Perl
Perl
Efficiently Process a Huge XML File
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Demonstrates a technique for processing a huge XML file (can be any size, even many gigabytes).Note: This example requires Chilkat v9.5.0.80 or greater.
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use chilkat();
$success = 0;
# This example shows a way to efficiently process a gigantic XML file -- one that may be too large
# to fit in memory.
#
# Two types of XML parsers exist: DOM parsers and SAX parsers.
# A DOM parser is a Document Object Model parser, where the entire XML is loaded into memory
# and the application has the luxury of interacting with the XML in a convenient, random-access
# way. The Chilkat Xml class is a DOM parser. Because the entire XML is loaded into memory,
# huge XML files (on the order of gigabytes) are usually not loadable for memory constraints.
# A SAX parser is such that the XML file is parsed as an input stream. No DOM exists.
# Using a SAX parser is generally less palatable than using a DOM parser, for many reasons.
#
# The technique described here is a hybrid. It streams the XML file as unstructured text
# to extract fragments that are individually treated as separate XML documents loaded into
# the Chilkat Xml parser.
#
# For example, imagine your XML file is several GBs in size, but has a relatively simple structure, such as:
#
# <Transactions>
# <Transaction id="1">
# ...
# </Transaction>
# <Transaction id="2">
# ...
# </Transaction>
# <Transaction id="3">
# ...
# </Transaction>
# ...
# </Transactions>
# In the following code, each <Transaction ...> ... </Transaction>
# is extracted and loaded separately into an Xml object, where it can be manipulated
# independently. The entire XML file is never entirely loaded into memory.
$fac = chilkat::CkFileAccess->new();
$success = $fac->OpenForRead("qa_data/xml/transactions.xml");
if ($success == 0) {
print $fac->lastErrorText() . "\r\n";
exit;
}
$xml = chilkat::CkXml->new();
$sb = chilkat::CkStringBuilder->new();
$firstIteration = 1;
$retval = 1;
$numTransactions = 0;
# The begin marker is "XML tag aware". If the begin marker begins with "<"
# and ends with ">", then it is assumed to be an XML tag and it will also match
# substrings where the ">" can be a whitespace char.
$beginMarker = "<Transaction>";
$endMarker = "</Transaction>";
while ($retval == 1) {
$sb->Clear();
# The retval can have the following values:
# 0: No more fragments exist.
# 1: Captured the next fragment. The text from beginMarker to endMarker, including the markers, are returned in sb.
# -1: Error.
$retval = $fac->ReadNextFragment($firstIteration,$beginMarker,$endMarker,"utf-8",$sb);
$firstIteration = 0;
if ($retval == 1) {
$numTransactions = $numTransactions + 1;
$success = $xml->LoadSb($sb,1);
# Your application may now do what it needs with this particular XML fragment...
}
}
if ($retval < 0) {
print $fac->lastErrorText() . "\r\n";
}
print "numTransactions: " . $numTransactions . "\r\n";