanin), XInclude text include of
1213    selfdocument.</li>
1214  <li>improvements: Xpath optimizations (Kasimier), XPath object
1215    cache(Kasimier)</li>
1216</ul>
1217
1218<h3>2.6.25: Jun 6 2006:</h3>
1219
1220<p>Do not use or package 2.6.25</p>
1221
1222<h3>2.6.24: Apr 28 2006</h3>
1223<ul>
1224  <li>Portability fixes: configure on Windows, testapi compile on windows
1225      (Kasimier Buchcik, venkat naidu), Borland C++ 6 compile (Eric Zurcher),
1226      HP-UX compiler workaround (Rick Jones), xml2-config bugfix, gcc-4.1
1227      cleanups, Python detection scheme (Joseph Sacco), UTF-8 file paths on
1228      Windows (Roland Schwingel).
1229      </li>
1230  <li>Improvements: xmlDOMWrapReconcileNamespaces xmlDOMWrapCloneNode (Kasimier
1231      Buchcik), XML catalog debugging (Rick Jones), update to Unicode 4.01.</li>
1232  <li>Bug fixes: xmlParseChunk() problem in 2.6.23, xmlParseInNodeContext()
1233      on HTML docs, URI behaviour on Windows (Rob Richards), comment streaming
1234      bug, xmlParseComment (with William Brack), regexp bug fixes (DV &amp;
1235      Youri Golovanov), xmlGetNodePath on text/CDATA (Kasimier),
1236      one Relax-NG interleave bug, xmllint --path and --valid,
1237      XSD bugfixes (Kasimier), remove debug
1238      left in Python bindings (Nic Ferrier), xmlCatalogAdd bug (Martin Cole),
1239      xmlSetProp fixes (Rob Richards), HTML IDness (Rob Richards), a large
1240      number of cleanups and small fixes based on Coverity reports, bug
1241      in character ranges, Unicode tables const (Aivars Kalvans), schemas
1242      fix (Stefan Kost), xmlRelaxNGParse error deallocation, 
1243      xmlSchemaAddSchemaDoc error deallocation, error handling on unallowed
1244      code point, ixmllint --nonet to never reach the net (Gary Coady),
1245      line break in writer after end PI (Jason Viers). </li>
1246  <li>Documentation: man pages updates and cleanups (Daniel Leidert).</li>
1247  <li>New features: Relax NG structure error handlers.</li>
1248</ul>
1249
1250<h3>2.6.23: Jan 5 2006</h3>
1251<ul>
1252  <li>portability fixes: Windows (Rob Richards), getaddrinfo on Windows
1253    (Kolja Nowak, Rob Richards), icc warnings (Kjartan Maraas),
1254    --with-minimum compilation fixes (William Brack), error case handling fix
1255    on Solaris (Albert Chin), don't use 'list' as parameter name reported by
1256    Samuel Diaz Garcia, more old Unices portability fixes (Albert Chin),
1257    MinGW compilation (Mark Junker), HP-UX compiler warnings (Rick
1258  Jones),</li>
1259  <li>code cleanup: xmlReportError (Adrian Mouat), remove xmlBufferClose
1260    (Geert Jansen), unreachable code (Oleksandr Kononenko), refactoring
1261    parsing code (Bjorn Reese)</li>
1262  <li>bug fixes: xmlBuildRelativeURI and empty path (William Brack),
1263    combinatory explosion and performances in regexp code, leak in
1264    xmlTextReaderReadString(), xmlStringLenDecodeEntities problem (Massimo
1265    Morara), Identity Constraints bugs and a segfault (Kasimier Buchcik),
1266    XPath pattern based evaluation bugs (DV &amp; Kasimier),
1267    xmlSchemaContentModelDump() memory leak (Kasimier), potential leak in
1268    xmlSchemaCheckCSelectorXPath(), xmlTextWriterVSprintf() misuse of
1269    vsnprintf (William Brack), XHTML serialization fix (Rob Richards), CRLF
1270    split problem (William), issues with non-namespaced attributes in
1271    xmlAddChild() xmlAddNextSibling() and xmlAddPrevSibling() (Rob Richards),
1272    HTML parsing of script, Python must not output to stdout (Nic Ferrier),
1273    exclusive C14N namespace visibility (Aleksey Sanin), XSD dataype
1274    totalDigits bug (Kasimier Buchcik), error handling when writing to an
1275    xmlBuffer (Rob Richards), runtest schemas error not reported (Hisashi
1276    Fujinaka), signed/unsigned problem in date/time code (Albert Chin), fix
1277    XSI driven XSD validation (Kasimier), parsing of xs:decimal (Kasimier),
1278    fix DTD writer output (Rob Richards), leak in xmlTextReaderReadInnerXml
1279    (Gary Coady), regexp bug affecting schemas (Kasimier), configuration of
1280    runtime debugging (Kasimier), xmlNodeBufGetContent bug on entity refs
1281    (Oleksandr Kononenko), xmlRegExecPushString2 bug (Sreeni Nair),
1282    compilation and build fixes (Michael Day), removed dependancies on
1283    xmlSchemaValidError (Kasimier), bug with &lt;xml:foo/&gt;, more XPath
1284    pattern based evaluation fixes (Kasimier)</li>
1285  <li>improvements: XSD Schemas redefinitions/restrictions (Kasimier
1286    Buchcik), node copy checks and fix for attribute (Rob Richards), counted
1287    transition bug in regexps, ctxt-&gt;standalone = -2 to indicate no
1288    standalone attribute was found, add xmlSchemaSetParserStructuredErrors()
1289    (Kasimier Buchcik), add xmlTextReaderSchemaValidateCtxt() to API
1290    (Kasimier), handle gzipped HTTP resources (Gary Coady), add
1291    htmlDocDumpMemoryFormat. (Rob Richards),</li>
1292  <li>documentation: typo (Michael Day), libxml man page (Albert Chin), save
1293    function to XML buffer (Geert Jansen), small doc fix (Aron Stansvik),</li>
1294</ul>
1295
1296<h3>2.6.22: Sep 12 2005</h3>
1297<ul>
1298  <li>build fixes: compile without schematron (Stéphane Bidoul)</li>
1299  <li>bug fixes: xmlDebugDumpNode on namespace node (Oleg Paraschenko)i,
1300    CDATA push parser bug, xmlElemDump problem with XHTML1 doc,
1301    XML_FEATURE_xxx clash with expat headers renamed XML_WITH_xxx, fix some
1302    output formatting for meta element (Rob Richards), script and style
1303    XHTML1 serialization (David Madore), Attribute derivation fixups in XSD
1304    (Kasimier Buchcik), better IDC error reports (Kasimier Buchcik)</li>
1305  <li>improvements: add XML_SAVE_NO_EMPTY xmlSaveOption (Rob Richards), add
1306    XML_SAVE_NO_XHTML xmlSaveOption, XML Schemas improvements preparing for
1307    derive (Kasimier Buchcik).</li>
1308  <li>documentation: generation of gtk-doc like docs, integration with
1309    devhelp.</li>
1310</ul>
1311
1312<h3>2.6.21: Sep 4 2005</h3>
1313<ul>
1314  <li>build fixes: Cygwin portability fixes (Gerrit P. Haase), calling
1315    convention problems on Windows (Marcus Boerger), cleanups based on Linus'
1316    sparse tool, update of win32/configure.js (Rob Richards), remove warnings
1317    on Windows(Marcus Boerger), compilation without SAX1, detection of the
1318    Python binary, use $GCC inestad of $CC = 'gcc' (Andrew W. Nosenko),
1319    compilation/link with threads and old gcc, compile problem by C370 on
1320    Z/OS,</li>
1321  <li>bug fixes: http_proxy environments (Peter Breitenlohner), HTML UTF-8
1322    bug (Jiri Netolicky), XPath NaN compare bug (William Brack),
1323    htmlParseScript potential bug, Schemas regexp handling of spaces, Base64
1324    Schemas comparisons NIST passes, automata build error xsd:all,
1325    xmlGetNodePath for namespaced attributes (Alexander Pohoyda), xmlSchemas
1326    foreign namespaces handling, XML Schemas facet comparison (Kupriyanov
1327    Anatolij), xmlSchemaPSimpleTypeErr error report (Kasimier Buchcik), xml:
1328    namespace ahndling in Schemas (Kasimier), empty model group in Schemas
1329    (Kasimier), wilcard in Schemas (Kasimier), URI composition (William),
1330    xs:anyType in Schemas (Kasimier), Python resolver emmitting error
1331    messages directly, Python xmlAttr.parent (Jakub Piotr Clapa), trying to
1332    fix the file path/URI conversion, xmlTextReaderGetAttribute fix (Rob
1333    Richards), xmlSchemaFreeAnnot memleak (Kasimier), HTML UTF-8
1334    serialization, streaming XPath, Schemas determinism detection problem,
1335    XInclude bug, Schemas context type (Dean Hill), validation fix (Derek
1336    Poon), xmlTextReaderGetAttribute[Ns] namespaces (Rob Richards), Schemas
1337    type fix (Kuba Nowakowski), UTF-8 parser bug, error in encoding handling,
1338    xmlGetLineNo fixes, bug on entities handling, entity name extraction in
1339    error handling with XInclude, text nodes in HTML body tags (Gary Coady),
1340    xml:id and IDness at the treee level fixes, XPath streaming patterns
1341  bugs.</li>
1342  <li>improvements: structured interfaces for schemas and RNG error reports
1343    (Marcus Boerger), optimization of the char data inner loop parsing
1344    (thanks to Behdad Esfahbod for the idea), schematron validation though
1345    not finished yet, xmlSaveOption to omit XML declaration, keyref match
1346    error reports (Kasimier), formal expression handling code not plugged
1347    yet, more lax mode for the HTML parser, parser XML_PARSE_COMPACT option
1348    for text nodes allocation.</li>
1349  <li>documentation: xmllint man page had --nonet duplicated</li>
1350</ul>
1351
1352<h3>2.6.20: Jul 10 2005</h3>
1353<ul>
1354  <li>build fixes: Windows build (Rob Richards), Mingw compilation (Igor
1355    Zlatkovic), Windows Makefile (Igor), gcc warnings (Kasimier and
1356    andriy@google.com), use gcc weak references to pthread to avoid the
1357    pthread dependancy on Linux, compilation problem (Steve Nairn), compiling
1358    of subset (Morten Welinder), IPv6/ss_family compilation (William Brack),
1359    compilation when disabling parts of the library, standalone test
1360    distribution.</li>
1361  <li>bug fixes: bug in lang(), memory cleanup on errors (William Brack),
1362    HTTP query strings (Aron Stansvik), memory leak in DTD (William), integer
1363    overflow in XPath (William), nanoftp buffer size, pattern "." apth fixup
1364    (Kasimier), leak in tree reported by Malcolm Rowe, replaceNode patch
1365    (Brent Hendricks), CDATA with NULL content (Mark Vakoc), xml:base fixup
1366    on XInclude (William), pattern fixes (William), attribute bug in
1367    exclusive c14n (Aleksey Sanin), xml:space and xml:lang with SAX2 (Rob
1368    Richards), namespace trouble in complex parsing (Malcolm Rowe), XSD type
1369    QNames fixes (Kasimier), XPath streaming fixups (William), RelaxNG bug
1370    (Rob Richards), Schemas for Schemas fixes (Kasimier), removal of ID (Rob
1371    Richards), a small RelaxNG leak, HTML parsing in push mode bug (James
1372    Bursa), failure to detect UTF-8 parsing bugs in CDATA sections,
1373    areBlanks() heuristic failure, duplicate attributes in DTD bug
1374  (William).</li>
1375  <li>improvements: lot of work on Schemas by Kasimier Buchcik both on
1376    conformance and streaming, Schemas validation messages (Kasimier Buchcik,
1377    Matthew Burgess), namespace removal at the python level (Brent
1378    Hendricks), Update to new Schemas regression tests from W3C/Nist
1379    (Kasimier), xmlSchemaValidateFile() (Kasimier), implementation of
1380    xmlTextReaderReadInnerXml and xmlTextReaderReadOuterXml (James Wert),
1381    standalone test framework and programs, new DOM import APIs
1382    xmlDOMWrapReconcileNamespaces() xmlDOMWrapAdoptNode() and
1383    xmlDOMWrapRemoveNode(), extension of xmllint capabilities for SAX and
1384    Schemas regression tests, xmlStopParser() available in pull mode too,
1385    ienhancement to xmllint --shell namespaces support, Windows port of the
1386    standalone testing tools (Kasimier and William),
1387    xmlSchemaValidateStream() xmlSchemaSAXPlug() and xmlSchemaSAXUnplug() SAX
1388    Schemas APIs, Schemas xmlReader support.</li>
1389</ul>
1390
1391<h3>2.6.19: Apr 02 2005</h3>
1392<ul>
1393  <li>build fixes: drop .la from RPMs, --with-minimum build fix (William
1394    Brack), use XML_SOCKLEN_T instead of SOCKLEN_T because it breaks with AIX
1395    5.3 compiler, fixed elfgcchack.h generation and PLT reduction code on
1396    Linux/ELF/gcc4</li>
1397  <li>bug fixes: schemas type decimal fixups (William Brack), xmmlint return
1398    code (Gerry Murphy), small schemas fixes (Matthew Burgess and GUY
1399    Fabrice), workaround "DAV:" namespace brokeness in c14n (Aleksey Sanin),
1400    segfault in Schemas (Kasimier Buchcik), Schemas attribute validation
1401    (Kasimier), Prop related functions and xmlNewNodeEatName (Rob Richards),
1402    HTML serialization of name attribute on a elements, Python error handlers
1403    leaks and improvement (Brent Hendricks), uninitialized variable in
1404    encoding code, Relax-NG validation bug, potential crash if
1405    gnorableWhitespace is NULL, xmlSAXParseDoc and xmlParseDoc signatures,
1406    switched back to assuming UTF-8 in case no encoding is given at
1407    serialization time</li>
1408  <li>improvements: lot of work on Schemas by Kasimier Buchcik on facets
1409    checking and also mixed handling.</li>
1410  <li></li>
1411</ul>
1412
1413<h3>2.6.18: Mar 13 2005</h3>
1414<ul>
1415  <li>build fixes: warnings (Peter Breitenlohner), testapi.c generation,
1416    Bakefile support (Francesco Montorsi), Windows compilation (Joel Reed),
1417    some gcc4 fixes, HP-UX portability fixes (Rick Jones).</li>
1418  <li>bug fixes: xmlSchemaElementDump namespace (Kasimier Buchcik), push and
1419    xmlreader stopping on non-fatal errors, thread support for dictionnaries
1420    reference counting (Gary Coady), internal subset and push problem, URL
1421    saved in xmlCopyDoc, various schemas bug fixes (Kasimier), Python paths
1422    fixup (Stephane Bidoul), xmlGetNodePath and namespaces, xmlSetNsProp fix
1423    (Mike Hommey), warning should not count as error (William Brack),
1424    xmlCreatePushParser empty chunk, XInclude parser flags (William), cleanup
1425    FTP and HTTP code to reuse the uri parsing and IPv6 (William),
1426    xmlTextWriterStartAttributeNS fix (Rob Richards), XMLLINT_INDENT being
1427    empty (William), xmlWriter bugs (Rob Richards), multithreading on Windows
1428    (Rich Salz), xmlSearchNsByHref fix (Kasimier), Python binding leak (Brent
1429    Hendricks), aliasing bug exposed by gcc4 on s390, xmlTextReaderNext bug
1430    (Rob Richards), Schemas decimal type fixes (William Brack),
1431    xmlByteConsumed static buffer (Ben Maurer).</li>
1432  <li>improvement: speedup parsing comments and DTDs, dictionnary support for
1433    hash tables, Schemas Identity constraints (Kasimier), streaming XPath
1434    subset, xmlTextReaderReadString added (Bjorn Reese), Schemas canonical
1435    values handling (Kasimier), add xmlTextReaderByteConsumed (Aron
1436  Stansvik),</li>
1437  <li>Documentation: Wiki support (Joel Reed)</li>
1438</ul>
1439
1440<h3>2.6.17: Jan 16 2005</h3>
1441<ul>
1442  <li>build fixes: Windows, warnings removal (William Brack),
1443    maintainer-clean dependency(William), build in a different directory
1444    (William), fixing --with-minimum configure build (William), BeOS build
1445    (Marcin Konicki), Python-2.4 detection (William), compilation on AIX (Dan
1446    McNichol)</li>
1447  <li>bug fixes: xmlTextReaderHasAttributes (Rob Richards), xmlCtxtReadFile()
1448    to use the catalog(s), loop on output (William Brack), XPath memory leak,
1449    ID deallocation problem (Steve Shepard), debugDumpNode crash (William),
1450    warning not using error callback (William), xmlStopParser bug (William),
1451    UTF-16 with BOM on DTDs (William), namespace bug on empty elements in
1452    push mode (Rob Richards), line and col computations fixups (Aleksey
1453    Sanin), xmlURIEscape fix (William), xmlXPathErr on bad range (William),
1454    patterns with too many steps, bug in RNG choice optimization, line number
1455    sometimes missing.</li>
1456  <li>improvements: XSD Schemas (Kasimier Buchcik), python generator
1457    (William), xmlUTF8Strpos speedup (William), unicode Python strings
1458    (William), XSD error reports (Kasimier Buchcik), Python __str__ call
1459    serialize().</li>
1460  <li>new APIs: added xmlDictExists(), GetLineNumber and GetColumnNumber for
1461    the xmlReader (Aleksey Sanin), Dynamic Shared Libraries APIs (mostly Joel
1462    Reed), error extraction API from regexps, new XMLSave option for format
1463    (Phil Shafer)</li>
1464  <li>documentation: site improvement (John Fleck), FAQ entries
1465  (William).</li>
1466</ul>
1467
1468<h3>2.6.16: Nov 10 2004</h3>
1469<ul>
1470  <li>general hardening and bug fixing crossing all the API based on new
1471    automated regression testing</li>
1472  <li>build fix: IPv6 build and test on AIX (Dodji Seketeli)</li>
1473  <li>bug fixes: problem with XML::Libxml reported by Petr Pajas,  encoding
1474    conversion functions return values, UTF-8 bug affecting XPath reported by
1475    Markus Bertheau, catalog problem with NULL entries (William Brack)</li>
1476  <li>documentation: fix to xmllint man page, some API function descritpion
1477    were updated.</li>
1478  <li>improvements: DTD validation APIs provided at the Python level (Brent
1479    Hendricks)</li>
1480</ul>
1481
1482<h3>2.6.15: Oct 27 2004</h3>
1483<ul>
1484  <li>security fixes on the nanoftp and nanohttp modules</li>
1485  <li>build fixes: xmllint detection bug in configure, building outside the
1486    source tree (Thomas Fitzsimmons)</li>
1487  <li>bug fixes: HTML parser on broken ASCII chars in names (William), Python
1488    paths (Malcolm Tredinnick), xmlHasNsProp and default namespace (William),
1489    saving to python file objects (Malcolm Tredinnick), DTD lookup fix
1490    (Malcolm), save back &lt;group&gt; in catalogs (William), tree build
1491    fixes (DV and Rob Richards), Schemas memory bug, structured error handler
1492    on Python 64bits, thread local memory deallocation, memory leak reported
1493    by Volker Roth, xmlValidateDtd in the presence of an internal subset,
1494    entities and _private problem (William), xmlBuildRelativeURI error
1495    (William).</li>
1496  <li>improvements: better XInclude error reports (William), tree debugging
1497    module and tests, convenience functions at the Reader API (Graham
1498    Bennett), add support for PI in the HTML parser.</li>
1499</ul>
1500
1501<h3>2.6.14: Sep 29 2004</h3>
1502<ul>
1503  <li>build fixes: configure paths for xmllint and xsltproc, compilation
1504    without HTML parser, compilation warning cleanups (William Brack &amp;
1505    Malcolm Tredinnick), VMS makefile update (Craig Berry),</li>
1506  <li>bug fixes: xmlGetUTF8Char (William Brack), QName properties (Kasimier
1507    Buchcik), XInclude testing, Notation serialization, UTF8ToISO8859x
1508    transcoding (Mark Itzcovitz), lots of XML Schemas cleanup and fixes
1509    (Kasimier), ChangeLog cleanup (Stepan Kasal), memory fixes (Mark Vakoc),
1510    handling of failed realloc(), out of bound array adressing in Schemas
1511    date handling, Python space/tabs cleanups (Malcolm Tredinnick), NMTOKENS
1512    E20 validation fix (Malcolm),</li>
1513  <li>improvements: added W3C XML Schemas testsuite (Kasimier Buchcik), add
1514    xmlSchemaValidateOneElement (Kasimier), Python exception hierearchy
1515    (Malcolm Tredinnick), Python libxml2 driver improvement (Malcolm
1516    Tredinnick), Schemas support for xsi:schemaLocation,
1517    xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation, xsi:type (Kasimier Buchcik)</li>
1518</ul>
1519
1520<h3>2.6.13: Aug 31 2004</h3>
1521<ul>
1522  <li>build fixes: Windows and zlib (Igor Zlatkovic), -O flag with gcc,
1523    Solaris compiler warning, fixing RPM BuildRequires,</li>
1524  <li>fixes: DTD loading on Windows (Igor), Schemas error reports APIs
1525    (Kasimier Buchcik), Schemas validation crash, xmlCheckUTF8 (William Brack
1526    and Julius Mittenzwei), Schemas facet check (Kasimier), default namespace
1527    problem (William), Schemas hexbinary empty values, encoding error could
1528    genrate a serialization loop.</li>
1529  <li>Improvements: Schemas validity improvements (Kasimier), added --path
1530    and --load-trace options to xmllint</li>
1531  <li>documentation: tutorial update (John Fleck)</li>
1532</ul>
1533
1534<h3>2.6.12: Aug 22 2004</h3>
1535<ul>
1536  <li>build fixes: fix --with-minimum, elfgcchack.h fixes (Peter
1537    Breitenlohner), perl path lookup (William), diff on Solaris (Albert
1538    Chin), some 64bits cleanups.</li>
1539  <li>Python: avoid a warning with 2.3 (William Brack), tab and space mixes
1540    (William), wrapper generator fixes (William), Cygwin support (Gerrit P.
