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9.14. XML Functions The functions and function-like expressions described in this
section operate on values of type xml. Check Section 8.13 for information about the xml
type. The function-like expressions 9.14.1. Producing XML ContentA set of functions and function-like expressions are available for producing XML content from SQL data. As such, they are particularly suitable for formatting query results into XML documents for processing in client applications. 9.14.1.1. xmlcomment
The function Example: SELECT xmlcomment('hello'); xmlcomment -------------- <!--hello-->
9.14.1.2. xmlconcat
The function Example: SELECT xmlconcat('<abc/>', '<bar>foo</bar>'); xmlconcat ---------------------- <abc/><bar>foo</bar>
XML declarations, if present, are combined as follows. If all argument values have the same XML version declaration, that version is used in the result, else no version is used. If all argument values have the standalone declaration value "yes", then that value is used in the result. If all argument values have a standalone declaration value and at least one is "no", then that is used in the result. Else the result will have no standalone declaration. If the result is determined to require a standalone declaration but no version declaration, a version declaration with version 1.0 will be used because XML requires an XML declaration to contain a version declaration. Encoding declarations are ignored and removed in all cases. Example: SELECT xmlconcat('<?xml version="1.1"?><foo/>', '<?xml version="1.1" standalone="no"?><bar/>'); xmlconcat ----------------------------------- <?xml version="1.1"?><foo/><bar/>
9.14.1.3. xmlelement
The Examples: SELECT xmlelement(name foo); xmlelement ------------ <foo/> SELECT xmlelement(name foo, xmlattributes('xyz' as bar)); xmlelement ------------------ <foo bar="xyz"/> SELECT xmlelement(name foo, xmlattributes(current_date as bar), 'cont', 'ent'); xmlelement ------------------------------------- <foo bar="2007-01-26">content</foo>
Element and attribute names that are not valid XML names are escaped by replacing the offending characters by the sequence _xHHHH_, where HHHH is the character's Unicode codepoint in hexadecimal notation. For example: SELECT xmlelement(name "foo$bar", xmlattributes('xyz' as "a&b")); xmlelement ---------------------------------- <foo_x0024_bar a_x0026_b="xyz"/>
An explicit attribute name need not be specified if the attribute value is a column reference, in which case the column's name will be used as the attribute name by default. In other cases, the attribute must be given an explicit name. So this example is valid: CREATE TABLE test (a xml, b xml); SELECT xmlelement(name test, xmlattributes(a, b)) FROM test; But these are not: SELECT xmlelement(name test, xmlattributes('constant'), a, b) FROM test; SELECT xmlelement(name test, xmlattributes(func(a, b))) FROM test;
Element content, if specified, will be formatted according to its data type. If the content is itself of type xml, complex XML documents can be constructed. For example: SELECT xmlelement(name foo, xmlattributes('xyz' as bar), xmlelement(name abc), xmlcomment('test'), xmlelement(name xyz)); xmlelement ---------------------------------------------- <foo bar="xyz"><abc/><!--test--><xyz/></foo> Content of other types will be formatted into valid XML character data. This means in particular that the characters <, >, and & will be converted to entities. Binary data (data type bytea) will be represented in base64 or hex encoding, depending on the setting of the configuration parameter xmlbinary. The particular behavior for individual data types is expected to evolve in order to align the SQL and PostgreSQL data types with the XML Schema specification, at which point a more precise description will appear. 9.14.1.4. xmlforest
The Examples: SELECT xmlforest('abc' AS foo, 123 AS bar); xmlforest ------------------------------ <foo>abc</foo><bar>123</bar> SELECT xmlforest(table_name, column_name) FROM information_schema.columns WHERE table_schema = 'pg_catalog'; xmlforest ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- <table_name>pg_authid</table_name><column_name>rolname</column_name> <table_name>pg_authid</table_name><column_name>rolsuper</column_name> ... As seen in the second example, the element name can be omitted if the content value is a column reference, in which case the column name is used by default. Otherwise, a name must be specified. Element names that are not valid XML names are escaped as shown
for Note that XML forests are not valid XML documents if they consist