1541    Haase), node wrapper fix (Marc-Antoine Parent), XML Schemas support
1542    (Torkel Lyng)</li>
1543  <li>Schemas: a lot of bug fixes and improvements from Kasimier Buchcik</li>
1544  <li>fixes: RVT fixes (William), XPath context resets bug (William), memory
1545    debug (Steve Hay), catalog white space handling (Peter Breitenlohner),
1546    xmlReader state after attribute reading (William), structured error
1547    handler (William), XInclude generated xml:base fixup (William), Windows
1548    memory reallocation problem (Steve Hay), Out of Memory conditions
1549    handling (William and Olivier Andrieu), htmlNewDoc() charset bug,
1550    htmlReadMemory init (William), a posteriori validation DTD base
1551    (William), notations serialization missing, xmlGetNodePath (Dodji),
1552    xmlCheckUTF8 (Diego Tartara), missing line numbers on entity
1553  (William)</li>
1554  <li>improvements: DocBook catalog build scrip (William), xmlcatalog tool
1555    (Albert Chin), xmllint --c14n option, no_proxy environment (Mike Hommey),
1556    xmlParseInNodeContext() addition, extend xmllint --shell, allow XInclude
1557    to not generate start/end nodes, extend xmllint --version to include CVS
1558    tag (William)</li>
1559  <li>documentation: web pages fixes, validity API docs fixes (William)
1560    schemas API fix (Eric Haszlakiewicz), xmllint man page (John Fleck)</li>
1561</ul>
1562
1563<h3>2.6.11: July 5 2004</h3>
1564<ul>
1565  <li>Schemas: a lot of changes and improvements by Kasimier Buchcik for
1566    attributes, namespaces and simple types.</li>
1567  <li>build fixes: --with-minimum (William Brack),  some gcc cleanup
1568    (William), --with-thread-alloc (William)</li>
1569  <li>portability: Windows binary package change (Igor Zlatkovic), Catalog
1570    path on Windows</li>
1571  <li>documentation: update to the tutorial (John Fleck), xmllint return code
1572    (John Fleck), man pages (Ville Skytta),</li>
1573  <li>bug fixes: C14N bug serializing namespaces (Aleksey Sanin), testSAX
1574    properly initialize the library (William), empty node set in XPath
1575    (William), xmlSchemas errors (William), invalid charref problem pointed
1576    by Morus Walter, XInclude xml:base generation (William), Relax-NG bug
1577    with div processing (William), XPointer and xml:base problem(William),
1578    Reader and entities, xmllint return code for schemas (William), reader
1579    streaming problem (Steve Ball), DTD serialization problem (William),
1580    libxml.m4 fixes (Mike Hommey), do not provide destructors as methods on
1581    Python classes, xmlReader buffer bug, Python bindings memory interfaces
1582    improvement (with Stéphane Bidoul), Fixed the push parser to be back to
1583    synchronous behaviour.</li>
1584  <li>improvement: custom per-thread I/O enhancement (Rob Richards), register
1585    namespace in debug shell (Stefano Debenedetti), Python based regression
1586    test for non-Unix users (William), dynamically increase the number of
1587    XPath extension functions in Python and fix a memory leak (Marc-Antoine
1588    Parent and William)</li>
1589  <li>performance: hack done with Arjan van de Ven to reduce ELF footprint
1590    and generated code on Linux, plus use gcc runtime profiling to optimize
1591    the code generated in the RPM packages.</li>
1592</ul>
1593
1594<h3>2.6.10: May 17 2004</h3>
1595<ul>
1596  <li>Web page generated for ChangeLog</li>
1597  <li>build fixes: --without-html problems, make check without make all</li>
1598  <li>portability: problem with xpath.c on Windows (MSC and Borland), memcmp
1599    vs. strncmp on Solaris, XPath tests on Windows (Mark Vakoc), C++ do not
1600    use "list" as parameter name, make tests work with Python 1.5 (Ed
1601  Davis),</li>
1602  <li>improvements: made xmlTextReaderMode public, small buffers resizing
1603    (Morten Welinder), add --maxmem option to xmllint, add
1604    xmlPopInputCallback() for Matt Sergeant, refactoring of serialization
1605    escaping, added escaping customization</li>
1606  <li>bugfixes: xsd:extension (Taihei Goi), assorted regexp bugs (William
1607    Brack), xmlReader end of stream problem, node deregistration with reader,
1608    URI escaping and filemanes,  XHTML1 formatting (Nick Wellnhofer), regexp
1609    transition reduction (William), various XSD Schemas fixes (Kasimier
1610    Buchcik), XInclude fallback problem (William), weird problems with DTD
1611    (William), structured error handler callback context (William), reverse
1612    xmlEncodeSpecialChars() behaviour back to escaping '"'</li>
1613</ul>
1614
1615<h3>2.6.9: Apr 18 2004</h3>
1616<ul>
1617  <li>implement xml:id Working Draft, relaxed XPath id() checking</li>
1618  <li>bugfixes: xmlCtxtReset (Brent Hendricks), line number and CDATA (Dave
1619    Beckett), Relax-NG compilation (William Brack), Regexp patches (with
1620    William), xmlUriEscape (Mark Vakoc), a Relax-NG notAllowed problem (with
1621    William), Relax-NG name classes compares (William), XInclude duplicate
1622    fallback (William), external DTD encoding detection (William), a DTD
1623    validation bug (William), xmlReader Close() fix, recusive extention
1624    schemas</li>
1625  <li>improvements: use xmlRead* APIs in test tools (Mark Vakoc), indenting
1626    save optimization, better handle IIS broken HTTP redirect  behaviour (Ian
1627    Hummel), HTML parser frameset (James Bursa), libxml2-python RPM
1628    dependancy, XML Schemas union support (Kasimier Buchcik), warning removal
1629    clanup (William), keep ChangeLog compressed when installing from RPMs</li>
1630  <li>documentation: examples and xmlDocDumpMemory docs (John Fleck), new
1631    example (load, xpath, modify, save), xmlCatalogDump() comments,</li>
1632  <li>Windows: Borland C++ builder (Eric Zurcher), work around Microsoft
1633    compiler NaN handling bug (Mark Vakoc)</li>
1634</ul>
1635
1636<h3>2.6.8: Mar 23 2004</h3>
1637<ul>
1638  <li>First step of the cleanup of the serialization code and APIs</li>
1639  <li>XML Schemas: mixed content (Adam Dickmeiss), QName handling fixes (Adam
1640    Dickmeiss), anyURI for "" (John Belmonte)</li>
1641  <li>Python: Canonicalization C14N support added (Anthony Carrico)</li>
1642  <li>xmlDocCopyNode() extension (William)</li>
1643  <li>Relax-NG: fix when processing XInclude results (William), external
1644    reference in interleave (William), missing error on &lt;choice&gt;
1645    failure (William), memory leak in schemas datatype facets.</li>
1646  <li>xmlWriter: patch for better DTD support (Alfred Mickautsch)</li>
1647  <li>bug fixes: xmlXPathLangFunction memory leak (Mike Hommey and William
1648    Brack), no ID errors if using HTML_PARSE_NOERROR, xmlcatalog fallbacks to
1649    URI on SYSTEM lookup failure, XInclude parse flags inheritance (William),
1650    XInclude and XPointer fixes for entities (William), XML parser bug
1651    reported by Holger Rauch, nanohttp fd leak (William),  regexps char
1652    groups '-' handling (William), dictionnary reference counting problems,
1653    do not close stderr.</li>
1654  <li>performance patches from Petr Pajas</li>
1655  <li>Documentation fixes: XML_CATALOG_FILES in man pages (Mike Hommey)</li>
1656  <li>compilation and portability fixes: --without-valid, catalog cleanups
1657    (Peter Breitenlohner), MingW patch (Roland Schwingel), cross-compilation
1658    to Windows (Christophe de Vienne),  --with-html-dir fixup (Julio Merino
1659    Vidal), Windows build (Eric Zurcher)</li>
1660</ul>
1661
1662<h3>2.6.7: Feb 23 2004</h3>
1663<ul>
1664  <li>documentation: tutorial updates (John Fleck), benchmark results</li>
1665  <li>xmlWriter: updates and fixes (Alfred Mickautsch, Lucas Brasilino)</li>
1666  <li>XPath optimization (Petr Pajas)</li>
1667  <li>DTD ID handling optimization</li>
1668  <li>bugfixes: xpath number with  &gt; 19 fractional (William Brack), push
1669    mode with unescaped '&gt;' characters, fix xmllint --stream --timing, fix
1670    xmllint --memory --stream memory usage, xmlAttrSerializeTxtContent
1671    handling NULL, trying to fix Relax-NG/Perl interface.</li>
1672  <li>python: 2.3 compatibility, whitespace fixes (Malcolm Tredinnick)</li>
1673  <li>Added relaxng option to xmllint --shell</li>
1674</ul>
1675
1676<h3>2.6.6: Feb 12 2004</h3>
1677<ul>
1678  <li>nanohttp and nanoftp: buffer overflow error on URI parsing (Igor and
1679    William) reported by Yuuichi Teranishi</li>
1680  <li>bugfixes: make test and path issues, xmlWriter attribute serialization
1681    (William Brack), xmlWriter indentation (William), schemas validation
1682    (Eric Haszlakiewicz), XInclude dictionnaries issues (William and Oleg
1683    Paraschenko), XInclude empty fallback (William), HTML warnings (William),
1684    XPointer in XInclude (William), Python namespace serialization,
1685    isolat1ToUTF8 bound error (Alfred Mickautsch), output of parameter
1686    entities in internal subset (William), internal subset bug in push mode,
1687    &lt;xs:all&gt; fix (Alexey Sarytchev)</li>
1688  <li>Build: fix for automake-1.8 (Alexander Winston), warnings removal
1689    (Philip Ludlam), SOCKLEN_T detection fixes (Daniel Richard), fix
1690    --with-minimum configuration.</li>
1691  <li>XInclude: allow the 2001 namespace without warning.</li>
1692  <li>Documentation: missing example/index.html (John Fleck), version
1693    dependancies (John Fleck)</li>
1694  <li>reader API: structured error reporting (Steve Ball)</li>
1695  <li>Windows compilation: mingw, msys (Mikhail Grushinskiy), function
1696    prototype (Cameron Johnson), MSVC6 compiler warnings, _WINSOCKAPI_
1697  patch</li>
1698  <li>Parsers: added xmlByteConsumed(ctxt) API to get the byte offest in
1699    input.</li>
1700</ul>
1701
1702<h3>2.6.5: Jan 25 2004</h3>
1703<ul>
1704  <li>Bugfixes: dictionnaries for schemas (William Brack), regexp segfault
1705    (William), xs:all problem (William), a number of XPointer bugfixes
1706    (William), xmllint error go to stderr, DTD validation problem with
1707    namespace, memory leak (William), SAX1 cleanup and minimal options fixes
1708    (Mark Vadoc), parser context reset on error (Shaun McCance), XPath union
1709    evaluation problem (William) , xmlReallocLoc with NULL (Aleksey Sanin),
1710    XML Schemas double free (Steve Ball), XInclude with no href, argument
1711    callbacks order for XPath callbacks (Frederic Peters)</li>
1712  <li>Documentation: python scripts (William Brack), xslt stylesheets (John
1713    Fleck), doc (Sven Zimmerman), I/O example.</li>
1714  <li>Python bindings: fixes (William), enum support (Stéphane Bidoul),
1715    structured error reporting (Stéphane Bidoul)</li>
1716  <li>XInclude: various fixes for conformance, problem related to dictionnary
1717    references (William &amp; me), recursion (William)</li>
1718  <li>xmlWriter: indentation (Lucas Brasilino), memory leaks (Alfred
1719    Mickautsch),</li>
1720  <li>xmlSchemas: normalizedString datatype (John Belmonte)</li>
1721  <li>code cleanup for strings functions (William)</li>
1722  <li>Windows: compiler patches (Mark Vakoc)</li>
1723  <li>Parser optimizations, a few new XPath and dictionnary APIs for future
1724    XSLT optimizations.</li>
1725</ul>
1726
1727<h3>2.6.4: Dec 24 2003</h3>
1728<ul>
1729  <li>Windows build fixes (Igor Zlatkovic)</li>
1730  <li>Some serious XInclude problems reported by Oleg Paraschenko and</li>
1731  <li>Unix and Makefile packaging fixes (me, William Brack,</li>
1732  <li>Documentation improvements (John Fleck, William Brack), example fix
1733    (Lucas Brasilino)</li>
1734  <li>bugfixes: xmlTextReaderExpand() with xmlReaderWalker, XPath handling of
1735    NULL strings (William Brack) , API building reader or parser from
1736    filedescriptor should not close it, changed XPath sorting to be stable
1737    again (William Brack), xmlGetNodePath() generating '(null)' (William
1738    Brack), DTD validation and namespace bug (William Brack), XML Schemas
1739    double inclusion behaviour</li>
1740</ul>
1741
1742<h3>2.6.3: Dec 10 2003</h3>
1743<ul>
1744  <li>documentation updates and cleanup (DV, William Brack, John Fleck)</li>
1745  <li>added a repository of examples, examples from Aleksey Sanin, Dodji
1746    Seketeli, Alfred Mickautsch</li>
1747  <li>Windows updates: Mark Vakoc, Igor Zlatkovic, Eric Zurcher, Mingw
1748    (Kenneth Haley)</li>
1749  <li>Unicode range checking (William Brack)</li>
1750  <li>code cleanup (William Brack)</li>
1751  <li>Python bindings: doc (John Fleck),  bug fixes</li>
1752  <li>UTF-16 cleanup and BOM issues (William Brack)</li>
1753  <li>bug fixes: ID and xmlReader validation, XPath (William Brack),
1754    xmlWriter (Alfred Mickautsch), hash.h inclusion problem, HTML parser
1755    (James Bursa), attribute defaulting and validation, some serialization
1756    cleanups, XML_GET_LINE macro, memory debug when using threads (William
1757    Brack), serialization of attributes and entities content, xmlWriter
1758    (Daniel Schulman)</li>
1759  <li>XInclude bugfix, new APIs and update to the last version including the
1760    namespace change.</li>
1761  <li>XML Schemas improvements: include (Robert Stepanek), import and
1762    namespace handling, fixed the regression tests troubles, added examples
1763    based on Eric van der Vlist book, regexp fixes</li>
1764  <li>preliminary pattern support for streaming (needed for schemas
1765    constraints), added xmlTextReaderPreservePattern() to collect subdocument
1766    when streaming.</li>
1767  <li>various fixes in the structured error handling</li>
1768</ul>
1769
1770<h3>2.6.2: Nov 4 2003</h3>
1771<ul>
1772  <li>XPath context unregistration fixes</li>
1773  <li>text node coalescing fixes (Mark Lilback)</li>
1774  <li>API to screate a W3C Schemas from an existing document (Steve Ball)</li>
1775  <li>BeOS patches (Marcin 'Shard' Konicki)</li>
1776  <li>xmlStrVPrintf function added (Aleksey Sanin)</li>
1777  <li>compilation fixes (Mark Vakoc)</li>
1778  <li>stdin parsing fix (William Brack)</li>
1779  <li>a posteriori DTD validation fixes</li>
1780  <li>xmlReader bug fixes: Walker fixes, python bindings</li>
1781  <li>fixed xmlStopParser() to really stop the parser and errors</li>
1782  <li>always generate line numbers when using the new xmlReadxxx
1783  functions</li>
1784  <li>added XInclude support to the xmlReader interface</li>
1785  <li>implemented XML_PARSE_NONET parser option</li>
1786  <li>DocBook XSLT processing bug fixed</li>
1787  <li>HTML serialization for &lt;p&gt; elements (William Brack and me)</li>
1788  <li>XPointer failure in XInclude are now handled as resource errors</li>
1789  <li>fixed xmllint --html to use the HTML serializer on output (added
1790    --xmlout to implement the previous behaviour of saving it using the XML
1791    serializer)</li>
1792</ul>
1793
1794<h3>2.6.1: Oct 28 2003</h3>
1795<ul>
1796  <li>Mostly bugfixes after the big 2.6.0 changes</li>
1797  <li>Unix compilation patches: libxml.m4 (Patrick Welche), warnings cleanup
1798    (William Brack)</li>
1799  <li>Windows compilation patches (Joachim Bauch, Stephane Bidoul, Igor
1800    Zlatkovic)</li>
1801  <li>xmlWriter bugfix (Alfred Mickautsch)</li>
1802  <li>chvalid.[ch]: couple of fixes from Stephane Bidoul</li>
1803  <li>context reset: error state reset, push parser reset (Graham
1804  Bennett)</li>
1805  <li>context reuse: generate errors if file is not readable</li>
1806  <li>defaulted attributes for element coming from internal entities
1807    (Stephane Bidoul)</li>
1808  <li>Python: tab and spaces mix (William Brack)</li>
1809  <li>Error handler could crash in DTD validation in 2.6.0</li>
1810  <li>xmlReader: do not use the document or element _private field</li>
1811  <li>testSAX.c: avoid a problem with some PIs (Massimo Morara)</li>
1812  <li>general bug fixes: mandatory encoding in text decl, serializing
1813    Document Fragment nodes, xmlSearchNs 2.6.0 problem (Kasimier Buchcik),
1814    XPath errors not reported,  slow HTML parsing of large documents.</li>
1815</ul>
1816
1817<h3>2.6.0: Oct 20 2003</h3>
1818<ul>
1819  <li>Major revision release: should be API and ABI compatible but got a lot
1820    of change</li>
1821  <li>Increased the library modularity, far more options can be stripped out,
1822    a --with-minimum configuration will weight around 160KBytes</li>
1823  <li>Use per parser and per document dictionnary, allocate names and small
1824    text nodes from the dictionnary</li>
1825  <li>Switch to a SAX2 like parser rewrote most of the XML parser core,
1826    provides namespace resolution and defaulted attributes, minimize memory
1827    allocations and copies, namespace checking and specific error handling,
1828    immutable buffers, make predefined entities static structures, etc...</li>
1829  <li>rewrote all the error handling in the library, all errors can be
1830    intercepted at a structured level, with precise information
1831  available.</li>
1832  <li>New simpler and more generic XML and HTML parser APIs, allowing to
1833    easilly modify the parsing options and reuse parser context for multiple
1834    consecutive documents.</li>
1835  <li>Similar new APIs for the xmlReader, for options and reuse, provided new
1836    functions to access content as const strings, use them for Python
1837  bindings</li>
1838  <li>a  lot of other smaller API improvements: xmlStrPrintf (Aleksey Sanin),
1839    Walker i.e. reader on a document tree based on Alfred Mickautsch code,
1840    make room in nodes for line numbers, reference counting and future PSVI
1841    extensions, generation of character ranges to be checked with faster
1842    algorithm (William),  xmlParserMaxDepth (Crutcher Dunnavant), buffer
1843    access</li>
1844  <li>New xmlWriter API provided by Alfred Mickautsch</li>
1845  <li>Schemas: base64 support by Anthony Carrico</li>
1846  <li>Parser&lt;-&gt;HTTP integration fix, proper processing of the Mime-Type
1847    and charset information if available.</li>
1848  <li>Relax-NG: bug fixes including the one reported by Martijn Faassen and
1849    zeroOrMore, better error reporting.</li>
1850  <li>Python bindings (Stéphane Bidoul), never use stdout for errors
1851  output</li>
1852  <li>Portability: all the headers have macros for export and calling
1853    convention definitions (Igor Zlatkovic), VMS update (Craig A. Berry),
1854    Windows: threads (Jesse Pelton), Borland compiler (Eric Zurcher,  Igor),
1855    Mingw (Igor), typos (Mark Vakoc),  beta version (Stephane Bidoul),
1856    warning cleanups on AIX and MIPS compilers (William Brack), BeOS (Marcin
1857    'Shard' Konicki)</li>
1858  <li>Documentation fixes and README (William Brack), search fix (William),
1859    tutorial updates (John Fleck), namespace docs (Stefan Kost)</li>
1860  <li>Bug fixes: xmlCleanupParser (Dave Beckett), threading uninitialized
1861    mutexes, HTML doctype lowercase,  SAX/IO (William), compression detection
1862    and restore (William), attribute declaration in DTDs (William), namespace
1863    on attribute in HTML output (William), input filename (Rob Richards),
1864    namespace DTD validation, xmlReplaceNode (Chris Ryland), I/O callbacks
1865    (Markus Keim), CDATA serialization (Shaun McCance), xmlReader (Peter
1866    Derr), high codepoint charref like &amp;#x10FFFF;, buffer access in push
1867    mode (Justin Fletcher), TLS threads on Windows (Jesse Pelton), XPath bug
1868    (William), xmlCleanupParser (Marc Liyanage), CDATA output (William), HTTP
1869    error handling.</li>
1870  <li>xmllint options: --dtdvalidfpi for Tobias Reif, --sax1 for compat
1871    testing,  --nodict for building without tree dictionnary, --nocdata to
1872    replace CDATA by text, --nsclean to remove surperfluous  namespace
1873    declarations</li>
1874  <li>added xml2-config --libtool-libs option from Kevin P. Fleming</li>
1875  <li>a lot of profiling and tuning of the code, speedup patch for
1876    xmlSearchNs() by Luca Padovani. The xmlReader should do far less
1877    allocation and it speed should get closer to SAX. Chris Anderson worked
1878    on speeding and cleaning up repetitive checking code.</li>
1879  <li>cleanup of "make tests"</li>
1880  <li>libxml-2.0-uninstalled.pc from Malcolm Tredinnick</li>
1881  <li>deactivated the broken docBook SGML parser code and plugged the XML
1882    parser instead.</li>
1883</ul>
1884
1885<h3>2.5.11: Sep 9 2003</h3>
1886
1887<p>A bugfix only release:</p>
1888<ul>
1889  <li>risk of crash in Relax-NG</li>
1890  <li>risk of crash when using multithreaded programs</li>
1891</ul>
1892
1893<h3>2.5.10: Aug 15 2003</h3>
1894
1895<p>A bugfixes only release</p>
1896<ul>
1897  <li>Windows Makefiles (William Brack)</li>
1898  <li>UTF-16 support fixes (Mark Itzcovitz)</li>
1899  <li>Makefile and portability (William Brack) automake, Linux alpha, Mingw
1900    on Windows (Mikhail Grushinskiy)</li>
1901  <li>HTML parser (Oliver Stoeneberg)</li>
1902  <li>XInclude performance problem reported by Kevin Ruscoe</li>
1903  <li>XML parser performance problem reported by Grant Goodale</li>
1904  <li>xmlSAXParseDTD() bug fix from Malcolm Tredinnick</li>
1905  <li>and a couple other cleanup</li>
1906</ul>
1907
1908<h3>2.5.9: Aug 9 2003</h3>
1909<ul>
1910  <li>bugfixes: IPv6 portability, xmlHasNsProp (Markus Keim), Windows build
1911    (Wiliam Brake, Jesse Pelton, Igor), Schemas (Peter Sobisch), threading
1912    (Rob Richards), hexBinary type (), UTF-16 BOM (Dodji Seketeli),
1913    xmlReader, Relax-NG schemas compilation, namespace handling,  EXSLT (Sean
1914    Griffin), HTML parsing problem (William Brack), DTD validation for mixed
1915    content + namespaces, HTML serialization, library initialization,
1916    progressive HTML parser</li>
1917  <li>better interfaces for Relax-NG error handling (Joachim Bauch, )</li>
1918  <li>adding xmlXIncludeProcessTree() for XInclud'ing in a subtree</li>
1919  <li>doc fixes and improvements (John Fleck)</li>
1920  <li>configure flag for -with-fexceptions when embedding in C++</li>
1921  <li>couple of new UTF-8 helper functions (William Brack)</li>
1922  <li>general encoding cleanup + ISO-8859-x without iconv (Peter Jacobi)</li>
1923  <li>xmlTextReader cleanup + enum for node types (Bjorn Reese)</li>
1924  <li>general compilation/warning cleanup Solaris/HP-UX/... (William
1925  Brack)</li>
1926</ul>
1927
1928<h3>2.5.8: Jul 6 2003</h3>
1929<ul>
1930  <li>bugfixes: XPath, XInclude, file/URI mapping, UTF-16 save (Mark
1931    Itzcovitz), UTF-8 checking, URI saving, error printing (William Brack),
1932    PI related memleak, compilation without schemas or without xpath (Joerg
1933    Schmitz-Linneweber/Garry Pennington), xmlUnlinkNode problem with DTDs,
1934    rpm problem on , i86_64, removed a few compilation problems from 2.5.7,
1935    xmlIOParseDTD, and xmlSAXParseDTD (Malcolm Tredinnick)</li>
1936  <li>portability: DJGPP (MsDos) , OpenVMS (Craig A. Berry)</li>
1937  <li>William Brack fixed multithreading lock problems</li>
1938  <li>IPv6 patch for FTP and HTTP accesses (Archana Shah/Wipro)</li>
1939  <li>Windows fixes (Igor Zlatkovic,  Eric Zurcher), threading (Stéphane
1940    Bidoul)</li>
1941  <li>A few W3C Schemas Structure improvements</li>
1942  <li>W3C Schemas Datatype improvements (Charlie Bozeman)</li>
1943  <li>Python bindings for thread globals (Stéphane Bidoul), and method/class
1944    generator</li>
1945  <li>added --nonet option to xmllint</li>
1946  <li>documentation improvements (John Fleck)</li>
1947</ul>
1948
1949<h3>2.5.7: Apr 25 2003</h3>
1950<ul>
1951  <li>Relax-NG: Compiling to regexp and streaming validation on top of the
1952    xmlReader interface, added to xmllint --stream</li>
1953  <li>xmlReader: Expand(), Next() and DOM access glue, bug fixes</li>
1954  <li>Support for large files: RGN validated a 4.5GB instance</li>
1955  <li>Thread support is now configured in by default</li>
1956  <li>Fixes: update of the Trio code (Bjorn), WXS Date and Duration fixes
1957    (Charles Bozeman), DTD and namespaces (Brent Hendricks), HTML push parser
1958    and zero bytes handling, some missing Windows file path conversions,
1959    behaviour of the parser and validator in the presence of "out of memory"
1960    error conditions</li>
1961  <li>extended the API to be able to plug a garbage collecting memory
1962    allocator, added xmlMallocAtomic() and modified the allocations
1963    accordingly.</li>
1964  <li>Performances: removed excessive malloc() calls, speedup of the push and
1965    xmlReader interfaces, removed excessive thread locking</li>
1966  <li>Documentation: man page (John Fleck), xmlReader documentation</li>
1967  <li>Python: adding binding for xmlCatalogAddLocal (Brent M Hendricks)</li>
1968</ul>
1969
1970<h3>2.5.6: Apr 1 2003</h3>
1971<ul>
1972  <li>Fixed W3C XML Schemas datatype, should be compliant now except for
1973    binHex and base64 which are not supported yet.</li>
1974  <li>bug fixes: non-ASCII IDs, HTML output, XInclude on large docs and
1975    XInclude entities handling, encoding detection on external subsets, XML
1976    Schemas bugs and memory leaks, HTML parser (James Bursa)</li>
1977  <li>portability: python/trio (Albert Chin), Sun compiler warnings</li>
1978  <li>documentation: added --relaxng option to xmllint man page (John)</li>
1979  <li>improved error reporting: xml:space, start/end tag mismatches, Relax NG
1980    errors</li>
1981</ul>
1982
1983<h3>2.5.5: Mar 24 2003</h3>
1984<ul>
1985  <li>Lot of fixes on the Relax NG implementation. More testing including
1986    DocBook and TEI examples.</li>
1987  <li>Increased the support for W3C XML Schemas datatype</li>
1988  <li>Several bug fixes in the URI handling layer</li>
1989  <li>Bug fixes: HTML parser, xmlReader, DTD validation, XPath, encoding
1990    conversion, line counting in the parser.</li>
1991  <li>Added support for $XMLLINT_INDENT environment variable, FTP delete</li>
1992  <li>Fixed the RPM spec file name</li>
1993</ul>
1994
1995<h3>2.5.4: Feb 20 2003</h3>
1996<ul>
1997  <li>Conformance testing and lot of fixes on Relax NG and XInclude
1998    implementation</li>
1999  <li>Implementation of XPointer element() scheme</li>
2000  <li>Bug fixes: XML parser, XInclude entities merge, validity checking on
2001    namespaces,
2002    <p>2 serialization bugs, node info generation problems, a DTD regexp
2003    generation problem.</p>
2004  </li>
2005  <li>Portability: windows updates and path canonicalization (Igor)</li>
2006  <li>A few typo fixes (Kjartan Maraas)</li>
2007  <li>Python bindings generator fixes (Stephane Bidoul)</li>
2008</ul>
2009
2010<h3>2.5.3: Feb 10 2003</h3>
2011<ul>
2012  <li>RelaxNG and XML Schemas datatypes improvements, and added a first
2013    version of RelaxNG Python bindings</li>
2014  <li>Fixes: XLink (Sean Chittenden), XInclude (Sean Chittenden), API fix for
2015    serializing namespace nodes, encoding conversion bug, XHTML1
2016  serialization</li>
2017  <li>Portability fixes: Windows (Igor), AMD 64bits RPM spec file</li>
2018</ul>
2019
2020<h3>2.5.2: Feb 5 2003</h3>
2021<ul>
2022  <li>First implementation of RelaxNG, added --relaxng flag to xmllint</li>
2023  <li>Schemas support now compiled in by default.</li>
2024  <li>Bug fixes: DTD validation, namespace checking, XInclude and entities,
2025    delegateURI in XML Catalogs, HTML parser, XML reader (Stéphane Bidoul),
2026    XPath parser and evaluation,  UTF8ToUTF8 serialization, XML reader memory
2027    consumption, HTML parser, HTML serialization in the presence of
2028  namespaces</li>
2029  <li>added an HTML API to check elements and attributes.</li>
2030  <li>Documentation improvement, PDF for the tutorial (John Fleck), doc
2031    patches (Stefan Kost)</li>
2032  <li>Portability fixes: NetBSD (Julio Merino), Windows (Igor Zlatkovic)</li>
2033  <li>Added python bindings for XPointer, contextual error reporting
2034    (Stéphane Bidoul)</li>
2035  <li>URI/file escaping problems (Stefano Zacchiroli)</li>
2036</ul>
2037
2038<h3>2.5.1: Jan 8 2003</h3>
2039<ul>
2040  <li>Fixes a memory leak and configuration/compilation problems in 2.5.0</li>
2041  <li>documentation updates (John)</li>
2042  <li>a couple of XmlTextReader fixes</li>
2043</ul>
2044
2045<h3>2.5.0: Jan 6 2003</h3>
2046<ul>
2047  <li>New <a href="xmlreader.html">XmltextReader interface</a> based on C#
2048    API (with help of Stéphane Bidoul)</li>
2049  <li>Windows: more exports, including the new API (Igor)</li>
2050  <li>XInclude fallback fix</li>
2051  <li>Python: bindings for the new API, packaging (Stéphane Bidoul),
2052    drv_libxml2.py Python xml.sax driver (Stéphane Bidoul), fixes, speedup
2053    and iterators for Python-2.2 (Hannu Krosing)</li>
2054  <li>Tutorial fixes (john Fleck and Niraj Tolia) xmllint man update
2055  (John)</li>
2056  <li>Fix an XML parser bug raised by Vyacheslav Pindyura</li>
2057  <li>Fix for VMS serialization (Nigel Hall) and config (Craig A. Berry)</li>
2058  <li>Entities handling fixes</li>
2059  <li>new API to optionally track node creation and deletion (Lukas
2060  Schroeder)</li>
2061  <li>Added documentation for the XmltextReader interface and some <a
2062    href="guidelines.html">XML guidelines</a></li>
2063</ul>
2064
2065<h3>2.4.30: Dec 12 2002</h3>
2066<ul>
2067  <li>2.4.29 broke the python bindings, rereleasing</li>
2068  <li>Improvement/fixes of the XML API generator, and couple of minor code
2069    fixes.</li>
2070</ul>
2071
2072<h3>2.4.29: Dec 11 2002</h3>
2073<ul>
2074  <li>Windows fixes (Igor): Windows CE port, pthread linking, python bindings
2075    (Stéphane Bidoul), Mingw (Magnus Henoch), and export list updates</li>
2076  <li>Fix for prev in python bindings (ERDI Gergo)</li>
2077  <li>Fix for entities handling (Marcus Clarke)</li>
2078  <li>Refactored the XML and HTML dumps to a single code path, fixed XHTML1
2079    dump</li>
2080  <li>Fix for URI parsing when handling URNs with fragment identifiers</li>
2081  <li>Fix for HTTP URL escaping problem</li>
2082  <li>added an TextXmlReader (C#) like API (work in progress)</li>
2083  <li>Rewrote the API in XML generation script, includes a C parser and saves
2084    more information needed for C# bindings</li>
2085</ul>
2086
2087<h3>2.4.28: Nov 22 2002</h3>
2088<ul>
2089  <li>a couple of python binding fixes</li>
2090  <li>2 bug fixes in the XML push parser</li>
2091  <li>potential memory leak removed (Martin Stoilov)</li>
2092  <li>fix to the configure script for Unix (Dimitri Papadopoulos)</li>
2093  <li>added encoding support for XInclude parse="text"</li>
2094  <li>autodetection of XHTML1 and specific serialization rules added</li>
2095  <li>nasty threading bug fixed (William Brack)</li>
2096</ul>
2097
2098<h3>2.4.27: Nov 17 2002</h3>
2099<ul>
2100  <li>fixes for the Python bindings</li>
2101  <li>a number of bug fixes: SGML catalogs, xmlParseBalancedChunkMemory(),
2102    HTML parser,  Schemas (Charles Bozeman), document fragment support
2103    (Christian Glahn), xmlReconciliateNs (Brian Stafford), XPointer,
2104    xmlFreeNode(), xmlSAXParseMemory (Peter Jones), xmlGetNodePath (Petr
2105    Pajas), entities processing</li>
2106  <li>added grep to xmllint --shell</li>
2107  <li>VMS update patch from Craig A. Berry</li>
2108  <li>cleanup of the Windows build with support for more compilers (Igor),
2109    better thread support on Windows</li>
2110  <li>cleanup of Unix Makefiles and spec file</li>
2111  <li>Improvements to the documentation (John Fleck)</li>
2112</ul>
2113
2114<h3>2.4.26: Oct 18 2002</h3>
2115<ul>
2116  <li>Patches for Windows CE port, improvements on Windows paths handling</li>
2117  <li>Fixes to the validation  code (DTD and Schemas), xmlNodeGetPath() ,
2118    HTML serialization, Namespace compliance,  and a number of small
2119  problems</li>
2120</ul>
2121
2122<h3>2.4.25: Sep 26 2002</h3>
2123<ul>
2124  <li>A number of bug fixes: XPath, validation, Python bindings, DOM and
2125    tree, xmlI/O,  Html</li>
2126  <li>Serious rewrite of XInclude</li>
2127  <li>Made XML Schemas regexp part of the default build and APIs, small fix
2128    and improvement of the regexp core</li>
2129  <li>Changed the validation code to reuse XML Schemas regexp APIs</li>
2130  <li>Better handling of Windows file paths, improvement of Makefiles (Igor,
2131    Daniel Gehriger, Mark Vakoc)</li>
2132  <li>Improved the python I/O bindings, the tests, added resolver and regexp
2133    APIs</li>
2134  <li>New logos from Marc Liyanage</li>
2135  <li>Tutorial improvements: John Fleck, Christopher Harris</li>
2136  <li>Makefile: Fixes for AMD x86_64 (Mandrake), DESTDIR (Christophe
2137  Merlet)</li>
2138  <li>removal of all stderr/perror use for error reporting</li>
2139  <li>Better error reporting: XPath and DTD validation</li>
2140  <li>update of the trio portability layer (Bjorn Reese)</li>
2141</ul>
2142
2143<p><strong>2.4.24: Aug 22 2002</strong></p>
2144<ul>
2145  <li>XPath fixes (William), xf:escape-uri() (Wesley Terpstra)</li>
2146  <li>Python binding fixes: makefiles (William), generator, rpm build, x86-64
2147    (fcrozat)</li>
2148  <li>HTML &lt;style&gt; and boolean attributes serializer fixes</li>
2149  <li>C14N improvements by Aleksey</li>
2150  <li>doc cleanups: Rick Jones</li>
2151  <li>Windows compiler makefile updates: Igor and Elizabeth Barham</li>
2152  <li>XInclude: implementation of fallback and xml:base fixup added</li>
2153</ul>
2154
2155<h3>2.4.23: July 6 2002</h3>
2156<ul>
2157  <li>performances patches: Peter Jacobi</li>
2158  <li>c14n fixes, testsuite and performances: Aleksey Sanin</li>
2159  <li>added xmlDocFormatDump: Chema Celorio</li>
2160  <li>new tutorial: John Fleck</li>
2161  <li>new hash functions and performances: Sander Vesik, portability fix from
2162    Peter Jacobi</li>
2163  <li>a number of bug fixes: XPath (William Brack, Richard Jinks), XML and
2164    HTML parsers, ID lookup function</li>
2165  <li>removal of all remaining sprintf: Aleksey Sanin</li>
2166</ul>
2167
2168<h3>2.4.22: May 27 2002</h3>
2169<ul>
2170  <li>a number of bug fixes: configure scripts, base handling, parser, memory
2171    usage, HTML parser, XPath, documentation (Christian Cornelssen),
2172    indentation, URI parsing</li>
2173  <li>Optimizations for XMLSec, fixing and making public some of the network
2174    protocol handlers (Aleksey)</li>
2175  <li>performance patch from Gary Pennington</li>
2176  <li>Charles Bozeman provided date and time support for XML Schemas
2177  datatypes</li>
2178</ul>
2179
2180<h3>2.4.21: Apr 29 2002</h3>
2181
2182<p>This release is both a bug fix release and also contains the early XML
2183Schemas <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-1/">structures</a> and <a
2184href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/">datatypes</a> code, beware, all
2185interfaces are likely to change, there is huge holes, it is clearly a work in
2186progress and don't even think of putting this code in a production system,
2187it's actually not compiled in by default. The real fixes are:</p>
2188<ul>
2189  <li>a couple of bugs or limitations introduced in 2.4.20</li>
2190  <li>patches for Borland C++ and MSC by Igor</li>
2191  <li>some fixes on XPath strings and conformance patches by Richard
2192  Jinks</li>
2193  <li>patch from Aleksey for the ExcC14N specification</li>
2194  <li>OSF/1 bug fix by Bjorn</li>
2195</ul>
2196
2197<h3>2.4.20: Apr 15 2002</h3>
2198<ul>
2199  <li>bug fixes: file descriptor leak, XPath, HTML output, DTD validation</li>
2200  <li>XPath conformance testing by Richard Jinks</li>
2201  <li>Portability fixes: Solaris, MPE/iX, Windows, OSF/1, python bindings,
2202    libxml.m4</li>
2203</ul>
2204
2205<h3>2.4.19: Mar 25 2002</h3>
2206<ul>
2207  <li>bug fixes: half a dozen XPath bugs, Validation, ISO-Latin to UTF8
2208    encoder</li>
2209  <li>portability fixes in the HTTP code</li>
2210  <li>memory allocation checks using valgrind, and profiling tests</li>
2211  <li>revamp of the Windows build and Makefiles</li>
2212</ul>
2213
2214<h3>2.4.18: Mar 18 2002</h3>
2215<ul>
2216  <li>bug fixes: tree, SAX, canonicalization, validation, portability,
2217  XPath</li>
2218  <li>removed the --with-buffer option it was becoming unmaintainable</li>
2219  <li>serious cleanup of the Python makefiles</li>
2220  <li>speedup patch to XPath very effective for DocBook stylesheets</li>
2221  <li>Fixes for Windows build, cleanup of the documentation</li>
2222</ul>
2223
2224<h3>2.4.17: Mar 8 2002</h3>
2225<ul>
2226  <li>a lot of bug fixes, including "namespace nodes have no parents in
2227  XPath"</li>
2228  <li>fixed/improved the Python wrappers, added more examples and more
2229    regression tests, XPath extension functions can now return node-sets</li>
2230  <li>added the XML Canonicalization support from Aleksey Sanin</li>
2231</ul>
2232
2233<h3>2.4.16: Feb 20 2002</h3>
2234<ul>
2235  <li>a lot of bug fixes, most of them were triggered by the XML Testsuite
2236    from OASIS and W3C. Compliance has been significantly improved.</li>
2237  <li>a couple of portability fixes too.</li>
2238</ul>
2239
2240<h3>2.4.15: Feb 11 2002</h3>
2241<ul>
2242  <li>Fixed the Makefiles, especially the python module ones</li>
2243  <li>A few bug fixes and cleanup</li>
2244  <li>Includes cleanup</li>
2245</ul>
2246
2247<h3>2.4.14: Feb 8 2002</h3>
2248<ul>
2249  <li>Change of License to the <a
2250    href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html">MIT
2251    License</a> basically for integration in XFree86 codebase, and removing
2252    confusion around the previous dual-licensing</li>
2253  <li>added Python bindings, beta software but should already be quite
2254    complete</li>
2255  <li>a large number of fixes and cleanups, especially for all tree
2256    manipulations</li>
2257  <li>cleanup of the headers, generation of a reference API definition in
2258  XML</li>
2259</ul>
2260
2261<h3>2.4.13: Jan 14 2002</h3>
2262<ul>
2263  <li>update of the documentation: John Fleck and Charlie Bozeman</li>
2264  <li>cleanup of timing code from Justin Fletcher</li>
2265  <li>fixes for Windows and initial thread support on Win32: Igor and Serguei
2266    Narojnyi</li>
2267  <li>Cygwin patch from Robert Collins</li>
2268  <li>added xmlSetEntityReferenceFunc() for Keith Isdale work on xsldbg</li>
2269</ul>
2270
2271<h3>2.4.12: Dec 7 2001</h3>
2272<ul>
2273  <li>a few bug fixes: thread (Gary Pennington), xmllint (Geert Kloosterman),
2274    XML parser (Robin Berjon), XPointer (Danny Jamshy), I/O cleanups
2275  (robert)</li>
2276  <li>Eric Lavigne contributed project files for MacOS</li>
2277  <li>some makefiles cleanups</li>
2278</ul>
2279
2280<h3>2.4.11: Nov 26 2001</h3>
2281<ul>
2282  <li>fixed a couple of errors in the includes, fixed a few bugs, some code
2283    cleanups</li>
2284  <li>xmllint man pages improvement by Heiko Rupp</li>
2285  <li>updated VMS build instructions from John A Fotheringham</li>
2286  <li>Windows Makefiles updates from Igor</li>
2287</ul>
2288
2289<h3>2.4.10: Nov 10 2001</h3>
2290<ul>
2291  <li>URI escaping fix (Joel Young)</li>
2292  <li>added xmlGetNodePath() (for paths or XPointers generation)</li>
2293  <li>Fixes namespace handling problems when using DTD and validation</li>
2294  <li>improvements on xmllint: Morus Walter patches for --format and
2295    --encode, Stefan Kost and Heiko Rupp improvements on the --shell</li>
2296  <li>fixes for xmlcatalog linking pointed by Weiqi Gao</li>
2297  <li>fixes to the HTML parser</li>
2298</ul>
2299
2300<h3>2.4.9: Nov 6 2001</h3>
2301<ul>
2302  <li>fixes more catalog bugs</li>
2303  <li>avoid a compilation problem, improve xmlGetLineNo()</li>
2304</ul>
2305
2306<h3>2.4.8: Nov 4 2001</h3>
2307<ul>
2308  <li>fixed SGML catalogs broken in previous release, updated xmlcatalog
2309  tool</li>
2310  <li>fixed a compile errors and some includes troubles.</li>
2311</ul>
2312
2313<h3>2.4.7: Oct 30 2001</h3>
2314<ul>
2315  <li>exported some debugging interfaces</li>
2316  <li>serious rewrite of the catalog code</li>
2317  <li>integrated Gary Pennington thread safety patch, added configure option
2318    and regression tests</li>
2319  <li>removed an HTML parser bug</li>
2320  <li>fixed a couple of potentially serious validation bugs</li>
2321  <li>integrated the SGML DocBook support in xmllint</li>
2322  <li>changed the nanoftp anonymous login passwd</li>
2323  <li>some I/O cleanup and a couple of interfaces for Perl wrapper</li>
2324  <li>general bug fixes</li>
2325  <li>updated xmllint man page by John Fleck</li>
2326  <li>some VMS and Windows updates</li>
2327</ul>
2328
2329<h3>2.4.6: Oct 10 2001</h3>
2330<ul>
2331  <li>added an updated man pages by John Fleck</li>
2332  <li>portability and configure fixes</li>
2333  <li>an infinite loop on the HTML parser was removed (William)</li>
2334  <li>Windows makefile patches from Igor</li>
2335  <li>fixed half a dozen bugs reported for libxml or libxslt</li>
2336  <li>updated xmlcatalog to be able to modify SGML super catalogs</li>
2337</ul>
2338
2339<h3>2.4.5: Sep 14 2001</h3>
2340<ul>
2341  <li>Remove a few annoying bugs in 2.4.4</li>
2342  <li>forces the HTML serializer to output decimal charrefs since some
2343    version of Netscape can't handle hexadecimal ones</li>
2344</ul>
2345
2346<h3>1.8.16: Sep 14 2001</h3>
2347<ul>
2348  <li>maintenance release of the old libxml1 branch, couple of bug and
2349    portability fixes</li>
2350</ul>
2351
2352<h3>2.4.4: Sep 12 2001</h3>
2353<ul>
2354  <li>added --convert to xmlcatalog, bug fixes and cleanups of XML
2355  Catalog</li>
2356  <li>a few bug fixes and some portability changes</li>
2357  <li>some documentation cleanups</li>
2358</ul>
2359
2360<h3>2.4.3:  Aug 23 2001</h3>
2361<ul>
2362  <li>XML Catalog support see the doc</li>
2363  <li>New NaN/Infinity floating point code</li>
2364  <li>A few bug fixes</li>
2365</ul>
2366
2367<h3>2.4.2:  Aug 15 2001</h3>
2368<ul>
2369  <li>adds xmlLineNumbersDefault() to control line number generation</li>
2370  <li>lot of bug fixes</li>
2371  <li>the Microsoft MSC projects files should now be up to date</li>
2372  <li>inheritance of namespaces from DTD defaulted attributes</li>
2373  <li>fixes a serious potential security bug</li>
2374  <li>added a --format option to xmllint</li>
2375</ul>
2376
2377<h3>2.4.1:  July 24 2001</h3>
2378<ul>
2379  <li>possibility to keep line numbers in the tree</li>
2380  <li>some computation NaN fixes</li>
2381  <li>extension of the XPath API</li>
2382  <li>cleanup for alpha and ia64 targets</li>
2383  <li>patch to allow saving through HTTP PUT or POST</li>
2384</ul>
2385
2386<h3>2.4.0: July 10 2001</h3>
2387<ul>
2388  <li>Fixed a few bugs in XPath, validation, and tree handling.</li>
2389  <li>Fixed XML Base implementation, added a couple of examples to the
2390    regression tests</li>
2391  <li>A bit of cleanup</li>
2392</ul>
2393
2394<h3>2.3.14: July 5 2001</h3>
2395<ul>
2396  <li>fixed some entities problems and reduce memory requirement when
2397    substituting them</li>
2398  <li>lots of improvements in the XPath queries interpreter can be
2399    substantially faster</li>
2400  <li>Makefiles and configure cleanups</li>
2401  <li>Fixes to XPath variable eval, and compare on empty node set</li>
2402  <li>HTML tag closing bug fixed</li>
2403  <li>Fixed an URI reference computation problem when validating</li>
2404</ul>
2405
2406<h3>2.3.13: June 28 2001</h3>
2407<ul>
2408  <li>2.3.12 configure.in was broken as well as the push mode XML parser</li>
2409  <li>a few more fixes for compilation on Windows MSC by Yon Derek</li>
2410</ul>
2411
2412<h3>1.8.14: June 28 2001</h3>
2413<ul>
2414  <li>Zbigniew Chyla gave a patch to use the old XML parser in push mode</li>
2415  <li>Small Makefile fix</li>
2416</ul>
2417
2418<h3>2.3.12: June 26 2001</h3>
2419<ul>
2420  <li>lots of cleanup</li>
2421  <li>a couple of validation fix</li>
2422  <li>fixed line number counting</li>
2423  <li>fixed serious problems in the XInclude processing</li>
2424  <li>added support for UTF8 BOM at beginning of entities</li>
2425  <li>fixed a strange gcc optimizer bugs in xpath handling of float, gcc-3.0
2426    miscompile uri.c (William), Thomas Leitner provided a fix for the
2427    optimizer on Tru64</li>
2428  <li>incorporated Yon Derek and Igor Zlatkovic  fixes and improvements for
2429    compilation on Windows MSC</li>
2430  <li>update of libxml-doc.el (Felix Natter)</li>
2431  <li>fixed 2 bugs in URI normalization code</li>
2432</ul>
2433
2434<h3>2.3.11: June 17 2001</h3>
2435<ul>
2436  <li>updates to trio, Makefiles and configure should fix some portability
2437    problems (alpha)</li>
2438  <li>fixed some HTML serialization problems (pre, script, and block/inline
2439    handling), added encoding aware APIs, cleanup of this code</li>
2440  <li>added xmlHasNsProp()</li>
2441  <li>implemented a specific PI for encoding support in the DocBook SGML
2442    parser</li>
2443  <li>some XPath fixes (-Infinity, / as a function parameter and namespaces
2444    node selection)</li>
2445  <li>fixed a performance problem and an error in the validation code</li>
2446  <li>fixed XInclude routine to implement the recursive behaviour</li>
2447  <li>fixed xmlFreeNode problem when libxml is included statically twice</li>
2448  <li>added --version to xmllint for bug reports</li>
2449</ul>
2450
2451<h3>2.3.10: June 1 2001</h3>
2452<ul>
2453  <li>fixed the SGML catalog support</li>
2454  <li>a number of reported bugs got fixed, in XPath, iconv detection,
2455    XInclude processing</li>
2456  <li>XPath string function should now handle unicode correctly</li>
2457</ul>
2458
2459<h3>2.3.9: May 19 2001</h3>
2460
2461<p>Lots of bugfixes, and added a basic SGML catalog support:</p>
2462<ul>
2463  <li>HTML push bugfix #54891 and another patch from Jonas Borgström</li>
2464  <li>some serious speed optimization again</li>
2465  <li>some documentation cleanups</li>
2466  <li>trying to get better linking on Solaris (-R)</li>
2467  <li>XPath API cleanup from Thomas Broyer</li>
2468  <li>Validation bug fixed #54631, added a patch from Gary Pennington, fixed
2469    xmlValidGetValidElements()</li>
2470  <li>Added an INSTALL file</li>
2471  <li>Attribute removal added to API: #54433</li>
2472  <li>added a basic support for SGML catalogs</li>
2473  <li>fixed xmlKeepBlanksDefault(0) API</li>
2474  <li>bugfix in xmlNodeGetLang()</li>
2475  <li>fixed a small configure portability problem</li>
2476  <li>fixed an inversion of SYSTEM and PUBLIC identifier in HTML document</li>
2477</ul>
2478
2479<h3>1.8.13: May 14 2001</h3>
2480<ul>
2481  <li>bugfixes release of the old libxml1 branch used by Gnome</li>
2482</ul>
2483
2484<h3>2.3.8: May 3 2001</h3>
2485<ul>
2486  <li>Integrated an SGML DocBook parser for the Gnome project</li>
2487  <li>Fixed a few things in the HTML parser</li>
2488  <li>Fixed some XPath bugs raised by XSLT use, tried to fix the floating
2489    point portability issue</li>
2490  <li>Speed improvement (8M/s for SAX, 3M/s for DOM, 1.5M/s for
2491    DOM+validation using the XML REC as input and a 700MHz celeron).</li>
2492  <li>incorporated more Windows cleanup</li>
2493  <li>added xmlSaveFormatFile()</li>
2494  <li>fixed problems in copying nodes with entities references (gdome)</li>
2495  <li>removed some troubles surrounding the new validation module</li>
2496</ul>
2497
2498<h3>2.3.7: April 22 2001</h3>
2499<ul>
2500  <li>lots of small bug fixes, corrected XPointer</li>
2501  <li>Non deterministic content model validation support</li>
2502  <li>added xmlDocCopyNode for gdome2</li>
2503  <li>revamped the way the HTML parser handles end of tags</li>
2504  <li>XPath: corrections of namespaces support and number formatting</li>
2505  <li>Windows: Igor Zlatkovic patches for MSC compilation</li>
2506  <li>HTML output fixes from P C Chow and William M. Brack</li>
2507  <li>Improved validation speed sensible for DocBook</li>
2508  <li>fixed a big bug with ID declared in external parsed entities</li>
2509  <li>portability fixes, update of Trio from Bjorn Reese</li>
2510</ul>
2511
2512<h3>2.3.6: April 8 2001</h3>
2513<ul>
2514  <li>Code cleanup using extreme gcc compiler warning options, found and
2515    cleared half a dozen potential problem</li>
2516  <li>the Eazel team found an XML parser bug</li>
2517  <li>cleaned up the user of some of the string formatting function. used the
2518    trio library code to provide the one needed when the platform is missing
2519    them</li>
2520  <li>xpath: removed a memory leak and fixed the predicate evaluation
2521    problem, extended the testsuite and cleaned up the result. XPointer seems
2522    broken ...</li>
2523</ul>
2524
2525<h3>2.3.5: Mar 23 2001</h3>
2526<ul>
2527  <li>Biggest change is separate parsing and evaluation of XPath expressions,
2528    there is some new APIs for this too</li>
2529  <li>included a number of bug fixes(XML push parser, 51876, notations,
2530  52299)</li>
2531  <li>Fixed some portability issues</li>
2532</ul>
2533
2534<h3>2.3.4: Mar 10 2001</h3>
2535<ul>
2536  <li>Fixed bugs #51860 and #51861</li>
2537  <li>Added a global variable xmlDefaultBufferSize to allow default buffer
2538    size to be application tunable.</li>
2539  <li>Some cleanup in the validation code, still a bug left and this part
2540    should probably be rewritten to support ambiguous content model :-\</li>
2541  <li>Fix a couple of serious bugs introduced or raised by changes in 2.3.3
2542    parser</li>
2543  <li>Fixed another bug in xmlNodeGetContent()</li>
2544  <li>Bjorn fixed XPath node collection and Number formatting</li>
2545  <li>Fixed a loop reported in the HTML parsing</li>
2546  <li>blank space are reported even if the Dtd content model proves that they
2547    are formatting spaces, this is for XML conformance</li>
2548</ul>
2549
2550<h3>2.3.3: Mar 1 2001</h3>
2551<ul>
2552  <li>small change in XPath for XSLT</li>
2553  <li>documentation cleanups</li>
2554  <li>fix in validation by Gary Pennington</li>
2555  <li>serious parsing performances improvements</li>
2556</ul>
2557
2558<h3>2.3.2: Feb 24 2001</h3>
2559<ul>
2560  <li>chasing XPath bugs, found a bunch, completed some TODO</li>
2561  <li>fixed a Dtd parsing bug</li>
2562  <li>fixed a bug in xmlNodeGetContent</li>
2563  <li>ID/IDREF support partly rewritten by Gary Pennington</li>
2564</ul>
2565
2566<h3>2.3.1: Feb 15 2001</h3>
2567<ul>
2568  <li>some XPath and HTML bug fixes for XSLT</li>
2569  <li>small extension of the hash table interfaces for DOM gdome2
2570    implementation</li>
2571  <li>A few bug fixes</li>
2572</ul>
2573
2574<h3>2.3.0: Feb 8 2001 (2.2.12 was on 25 Jan but I didn't kept track)</h3>
2575<ul>
2576  <li>Lots of XPath bug fixes</li>
2577  <li>Add a mode with Dtd lookup but without validation error reporting for
2578    XSLT</li>
2579  <li>Add support for text node without escaping (XSLT)</li>
2580  <li>bug fixes for xmlCheckFilename</li>
2581  <li>validation code bug fixes from Gary Pennington</li>
2582  <li>Patch from Paul D. Smith correcting URI path normalization</li>
2583  <li>Patch to allow simultaneous install of libxml-devel and
2584  libxml2-devel</li>
2585  <li>the example Makefile is now fixed</li>
2586  <li>added HTML to the RPM packages</li>
2587  <li>tree copying bugfixes</li>
2588  <li>updates to Windows makefiles</li>
2589  <li>optimization patch from Bjorn Reese</li>
2590</ul>
2591
2592<h3>2.2.11: Jan 4 2001</h3>
2593<ul>
2594  <li>bunch of bug fixes (memory I/O, xpath, ftp/http, ...)</li>
2595  <li>added htmlHandleOmittedElem()</li>
2596  <li>Applied Bjorn Reese's IPV6 first patch</li>
2597  <li>Applied Paul D. Smith patches for validation of XInclude results</li>
2598  <li>added XPointer xmlns() new scheme support</li>
2599</ul>
2600
2601<h3>2.2.10: Nov 25 2000</h3>
2602<ul>
2603  <li>Fix the Windows problems of 2.2.8</li>
2604  <li>integrate OpenVMS patches</li>
2605  <li>better handling of some nasty HTML input</li>
2606  <li>Improved the XPointer implementation</li>
2607  <li>integrate a number of provided patches</li>
2608</ul>
2609
2610<h3>2.2.9: Nov 25 2000</h3>
2611<ul>
2612  <li>erroneous release :-(</li>
2613</ul>
2614
2615<h3>2.2.8: Nov 13 2000</h3>
2616<ul>
2617  <li>First version of <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude">XInclude</a>
2618    support</li>
2619  <li>Patch in conditional section handling</li>
2620  <li>updated MS compiler project</li>
2621  <li>fixed some XPath problems</li>
2622  <li>added an URI escaping function</li>
2623  <li>some other bug fixes</li>
2624</ul>
2625
2626<h3>2.2.7: Oct 31 2000</h3>
2627<ul>
2628  <li>added message redirection</li>
2629  <li>XPath improvements (thanks TOM !)</li>
2630  <li>xmlIOParseDTD() added</li>
2631  <li>various small fixes in the HTML, URI, HTTP and XPointer support</li>
2632  <li>some cleanup of the Makefile, autoconf and the distribution content</li>
2633</ul>
2634
2635<h3>2.2.6: Oct 25 2000:</h3>
2636<ul>
2637  <li>Added an hash table module, migrated a number of internal structure to
2638    those</li>
2639  <li>Fixed a posteriori validation problems</li>
2640  <li>HTTP module cleanups</li>
2641  <li>HTML parser improvements (tag errors, script/style handling, attribute
2642    normalization)</li>
2643  <li>coalescing of adjacent text nodes</li>
2644  <li>couple of XPath bug fixes, exported the internal API</li>
2645</ul>
2646
2647<h3>2.2.5: Oct 15 2000:</h3>
2648<ul>
2649  <li>XPointer implementation and testsuite</li>
2650  <li>Lot of XPath fixes, added variable and functions registration, more
2651    tests</li>
2652  <li>Portability fixes, lots of enhancements toward an easy Windows build
2653    and release</li>
2654  <li>Late validation fixes</li>
2655  <li>Integrated a lot of contributed patches</li>
2656  <li>added memory management docs</li>
2657  <li>a performance problem when using large buffer seems fixed</li>
2658</ul>
2659
2660<h3>2.2.4: Oct 1 2000:</h3>
2661<ul>
2662  <li>main XPath problem fixed</li>
2663  <li>Integrated portability patches for Windows</li>
2664  <li>Serious bug fixes on the URI and HTML code</li>
2665</ul>
2666
2667<h3>2.2.3: Sep 17 2000</h3>
2668<ul>
2669  <li>bug fixes</li>
2670  <li>cleanup of entity handling code</li>
2671  <li>overall review of all loops in the parsers, all sprintf usage has been
2672    checked too</li>
2673  <li>Far better handling of larges Dtd. Validating against DocBook XML Dtd
2674    works smoothly now.</li>
2675</ul>
2676
2677<h3>1.8.10: Sep 6 2000</h3>
2678<ul>
2679  <li>bug fix release for some Gnome projects</li>
2680</ul>
2681
2682<h3>2.2.2: August 12 2000</h3>
2683<ul>
2684  <li>mostly bug fixes</li>
2685  <li>started adding routines to access xml parser context options</li>
2686</ul>
2687
2688<h3>2.2.1: July 21 2000</h3>
2689<ul>
2690  <li>a purely bug fixes release</li>
2691  <li>fixed an encoding support problem when parsing from a memory block</li>
2692  <li>fixed a DOCTYPE parsing problem</li>
2693  <li>removed a bug in the function allowing to override the memory
2694    allocation routines</li>
2695</ul>
2696
2697<h3>2.2.0: July 14 2000</h3>
2698<ul>
2699  <li>applied a lot of portability fixes</li>
2700  <li>better encoding support/cleanup and saving (content is now always
2701    encoded in UTF-8)</li>
2702  <li>the HTML parser now correctly handles encodings</li>
2703  <li>added xmlHasProp()</li>
2704  <li>fixed a serious problem with &amp;#38;</li>
2705  <li>propagated the fix to FTP client</li>
2706  <li>cleanup, bugfixes, etc ...</li>
2707  <li>Added a page about <a href="encoding.html">libxml Internationalization
2708    support</a></li>
2709</ul>
2710
2711<h3>1.8.9:  July 9 2000</h3>
2712<ul>
2713  <li>fixed the spec the RPMs should be better</li>
2714  <li>fixed a serious bug in the FTP implementation, released 1.8.9 to solve
2715    rpmfind users problem</li>
2716</ul>
2717
2718<h3>2.1.1: July 1 2000</h3>
2719<ul>
2720  <li>fixes a couple of bugs in the 2.1.0 packaging</li>
2721  <li>improvements on the HTML parser</li>
2722</ul>
2723
2724<h3>2.1.0 and 1.8.8: June 29 2000</h3>
2725<ul>
2726  <li>1.8.8 is mostly a commodity package for upgrading to libxml2 according
2727    to <a href="upgrade.html">new instructions</a>. It fixes a nasty problem
2728    about &amp;#38; charref parsing</li>
2729  <li>2.1.0 also ease the upgrade from libxml v1 to the recent version. it
2730    also contains numerous fixes and enhancements:
2731    <ul>
2732      <li>added xmlStopParser() to stop parsing</li>
2733      <li>improved a lot parsing speed when there is large CDATA blocs</li>
2734      <li>includes XPath patches provided by Picdar Technology</li>
2735      <li>tried to fix as much as possible DTD validation and namespace
2736        related problems</li>
2737      <li>output to a given encoding has been added/tested</li>
2738      <li>lot of various fixes</li>
2739    </ul>
2740  </li>
2741</ul>
2742
2743<h3>2.0.0: Apr 12 2000</h3>
2744<ul>
2745  <li>First public release of libxml2. If you are using libxml, it's a good
2746    idea to check the 1.x to 2.x upgrade instructions. NOTE: while initially
2747    scheduled for Apr 3 the release occurred only on Apr 12 due to massive
2748    workload.</li>
2749  <li>The include are now located under $prefix/include/libxml (instead of
2750    $prefix/include/gnome-xml), they also are referenced by
2751    <pre>#include &lt;libxml/xxx.h&gt;</pre>
2752    <p>instead of</p>
2753    <pre>#include "xxx.h"</pre>
2754  </li>
2755  <li>a new URI module for parsing URIs and following strictly RFC 2396</li>
2756  <li>the memory allocation routines used by libxml can now be overloaded
2757    dynamically by using xmlMemSetup()</li>
2758  <li>The previously CVS only tool tester has been renamed
2759    <strong>xmllint</strong> and is now installed as part of the libxml2
2760    package</li>
2761  <li>The I/O interface has been revamped. There is now ways to plug in
2762    specific I/O modules, either at the URI scheme detection level using
2763    xmlRegisterInputCallbacks()  or by passing I/O functions when creating a
2764    parser context using xmlCreateIOParserCtxt()</li>
2765  <li>there is a C preprocessor macro LIBXML_VERSION providing the version
2766    number of the libxml module in use</li>
2767  <li>a number of optional features of libxml can now be excluded at
2768    configure time (FTP/HTTP/HTML/XPath/Debug)</li>
2769</ul>
2770
2771<h3>2.0.0beta: Mar 14 2000</h3>
2772<ul>
2773  <li>This is a first Beta release of libxml version 2</li>
2774  <li>It's available only from<a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/">xmlsoft.org
2775    FTP</a>, it's packaged as libxml2-2.0.0beta and available as tar and
2776  RPMs</li>
2777  <li>This version is now the head in the Gnome CVS base, the old one is
2778    available under the tag LIB_XML_1_X</li>
2779  <li>This includes a very large set of changes. From a  programmatic point
2780    of view applications should not have to be modified too much, check the
2781    <a href="upgrade.html">upgrade page</a></li>
2782  <li>Some interfaces may changes (especially a bit about encoding).</li>
2783  <li>the updates includes:
2784    <ul>
2785      <li>fix I18N support. ISO-Latin-x/UTF-8/UTF-16 (nearly) seems correctly
2786        handled now</li>
2787      <li>Better handling of entities, especially well-formedness checking
2788        and proper PEref extensions in external subsets</li>
2789      <li>DTD conditional sections</li>
2790      <li>Validation now correctly handle entities content</li>
2791      <li><a href="http://rpmfind.net/tools/gdome/messages/0039.html">change
2792        structures to accommodate DOM</a></li>
2793    </ul>
2794  </li>
2795  <li>Serious progress were made toward compliance, <a
2796    href="conf/result.html">here are the result of the test</a> against the
2797    OASIS testsuite (except the Japanese tests since I don't support that
2798    encoding yet). This URL is rebuilt every couple of hours using the CVS
2799    head version.</li>
2800</ul>
2801
2802<h3>1.8.7: Mar 6 2000</h3>
2803<ul>
2804  <li>This is a bug fix release:</li>
2805  <li>It is possible to disable the ignorable blanks heuristic used by
2806    libxml-1.x, a new function  xmlKeepBlanksDefault(0) will allow this. Note
2807    that for adherence to XML spec, this behaviour will be disabled by
2808    default in 2.x . The same function will allow to keep compatibility for
2809    old code.</li>
2810  <li>Blanks in &lt;a&gt;  &lt;/a&gt; constructs are not ignored anymore,
2811    avoiding heuristic is really the Right Way :-\</li>
2812  <li>The unchecked use of snprintf which was breaking libxml-1.8.6
2813    compilation on some platforms has been fixed</li>
2814  <li>nanoftp.c nanohttp.c: Fixed '#' and '?' stripping when processing
2815  URIs</li>
2816</ul>
2817
2818<h3>1.8.6: Jan 31 2000</h3>
2819<ul>
2820  <li>added a nanoFTP transport module, debugged until the new version of <a
2821    href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/rpm2html/rpmfind.html">rpmfind</a> can use
2822    it without troubles</li>
2823</ul>
2824
2825<h3>1.8.5: Jan 21 2000</h3>
2826<ul>
2827  <li>adding APIs to parse a well balanced chunk of XML (production <a
2828    href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#NT-content">[43] content</a> of the
2829    XML spec)</li>
2830  <li>fixed a hideous bug in xmlGetProp pointed by Rune.Djurhuus@fast.no</li>
2831  <li>Jody Goldberg &lt;jgoldberg@home.com&gt; provided another patch trying
2832    to solve the zlib checks problems</li>
2833  <li>The current state in gnome CVS base is expected to ship as 1.8.5 with
2834    gnumeric soon</li>
2835</ul>
2836
2837<h3>1.8.4: Jan 13 2000</h3>
2838<ul>
2839  <li>bug fixes, reintroduced xmlNewGlobalNs(), fixed xmlNewNs()</li>
2840  <li>all exit() call should have been removed from libxml</li>
2841  <li>fixed a problem with INCLUDE_WINSOCK on WIN32 platform</li>
2842  <li>added newDocFragment()</li>
2843</ul>
2844
2845<h3>1.8.3: Jan 5 2000</h3>
2846<ul>
2847  <li>a Push interface for the XML and HTML parsers</li>
2848  <li>a shell-like interface to the document tree (try tester --shell :-)</li>
2849  <li>lots of bug fixes and improvement added over XMas holidays</li>
2850  <li>fixed the DTD parsing code to work with the xhtml DTD</li>
2851  <li>added xmlRemoveProp(), xmlRemoveID() and xmlRemoveRef()</li>
2852  <li>Fixed bugs in xmlNewNs()</li>
2853  <li>External entity loading code has been revamped, now it uses
2854    xmlLoadExternalEntity(), some fix on entities processing were added</li>
2855  <li>cleaned up WIN32 includes of socket stuff</li>
2856</ul>
2857
2858<h3>1.8.2: Dec 21 1999</h3>
2859<ul>
2860  <li>I got another problem with includes and C++, I hope this issue is fixed
2861    for good this time</li>
2862  <li>Added a few tree modification functions: xmlReplaceNode,
2863    xmlAddPrevSibling, xmlAddNextSibling, xmlNodeSetName and
2864    xmlDocSetRootElement</li>
2865  <li>Tried to improve the HTML output with help from <a
2866    href="mailto:clahey@umich.edu">Chris Lahey</a></li>
2867</ul>
2868
2869<h3>1.8.1: Dec 18 1999</h3>
2870<ul>
2871  <li>various patches to avoid troubles when using libxml with C++ compilers
2872    the "namespace" keyword and C escaping in include files</li>
2873  <li>a problem in one of the core macros IS_CHAR was corrected</li>
2874  <li>fixed a bug introduced in 1.8.0 breaking default namespace processing,
2875    and more specifically the Dia application</li>
2876  <li>fixed a posteriori validation (validation after parsing, or by using a
2877    Dtd not specified in the original document)</li>
2878  <li>fixed a bug in</li>
2879</ul>
2880
2881<h3>1.8.0: Dec 12 1999</h3>
2882<ul>
2883  <li>cleanup, especially memory wise</li>
2884  <li>the parser should be more reliable, especially the HTML one, it should
2885    not crash, whatever the input !</li>
2886  <li>Integrated various patches, especially a speedup improvement for large
2887    dataset from <a href="mailto:cnygard@bellatlantic.net">Carl Nygard</a>,
2888    configure with --with-buffers to enable them.</li>
2889  <li>attribute normalization, oops should have been added long ago !</li>
2890  <li>attributes defaulted from DTDs should be available, xmlSetProp() now
2891    does entities escaping by default.</li>
2892</ul>
2893
2894<h3>1.7.4: Oct 25 1999</h3>
2895<ul>
2896  <li>Lots of HTML improvement</li>
2897  <li>Fixed some errors when saving both XML and HTML</li>
2898  <li>More examples, the regression tests should now look clean</li>
2899  <li>Fixed a bug with contiguous charref</li>
2900</ul>
2901
2902<h3>1.7.3: Sep 29 1999</h3>
2903<ul>
2904  <li>portability problems fixed</li>
2905  <li>snprintf was used unconditionally, leading to link problems on system
2906    were it's not available, fixed</li>
2907</ul>
2908
2909<h3>1.7.1: Sep 24 1999</h3>
2910<ul>
2911  <li>The basic type for strings manipulated by libxml has been renamed in
2912    1.7.1 from <strong>CHAR</strong> to <strong>xmlChar</strong>. The reason
2913    is that CHAR was conflicting with a predefined type on Windows. However
2914    on non WIN32 environment, compatibility is provided by the way of  a
2915    <strong>#define </strong>.</li>
2916  <li>Changed another error : the use of a structure field called errno, and
2917    leading to troubles on platforms where it's a macro</li>
2918</ul>
2919
2920<h3>1.7.0: Sep 23 1999</h3>
2921<ul>
2922  <li>Added the ability to fetch remote DTD or parsed entities, see the <a
2923    href="html/libxml-nanohttp.html">nanohttp</a> module.</li>
2924  <li>Added an errno to report errors by another mean than a simple printf
2925    like callback</li>
2926  <li>Finished ID/IDREF support and checking when validation</li>
2927  <li>Serious memory leaks fixed (there is now a <a
2928    href="html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">memory wrapper</a> module)</li>
2929  <li>Improvement of <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath">XPath</a>
2930    implementation</li>
2931  <li>Added an HTML parser front-end</li>
2932</ul>
2933
2934<h2><a name="XML">XML</a></h2>
2935
2936<p><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml">XML is a standard</a> for
2937markup-based structured documents. Here is <a name="example">an example XML
2938document</a>:</p>
2939<pre>&lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
2940&lt;EXAMPLE prop1="gnome is great" prop2="&amp;amp; linux too"&gt;
2941  &lt;head&gt;
2942   &lt;title&gt;Welcome to Gnome&lt;/title&gt;
2943  &lt;/head&gt;
2944  &lt;chapter&gt;
2945   &lt;title&gt;The Linux adventure&lt;/title&gt;
2946   &lt;p&gt;bla bla bla ...&lt;/p&gt;
2947   &lt;image href="linus.gif"/&gt;
2948   &lt;p&gt;...&lt;/p&gt;
2949  &lt;/chapter&gt;
2950&lt;/EXAMPLE&gt;</pre>
2951
2952<p>The first line specifies that it is an XML document and gives useful
2953information about its encoding.  Then the rest of the document is a text
2954format whose structure is specified by tags between brackets. <strong>Each
2955tag opened has to be closed</strong>. XML is pedantic about this. However, if
2956a tag is empty (no content), a single tag can serve as both the opening and
2957closing tag if it ends with <code>/&gt;</code> rather than with
2958<code>&gt;</code>. Note that, for example, the image tag has no content (just
2959an attribute) and is closed by ending the tag with <code>/&gt;</code>.</p>
2960
2961<p>XML can be applied successfully to a wide range of tasks, ranging from
2962long term structured document maintenance (where it follows the steps of
2963SGML) to simple data encoding mechanisms like configuration file formatting
2964(glade), spreadsheets (gnumeric), or even shorter lived documents such as
2965WebDAV where it is used to encode remote calls between a client and a
2966server.</p>
2967
2968<h2><a name="XSLT">XSLT</a></h2>
2969
2970<p>Check <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT">the separate libxslt page</a></p>
2971
2972<p><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt">XSL Transformations</a>,  is a
2973language for transforming XML documents into other XML documents (or
2974HTML/textual output).</p>
2975
2976<p>A separate library called libxslt is available implementing XSLT-1.0 for
2977libxml2. This module "libxslt" too can be found in the Gnome SVN base.</p>
2978
2979<p>You can check the progresses on the libxslt <a
2980href="http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/ChangeLog.html">Changelog</a>.</p>
2981
2982<h2><a name="Python">Python and bindings</a></h2>
2983
2984<p>There are a number of language bindings and wrappers available for
2985libxml2, the list below is not exhaustive. Please contact the <a
2986href="http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/xml-bindings">xml-bindings@gnome.org</a>
2987(<a href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml-bindings/">archives</a>) in
2988order to get updates to this list or to discuss the specific topic of libxml2
2989or libxslt wrappers or bindings:</p>
2990<ul>
2991  <li><a href="http://libxmlplusplus.sourceforge.net/">Libxml++</a> seems the
2992    most up-to-date C++ bindings for libxml2, check the <a
2993    href="http://libxmlplusplus.sourceforge.net/reference/html/hierarchy.html">documentation</a>
2994    and the <a
2995    href="http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/libxmlplusplus/libxml%2b%2b/examples/">examples</a>.</li>
2996  <li>There is another <a href="http://libgdome-cpp.berlios.de/">C++ wrapper
2997    based on the gdome2 bindings</a> maintained by Tobias Peters.</li>
2998  <li>and a third C++ wrapper by Peter Jones &lt;pjones@pmade.org&gt;
2999    <p>Website: <a
3000    href="http://pmade.org/pjones/software/xmlwrapp/">http://pmade.org/pjones/software/xmlwrapp/</a></p>
3001  </li>
3002  <li>XML::LibXML <a href="http://cpan.uwinnipeg.ca/dist/XML-LibXML">Perl
3003      bindings</a> are available on CPAN, as well as XML::LibXSLT
3004      <a href="http://cpan.uwinnipeg.ca/dist/XML-LibXSLT">Perl libxslt
3005      bindings</a>.</li>
3006  <li>If you're interested into scripting XML processing, have a look at <a
3007    href="http://xsh.sourceforge.net/">XSH</a> an XML editing shell based on
3008    Libxml2 Perl bindings.</li>
3009  <li><a href="mailto:dkuhlman@cutter.rexx.com">Dave Kuhlman</a> provides an
3010    earlier version of the libxml/libxslt <a
3011    href="http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman">wrappers for Python</a>.</li>
3012  <li>Gopal.V and Peter Minten develop <a
3013    href="http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/libxmlsharp">libxml#</a>, a set of
3014    C# libxml2 bindings.</li>
3015  <li>Petr Kozelka provides <a
3016    href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/libxml2-pas">Pascal units to glue
3017    libxml2</a> with Kylix, Delphi and other Pascal compilers.</li>
3018  <li>Uwe Fechner also provides <a
3019    href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/idom2-pas/">idom2</a>, a DOM2
3020    implementation for Kylix2/D5/D6 from Borland.</li>
3021  <li>There is <a href="http://libxml.rubyforge.org/">bindings for Ruby</a> 
3022    and libxml2 bindings are also available in Ruby through the <a
3023    href="http://libgdome-ruby.berlios.de/">libgdome-ruby</a> module
3024    maintained by Tobias Peters.</li>
3025  <li>Steve Ball and contributors maintains <a
3026    href="http://tclxml.sourceforge.net/">libxml2 and libxslt bindings for
3027    Tcl</a>.</li>
3028  <li>libxml2 and libxslt are the default XML libraries for PHP5.</li>
3029  <li><a href="http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/classpathx/">LibxmlJ</a> is
3030    an effort to create a 100% JAXP-compatible Java wrapper for libxml2 and
3031    libxslt as part of GNU ClasspathX project.</li>
3032  <li>Patrick McPhee provides Rexx bindings fof libxml2 and libxslt, look for
3033    <a href="http://www.interlog.com/~ptjm/software.html">RexxXML</a>.</li>
3034  <li><a
3035    href="http://www.satimage.fr/software/en/xml_suite.html">Satimage</a>
3036    provides <a
3037    href="http://www.satimage.fr/software/en/downloads_osaxen.html">XMLLib
3038    osax</a>. This is an osax for Mac OS X with a set of commands to
3039    implement in AppleScript the XML DOM, XPATH and XSLT. Also includes
3040    commands for Property-lists (Apple's fast lookup table XML format.)</li>
3041  <li>Francesco Montorsi developped <a
3042    href="https://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=51305&package_id=45182">wxXml2</a>
3043    wrappers that interface libxml2, allowing wxWidgets applications to
3044    load/save/edit XML instances.</li>
3045</ul>
3046
3047<p>The distribution includes a set of Python bindings, which are guaranteed
3048to be maintained as part of the library in the future, though the Python
3049interface have not yet reached the completeness of the C API.</p>
3050
3051<p>Note that some of the Python purist dislike the default set of Python
3052bindings, rather than complaining I suggest they have a look at <a
3053href="http://lxml.de/">lxml the more pythonic bindings for libxml2
3054and libxslt</a> and <a
3055href="http://lxml.de/mailinglist/">check the mailing-list</a>.</p>
3056
3057<p><a href="mailto:stephane.bidoul@softwareag.com">Stéphane Bidoul</a>
3058maintains <a href="http://users.skynet.be/sbi/libxml-python/">a Windows port
3059of the Python bindings</a>.</p>
3060
3061<p>Note to people interested in building bindings, the API is formalized as
3062<a href="libxml2-api.xml">an XML API description file</a> which allows to
3063automate a large part of the Python bindings, this includes function
3064descriptions, enums, structures, typedefs, etc... The Python script used to
3065build the bindings is python/generator.py in the source distribution.</p>
3066
3067<p>To install the Python bindings there are 2 options:</p>
3068<ul>
3069  <li>If you use an RPM based distribution, simply install the <a
3070    href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/rpm2html/search.php?query=libxml2-python">libxml2-python
3071    RPM</a> (and if needed the <a
3072    href="http://rpmfind.net/linux/rpm2html/search.php?query=libxslt-python">libxslt-python
3073    RPM</a>).</li>
3074  <li>Otherwise use the <a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/python/">libxml2-python
3075    module distribution</a> corresponding to your installed version of
3076    libxml2 and libxslt. Note that to install it you will need both libxml2
3077    and libxslt installed and run "python setup.py build install" in the
3078    module tree.</li>
3079</ul>
3080
3081<p>The distribution includes a set of examples and regression tests for the
3082python bindings in the <code>python/tests</code> directory. Here are some
3083excerpts from those tests:</p>
3084
3085<h3>tst.py:</h3>
3086
3087<p>This is a basic test of the file interface and DOM navigation:</p>
3088<pre>import libxml2, sys
3089
3090doc = libxml2.parseFile("tst.xml")
3091if doc.name != "tst.xml":
3092    print "doc.name failed"
3093    sys.exit(1)
3094root = doc.children
3095if root.name != "doc":
3096    print "root.name failed"
3097    sys.exit(1)
3098child = root.children
3099if child.name != "foo":
3100    print "child.name failed"
3101    sys.exit(1)
3102doc.freeDoc()</pre>
3103
3104<p>The Python module is called libxml2; parseFile is the equivalent of
3105xmlParseFile (most of the bindings are automatically generated, and the xml
3106prefix is removed and the casing convention are kept). All node seen at the
3107binding level share the same subset of accessors:</p>
3108<ul>
3109  <li><code>name</code> : returns the node name</li>
3110  <li><code>type</code> : returns a string indicating the node type</li>
3111  <li><code>content</code> : returns the content of the node, it is based on
3112    xmlNodeGetContent() and hence is recursive.</li>
3113  <li><code>parent</code> , <code>children</code>, <code>last</code>,
3114    <code>next</code>, <code>prev</code>, <code>doc</code>,
3115    <code>properties</code>: pointing to the associated element in the tree,
3116    those may return None in case no such link exists.</li>
3117</ul>
3118
3119<p>Also note the need to explicitly deallocate documents with freeDoc() .
3120Reference counting for libxml2 trees would need quite a lot of work to
3121function properly, and rather than risk memory leaks if not implemented
3122correctly it sounds safer to have an explicit function to free a tree. The
3123wrapper python objects like doc, root or child are them automatically garbage
3124collected.</p>
3125
3126<h3>validate.py:</h3>
3127
3128<p>This test check the validation interfaces and redirection of error
3129messages:</p>
3130<pre>import libxml2
3131
3132#deactivate error messages from the validation
3133def noerr(ctx, str):
3134    pass
3135
3136libxml2.registerErrorHandler(noerr, None)
3137
3138ctxt = libxml2.createFileParserCtxt("invalid.xml")
3139ctxt.validate(1)
3140ctxt.parseDocument()
3141doc = ctxt.doc()
3142valid = ctxt.isValid()
3143doc.freeDoc()
3144if valid != 0:
3145    print "validity check failed"</pre>
3146
3147<p>The first thing to notice is the call to registerErrorHandler(), it
3148defines a new error handler global to the library. It is used to avoid seeing
3149the error messages when trying to validate the invalid document.</p>
3150
3151<p>The main interest of that test is the creation of a parser context with
3152createFileParserCtxt() and how the behaviour can be changed before calling
3153parseDocument() . Similarly the information resulting from the parsing phase
3154is also available using context methods.</p>
3155
3156<p>Contexts like nodes are defined as class and the libxml2 wrappers maps the
3157C function interfaces in terms of objects method as much as possible. The
3158best to get a complete view of what methods are supported is to look at the
3159libxml2.py module containing all the wrappers.</p>
3160
3161<h3>push.py:</h3>
3162
3163<p>This test show how to activate the push parser interface:</p>
3164<pre>import libxml2
3165
3166ctxt = libxml2.createPushParser(None, "&lt;foo", 4, "test.xml")
3167ctxt.parseChunk("/&gt;", 2, 1)
3168doc = ctxt.doc()
3169
3170doc.freeDoc()</pre>
3171
3172<p>The context is created with a special call based on the
3173xmlCreatePushParser() from the C library. The first argument is an optional
3174SAX callback object, then the initial set of data, the length and the name of
3175the resource in case URI-References need to be computed by the parser.</p>
3176
3177<p>Then the data are pushed using the parseChunk() method, the last call
3178setting the third argument terminate to 1.</p>
3179
3180<h3>pushSAX.py:</h3>
3181
3182<p>this test show the use of the event based parsing interfaces. In this case
3183the parser does not build a document, but provides callback information as
3184the parser makes progresses analyzing the data being provided:</p>
3185<pre>import libxml2
3186log = ""
3187
3188class callback:
3189    def startDocument(self):
3190        global log
3191        log = log + "startDocument:"
3192
3193    def endDocument(self):
3194        global log
3195        log = log + "endDocument:"
3196
3197    def startElement(self, tag, attrs):
3198        global log
3199        log = log + "startElement %s %s:" % (tag, attrs)
3200
3201    def endElement(self, tag):
3202        global log
3203        log = log + "endElement %s:" % (tag)
3204
3205    def characters(self, data):
3206        global log
3207        log = log + "characters: %s:" % (data)
3208
3209    def warning(self, msg):
3210        global log
3211        log = log + "warning: %s:" % (msg)
3212
3213    def error(self, msg):
3214        global log
3215        log = log + "error: %s:" % (msg)
3216
3217    def fatalError(self, msg):
3218        global log
3219        log = log + "fatalError: %s:" % (msg)
3220
3221handler = callback()
3222
3223ctxt = libxml2.createPushParser(handler, "&lt;foo", 4, "test.xml")
3224chunk = " url='tst'&gt;b"
3225ctxt.parseChunk(chunk, len(chunk), 0)
3226chunk = "ar&lt;/foo&gt;"
3227ctxt.parseChunk(chunk, len(chunk), 1)
3228
3229reference = "startDocument:startElement foo {'url': 'tst'}:" + \ 
3230            "characters: bar:endElement foo:endDocument:"
3231if log != reference:
3232    print "Error got: %s" % log
3233    print "Expected: %s" % reference</pre>
3234
3235<p>The key object in that test is the handler, it provides a number of entry
3236points which can be called by the parser as it makes progresses to indicate
3237the information set obtained. The full set of callback is larger than what
3238the callback class in that specific example implements (see the SAX
3239definition for a complete list). The wrapper will only call those supplied by
3240the object when activated. The startElement receives the names of the element
3241and a dictionary containing the attributes carried by this element.</p>
3242
3243<p>Also note that the reference string generated from the callback shows a
3244single character call even though the string "bar" is passed to the parser
3245from 2 different call to parseChunk()</p>
3246
3247<h3>xpath.py:</h3>
3248
3249<p>This is a basic test of XPath wrappers support</p>
3250<pre>import libxml2
3251
3252doc = libxml2.parseFile("tst.xml")
3253ctxt = doc.xpathNewContext()
3254res = ctxt.xpathEval("//*")
3255if len(res) != 2:
3256    print "xpath query: wrong node set size"
3257    sys.exit(1)
3258if res[0].name != "doc" or res[1].name != "foo":
3259    print "xpath query: wrong node set value"
3260    sys.exit(1)
3261doc.freeDoc()
3262ctxt.xpathFreeContext()</pre>
3263
3264<p>This test parses a file, then create an XPath context to evaluate XPath
3265expression on it. The xpathEval() method execute an XPath query and returns
3266the result mapped in a Python way. String and numbers are natively converted,
3267and node sets are returned as a tuple of libxml2 Python nodes wrappers. Like
3268the document, the XPath context need to be freed explicitly, also not that
3269the result of the XPath query may point back to the document tree and hence
3270the document must be freed after the result of the query is used.</p>
3271
3272<h3>xpathext.py:</h3>
3273
3274<p>This test shows how to extend the XPath engine with functions written in
3275python:</p>
3276<pre>import libxml2
3277
3278def foo(ctx, x):
3279    return x + 1
3280
3281doc = libxml2.parseFile("tst.xml")
3282ctxt = doc.xpathNewContext()
3283libxml2.registerXPathFunction(ctxt._o, "foo", None, foo)
3284res = ctxt.xpathEval("foo(1)")
3285if res != 2:
3286    print "xpath extension failure"
3287doc.freeDoc()
3288ctxt.xpathFreeContext()</pre>
3289
3290<p>Note how the extension function is registered with the context (but that
3291part is not yet finalized, this may change slightly in the future).</p>
3292
3293<h3>tstxpath.py:</h3>
3294
3295<p>This test is similar to the previous one but shows how the extension
3296function can access the XPath evaluation context:</p>
3297<pre>def foo(ctx, x):
3298    global called
3299
3300    #
3301    # test that access to the XPath evaluation contexts
3302    #
3303    pctxt = libxml2.xpathParserContext(_obj=ctx)
3304    ctxt = pctxt.context()
3305    called = ctxt.function()
3306    return x + 1</pre>
3307
3308<p>All the interfaces around the XPath parser(or rather evaluation) context
3309are not finalized, but it should be sufficient to do contextual work at the
3310evaluation point.</p>
3311
3312<h3>Memory debugging:</h3>
3313
3314<p>last but not least, all tests starts with the following prologue:</p>
3315<pre>#memory debug specific
3316libxml2.debugMemory(1)</pre>
3317
3318<p>and ends with the following epilogue:</p>
3319<pre>#memory debug specific
3320libxml2.cleanupParser()
3321if libxml2.debugMemory(1) == 0:
3322    print "OK"
3323else:
3324    print "Memory leak %d bytes" % (libxml2.debugMemory(1))
3325    libxml2.dumpMemory()</pre>
3326
3327<p>Those activate the memory debugging interface of libxml2 where all
3328allocated block in the library are tracked. The prologue then cleans up the
3329library state and checks that all allocated memory has been freed. If not it
3330calls dumpMemory() which saves that list in a <code>.memdump</code> file.</p>
3331
3332<h2><a name="architecture">libxml2 architecture</a></h2>
3333
3334<p>Libxml2 is made of multiple components; some of them are optional, and
3335most of the block interfaces are public. The main components are:</p>
3336<ul>
3337  <li>an Input/Output layer</li>
3338  <li>FTP and HTTP client layers (optional)</li>
3339  <li>an Internationalization layer managing the encodings support</li>
3340  <li>a URI module</li>
3341  <li>the XML parser and its basic SAX interface</li>
3342  <li>an HTML parser using the same SAX interface (optional)</li>
3343  <li>a SAX tree module to build an in-memory DOM representation</li>
3344  <li>a tree module to manipulate the DOM representation</li>
3345  <li>a validation module using the DOM representation (optional)</li>
3346  <li>an XPath module for global lookup in a DOM representation
3347  (optional)</li>
3348  <li>a debug module (optional)</li>
3349</ul>
3350
3351<p>Graphically this gives the following:</p>
3352
3353<p><img src="libxml.gif" alt="a graphical view of the various"></p>
3354
3355<p></p>
3356
3357<h2><a name="tree">The tree output</a></h2>
3358
3359<p>The parser returns a tree built during the document analysis. The value
3360returned is an <strong>xmlDocPtr</strong> (i.e., a pointer to an
3361<strong>xmlDoc</strong> structure). This structure contains information such
3362as the file name, the document type, and a <strong>children</strong> pointer
3363which is the root of the document (or more exactly the first child under the
3364root which is the document). The tree is made of <strong>xmlNode</strong>s,
3365chained in double-linked lists of siblings and with a children&lt;-&gt;parent
3366relationship. An xmlNode can also carry properties (a chain of xmlAttr
3367structures). An attribute may have a value which is a list of TEXT or
3368ENTITY_REF nodes.</p>
3369
3370<p>Here is an example (erroneous with respect to the XML spec since there
3371should be only one ELEMENT under the root):</p>
3372
3373<p><img src="structure.gif" alt=" structure.gif "></p>
3374
3375<p>In the source package there is a small program (not installed by default)
3376called <strong>xmllint</strong> which parses XML files given as argument and
3377prints them back as parsed. This is useful for detecting errors both in XML
3378code and in the XML parser itself. It has an option <strong>--debug</strong>
3379which prints the actual in-memory structure of the document; here is the
3380result with the <a href="#example">example</a> given before:</p>
3381<pre>DOCUMENT
3382version=1.0
3383standalone=true
3384  ELEMENT EXAMPLE
3385    ATTRIBUTE prop1
3386      TEXT
3387      content=gnome is great
3388    ATTRIBUTE prop2
3389      ENTITY_REF
3390      TEXT
3391      content= linux too 
3392    ELEMENT head
3393      ELEMENT title
3394        TEXT
3395        content=Welcome to Gnome
3396    ELEMENT chapter
3397      ELEMENT title
3398        TEXT
3399        content=The Linux adventure
3400      ELEMENT p
3401        TEXT
3402        content=bla bla bla ...
3403      ELEMENT image
3404        ATTRIBUTE href
3405          TEXT
3406          content=linus.gif
3407      ELEMENT p
3408        TEXT
3409        content=...</pre>
3410
3411<p>This should be useful for learning the internal representation model.</p>
3412
3413<h2><a name="interface">The SAX interface</a></h2>
3414
3415<p>Sometimes the DOM tree output is just too large to fit reasonably into
3416memory. In that case (and if you don't expect to save back the XML document
3417loaded using libxml), it's better to use the SAX interface of libxml. SAX is
3418a <strong>callback-based interface</strong> to the parser. Before parsing,
3419the application layer registers a customized set of callbacks which are
3420called by the library as it progresses through the XML input.</p>
3421
3422<p>To get more detailed step-by-step guidance on using the SAX interface of
3423libxml, see the <a
3424href="http://www.daa.com.au/~james/gnome/xml-sax/xml-sax.html">nice
3425documentation</a>.written by <a href="mailto:james@daa.com.au">James
3426Henstridge</a>.</p>
3427
3428<p>You can debug the SAX behaviour by using the <strong>testSAX</strong>
3429program located in the gnome-xml module (it's usually not shipped in the
3430binary packages of libxml, but you can find it in the tar source
3431distribution). Here is the sequence of callbacks that would be reported by
3432testSAX when parsing the example XML document shown earlier:</p>
3433<pre>SAX.setDocumentLocator()
3434SAX.startDocument()
3435SAX.getEntity(amp)
3436SAX.startElement(EXAMPLE, prop1='gnome is great', prop2='&amp;amp; linux too')
3437SAX.characters(   , 3)
3438SAX.startElement(head)
3439SAX.characters(    , 4)
3440SAX.startElement(title)
3441SAX.characters(Welcome to Gnome, 16)
3442SAX.endElement(title)
3443SAX.characters(   , 3)
3444SAX.endElement(head)
3445SAX.characters(   , 3)
3446SAX.startElement(chapter)
3447SAX.characters(    , 4)
3448SAX.startElement(title)
3449SAX.characters(The Linux adventure, 19)
3450SAX.endElement(title)
3451SAX.characters(    , 4)
3452SAX.startElement(p)
3453SAX.characters(bla bla bla ..., 15)
3454SAX.endElement(p)
3455SAX.characters(    , 4)
3456SAX.startElement(image, href='linus.gif')
3457SAX.endElement(image)
3458SAX.characters(    , 4)
3459SAX.startElement(p)
3460SAX.characters(..., 3)
3461SAX.endElement(p)
3462SAX.characters(   , 3)
3463SAX.endElement(chapter)
3464SAX.characters( , 1)
3465SAX.endElement(EXAMPLE)
3466SAX.endDocument()</pre>
3467
3468<p>Most of the other interfaces of libxml2 are based on the DOM tree-building
3469facility, so nearly everything up to the end of this document presupposes the
3470use of the standard DOM tree build. Note that the DOM tree itself is built by
3471a set of registered default callbacks, without internal specific
3472interface.</p>
3473
3474<h2><a name="Validation">Validation &amp; DTDs</a></h2>
3475
3476<p>Table of Content:</p>
3477<ol>
3478  <li><a href="#General5">General overview</a></li>
3479  <li><a href="#definition">The definition</a></li>
3480  <li><a href="#Simple">Simple rules</a>
3481    <ol>
3482      <li><a href="#reference">How to reference a DTD from a document</a></li>
3483      <li><a href="#Declaring">Declaring elements</a></li>
3484      <li><a href="#Declaring1">Declaring attributes</a></li>
3485    </ol>
3486  </li>
3487  <li><a href="#Some">Some examples</a></li>
3488  <li><a href="#validate">How to validate</a></li>
3489  <li><a href="#Other">Other resources</a></li>
3490</ol>
3491
3492<h3><a name="General5">General overview</a></h3>
3493
3494<p>Well what is validation and what is a DTD ?</p>
3495
3496<p>DTD is the acronym for Document Type Definition. This is a description of
3497the content for a family of XML files. This is part of the XML 1.0
3498specification, and allows one to describe and verify that a given document
3499instance conforms to the set of rules detailing its structure and content.</p>
3500
3501<p>Validation is the process of checking a document against a DTD (more
3502generally against a set of construction rules).</p>
3503
3504<p>The validation process and building DTDs are the two most difficult parts
3505of the XML life cycle. Briefly a DTD defines all the possible elements to be
3506found within your document, what is the formal shape of your document tree
3507(by defining the allowed content of an element; either text, a regular
3508expression for the allowed list of children, or mixed content i.e. both text
3509and children). The DTD also defines the valid attributes for all elements and
3510the types of those attributes.</p>
3511
3512<h3><a name="definition1">The definition</a></h3>
3513
3514<p>The <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml">W3C XML Recommendation</a> (<a
3515href="http://www.xml.com/axml/axml.html">Tim Bray's annotated version of
3516Rev1</a>):</p>
3517<ul>
3518  <li><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#elemdecls">Declaring
3519  elements</a></li>
3520  <li><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#attdecls">Declaring
3521  attributes</a></li>
3522</ul>
3523
3524<p>(unfortunately) all this is inherited from the SGML world, the syntax is
3525ancient...</p>
3526
3527<h3><a name="Simple1">Simple rules</a></h3>
3528
3529<p>Writing DTDs can be done in many ways. The rules to build them if you need
3530something permanent or something which can evolve over time can be radically
3531different. Really complex DTDs like DocBook ones are flexible but quite
3532harder to design. I will just focus on DTDs for a formats with a fixed simple
3533structure. It is just a set of basic rules, and definitely not exhaustive nor
3534usable for complex DTD design.</p>
3535
3536<h4><a name="reference1">How to reference a DTD from a document</a>:</h4>
3537
3538<p>Assuming the top element of the document is <code>spec</code> and the dtd
3539is placed in the file <code>mydtd</code> in the subdirectory
3540<code>dtds</code> of the directory from where the document were loaded:</p>
3541
3542<p><code>&lt;!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "dtds/mydtd"&gt;</code></p>
3543
3544<p>Notes:</p>
3545<ul>
3546  <li>The system string is actually an URI-Reference (as defined in <a
3547    href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt">RFC 2396</a>) so you can use a
3548    full URL string indicating the location of your DTD on the Web. This is a
3549    really good thing to do if you want others to validate your document.</li>
3550  <li>It is also possible to associate a <code>PUBLIC</code> identifier (a
3551    magic string) so that the DTD is looked up in catalogs on the client side
3552    without having to locate it on the web.</li>
3553  <li>A DTD contains a set of element and attribute declarations, but they
3554    don't define what the root of the document should be. This is explicitly
3555    told to the parser/validator as the first element of the
3556    <code>DOCTYPE</code> declaration.</li>
3557</ul>
3558
3559<h4><a name="Declaring2">Declaring elements</a>:</h4>
3560
3561<p>The following declares an element <code>spec</code>:</p>
3562
3563<p><code>&lt;!ELEMENT spec (front, body, back?)&gt;</code></p>
3564
3565<p>It also expresses that the spec element contains one <code>front</code>,
3566one <code>body</code> and one optional <code>back</code> children elements in
3567this order. The declaration of one element of the structure and its content
3568are done in a single declaration. Similarly the following declares
3569<code>div1</code> elements:</p>
3570
3571<p><code>&lt;!ELEMENT div1 (head, (p | list | note)*, div2?)&gt;</code></p>
3572
3573<p>which means div1 contains one <code>head</code> then a series of optional
3574<code>p</code>, <code>list</code>s and <code>note</code>s and then an
3575optional <code>div2</code>. And last but not least an element can contain
3576text:</p>
3577
3578<p><code>&lt;!ELEMENT b (#PCDATA)&gt;</code></p>
3579
3580<p><code>b</code> contains text or being of mixed content (text and elements
3581in no particular order):</p>
3582
3583<p><code>&lt;!ELEMENT p (#PCDATA|a|ul|b|i|em)*&gt;</code></p>
3584
3585<p><code>p </code>can contain text or <code>a</code>, <code>ul</code>,
3586<code>b</code>, <code>i </code>or <code>em</code> elements in no particular
3587order.</p>
3588
3589<h4><a name="Declaring1">Declaring attributes</a>:</h4>
3590
3591<p>Again the attributes declaration includes their content definition:</p>
3592
3593<p><code>&lt;!ATTLIST termdef name CDATA #IMPLIED&gt;</code></p>
3594
3595<p>means that the element <code>termdef</code> can have a <code>name</code>
3596attribute containing text (<code>CDATA</code>) and which is optional
3597(<code>#IMPLIED</code>). The attribute value can also be defined within a
3598set:</p>
3599
3600<p><code>&lt;!ATTLIST list type (bullets|ordered|glossary)
3601"ordered"&gt;</code></p>
3602
3603<p>means <code>list</code> element have a <code>type</code> attribute with 3
3604allowed values "bullets", "ordered" or "glossary" and which default to
3605"ordered" if the attribute is not explicitly specified.</p>
3606
3607<p>The content type of an attribute can be text (<code>CDATA</code>),
3608anchor/reference/references
3609(<code>ID</code>/<code>IDREF</code>/<code>IDREFS</code>), entity(ies)
3610(<code>ENTITY</code>/<code>ENTITIES</code>) or name(s)
3611(<code>NMTOKEN</code>/<code>NMTOKENS</code>). The following defines that a
3612<code>chapter</code> element can have an optional <code>id</code> attribute
3613of type <code>ID</code>, usable for reference from attribute of type
3614IDREF:</p>
3615
3616<p><code>&lt;!ATTLIST chapter id ID #IMPLIED&gt;</code></p>
3617
3618<p>The last value of an attribute definition can be <code>#REQUIRED
3619</code>meaning that the attribute has to be given, <code>#IMPLIED</code>
3620meaning that it is optional, or the default value (possibly prefixed by
3621<code>#FIXED</code> if it is the only allowed).</p>
3622
3623<p>Notes:</p>
3624<ul>
3625  <li>Usually the attributes pertaining to a given element are declared in a
3626    single expression, but it is just a convention adopted by a lot of DTD
3627    writers:
3628    <pre>&lt;!ATTLIST termdef
3629          id      ID      #REQUIRED
3630          name    CDATA   #IMPLIED&gt;</pre>
3631    <p>The previous construct defines both <code>id</code> and
3632    <code>name</code> attributes for the element <code>termdef</code>.</p>
3633  </li>
3634</ul>
3635
3636<h3><a name="Some1">Some examples</a></h3>
3637
3638<p>The directory <code>test/valid/dtds/</code> in the libxml2 distribution
3639contains some complex DTD examples. The example in the file
3640<code>test/valid/dia.xml</code> shows an XML file where the simple DTD is
3641directly included within the document.</p>
3642
3643<h3><a name="validate1">How to validate</a></h3>
3644
3645<p>The simplest way is to use the xmllint program included with libxml. The
3646<code>--valid</code> option turns-on validation of the files given as input.
3647For example the following validates a copy of the first revision of the XML
36481.0 specification:</p>
3649
3650<p><code>xmllint --valid --noout test/valid/REC-xml-19980210.xml</code></p>
3651
3652<p>the -- noout is used to disable output of the resulting tree.</p>
3653
3654<p>The <code>--dtdvalid dtd</code> allows validation of the document(s)
3655against a given DTD.</p>
3656
3657<p>Libxml2 exports an API to handle DTDs and validation, check the <a
3658href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-valid.html">associated
3659description</a>.</p>
3660
3661<h3><a name="Other1">Other resources</a></h3>
3662
3663<p>DTDs are as old as SGML. So there may be a number of examples on-line, I
3664will just list one for now, others pointers welcome:</p>
3665<ul>
3666  <li><a href="http://www.xml101.com:8081/dtd/">XML-101 DTD</a></li>
3667</ul>
3668
3669<p>I suggest looking at the examples found under test/valid/dtd and any of
3670the large number of books available on XML. The dia example in test/valid
3671should be both simple and complete enough to allow you to build your own.</p>
3672
3673<p></p>
3674
3675<h2><a name="Memory">Memory Management</a></h2>
3676
3677<p>Table of Content:</p>
3678<ol>
3679  <li><a href="#General3">General overview</a></li>
3680  <li><a href="#setting">Setting libxml2 set of memory routines</a></li>
3681  <li><a href="#cleanup">Cleaning up after using the library</a></li>
3682  <li><a href="#Debugging">Debugging routines</a></li>
3683  <li><a href="#General4">General memory requirements</a></li>
3684  <li><a href="#Compacting">Returning memory to the kernel</a></li>
3685</ol>
3686
3687<h3><a name="General3">General overview</a></h3>
3688
3689<p>The module <code><a
3690href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlmemory.h</a></code>
3691provides the interfaces to the libxml2 memory system:</p>
3692<ul>
3693  <li>libxml2 does not use the libc memory allocator directly but xmlFree(),
3694    xmlMalloc() and xmlRealloc()</li>
3695  <li>those routines can be reallocated to a specific set of routine, by
3696    default the libc ones i.e. free(), malloc() and realloc()</li>
3697  <li>the xmlmemory.c module includes a set of debugging routine</li>
3698</ul>
3699
3700<h3><a name="setting">Setting libxml2 set of memory routines</a></h3>
3701
3702<p>It is sometimes useful to not use the default memory allocator, either for
3703debugging, analysis or to implement a specific behaviour on memory management
3704(like on embedded systems). Two function calls are available to do so:</p>
3705<ul>
3706  <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemGet
3707    ()</a> which return the current set of functions in use by the parser</li>
3708  <li><a
3709    href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemSetup()</a>
3710    which allow to set up a new set of memory allocation functions</li>
3711</ul>
3712
3713<p>Of course a call to xmlMemSetup() should probably be done before calling
3714any other libxml2 routines (unless you are sure your allocations routines are
3715compatibles).</p>
3716
3717<h3><a name="cleanup">Cleaning up after using the library</a></h3>
3718
3719<p>Libxml2 is not stateless, there is a few set of memory structures needing
3720allocation before the parser is fully functional (some encoding structures
3721for example). This also mean that once parsing is finished there is a tiny
3722amount of memory (a few hundred bytes) which can be recollected if you don't
3723reuse the library or any document built with it:</p>
3724<ul>
3725  <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html">xmlCleanupParser
3726    ()</a> is a centralized routine to free the library state and data. Note
3727    that it won't deallocate any produced tree if any (use the xmlFreeDoc()
3728    and related routines for this). This should be called only when the library
3729    is not used anymore.</li>
3730  <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-parser.html">xmlInitParser
3731    ()</a> is the dual routine allowing to preallocate the parsing state
3732    which can be useful for example to avoid initialization reentrancy
3733    problems when using libxml2 in multithreaded applications</li>
3734</ul>
3735
3736<p>Generally xmlCleanupParser() is safe assuming no parsing is ongoing and
3737no document is still being used, if needed the state will be rebuild at the
3738next invocation of parser routines (or by xmlInitParser()), but be careful
3739of the consequences in multithreaded applications.</p>
3740
3741<h3><a name="Debugging">Debugging routines</a></h3>
3742
3743<p>When configured using --with-mem-debug flag (off by default), libxml2 uses
3744a set of memory allocation debugging routines keeping track of all allocated
3745blocks and the location in the code where the routine was called. A couple of
3746other debugging routines allow to dump the memory allocated infos to a file
3747or call a specific routine when a given block number is allocated:</p>
3748<ul>
3749  <li><a
3750    href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMallocLoc()</a>
3751    <a
3752    href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlReallocLoc()</a>
3753    and <a
3754    href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemStrdupLoc()</a>
3755    are the memory debugging replacement allocation routines</li>
3756  <li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlmemory.html">xmlMemoryDump
3757    ()</a> dumps all the information about the allocated memory block lefts
3758    in the <code>.memdump</code> file</li>
3759</ul>
3760
3761<p>When developing libxml2 memory debug is enabled, the tests programs call
3762xmlMemoryDump () and the "make test" regression tests will check for any
3763memory leak during the full regression test sequence, this helps a lot
3764ensuring that libxml2  does not leak memory and bullet proof memory
3765allocations use (some libc implementations are known to be far too permissive
3766resulting in major portability problems!).</p>
3767
3768<p>If the .memdump reports a leak, it displays the allocation function and
3769also tries to give some information about the content and structure of the
3770allocated blocks left. This is sufficient in most cases to find the culprit,
3771but not always. Assuming the allocation problem is reproducible, it is
3772possible to find more easily:</p>
3773<ol>
3774  <li>write down the block number xxxx not allocated</li>
3775  <li>export the environment variable XML_MEM_BREAKPOINT=xxxx , the easiest
3776    when using GDB is to simply give the command
3777    <p><code>set environment XML_MEM_BREAKPOINT xxxx</code></p>
3778    <p>before running the program.</p>
3779  </li>
3780  <li>run the program under a debugger and set a breakpoint on
3781    xmlMallocBreakpoint() a specific function called when this precise block
3782    is allocated</li>
3783  <li>when the breakpoint is reached you can then do a fine analysis of the
3784    allocation an step  to see the condition resulting in the missing
3785    deallocation.</li>
3786</ol>
3787
3788<p>I used to use a commercial tool to debug libxml2 memory problems but after
3789noticing that it was not detecting memory leaks that simple mechanism was
3790used and proved extremely efficient until now. Lately I have also used <a
3791href="http://developer.kde.org/~sewardj/">valgrind</a> with quite some
3792success, it is tied to the i386 architecture since it works by emulating the
3793processor and instruction set, it is slow but  extremely efficient, i.e. it
3794spot memory usage errors in a very precise way.</p>
3795
3796<h3><a name="General4">General memory requirements</a></h3>
3797
3798<p>How much libxml2 memory require ? It's hard to tell in average it depends
3799of a number of things:</p>
3800<ul>
3801  <li>the parser itself should work  in a fixed amount of memory, except for
3802    information maintained about the stacks of names and  entities locations.
3803    The I/O and encoding handlers will probably account for a few KBytes.
3804    This is true for both the XML and HTML parser (though the HTML parser
3805    need more state).</li>
3806  <li>If you are generating the DOM tree then memory requirements will grow
3807    nearly linear with the size of the data. In general for a balanced
3808    textual document the internal memory requirement is about 4 times the
3809    size of the UTF8 serialization of this document (example the XML-1.0
3810    recommendation is a bit more of 150KBytes and takes 650KBytes of main
3811    memory when parsed). Validation will add a amount of memory required for
3812    maintaining the external Dtd state which should be linear with the
3813    complexity of the content model defined by the Dtd</li>
3814  <li>If you need to work with fixed memory requirements or don't need the
3815    full DOM tree then using the <a href="xmlreader.html">xmlReader
3816    interface</a> is probably the best way to proceed, it still allows to
3817    validate or operate on subset of the tree if needed.</li>
3818  <li>If you don't care about the advanced features of libxml2 like
3819    validation, DOM, XPath or XPointer, don't use entities, need to work with
3820    fixed memory requirements, and try to get the fastest parsing possible
3821    then the SAX interface should be used, but it has known restrictions.</li>
3822</ul>
3823
3824<p></p>
3825<h3><a name="Compacting">Returning memory to the kernel</a></h3>
3826
3827<p>You may encounter that your process using libxml2 does not have a
3828reduced memory usage although you freed the trees. This is because
3829libxml2 allocates memory in a number of small chunks. When freeing one
3830of those chunks, the OS may decide that giving this little memory back
3831to the kernel will cause too much overhead and delay the operation. As
3832all chunks are this small, they get actually freed but not returned to
3833the kernel. On systems using glibc, there is a function call
3834"malloc_trim" from malloc.h which does this missing operation (note that
3835it is allowed to fail). Thus, after freeing your tree you may simply try
3836"malloc_trim(0);" to really get the memory back. If your OS does not
3837provide malloc_trim, try searching for a similar function.</p>
3838<p></p>
3839
3840<h2><a name="Encodings">Encodings support</a></h2>
3841
3842<p>If you are not really familiar with Internationalization (usual shortcut
3843is I18N) , Unicode, characters and glyphs, I suggest you read a <a
3844href="http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2003/04/06/Unicode">presentation</a>
3845by Tim Bray on Unicode and why you should care about it.</p>
3846
3847<p>If you don't understand why <b>it does not make sense to have a string
3848without knowing what encoding it uses</b>, then as Joel Spolsky said <a
3849href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Unicode.html">please do not
3850write another line of code until you finish reading that article.</a>. It is
3851a prerequisite to understand this page, and avoid a lot of problems with
3852libxml2, XML or text processing in general.</p>
3853
3854<p>Table of Content:</p>
3855<ol>
3856  <li><a href="encoding.html#What">What does internationalization support
3857    mean ?</a></li>
3858  <li><a href="encoding.html#internal">The internal encoding, how and
3859  why</a></li>
3860  <li><a href="encoding.html#implemente">How is it implemented ?</a></li>
3861  <li><a href="encoding.html#Default">Default supported encodings</a></li>
3862  <li><a href="encoding.html#extend">How to extend the existing
3863  support</a></li>
3864</ol>
3865
3866<h3><a name="What">What does internationalization support mean ?</a></h3>
3867
3868<p>XML was designed from the start to allow the support of any character set
3869by using Unicode. Any conformant XML parser has to support the UTF-8 and
3870UTF-16 default encodings which can both express the full unicode ranges. UTF8
3871is a variable length encoding whose greatest points are to reuse the same
3872encoding for ASCII and to save space for Western encodings, but it is a bit
3873more complex to handle in practice. UTF-16 use 2 bytes per character (and
3874sometimes combines two pairs), it makes implementation easier, but looks a
3875bit overkill for Western languages encoding. Moreover the XML specification
3876allows the document to be encoded in other encodings at the condition that
3877they are clearly labeled as such. For example the following is a wellformed
3878XML document encoded in ISO-8859-1 and using accentuated letters that we
3879French like for both markup and content:</p>
3880<pre>&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?&gt;
3881&lt;tr&egrave;s&gt;l&agrave; &lt;/tr&egrave;s&gt;</pre>
3882
3883<p>Having internationalization support in libxml2 means the following:</p>
3884<ul>
3885  <li>the document is properly parsed</li>
3886  <li>information about it's encoding is saved</li>
3887  <li>it can be modified</li>
3888  <li>it can be saved in its original encoding</li>
3889  <li>it can also be saved in another encoding supported by libxml2 (for
3890    example straight UTF8 or even an ASCII form)</li>
3891</ul>
3892
3893<p>Another very important point is that the whole libxml2 API, with the
3894exception of a few routines to read with a specific encoding or save to a
3895specific encoding, is completely agnostic about the original encoding of the
3896document.</p>
3897
3898<p>It should be noted too that the HTML parser embedded in libxml2 now obey
3899the same rules too, the following document will be (as of 2.2.2) handled  in
3900an internationalized fashion by libxml2 too:</p>
3901<pre>&lt;!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"
3902                      "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd"&gt;
3903&lt;html lang="fr"&gt;
3904&lt;head&gt;
3905  &lt;META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"&gt;
3906&lt;/head&gt;
3907&lt;body&gt;
3908&lt;p&gt;W3C cr&eacute;e des standards pour le Web.&lt;/body&gt;
3909&lt;/html&gt;</pre>
3910
3911<h3><a name="internal">The internal encoding, how and why</a></h3>
3912
3913<p>One of the core decisions was to force all documents to be converted to a
3914default internal encoding, and that encoding to be UTF-8, here are the
3915rationales for those choices:</p>
3916<ul>
3917  <li>keeping the native encoding in the internal form would force the libxml
3918    users (or the code associated) to be fully aware of the encoding of the
3919    original document, for examples when adding a text node to a document,
3920    the content would have to be provided in the document encoding, i.e. the
3921    client code would have to check it before hand, make sure it's conformant
3922    to the encoding, etc ... Very hard in practice, though in some specific
3923    cases this may make sense.</li>
3924  <li>the second decision was which encoding. From the XML spec only UTF8 and
3925    UTF16 really makes sense as being the two only encodings for which there
3926    is mandatory support. UCS-4 (32 bits fixed size encoding) could be
3927    considered an intelligent choice too since it's a direct Unicode mapping
3928    support. I selected UTF-8 on the basis of efficiency and compatibility
3929    with surrounding software:
3930    <ul>
3931      <li>UTF-8 while a bit more complex to convert from/to (i.e. slightly
3932        more costly to import and export CPU wise) is also far more compact
3933        than UTF-16 (and UCS-4) for a majority of the documents I see it used
3934        for right now (RPM RDF catalogs, advogato data, various configuration
3935        file formats, etc.) and the key point for today's computer
3936        architecture is efficient uses of caches. If one nearly double the
3937        memory requirement to store the same amount of data, this will trash
3938        caches (main memory/external caches/internal caches) and my take is
3939        that this harms the system far more than the CPU requirements needed
3940        for the conversion to UTF-8</li>
3941      <li>Most of libxml2 version 1 users were using it with straight ASCII
3942        most of the time, doing the conversion with an internal encoding
3943        requiring all their code to be rewritten was a serious show-stopper
3944        for using UTF-16 or UCS-4.</li>
3945      <li>UTF-8 is being used as the de-facto internal encoding standard for
3946        related code like the <a href="http://www.pango.org/">pango</a>
3947        upcoming Gnome text widget, and a lot of Unix code (yet another place
3948        where Unix programmer base takes a different approach from Microsoft
3949        - they are using UTF-16)</li>
3950    </ul>
3951  </li>
3952</ul>
3953
3954<p>What does this mean in practice for the libxml2 user:</p>
3955<ul>
3956  <li>xmlChar, the libxml2 data type is a byte, those bytes must be assembled
3957    as UTF-8 valid strings. The proper way to terminate an xmlChar * string
3958    is simply to append 0 byte, as usual.</li>
3959  <li>One just need to make sure that when using chars outside the ASCII set,
3960    the values has been properly converted to UTF-8</li>
3961</ul>
3962
3963<h3><a name="implemente">How is it implemented ?</a></h3>
3964
3965<p>Let's describe how all this works within libxml, basically the I18N
3966(internationalization) support get triggered only during I/O operation, i.e.
3967when reading a document or saving one. Let's look first at the reading
3968sequence:</p>
3969<ol>
3970  <li>when a document is processed, we usually don't know the encoding, a
3971    simple heuristic allows to detect UTF-16 and UCS-4 from encodings where
3972    the ASCII range (0-0x7F) maps with ASCII</li>
3973  <li>the xml declaration if available is parsed, including the encoding
3974    declaration. At that point, if the autodetected encoding is different
3975    from the one declared a call to xmlSwitchEncoding() is issued.</li>
3976  <li>If there is no encoding declaration, then the input has to be in either
3977    UTF-8 or UTF-16, if it is not then at some point when processing the
3978    input, the converter/checker of UTF-8 form will raise an encoding error.
3979    You may end-up with a garbled document, or no document at all ! Example:
3980    <pre>~/XML -&gt; /xmllint err.xml 
3981err.xml:1: error: Input is not proper UTF-8, indicate encoding !
3982&lt;tr&egrave;s&gt;l&agrave; &lt;/tr&egrave;s&gt;
3983   ^
3984err.xml:1: error: Bytes: 0xE8 0x73 0x3E 0x6C
3985&lt;tr&egrave;s&gt;l&agrave; &lt;/tr&egrave;s&gt;
3986   ^</pre>
3987  </li>
3988  <li>xmlSwitchEncoding() does an encoding name lookup, canonicalize it, and
3989    then search the default registered encoding converters for that encoding.
3990    If it's not within the default set and iconv() support has been compiled
3991    it, it will ask iconv for such an encoder. If this fails then the parser
3992    will report an error and stops processing:
3993    <pre>~/XML -&gt; /xmllint err2.xml 
3994err2.xml:1: error: Unsupported encoding UnsupportedEnc
3995&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UnsupportedEnc"?&gt;
3996                                             ^</pre>
3997  </li>
3998  <li>From that point the encoder processes progressively the input (it is
3999    plugged as a front-end to the I/O module) for that entity. It captures
4000    and converts on-the-fly the document to be parsed to UTF-8. The parser
4001    itself just does UTF-8 checking of this input and process it
4002    transparently. The only difference is that the encoding information has
4003    been added to the parsing context (more precisely to the input
4004    corresponding to this entity).</li>
4005  <li>The result (when using DOM) is an internal form completely in UTF-8
4006    with just an encoding information on the document node.</li>
4007</ol>
4008
4009<p>Ok then what happens when saving the document (assuming you
4010collected/built an xmlDoc DOM like structure) ? It depends on the function
4011called, xmlSaveFile() will just try to save in the original encoding, while
4012xmlSaveFileTo() and xmlSaveFileEnc() can optionally save to a given
4013encoding:</p>
4014<ol>
4015  <li>if no encoding is given, libxml2 will look for an encoding value
4016    associated to the document and if it exists will try to save to that
4017    encoding,
4018    <p>otherwise everything is written in the internal form, i.e. UTF-8</p>
4019  </li>
4020  <li>so if an encoding was specified, either at the API level or on the
4021    document, libxml2 will again canonicalize the encoding name, lookup for a
4022    converter in the registered set or through iconv. If not found the
4023    function will return an error code</li>
4024  <li>the converter is placed before the I/O buffer layer, as another kind of
4025    buffer, then libxml2 will simply push the UTF-8 serialization to through
4026    that buffer, which will then progressively be converted and pushed onto
4027    the I/O layer.</li>
4028  <li>It is possible that the converter code fails on some input, for example
4029    trying to push an UTF-8 encoded Chinese character through the UTF-8 to
4030    ISO-8859-1 converter won't work. Since the encoders are progressive they
4031    will just report the error and the number of bytes converted, at that
4032    point libxml2 will decode the offending character, remove it from the
4033    buffer and replace it with the associated charRef encoding &amp;#123; and
4034    resume the conversion. This guarantees that any document will be saved
4035    without losses (except for markup names where this is not legal, this is
4036    a problem in the current version, in practice avoid using non-ascii
4037    characters for tag or attribute names). A special "ascii" encoding name
4038    is used to save documents to a pure ascii form can be used when
4039    portability is really crucial</li>
4040</ol>
4041
4042<p>Here are a few examples based on the same test document and assumin a
4043terminal using ISO-8859-1 as the text encoding:</p>
4044<pre>~/XML -&gt; /xmllint isolat1 
4045&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?&gt;
4046&lt;tr&egrave;s&gt;là&lt;/tr&egrave;s&gt;
4047~/XML -&gt; /xmllint --encode UTF-8 isolat1 
4048&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;
4049&lt;très&gt;là &nbsp;&lt;/très&gt;
4050~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4051
4052<p>The same processing is applied (and reuse most of the code) for HTML I18N
4053processing. Looking up and modifying the content encoding is a bit more
4054difficult since it is located in a &lt;meta&gt; tag under the &lt;head&gt;,
4055so a couple of functions htmlGetMetaEncoding() and htmlSetMetaEncoding() have
4056been provided. The parser also attempts to switch encoding on the fly when
4057detecting such a tag on input. Except for that the processing is the same
4058(and again reuses the same code).</p>
4059
4060<h3><a name="Default">Default supported encodings</a></h3>
4061
4062<p>libxml2 has a set of default converters for the following encodings
4063(located in encoding.c):</p>
4064<ol>
4065  <li>UTF-8 is supported by default (null handlers)</li>
4066  <li>UTF-16, both little and big endian</li>
4067  <li>ISO-Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1) covering most western languages</li>
4068  <li>ASCII, useful mostly for saving</li>
4069  <li>HTML, a specific handler for the conversion of UTF-8 to ASCII with HTML
4070    predefined entities like &amp;copy; for the Copyright sign.</li>
4071</ol>
4072
4073<p>More over when compiled on an Unix platform with iconv support the full
4074set of encodings supported by iconv can be instantly be used by libxml. On a
4075linux machine with glibc-2.1 the list of supported encodings and aliases fill
40763 full pages, and include UCS-4, the full set of ISO-Latin encodings, and the
4077various Japanese ones.</p>
4078
4079<p>To convert from the UTF-8 values returned from the API to another encoding
4080then it is possible to use the function provided from <a
4081href="html/libxml-encoding.html">the encoding module</a> like <a
4082href="html/libxml-encoding.html#UTF8Toisolat1">UTF8Toisolat1</a>, or use the
4083POSIX <a
4084href="http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/iconv.html">iconv()</a>
4085API directly.</p>
4086
4087<h4>Encoding aliases</h4>
4088
4089<p>From 2.2.3, libxml2 has support to register encoding names aliases. The
4090goal is to be able to parse document whose encoding is supported but where
4091the name differs (for example from the default set of names accepted by
4092iconv). The following functions allow to register and handle new aliases for
4093existing encodings. Once registered libxml2 will automatically lookup the
4094aliases when handling a document:</p>
4095<ul>
4096  <li>int xmlAddEncodingAlias(const char *name, const char *alias);</li>
4097  <li>int xmlDelEncodingAlias(const char *alias);</li>
4098  <li>const char * xmlGetEncodingAlias(const char *alias);</li>
4099  <li>void xmlCleanupEncodingAliases(void);</li>
4100</ul>
4101
4102<h3><a name="extend">How to extend the existing support</a></h3>
4103
4104<p>Well adding support for new encoding, or overriding one of the encoders
4105(assuming it is buggy) should not be hard, just write input and output
4106conversion routines to/from UTF-8, and register them using
4107xmlNewCharEncodingHandler(name, xxxToUTF8, UTF8Toxxx),  and they will be
4108called automatically if the parser(s) encounter such an encoding name
4109(register it uppercase, this will help). The description of the encoders,
4110their arguments and expected return values are described in the encoding.h
4111header.</p>
4112
4113<h2><a name="IO">I/O Interfaces</a></h2>
4114
4115<p>Table of Content:</p>
4116<ol>
4117  <li><a href="#General1">General overview</a></li>
4118  <li><a href="#basic">The basic buffer type</a></li>
4119  <li><a href="#Input">Input I/O handlers</a></li>
4120  <li><a href="#Output">Output I/O handlers</a></li>
4121  <li><a href="#entities">The entities loader</a></li>
4122  <li><a href="#Example2">Example of customized I/O</a></li>
4123</ol>
4124
4125<h3><a name="General1">General overview</a></h3>
4126
4127<p>The module <code><a
4128href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-xmlio.html">xmlIO.h</a></code> provides
4129the interfaces to the libxml2 I/O system. This consists of 4 main parts:</p>
4130<ul>
4131  <li>Entities loader, this is a routine which tries to fetch the entities
4132    (files) based on their PUBLIC and SYSTEM identifiers. The default loader
4133    don't look at the public identifier since libxml2 do not maintain a
4134    catalog. You can redefine you own entity loader by using
4135    <code>xmlGetExternalEntityLoader()</code> and
4136    <code>xmlSetExternalEntityLoader()</code>. <a href="#entities">Check the
4137    example</a>.</li>
4138  <li>Input I/O buffers which are a commodity structure used by the parser(s)
4139    input layer to handle fetching the information to feed the parser. This
4140    provides buffering and is also a placeholder where the encoding
4141    converters to UTF8 are piggy-backed.</li>
4142  <li>Output I/O buffers are similar to the Input ones and fulfill similar
4143    task but when generating a serialization from a tree.</li>
4144  <li>A mechanism to register sets of I/O callbacks and associate them with
4145    specific naming schemes like the protocol part of the URIs.
4146    <p>This affect the default I/O operations and allows to use specific I/O
4147    handlers for certain names.</p>
4148  </li>
4149</ul>
4150
4151<p>The general mechanism used when loading http://rpmfind.net/xml.html for
4152example in the HTML parser is the following:</p>
4153<ol>
4154  <li>The default entity loader calls <code>xmlNewInputFromFile()</code> with
4155    the parsing context and the URI string.</li>
4156  <li>the URI string is checked against the existing registered handlers
4157    using their match() callback function, if the HTTP module was compiled
4158    in, it is registered and its match() function will succeeds</li>
4159  <li>the open() function of the handler is called and if successful will
4160    return an I/O Input buffer</li>
4161  <li>the parser will the start reading from this buffer and progressively
4162    fetch information from the resource, calling the read() function of the
4163    handler until the resource is exhausted</li>
4164  <li>if an encoding change is detected it will be installed on the input
4165    buffer, providing buffering and efficient use of the conversion
4166  routines</li>
4167  <li>once the parser has finished, the close() function of the handler is
4168    called once and the Input buffer and associated resources are
4169  deallocated.</li>
4170</ol>
4171
4172<p>The user defined callbacks are checked first to allow overriding of the
4173default libxml2 I/O routines.</p>
4174
4175<h3><a name="basic">The basic buffer type</a></h3>
4176
4177<p>All the buffer manipulation handling is done using the
4178<code>xmlBuffer</code> type define in <code><a
4179href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-tree.html">tree.h</a> </code>which is a
4180resizable memory buffer. The buffer allocation strategy can be selected to be
4181either best-fit or use an exponential doubling one (CPU vs. memory use
4182trade-off). The values are <code>XML_BUFFER_ALLOC_EXACT</code> and
4183<code>XML_BUFFER_ALLOC_DOUBLEIT</code>, and can be set individually or on a
4184system wide basis using <code>xmlBufferSetAllocationScheme()</code>. A number
4185of functions allows to manipulate buffers with names starting with the
4186<code>xmlBuffer...</code> prefix.</p>
4187
4188<h3><a name="Input">Input I/O handlers</a></h3>
4189
4190<p>An Input I/O handler is a simple structure
4191<code>xmlParserInputBuffer</code> containing a context associated to the
4192resource (file descriptor, or pointer to a protocol handler), the read() and
4193close() callbacks to use and an xmlBuffer. And extra xmlBuffer and a charset
4194encoding handler are also present to support charset conversion when
4195needed.</p>
4196
4197<h3><a name="Output">Output I/O handlers</a></h3>
4198
4199<p>An Output handler <code>xmlOutputBuffer</code> is completely similar to an
4200Input one except the callbacks are write() and close().</p>
4201
4202<h3><a name="entities">The entities loader</a></h3>
4203
4204<p>The entity loader resolves requests for new entities and create inputs for
4205the parser. Creating an input from a filename or an URI string is done
4206through the xmlNewInputFromFile() routine.  The default entity loader do not
4207handle the PUBLIC identifier associated with an entity (if any). So it just
4208calls xmlNewInputFromFile() with the SYSTEM identifier (which is mandatory in
4209XML).</p>
4210
4211<p>If you want to hook up a catalog mechanism then you simply need to
4212override the default entity loader, here is an example:</p>
4213<pre>#include &lt;libxml/xmlIO.h&gt;
4214
4215xmlExternalEntityLoader defaultLoader = NULL;
4216
4217xmlParserInputPtr
4218xmlMyExternalEntityLoader(const char *URL, const char *ID,
4219                               xmlParserCtxtPtr ctxt) {
4220    xmlParserInputPtr ret;
4221    const char *fileID = NULL;
4222    /* lookup for the fileID depending on ID */
4223
4224    ret = xmlNewInputFromFile(ctxt, fileID);
4225    if (ret != NULL)
4226        return(ret);
4227    if (defaultLoader != NULL)
4228        ret = defaultLoader(URL, ID, ctxt);
4229    return(ret);
4230}
4231
4232int main(..) {
4233    ...
4234
4235    /*
4236     * Install our own entity loader
4237     */
4238    defaultLoader = xmlGetExternalEntityLoader();
4239    xmlSetExternalEntityLoader(xmlMyExternalEntityLoader);
4240
4241    ...
4242}</pre>
4243
4244<h3><a name="Example2">Example of customized I/O</a></h3>
4245
4246<p>This example come from <a href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages/0708.html">a
4247real use case</a>,  xmlDocDump() closes the FILE * passed by the application
4248and this was a problem. The <a
4249href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages/0711.html">solution</a> was to redefine a
4250new output handler with the closing call deactivated:</p>
4251<ol>
4252  <li>First define a new I/O output allocator where the output don't close
4253    the file:
4254    <pre>xmlOutputBufferPtr
4255xmlOutputBufferCreateOwn(FILE *file, xmlCharEncodingHandlerPtr encoder) {
4256&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;xmlOutputBufferPtr ret;
4257&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
4258&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;if (xmlOutputCallbackInitialized == 0)
4259&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;xmlRegisterDefaultOutputCallbacks();
4260
4261&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;if (file == NULL) return(NULL);
4262&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ret = xmlAllocOutputBuffer(encoder);
4263&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;if (ret != NULL) {
4264&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ret-&gt;context = file;
4265&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ret-&gt;writecallback = xmlFileWrite;
4266&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ret-&gt;closecallback = NULL;  /* No close callback */
4267&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}
4268&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;return(ret);
4269} </pre>
4270  </li>
4271  <li>And then use it to save the document:
4272    <pre>FILE *f;
4273xmlOutputBufferPtr output;
4274xmlDocPtr doc;
4275int res;
4276
4277f = ...
4278doc = ....
4279
4280output = xmlOutputBufferCreateOwn(f, NULL);
4281res = xmlSaveFileTo(output, doc, NULL);
4282    </pre>
4283  </li>
4284</ol>
4285
4286<h2><a name="Catalog">Catalog support</a></h2>
4287
4288<p>Table of Content:</p>
4289<ol>
4290  <li><a href="General2">General overview</a></li>
4291  <li><a href="#definition">The definition</a></li>
4292  <li><a href="#Simple">Using catalogs</a></li>
4293  <li><a href="#Some">Some examples</a></li>
4294  <li><a href="#reference">How to tune  catalog usage</a></li>
4295  <li><a href="#validate">How to debug catalog processing</a></li>
4296  <li><a href="#Declaring">How to create and maintain catalogs</a></li>
4297  <li><a href="#implemento">The implementor corner quick review of the
4298  API</a></li>
4299  <li><a href="#Other">Other resources</a></li>
4300</ol>
4301
4302<h3><a name="General2">General overview</a></h3>
4303
4304<p>What is a catalog? Basically it's a lookup mechanism used when an entity
4305(a file or a remote resource) references another entity. The catalog lookup
4306is inserted between the moment the reference is recognized by the software
4307(XML parser, stylesheet processing, or even images referenced for inclusion
4308in a rendering) and the time where loading that resource is actually
4309started.</p>
4310
4311<p>It is basically used for 3 things:</p>
4312<ul>
4313  <li>mapping from "logical" names, the public identifiers and a more
4314    concrete name usable for download (and URI). For example it can associate
4315    the logical name
4316    <p>"-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"</p>
4317    <p>of the DocBook 4.1.2 XML DTD with the actual URL where it can be
4318    downloaded</p>
4319    <p>http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd</p>
4320  </li>
4321  <li>remapping from a given URL to another one, like an HTTP indirection
4322    saying that
4323    <p>"http://www.oasis-open.org/committes/tr.xsl"</p>
4324    <p>should really be looked at</p>
4325    <p>"http://www.oasis-open.org/committes/entity/stylesheets/base/tr.xsl"</p>
4326  </li>
4327  <li>providing a local cache mechanism allowing to load the entities
4328    associated to public identifiers or remote resources, this is a really
4329    important feature for any significant deployment of XML or SGML since it
4330    allows to avoid the aleas and delays associated to fetching remote
4331    resources.</li>
4332</ul>
4333
4334<h3><a name="definition">The definitions</a></h3>
4335
4336<p>Libxml, as of 2.4.3 implements 2 kind of catalogs:</p>
4337<ul>
4338  <li>the older SGML catalogs, the official spec is  SGML Open Technical
4339    Resolution TR9401:1997, but is better understood by reading <a
4340    href="http://www.jclark.com/sp/catalog.htm">the SP Catalog page</a> from
4341    James Clark. This is relatively old and not the preferred mode of
4342    operation of libxml.</li>
4343  <li><a href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/spec.html">XML
4344    Catalogs</a> is far more flexible, more recent, uses an XML syntax and
4345    should scale quite better. This is the default option of libxml.</li>
4346</ul>
4347
4348<p></p>
4349
4350<h3><a name="Simple">Using catalog</a></h3>
4351
4352<p>In a normal environment libxml2 will by default check the presence of a
4353catalog in /etc/xml/catalog, and assuming it has been correctly populated,
4354the processing is completely transparent to the document user. To take a
4355concrete example, suppose you are authoring a DocBook document, this one
4356starts with the following DOCTYPE definition:</p>
4357<pre>&lt;?xml version='1.0'?&gt;
4358&lt;!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//Norman Walsh//DTD DocBk XML V3.1.4//EN"
4359          "http://nwalsh.com/docbook/xml/3.1.4/db3xml.dtd"&gt;</pre>
4360
4361<p>When validating the document with libxml, the catalog will be
4362automatically consulted to lookup the public identifier "-//Norman Walsh//DTD
4363DocBk XML V3.1.4//EN" and the system identifier
4364"http://nwalsh.com/docbook/xml/3.1.4/db3xml.dtd", and if these entities have
4365been installed on your system and the catalogs actually point to them, libxml
4366will fetch them from the local disk.</p>
4367
4368<p style="font-size: 10pt"><strong>Note</strong>: Really don't use this
4369DOCTYPE example it's a really old version, but is fine as an example.</p>
4370
4371<p>Libxml2 will check the catalog each time that it is requested to load an
4372entity, this includes DTD, external parsed entities, stylesheets, etc ... If
4373your system is correctly configured all the authoring phase and processing
4374should use only local files, even if your document stays portable because it
4375uses the canonical public and system ID, referencing the remote document.</p>
4376
4377<h3><a name="Some">Some examples:</a></h3>
4378
4379<p>Here is a couple of fragments from XML Catalogs used in libxml2 early
4380regression tests in <code>test/catalogs</code> :</p>
4381<pre>&lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
4382&lt;!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC 
4383   "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN"
4384   "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"&gt;
4385&lt;catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"&gt;
4386  &lt;public publicId="-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
4387   uri="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd"/&gt;
4388...</pre>
4389
4390<p>This is the beginning of a catalog for DocBook 4.1.2, XML Catalogs are
4391written in XML,  there is a specific namespace for catalog elements
4392"urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog". The first entry in this
4393catalog is a <code>public</code> mapping it allows to associate a Public
4394Identifier with an URI.</p>
4395<pre>...
4396    &lt;rewriteSystem systemIdStartString="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/"
4397                   rewritePrefix="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook/"/&gt;
4398...</pre>
4399
4400<p>A <code>rewriteSystem</code> is a very powerful instruction, it says that
4401any URI starting with a given prefix should be looked at another  URI
4402constructed by replacing the prefix with an new one. In effect this acts like
4403a cache system for a full area of the Web. In practice it is extremely useful
4404with a file prefix if you have installed a copy of those resources on your
4405local system.</p>
4406<pre>...
4407&lt;delegatePublic publicIdStartString="-//OASIS//DTD XML Catalog //"
4408                catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/&gt;
4409&lt;delegatePublic publicIdStartString="-//OASIS//ENTITIES DocBook XML"
4410                catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/&gt;
4411&lt;delegatePublic publicIdStartString="-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML"
4412                catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/&gt;
4413&lt;delegateSystem systemIdStartString="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/"
4414                catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/&gt;
4415&lt;delegateURI uriStartString="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/"
4416                catalog="file:///usr/share/xml/docbook.xml"/&gt;
4417...</pre>
4418
4419<p>Delegation is the core features which allows to build a tree of catalogs,
4420easier to maintain than a single catalog, based on Public Identifier, System
4421Identifier or URI prefixes it instructs the catalog software to look up
4422entries in another resource. This feature allow to build hierarchies of
4423catalogs, the set of entries presented should be sufficient to redirect the
4424resolution of all DocBook references to the specific catalog in
4425<code>/usr/share/xml/docbook.xml</code> this one in turn could delegate all
4426references for DocBook 4.2.1 to a specific catalog installed at the same time
4427as the DocBook resources on the local machine.</p>
4428
4429<h3><a name="reference">How to tune catalog usage:</a></h3>
4430
4431<p>The user can change the default catalog behaviour by redirecting queries
4432to its own set of catalogs, this can be done by setting the
4433<code>XML_CATALOG_FILES</code> environment variable to a list of catalogs, an
4434empty one should deactivate loading the default <code>/etc/xml/catalog</code>
4435default catalog</p>
4436
4437<h3><a name="validate">How to debug catalog processing:</a></h3>
4438
4439<p>Setting up the <code>XML_DEBUG_CATALOG</code> environment variable will
4440make libxml2 output debugging information for each catalog operations, for
4441example:</p>
4442<pre>orchis:~/XML -&gt; xmllint --memory --noout test/ent2
4443warning: failed to load external entity "title.xml"
4444orchis:~/XML -&gt; export XML_DEBUG_CATALOG=
4445orchis:~/XML -&gt; xmllint --memory --noout test/ent2
4446Failed to parse catalog /etc/xml/catalog
4447Failed to parse catalog /etc/xml/catalog
4448warning: failed to load external entity "title.xml"
4449Catalogs cleanup
4450orchis:~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4451
4452<p>The test/ent2 references an entity, running the parser from memory makes
4453the base URI unavailable and the the "title.xml" entity cannot be loaded.
4454Setting up the debug environment variable allows to detect that an attempt is
4455made to load the <code>/etc/xml/catalog</code> but since it's not present the
4456resolution fails.</p>
4457
4458<p>But the most advanced way to debug XML catalog processing is to use the
4459<strong>xmlcatalog</strong> command shipped with libxml2, it allows to load
4460catalogs and make resolution queries to see what is going on. This is also
4461used for the regression tests:</p>
4462<pre>orchis:~/XML -&gt; /xmlcatalog test/catalogs/docbook.xml \
4463                   "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
4464http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd
4465orchis:~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4466
4467<p>For debugging what is going on, adding one -v flags increase the verbosity
4468level to indicate the processing done (adding a second flag also indicate
4469what elements are recognized at parsing):</p>
4470<pre>orchis:~/XML -&gt; /xmlcatalog -v test/catalogs/docbook.xml \
4471                   "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
4472Parsing catalog test/catalogs/docbook.xml's content
4473Found public match -//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN
4474http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd
4475Catalogs cleanup
4476orchis:~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4477
4478<p>A shell interface is also available to debug and process multiple queries
4479(and for regression tests):</p>
4480<pre>orchis:~/XML -&gt; /xmlcatalog -shell test/catalogs/docbook.xml \
4481                   "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
4482&gt; help   
4483Commands available:
4484public PublicID: make a PUBLIC identifier lookup
4485system SystemID: make a SYSTEM identifier lookup
4486resolve PublicID SystemID: do a full resolver lookup
4487add 'type' 'orig' 'replace' : add an entry
4488del 'values' : remove values
4489dump: print the current catalog state
4490debug: increase the verbosity level
4491quiet: decrease the verbosity level
4492exit:  quit the shell
4493&gt; public "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
4494http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd
4495&gt; quit
4496orchis:~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4497
4498<p>This should be sufficient for most debugging purpose, this was actually
4499used heavily to debug the XML Catalog implementation itself.</p>
4500
4501<h3><a name="Declaring">How to create and maintain</a> catalogs:</h3>
4502
4503<p>Basically XML Catalogs are XML files, you can either use XML tools to
4504manage them or use  <strong>xmlcatalog</strong> for this. The basic step is
4505to create a catalog the -create option provide this facility:</p>
4506<pre>orchis:~/XML -&gt; /xmlcatalog --create tst.xml
4507&lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
4508&lt;!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN"
4509         "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"&gt;
4510&lt;catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"/&gt;
4511orchis:~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4512
4513<p>By default xmlcatalog does not overwrite the original catalog and save the
4514result on the standard output, this can be overridden using the -noout
4515option. The <code>-add</code> command allows to add entries in the
4516catalog:</p>
4517<pre>orchis:~/XML -&gt; /xmlcatalog --noout --create --add "public" \
4518  "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" \
4519  http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd tst.xml
4520orchis:~/XML -&gt; cat tst.xml
4521&lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
4522&lt;!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN" \
4523  "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"&gt;
4524&lt;catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"&gt;
4525&lt;public publicId="-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
4526        uri="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd"/&gt;
4527&lt;/catalog&gt;
4528orchis:~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4529
4530<p>The <code>-add</code> option will always take 3 parameters even if some of
4531the XML Catalog constructs (like nextCatalog) will have only a single
4532argument, just pass a third empty string, it will be ignored.</p>
4533
4534<p>Similarly the <code>-del</code> option remove matching entries from the
4535catalog:</p>
4536<pre>orchis:~/XML -&gt; /xmlcatalog --del \
4537  "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" tst.xml
4538&lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
4539&lt;!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN"
4540    "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd"&gt;
4541&lt;catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"/&gt;
4542orchis:~/XML -&gt; </pre>
4543
4544<p>The catalog is now empty. Note that the matching of <code>-del</code> is
4545exact and would have worked in a similar fashion with the Public ID
4546string.</p>
4547
4548<p>This is rudimentary but should be sufficient to manage a not too complex
4549catalog tree of resources.</p>
4550
4551<h3><a name="implemento">The implementor corner quick review of the
4552API:</a></h3>
4553
4554<p>First, and like for every other module of libxml, there is an
4555automatically generated <a href="html/libxml-catalog.html">API page for
4556catalog support</a>.</p>
4557
4558<p>The header for the catalog interfaces should be included as:</p>
4559<pre>#include &lt;libxml/catalog.h&gt;</pre>
4560
4561<p>The API is voluntarily kept very simple. First it is not obvious that
4562applications really need access to it since it is the default behaviour of
4563libxml2 (Note: it is possible to completely override libxml2 default catalog
4564by using <a href="html/libxml-parser.html">xmlSetExternalEntityLoader</a> to
4565plug an application specific resolver).</p>
4566
4567<p>Basically libxml2 support 2 catalog lists:</p>
4568<ul>
4569  <li>the default one, global shared by all the application</li>
4570  <li>a per-document catalog, this one is built if the document uses the
4571    <code>oasis-xml-catalog</code> PIs to specify its own catalog list, it is
4572    associated to the parser context and destroyed when the parsing context
4573    is destroyed.</li>
4574</ul>
4575
4576<p>the document one will be used first if it exists.</p>
4577
4578<h4>Initialization routines:</h4>
4579
4580<p>xmlInitializeCatalog(), xmlLoadCatalog() and xmlLoadCatalogs() should be
4581used at startup to initialize the catalog, if the catalog should be
4582initialized with specific values xmlLoadCatalog()  or xmlLoadCatalogs()
4583should be called before xmlInitializeCatalog() which would otherwise do a
4584default initialization first.</p>
4585
4586<p>The xmlCatalogAddLocal() call is used by the parser to grow the document
4587own catalog list if needed.</p>
4588
4589<h4>Preferences setup:</h4>
4590
4591<p>The XML Catalog spec requires the possibility to select default
4592preferences between  public and system delegation,
4593xmlCatalogSetDefaultPrefer() allows this, xmlCatalogSetDefaults() and
4594xmlCatalogGetDefaults() allow to control  if XML Catalogs resolution should
4595be forbidden, allowed for global catalog, for document catalog or both, the
4596default is to allow both.</p>
4597
4598<p>And of course xmlCatalogSetDebug() allows to generate debug messages
4599(through the xmlGenericError() mechanism).</p>
4600
4601<h4>Querying routines:</h4>
4602
4603<p>xmlCatalogResolve(), xmlCatalogResolveSystem(), xmlCatalogResolvePublic()
4604and xmlCatalogResolveURI() are relatively explicit if you read the XML
4605Catalog specification they correspond to section 7 algorithms, they should
4606also work if you have loaded an SGML catalog with a simplified semantic.</p>
4607
4608<p>xmlCatalogLocalResolve() and xmlCatalogLocalResolveURI() are the same but
4609operate on the document catalog list</p>
4610
4611<h4>Cleanup and Miscellaneous:</h4>
4612
4613<p>xmlCatalogCleanup() free-up the global catalog, xmlCatalogFreeLocal() is
4614the per-document equivalent.</p>
4615
4616<p>xmlCatalogAdd() and xmlCatalogRemove() are used to dynamically modify the
4617first catalog in the global list, and xmlCatalogDump() allows to dump a
4618catalog state, those routines are primarily designed for xmlcatalog, I'm not
4619sure that exposing more complex interfaces (like navigation ones) would be
4620really useful.</p>
4621
4622<p>The xmlParseCatalogFile() is a function used to load XML Catalog files,
4623it's similar as xmlParseFile() except it bypass all catalog lookups, it's
4624provided because this functionality may be useful for client tools.</p>
4625
4626<h4>threaded environments:</h4>
4627
4628<p>Since the catalog tree is built progressively, some care has been taken to
4629try to avoid troubles in multithreaded environments. The code is now thread
4630safe assuming that the libxml2 library has been compiled with threads
4631support.</p>
4632
4633<p></p>
4634
4635<h3><a name="Other">Other resources</a></h3>
4636
4637<p>The XML Catalog specification is relatively recent so there isn't much
4638literature to point at:</p>
4639<ul>
4640  <li>You can find a good rant from Norm Walsh about <a
4641    href="http://www.arbortext.com/Think_Tank/XML_Resources/Issue_Three/issue_three.html">the
4642    need for catalogs</a>, it provides a lot of context information even if
4643    I don't agree with everything presented. Norm also wrote a more recent
4644    article <a
4645    href="http://wwws.sun.com/software/xml/developers/resolver/article/">XML
4646    entities and URI resolvers</a> describing them.</li>
4647  <li>An <a href="http://home.ccil.org/~cowan/XML/XCatalog.html">old XML
4648    catalog proposal</a> from John Cowan</li>
4649  <li>The <a href="http://www.rddl.org/">Resource Directory Description
4650    Language</a> (RDDL) another catalog system but more oriented toward
4651    providing metadata for XML namespaces.</li>
4652  <li>the page from the OASIS Technical <a
4653    href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/">Committee on Entity
4654    Resolution</a> who maintains XML Catalog, you will find pointers to the
4655    specification update, some background and pointers to others tools
4656    providing XML Catalog support</li>
4657  <li>There is a <a href="buildDocBookCatalog">shell script</a> to generate
4658    XML Catalogs for DocBook 4.1.2 . If it can write to the /etc/xml/
4659    directory, it will set-up /etc/xml/catalog and /etc/xml/docbook based on
4660    the resources found on the system. Otherwise it will just create
4661    ~/xmlcatalog and ~/dbkxmlcatalog and doing:
4662    <p><code>export XML_CATALOG_FILES=$HOME/xmlcatalog</code></p>
4663    <p>should allow to process DocBook documentations without requiring
4664    network accesses for the DTD or stylesheets</p>
4665  </li>
4666  <li>I have uploaded <a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxml2/test/dbk412catalog.tar.gz">a
4667    small tarball</a> containing XML Catalogs for DocBook 4.1.2 which seems
4668    to work fine for me too</li>
4669  <li>The <a href="http://www.xmlsoft.org/xmlcatalog_man.html">xmlcatalog
4670    manual page</a></li>
4671</ul>
4672
4673<p>If you have suggestions for corrections or additions, simply contact
4674me:</p>
4675
4676<h2><a name="library">The parser interfaces</a></h2>
4677
4678<p>This section is directly intended to help programmers getting bootstrapped
4679using the XML tollkit from the C language. It is not intended to be
4680extensive. I hope the automatically generated documents will provide the
4681completeness required, but as a separate set of documents. The interfaces of
4682the XML parser are by principle low level, Those interested in a higher level
4683API should <a href="#DOM">look at DOM</a>.</p>
4684
4685<p>The <a href="html/libxml-parser.html">parser interfaces for XML</a> are
4686separated from the <a href="html/libxml-htmlparser.html">HTML parser
4687interfaces</a>.  Let's have a look at how the XML parser can be called:</p>
4688
4689<h3><a name="Invoking">Invoking the parser : the pull method</a></h3>
4690
4691<p>Usually, the first thing to do is to read an XML input. The parser accepts
4692documents either from in-memory strings or from files.  The functions are
4693defined in "parser.h":</p>
4694<dl>
4695  <dt><code>xmlDocPtr xmlParseMemory(char *buffer, int size);</code></dt>
4696    <dd><p>Parse a null-terminated string containing the document.</p>
4697    </dd>
4698</dl>
4699<dl>
4700  <dt><code>xmlDocPtr xmlParseFile(const char *filename);</code></dt>
4701    <dd><p>Parse an XML document contained in a (possibly compressed)
4702      file.</p>
4703    </dd>
4704</dl>
4705
4706<p>The parser returns a pointer to the document structure (or NULL in case of
4707failure).</p>
4708
4709<h3 id="Invoking1">Invoking the parser: the push method</h3>
4710
4711<p>In order for the application to keep the control when the document is
4712being fetched (which is common for GUI based programs) libxml2 provides a
4713push interface, too, as of version 1.8.3. Here are the interface
4714functions:</p>
4715<pre>xmlParserCtxtPtr xmlCreatePushParserCtxt(xmlSAXHandlerPtr sax,
4716                                         void *user_data,
4717                                         const char *chunk,
4718                                         int size,
4719                                         const char *filename);
4720int              xmlParseChunk          (xmlParserCtxtPtr ctxt,
4721                                         const char *chunk,
4722                                         int size,
4723                                         int terminate);</pre>
4724
4725<p>and here is a simple example showing how to use the interface:</p>
4726<pre>            FILE *f;
4727
4728            f = fopen(filename, "r");
4729            if (f != NULL) {
4730                int res, size = 1024;
4731                char chars[1024];
4732                xmlParserCtxtPtr ctxt;
4733
4734                res = fread(chars, 1, 4, f);
4735                if (res &gt; 0) {
4736                    ctxt = xmlCreatePushParserCtxt(NULL, NULL,
4737                                chars, res, filename);
4738                    while ((res = fread(chars, 1, size, f)) &gt; 0) {
4739                        xmlParseChunk(ctxt, chars, res, 0);
4740                    }
4741                    xmlParseChunk(ctxt, chars, 0, 1);
4742                    doc = ctxt-&gt;myDoc;
4743                    xmlFreeParserCtxt(ctxt);
4744                }
4745            }</pre>
4746
4747<p>The HTML parser embedded into libxml2 also has a push interface; the
4748functions are just prefixed by "html" rather than "xml".</p>
4749
4750<h3 id="Invoking2">Invoking the parser: the SAX interface</h3>
4751
4752<p>The tree-building interface makes the parser memory-hungry, first loading
4753the document in memory and then building the tree itself. Reading a document
4754without building the tree is possible using the SAX interfaces (see SAX.h and
4755<a href="http://www.daa.com.au/~james/gnome/xml-sax/xml-sax.html">James
4756Henstridge's documentation</a>). Note also that the push interface can be
4757limited to SAX: just use the two first arguments of
4758<code>xmlCreatePushParserCtxt()</code>.</p>
4759
4760<h3><a name="Building">Building a tree from scratch</a></h3>
4761
4762<p>The other way to get an XML tree in memory is by building it. Basically
4763there is a set of functions dedicated to building new elements. (These are
4764also described in &lt;libxml/tree.h&gt;.) For example, here is a piece of
4765code that produces the XML document used in the previous examples:</p>
4766<pre>    #include &lt;libxml/tree.h&gt;
4767    xmlDocPtr doc;
4768    xmlNodePtr tree, subtree;
4769
4770    doc = xmlNewDoc("1.0");
4771    doc-&gt;children = xmlNewDocNode(doc, NULL, "EXAMPLE", NULL);
4772    xmlSetProp(doc-&gt;children, "prop1", "gnome is great");
4773    xmlSetProp(doc-&gt;children, "prop2", "&amp; linux too");
4774    tree = xmlNewChild(doc-&gt;children, NULL, "head", NULL);
4775    subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "title", "Welcome to Gnome");
4776    tree = xmlNewChild(doc-&gt;children, NULL, "chapter", NULL);
4777    subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "title", "The Linux adventure");
4778    subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "p", "bla bla bla ...");
4779    subtree = xmlNewChild(tree, NULL, "image", NULL);
4780    xmlSetProp(subtree, "href", "linus.gif");</pre>
4781
4782<p>Not really rocket science ...</p>
4783
4784<h3><a name="Traversing">Traversing the tree</a></h3>
4785
4786<p>Basically by <a href="html/libxml-tree.html">including "tree.h"</a> your
4787code has access to the internal structure of all the elements of the tree.
4788The names should be somewhat simple like <strong>parent</strong>,
4789<strong>children</strong>, <strong>next</strong>, <strong>prev</strong>,
4790<strong>properties</strong>, etc... For example, still with the previous
4791example:</p>
4792<pre><code>doc-&gt;children-&gt;children-&gt;children</code></pre>
4793
4794<p>points to the title element,</p>
4795<pre>doc-&gt;children-&gt;children-&gt;next-&gt;children-&gt;children</pre>
4796
4797<p>points to the text node containing the chapter title "The Linux
4798adventure".</p>
4799
4800<p><strong>NOTE</strong>: XML allows <em>PI</em>s and <em>comments</em> to be
4801present before the document root, so <code>doc-&gt;children</code> may point
4802to an element which is not the document Root Element; a function
4803<code>xmlDocGetRootElement()</code> was added for this purpose.</p>
4804
4805<h3><a name="Modifying">Modifying the tree</a></h3>
4806
4807<p>Functions are provided for reading and writing the document content. Here
4808is an excerpt from the <a href="html/libxml-tree.html">tree API</a>:</p>
4809<dl>
4810  <dt><code>xmlAttrPtr xmlSetProp(xmlNodePtr node, const xmlChar *name, const
4811  xmlChar *value);</code></dt>
4812    <dd><p>This sets (or changes) an attribute carried by an ELEMENT node.
4813      The value can be NULL.</p>
4814    </dd>
4815</dl>
4816<dl>
4817  <dt><code>const xmlChar *xmlGetProp(xmlNodePtr node, const xmlChar
4818  *name);</code></dt>
4819    <dd><p>This function returns a pointer to new copy of the property
4820      content. Note that the user must deallocate the result.</p>
4821    </dd>
4822</dl>
4823
4824<p>Two functions are provided for reading and writing the text associated
4825with elements:</p>
4826<dl>
4827  <dt><code>xmlNodePtr xmlStringGetNodeList(xmlDocPtr doc, const xmlChar
4828  *value);</code></dt>
4829    <dd><p>This function takes an "external" string and converts it to one
4830      text node or possibly to a list of entity and text nodes. All
4831      non-predefined entity references like &amp;Gnome; will be stored
4832      internally as entity nodes, hence the result of the function may not be
4833      a single node.</p>
4834    </dd>
4835</dl>
4836<dl>
4837  <dt><code>xmlChar *xmlNodeListGetString(xmlDocPtr doc, xmlNodePtr list, int
4838  inLine);</code></dt>
4839    <dd><p>This function is the inverse of
4840      <code>xmlStringGetNodeList()</code>. It generates a new string
4841      containing the content of the text and entity nodes. Note the extra
4842      argument inLine. If this argument is set to 1, the function will expand
4843      entity references.  For example, instead of returning the &amp;Gnome;
4844      XML encoding in the string, it will substitute it with its value (say,
4845      "GNU Network Object Model Environment").</p>
4846    </dd>
4847</dl>
4848
4849<h3><a name="Saving">Saving a tree</a></h3>
4850
4851<p>Basically 3 options are possible:</p>
4852<dl>
4853  <dt><code>void xmlDocDumpMemory(xmlDocPtr cur, xmlChar**mem, int
4854  *size);</code></dt>
4855    <dd><p>Returns a buffer into which the document has been saved.</p>
4856    </dd>
4857</dl>
4858<dl>
4859  <dt><code>extern void xmlDocDump(FILE *f, xmlDocPtr doc);</code></dt>
4860    <dd><p>Dumps a document to an open file descriptor.</p>
4861    </dd>
4862</dl>
4863<dl>
4864  <dt><code>int xmlSaveFile(const char *filename, xmlDocPtr cur);</code></dt>
4865    <dd><p>Saves the document to a file. In this case, the compression
4866      interface is triggered if it has been turned on.</p>
4867    </dd>
4868</dl>
4869
4870<h3><a name="Compressio">Compression</a></h3>
4871
4872<p>The library transparently handles compression when doing file-based
4873accesses. The level of compression on saves can be turned on either globally
4874or individually for one file:</p>
4875<dl>
4876  <dt><code>int  xmlGetDocCompressMode (xmlDocPtr doc);</code></dt>
4877    <dd><p>Gets the document compression ratio (0-9).</p>
4878    </dd>
4879</dl>
4880<dl>
4881  <dt><code>void xmlSetDocCompressMode (xmlDocPtr doc, int mode);</code></dt>
4882    <dd><p>Sets the document compression ratio.</p>
4883    </dd>
4884</dl>
4885<dl>
4886  <dt><code>int  xmlGetCompressMode(void);</code></dt>
4887    <dd><p>Gets the default compression ratio.</p>
4888    </dd>
4889</dl>
4890<dl>
4891  <dt><code>void xmlSetCompressMode(int mode);</code></dt>
4892    <dd><p>Sets the default compression ratio.</p>
4893    </dd>
4894</dl>
4895
4896<h2><a name="Entities">Entities or no entities</a></h2>
4897
4898<p>Entities in principle are similar to simple C macros. An entity defines an
4899abbreviation for a given string that you can reuse many times throughout the
4900content of your document. Entities are especially useful when a given string
4901may occur frequently within a document, or to confine the change needed to a
4902document to a restricted area in the internal subset of the document (at the
4903beginning). Example:</p>
4904<pre>1 &lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
49052 &lt;!DOCTYPE EXAMPLE SYSTEM "example.dtd" [
49063 &lt;!ENTITY xml "Extensible Markup Language"&gt;
49074 ]&gt;
49085 &lt;EXAMPLE&gt;
49096    &amp;xml;
49107 &lt;/EXAMPLE&gt;</pre>
4911
4912<p>Line 3 declares the xml entity. Line 6 uses the xml entity, by prefixing
4913its name with '&amp;' and following it by ';' without any spaces added. There
4914are 5 predefined entities in libxml2 allowing you to escape characters with
4915predefined meaning in some parts of the xml document content:
4916<strong>&amp;lt;</strong> for the character '&lt;', <strong>&amp;gt;</strong>
4917for the character '&gt;',  <strong>&amp;apos;</strong> for the character ''',
4918<strong>&amp;quot;</strong> for the character '"', and
4919<strong>&amp;amp;</strong> for the character '&amp;'.</p>
4920
4921<p>One of the problems related to entities is that you may want the parser to
4922substitute an entity's content so that you can see the replacement text in
4923your application. Or you may prefer to keep entity references as such in the
4924content to be able to save the document back without losing this usually
4925precious information (if the user went through the pain of explicitly
4926defining entities, he may have a a rather negative attitude if you blindly
4927substitute them as saving time). The <a
4928href="html/libxml-parser.html#xmlSubstituteEntitiesDefault">xmlSubstituteEntitiesDefault()</a>
4929function allows you to check and change the behaviour, which is to not
4930substitute entities by default.</p>
4931
4932<p>Here is the DOM tree built by libxml2 for the previous document in the
4933default case:</p>
4934<pre>/gnome/src/gnome-xml -&gt; /xmllint --debug test/ent1
4935DOCUMENT
4936version=1.0
4937   ELEMENT EXAMPLE
4938     TEXT
4939     content=
4940     ENTITY_REF
4941       INTERNAL_GENERAL_ENTITY xml
4942       content=Extensible Markup Language
4943     TEXT
4944     content=</pre>
4945
4946<p>And here is the result when substituting entities:</p>
4947<pre>/gnome/src/gnome-xml -&gt; /tester --debug --noent test/ent1
4948DOCUMENT
4949version=1.0
4950   ELEMENT EXAMPLE
4951     TEXT
4952     content=     Extensible Markup Language</pre>
4953
4954<p>So, entities or no entities? Basically, it depends on your use case. I
4955suggest that you keep the non-substituting default behaviour and avoid using
4956entities in your XML document or data if you are not willing to handle the
4957entity references elements in the DOM tree.</p>
4958
4959<p>Note that at save time libxml2 enforces the conversion of the predefined
4960entities where necessary to prevent well-formedness problems, and will also
4961transparently replace those with chars (i.e. it will not generate entity
4962reference elements in the DOM tree or call the reference() SAX callback when
4963finding them in the input).</p>
4964
4965<p><span style="background-color: #FF0000">WARNING</span>: handling entities
4966on top of the libxml2 SAX interface is difficult!!! If you plan to use
4967non-predefined entities in your documents, then the learning curve to handle
4968then using the SAX API may be long. If you plan to use complex documents, I
4969strongly suggest you consider using the DOM interface instead and let libxml
4970deal with the complexity rather than trying to do it yourself.</p>
4971
4972<h2><a name="Namespaces">Namespaces</a></h2>
4973
4974<p>The libxml2 library implements <a
4975href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">XML namespaces</a> support by
4976recognizing namespace constructs in the input, and does namespace lookup
4977automatically when building the DOM tree. A namespace declaration is
4978associated with an in-memory structure and all elements or attributes within
4979that namespace point to it. Hence testing the namespace is a simple and fast
4980equality operation at the user level.</p>
4981
4982<p>I suggest that people using libxml2 use a namespace, and declare it in the
4983root element of their document as the default namespace. Then they don't need
4984to use the prefix in the content but we will have a basis for future semantic
4985refinement and  merging of data from different sources. This doesn't increase
4986the size of the XML output significantly, but significantly increases its
4987value in the long-term. Example:</p>
4988<pre>&lt;mydoc xmlns="http://mydoc.example.org/schemas/"&gt;
4989   &lt;elem1&gt;...&lt;/elem1&gt;
4990   &lt;elem2&gt;...&lt;/elem2&gt;
4991&lt;/mydoc&gt;</pre>
4992
4993<p>The namespace value has to be an absolute URL, but the URL doesn't have to
4994point to any existing resource on the Web. It will bind all the element and
4995attributes with that URL. I suggest to use an URL within a domain you
4996control, and that the URL should contain some kind of version information if
4997possible. For example, <code>"http://www.gnome.org/gnumeric/1.0/"</code> is a
4998good namespace scheme.</p>
4999
5000<p>Then when you load a file, make sure that a namespace carrying the
5001version-independent prefix is installed on the root element of your document,
5002and if the version information don't match something you know, warn the user
5003and be liberal in what you accept as the input. Also do *not* try to base
5004namespace checking on the prefix value. &lt;foo:text&gt; may be exactly the
5005same as &lt;bar:text&gt; in another document. What really matters is the URI
5006associated with the element or the attribute, not the prefix string (which is
5007just a shortcut for the full URI). In libxml, element and attributes have an
5008<code>ns</code> field pointing to an xmlNs structure detailing the namespace
5009prefix and its URI.</p>
5010
5011<p>@@Interfaces@@</p>
5012<pre>xmlNodePtr node;
5013if(!strncmp(node-&gt;name,"mytag",5)
5014  &amp;&amp; node-&gt;ns
5015  &amp;&amp; !strcmp(node-&gt;ns-&gt;href,"http://www.mysite.com/myns/1.0")) {
5016  ...
5017}</pre>
5018
5019<p>Usually people object to using namespaces together with validity checking.
5020I will try to make sure that using namespaces won't break validity checking,
5021so even if you plan to use or currently are using validation I strongly
5022suggest adding namespaces to your document. A default namespace scheme
5023<code>xmlns="http://...."</code> should not break validity even on less
5024flexible parsers. Using namespaces to mix and differentiate content coming
5025from multiple DTDs will certainly break current validation schemes. To check
5026such documents one needs to use schema-validation, which is supported in
5027libxml2 as well. See <a href="http://www.relaxng.org/">relagx-ng</a> and <a
5028href="http://www.w3c.org/XML/Schema">w3c-schema</a>.</p>
5029
5030<h2><a name="Upgrading">Upgrading 1.x code</a></h2>
5031
5032<p>Incompatible changes:</p>
5033
5034<p>Version 2 of libxml2 is the first version introducing serious backward
5035incompatible changes. The main goals were:</p>
5036<ul>
5037  <li>a general cleanup. A number of mistakes inherited from the very early
5038    versions couldn't be changed due to compatibility constraints. Example
5039    the "childs" element in the nodes.</li>
5040  <li>Uniformization of the various nodes, at least for their header and link
5041    parts (doc, parent, children, prev, next), the goal is a simpler
5042    programming model and simplifying the task of the DOM implementors.</li>
5043  <li>better conformances to the XML specification, for example version 1.x
5044    had an heuristic to try to detect ignorable white spaces. As a result the
5045    SAX event generated were ignorableWhitespace() while the spec requires
5046    character() in that case. This also mean that a number of DOM node
5047    containing blank text may populate the DOM tree which were not present
5048    before.</li>
5049</ul>
5050
5051<h3>How to fix libxml-1.x code:</h3>
5052
5053<p>So client code of libxml designed to run with version 1.x may have to be
5054changed to compile against version 2.x of libxml. Here is a list of changes
5055that I have collected, they may not be sufficient, so in case you find other
5056change which are required, <a href="mailto:Daniel.Veillard@w3.org">drop me a
5057mail</a>:</p>
5058<ol>
5059  <li>The package name have changed from libxml to libxml2, the library name
5060    is now -lxml2 . There is a new xml2-config script which should be used to
5061    select the right parameters libxml2</li>
5062  <li>Node <strong>childs</strong> field has been renamed
5063    <strong>children</strong> so s/childs/children/g should be  applied
5064    (probability of having "childs" anywhere else is close to 0+</li>
5065  <li>The document don't have anymore a <strong>root</strong> element it has
5066    been replaced by <strong>children</strong> and usually you will get a
5067    list of element here. For example a Dtd element for the internal subset
5068    and it's declaration may be found in that list, as well as processing
5069    instructions or comments found before or after the document root element.
5070    Use <strong>xmlDocGetRootElement(doc)</strong> to get the root element of
5071    a document. Alternatively if you are sure to not reference DTDs nor have
5072    PIs or comments before or after the root element
5073    s/-&gt;root/-&gt;children/g will probably do it.</li>
5074  <li>The white space issue, this one is more complex, unless special case of
5075    validating parsing, the line breaks and spaces usually used for indenting
5076    and formatting the document content becomes significant. So they are
5077    reported by SAX and if your using the DOM tree, corresponding nodes are
5078    generated. Too approach can be taken:
5079    <ol>
5080      <li>lazy one, use the compatibility call
5081        <strong>xmlKeepBlanksDefault(0)</strong> but be aware that you are
5082        relying on a special (and possibly broken) set of heuristics of
5083        libxml to detect ignorable blanks. Don't complain if it breaks or
5084        make your application not 100% clean w.r.t. to it's input.</li>
5085      <li>the Right Way: change you code to accept possibly insignificant
5086        blanks characters, or have your tree populated with weird blank text
5087        nodes. You can spot them using the commodity function
5088        <strong>xmlIsBlankNode(node)</strong> returning 1 for such blank
5089        nodes.</li>
5090    </ol>
5091    <p>Note also that with the new default the output functions don't add any
5092    extra indentation when saving a tree in order to be able to round trip
5093    (read and save) without inflating the document with extra formatting
5094    chars.</p>
5095  </li>
5096  <li>The include path has changed to $prefix/libxml/ and the includes
5097    themselves uses this new prefix in includes instructions... If you are
5098    using (as expected) the
5099    <pre>xml2-config --cflags</pre>
5100    <p>output to generate you compile commands this will probably work out of
5101    the box</p>
5102  </li>
5103  <li>xmlDetectCharEncoding takes an extra argument indicating the length in
5104    byte of the head of the document available for character detection.</li>
5105</ol>
5106
5107<h3>Ensuring both libxml-1.x and libxml-2.x compatibility</h3>
5108
5109<p>Two new version of libxml (1.8.11) and libxml2 (2.3.4) have been released
5110to allow smooth upgrade of existing libxml v1code while retaining
5111compatibility. They offers the following:</p>
5112<ol>
5113  <li>similar include naming, one should use
5114    <strong>#include&lt;libxml/...&gt;</strong> in both cases.</li>
5115  <li>similar identifiers defined via macros for the child and root fields:
5116    respectively <strong>xmlChildrenNode</strong> and
5117    <strong>xmlRootNode</strong></li>
5118  <li>a new macro <strong>LIBXML_TEST_VERSION</strong> which should be
5119    inserted once in the client code</li>
5120</ol>
5121
5122<p>So the roadmap to upgrade your existing libxml applications is the
5123following:</p>
5124<ol>
5125  <li>install the  libxml-1.8.8 (and libxml-devel-1.8.8) packages</li>
5126  <li>find all occurrences where the xmlDoc <strong>root</strong> field is
5127    used and change it to <strong>xmlRootNode</strong></li>
5128  <li>similarly find all occurrences where the xmlNode
5129    <strong>childs</strong> field is used and change it to
5130    <strong>xmlChildrenNode</strong></li>
5131  <li>add a <strong>LIBXML_TEST_VERSION</strong> macro somewhere in your
5132    <strong>main()</strong> or in the library init entry point</li>
5133  <li>Recompile, check compatibility, it should still work</li>
5134  <li>Change your configure script to look first for xml2-config and fall
5135    back using xml-config . Use the --cflags and --libs output of the command
5136    as the Include and Linking parameters needed to use libxml.</li>
5137  <li>install libxml2-2.3.x and  libxml2-devel-2.3.x (libxml-1.8.y and
5138    libxml-devel-1.8.y can be kept simultaneously)</li>
5139  <li>remove your config.cache, relaunch your configuration mechanism, and
5140    recompile, if steps 2 and 3 were done right it should compile as-is</li>
5141  <li>Test that your application is still running correctly, if not this may
5142    be due to extra empty nodes due to formating spaces being kept in libxml2
5143    contrary to libxml1, in that case insert xmlKeepBlanksDefault(1) in your
5144    code before calling the parser (next to
5145    <strong>LIBXML_TEST_VERSION</strong> is a fine place).</li>
5146</ol>
5147
5148<p>Following those steps should work. It worked for some of my own code.</p>
5149
5150<p>Let me put some emphasis on the fact that there is far more changes from
5151libxml 1.x to 2.x than the ones you may have to patch for. The overall code
5152has been considerably cleaned up and the conformance to the XML specification
5153has been drastically improved too. Don't take those changes as an excuse to
5154not upgrade, it may cost a lot on the long term ...</p>
5155
5156<h2><a name="Thread">Thread safety</a></h2>
5157
5158<p>Starting with 2.4.7, libxml2 makes provisions to ensure that concurrent
5159threads can safely work in parallel parsing different documents. There is
5160however a couple of things to do to ensure it:</p>
5161<ul>
5162  <li>configure the library accordingly using the --with-threads options</li>
5163  <li>call xmlInitParser() in the "main" thread before using any of the
5164    libxml2 API (except possibly selecting a different memory allocator)</li>
5165</ul>
5166
5167<p>Note that the thread safety cannot be ensured for multiple threads sharing
5168the same document, the locking must be done at the application level, libxml
5169exports a basic mutex and reentrant mutexes API in &lt;libxml/threads.h&gt;.
5170The parts of the library checked for thread safety are:</p>
5171<ul>
5172  <li>concurrent loading</li>
5173  <li>file access resolution</li>
5174  <li>catalog access</li>
5175  <li>catalog building</li>
5176  <li>entities lookup/accesses</li>
5177  <li>validation</li>
5178  <li>global variables per-thread override</li>
5179  <li>memory handling</li>
5180</ul>
5181
5182<p>XPath has been tested for threaded usage on non-modified document
5183   for example when using libxslt, but make 100% sure the documents
5184   are accessed read-only !</p>
5185
5186<h2><a name="DOM"></a><a name="Principles">DOM Principles</a></h2>
5187
5188<p><a href="http://www.w3.org/DOM/">DOM</a> stands for the <em>Document
5189Object Model</em>; this is an API for accessing XML or HTML structured
5190documents. Native support for DOM in Gnome is on the way (module gnome-dom),
5191and will be based on gnome-xml. This will be a far cleaner interface to
5192manipulate XML files within Gnome since it won't expose the internal
5193structure.</p>
5194
5195<p>The current DOM implementation on top of libxml2 is the <a
5196href="http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/gdome2/trunk/">gdome2 Gnome module</a>, this
5197is a full DOM interface, thanks to Paolo Casarini, check the <a
5198href="http://gdome2.cs.unibo.it/">Gdome2 homepage</a> for more
5199information.</p>
5200
5201<h2><a name="Example"></a><a name="real">A real example</a></h2>
5202
5203<p>Here is a real size example, where the actual content of the application
5204data is not kept in the DOM tree but uses internal structures. It is based on
5205a proposal to keep a database of jobs related to Gnome, with an XML based
5206storage structure. Here is an <a href="gjobs.xml">XML encoded jobs
5207base</a>:</p>
5208<pre>&lt;?xml version="1.0"?&gt;
5209&lt;gjob:Helping xmlns:gjob="http://www.gnome.org/some-location"&gt;
5210  &lt;gjob:Jobs&gt;
5211
5212    &lt;gjob:Job&gt;
5213      &lt;gjob:Project ID="3"/&gt;
5214      &lt;gjob:Application&gt;GBackup&lt;/gjob:Application&gt;
5215      &lt;gjob:Category&gt;Development&lt;/gjob:Category&gt;
5216
5217      &lt;gjob:Update&gt;
5218        &lt;gjob:Status&gt;Open&lt;/gjob:Status&gt;
5219        &lt;gjob:Modified&gt;Mon, 07 Jun 1999 20:27:45 -0400 MET DST&lt;/gjob:Modified&gt;
5220        &lt;gjob:Salary&gt;USD 0.00&lt;/gjob:Salary&gt;
5221      &lt;/gjob:Update&gt;
5222
5223      &lt;gjob:Developers&gt;
5224        &lt;gjob:Developer&gt;
5225        &lt;/gjob:Developer&gt;
5226      &lt;/gjob:Developers&gt;
5227
5228      &lt;gjob:Contact&gt;
5229        &lt;gjob:Person&gt;Nathan Clemons&lt;/gjob:Person&gt;
5230        &lt;gjob:Email&gt;nathan@windsofstorm.net&lt;/gjob:Email&gt;
5231        &lt;gjob:Company&gt;
5232        &lt;/gjob:Company&gt;
5233        &lt;gjob:Organisation&gt;
5234        &lt;/gjob:Organisation&gt;
5235        &lt;gjob:Webpage&gt;
5236        &lt;/gjob:Webpage&gt;
5237        &lt;gjob:Snailmail&gt;
5238        &lt;/gjob:Snailmail&gt;
5239        &lt;gjob:Phone&gt;
5240        &lt;/gjob:Phone&gt;
5241      &lt;/gjob:Contact&gt;
5242
5243      &lt;gjob:Requirements&gt;
5244      The program should be released as free software, under the GPL.
5245      &lt;/gjob:Requirements&gt;
5246
5247      &lt;gjob:Skills&gt;
5248      &lt;/gjob:Skills&gt;
5249
5250      &lt;gjob:Details&gt;
5251      A GNOME based system that will allow a superuser to configure 
5252      compressed and uncompressed files and/or file systems to be backed 
5253      up with a supported media in the system.  This should be able to 
5254      perform via find commands generating a list of files that are passed 
5255      to tar, dd, cpio, cp, gzip, etc., to be directed to the tape machine 
5256      or via operations performed on the filesystem itself. Email 
5257      notification and GUI status display very important.
5258      &lt;/gjob:Details&gt;
5259
5260    &lt;/gjob:Job&gt;
5261
5262  &lt;/gjob:Jobs&gt;
5263&lt;/gjob:Helping&gt;</pre>
5264
5265<p>While loading the XML file into an internal DOM tree is a matter of
5266calling only a couple of functions, browsing the tree to gather the data and
5267generate the internal structures is harder, and more error prone.</p>
5268
5269<p>The suggested principle is to be tolerant with respect to the input
5270structure. For example, the ordering of the attributes is not significant,
5271the XML specification is clear about it. It's also usually a good idea not to
5272depend on the order of the children of a given node, unless it really makes
5273things harder. Here is some code to parse the information for a person:</p>
5274<pre>/*
5275 * A person record
5276 */
5277typedef struct person {
5278    char *name;
5279    char *email;
5280    char *company;
5281    char *organisation;
5282    char *smail;
5283    char *webPage;
5284    char *phone;
5285} person, *personPtr;
5286
5287/*
5288 * And the code needed to parse it
5289 */
5290personPtr parsePerson(xmlDocPtr doc, xmlNsPtr ns, xmlNodePtr cur) {
5291    personPtr ret = NULL;
5292
5293DEBUG("parsePerson\n");
5294    /*
5295     * allocate the struct
5296     */
5297    ret = (personPtr) malloc(sizeof(person));
5298    if (ret == NULL) {
5299        fprintf(stderr,"out of memory\n");
5300        return(NULL);
5301    }
5302    memset(ret, 0, sizeof(person));
5303
5304    /* We don't care what the top level element name is */
5305    cur = cur-&gt;xmlChildrenNode;
5306    while (cur != NULL) {
5307        if ((!strcmp(cur-&gt;name, "Person")) &amp;&amp; (cur-&gt;ns == ns))
5308            ret-&gt;name = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur-&gt;xmlChildrenNode, 1);
5309        if ((!strcmp(cur-&gt;name, "Email")) &amp;&amp; (cur-&gt;ns == ns))
5310            ret-&gt;email = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur-&gt;xmlChildrenNode, 1);
5311        cur = cur-&gt;next;
5312    }
5313
5314    return(ret);
5315}</pre>
5316
5317<p>Here are a couple of things to notice:</p>
5318<ul>
5319  <li>Usually a recursive parsing style is the more convenient one: XML data
5320    is by nature subject to repetitive constructs and usually exhibits highly
5321    structured patterns.</li>
5322  <li>The two arguments of type <em>xmlDocPtr</em> and <em>xmlNsPtr</em>,
5323    i.e. the pointer to the global XML document and the namespace reserved to
5324    the application. Document wide information are needed for example to
5325    decode entities and it's a good coding practice to define a namespace for
5326    your application set of data and test that the element and attributes
5327    you're analyzing actually pertains to your application space. This is
5328    done by a simple equality test (cur-&gt;ns == ns).</li>
5329  <li>To retrieve text and attributes value, you can use the function
5330    <em>xmlNodeListGetString</em> to gather all the text and entity reference
5331    nodes generated by the DOM output and produce an single text string.</li>
5332</ul>
5333
5334<p>Here is another piece of code used to parse another level of the
5335structure:</p>
5336<pre>#include &lt;libxml/tree.h&gt;
5337/*
5338 * a Description for a Job
5339 */
5340typedef struct job {
5341    char *projectID;
5342    char *application;
5343    char *category;
5344    personPtr contact;
5345    int nbDevelopers;
5346    personPtr developers[100]; /* using dynamic alloc is left as an exercise */
5347} job, *jobPtr;
5348
5349/*
5350 * And the code needed to parse it
5351 */
5352jobPtr parseJob(xmlDocPtr doc, xmlNsPtr ns, xmlNodePtr cur) {
5353    jobPtr ret = NULL;
5354
5355DEBUG("parseJob\n");
5356    /*
5357     * allocate the struct
5358     */
5359    ret = (jobPtr) malloc(sizeof(job));
5360    if (ret == NULL) {
5361        fprintf(stderr,"out of memory\n");
5362        return(NULL);
5363    }
5364    memset(ret, 0, sizeof(job));
5365
5366    /* We don't care what the top level element name is */
5367    cur = cur-&gt;xmlChildrenNode;
5368    while (cur != NULL) {
5369        
5370        if ((!strcmp(cur-&gt;name, "Project")) &amp;&amp; (cur-&gt;ns == ns)) {
5371            ret-&gt;projectID = xmlGetProp(cur, "ID");
5372            if (ret-&gt;projectID == NULL) {
5373                fprintf(stderr, "Project has no ID\n");
5374            }
5375        }
5376        if ((!strcmp(cur-&gt;name, "Application")) &amp;&amp; (cur-&gt;ns == ns))
5377            ret-&gt;application = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur-&gt;xmlChildrenNode, 1);
5378        if ((!strcmp(cur-&gt;name, "Category")) &amp;&amp; (cur-&gt;ns == ns))
5379            ret-&gt;category = xmlNodeListGetString(doc, cur-&gt;xmlChildrenNode, 1);
5380        if ((!strcmp(cur-&gt;name, "Contact")) &amp;&amp; (cur-&gt;ns == ns))
5381            ret-&gt;contact = parsePerson(doc, ns, cur);
5382        cur = cur-&gt;next;
5383    }
5384
5385    return(ret);
5386}</pre>
5387
5388<p>Once you are used to it, writing this kind of code is quite simple, but
5389boring. Ultimately, it could be possible to write stubbers taking either C
5390data structure definitions, a set of XML examples or an XML DTD and produce
5391the code needed to import and export the content between C data and XML
5392storage. This is left as an exercise to the reader :-)</p>
5393
5394<p>Feel free to use <a href="example/gjobread.c">the code for the full C
5395parsing example</a> as a template, it is also available with Makefile in the
5396Gnome SVN base under libxml2/example</p>
5397
5398<h2><a name="Contributi">Contributions</a></h2>
5399<ul>
5400  <li>Bjorn Reese, William Brack and Thomas Broyer have provided a number of
5401    patches, Gary Pennington worked on the validation API, threading support
5402    and Solaris port.</li>
5403  <li>John Fleck helps maintaining the documentation and man pages.</li>
5404  <li><a href="mailto:igor@zlatkovic.com">Igor  Zlatkovic</a> is now the
5405    maintainer of the Windows port, <a
5406    href="http://www.zlatkovic.com/projects/libxml/index.html">he provides
5407    binaries</a></li>
5408  <li><a href="mailto:Gary.Pennington@sun.com">Gary Pennington</a> provides
5409    <a href="http://garypennington.net/libxml2/">Solaris binaries</a></li>
5410  <li><a
5411    href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/2001-March/msg00014.html">Matt
5412    Sergeant</a> developed <a
5413    href="http://axkit.org/download/">XML::LibXSLT</a>, a Perl wrapper for
5414    libxml2/libxslt as part of the <a href="http://axkit.com/">AxKit XML
5415    application server</a></li>
5416  <li><a href="mailto:fnatter@gmx.net">Felix Natter</a> and <a
5417    href="mailto:geertk@ai.rug.nl">Geert Kloosterman</a> provide <a
5418    href="libxml-doc.el">an emacs module</a> to lookup libxml(2) functions
5419    documentation</li>
5420  <li><a href="mailto:sherwin@nlm.nih.gov">Ziying Sherwin</a> provided <a
5421    href="http://xmlsoft.org/messages/0488.html">man pages</a></li>
5422  <li>there is a module for <a
5423    href="http://acs-misc.sourceforge.net/nsxml.html">libxml/libxslt support
5424    in OpenNSD/AOLServer</a></li>
5425  <li><a href="mailto:dkuhlman@cutter.rexx.com">Dave Kuhlman</a> provided the
5426    first version of libxml/libxslt <a
5427    href="http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman">wrappers for Python</a></li>
5428  <li>Petr Kozelka provides <a
5429    href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/libxml2-pas">Pascal units to glue
5430    libxml2</a> with Kylix and Delphi and other Pascal compilers</li>
5431  <li><a href="mailto:aleksey@aleksey.com">Aleksey Sanin</a> implemented the
5432    <a href="http://www.w3.org/Signature/">XML Canonicalization and XML
5433    Digital Signature</a> <a
5434    href="http://www.aleksey.com/xmlsec/">implementations for libxml2</a></li>
5435  <li><a href="mailto:Steve.Ball@explain.com.au">Steve Ball</a> and
5436    contributors maintain <a href="http://tclxml.sourceforge.net/">tcl
5437    bindings for libxml2 and libxslt</a>, as well as <a
5438    href="http://tclxml.sf.net/tkxmllint.html">tkxmllint</a> a GUI for
5439    xmllint and <a href="http://tclxml.sf.net/tkxsltproc.html">tkxsltproc</a>
5440    a GUI for xsltproc.</li>
5441</ul>
5442
5443<p></p>
5444</body>
5445</html>
5446