of more than one element, so it might be useful to wrap
9.14.1.5. xmlpi
The Example: SELECT xmlpi(name php, 'echo "hello world";'); xmlpi ----------------------------- <?php echo "hello world";?>
9.14.1.6. xmlroot
The SELECT xmlroot(xmlparse(document '<?xml version="1.1"?><content>abc</content>'), version '1.0', standalone yes); xmlroot ---------------------------------------- <?xml version="1.0" standalone="yes"?> <content>abc</content>
9.14.1.7. xmlagg
The function Example: CREATE TABLE test (y int, x xml); INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, '<foo>abc</foo>'); INSERT INTO test VALUES (2, '<bar/>'); SELECT xmlagg(x) FROM test; xmlagg ---------------------- <foo>abc</foo><bar/>
To determine the order of the concatenation, an ORDER BY clause may be added to the aggregate call as described in Section 4.2.7. For example: SELECT xmlagg(x ORDER BY y DESC) FROM test; xmlagg ---------------------- <bar/><foo>abc</foo>
The following non-standard approach used to be recommended in previous versions, and may still be useful in specific cases: SELECT xmlagg(x) FROM (SELECT * FROM test ORDER BY y DESC) AS tab; xmlagg ---------------------- <bar/><foo>abc</foo>
9.14.2. XML PredicatesThe expressions described in this section check properties of xml values. 9.14.2.1. IS DOCUMENTxml IS DOCUMENT The expression IS DOCUMENT returns true if the argument XML value is a proper XML document, false if it is not (that is, it is a content fragment), or null if the argument is null. See Section 8.13 about the difference between documents and content fragments. 9.14.2.2. XMLEXISTS
The function Example: SELECT xmlexists('//town[text() = ''Toronto'']' PASSING BY REF '<towns><town>Toronto</town><town>Ottawa</town></towns>'); xmlexists ------------ t (1 row)
The BY REF clauses have no effect in
PostgreSQL, but are allowed for SQL conformance and compatibility
with other implementations. Per SQL standard, the
first BY REF is required, the second is
optional. Also note that the SQL standard specifies
the 9.14.2.3. xml_is_well_formed
These functions check whether a text string is well-formed XML,
returning a Boolean result.
Examples: SET xmloption TO DOCUMENT; SELECT xml_is_well_formed('<>'); xml_is_well_formed -------------------- f (1 row) SELECT xml_is_well_formed('<abc/>'); xml_is_well_formed -------------------- t (1 row) SET xmloption TO CONTENT; SELECT xml_is_well_formed('abc'); xml_is_well_formed -------------------- t (1 row) SELECT xml_is_well_formed_document('<pg:foo xmlns:pg="http://postgresql.org/stuff">bar</pg:foo>'); xml_is_well_formed_document ----------------------------- t (1 row) SELECT xml_is_well_formed_document('<pg:foo xmlns:pg="http://postgresql.org/stuff">bar</my:foo>'); xml_is_well_formed_document ----------------------------- f (1 row) The last example shows that the checks include whether namespaces are correctly matched. 9.14.3. Processing XML To process values of data type xml, PostgreSQL offers
the functions
The function The second argument must be a well formed XML document. In particular, it must have a single root node element. The optional third argument of the function is an array of namespace
mappings. This array should be a two-dimensional text array with
the length of the second axis being equal to 2 (i.e., it should be an
array of arrays, each of which consists of exactly 2 elements).
The first element of each array entry is the namespace name (alias), the
second the namespace URI. It is not required that aliases provided in
this array be the same as those being used in the XML document itself (in
other words, both in the XML document and in the Example: SELECT xpath('/my:a/text()', '<my:a xmlns:my="http://example.com">test</my:a>', ARRAY[ARRAY['my', 'http://example.com']]); xpath -------- {test} (1 row)
To deal with default (anonymous) namespaces, do something like this: SELECT xpath('//mydefns:b/text()', '<a xmlns="http://example.com"><b>test</b></a>', ARRAY[ARRAY['mydefns', 'http://example.com']]); xpath -------- {test} (1 row)
The function Example: SELECT xpath_exists('/my:a/text()', '<my:a xmlns:my="http://example.com">test</my:a>', ARRAY[ARRAY['my', 'http://example.com']]); xpath_exists -------------- t (1 row)
9.14.4. Mapping Tables to XMLThe following functions map the contents of relational tables to XML values. They can be thought of as XML export functionality: table_to_xml(tbl regclass, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) query_to_xml(query text, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) cursor_to_xml(cursor refcursor, count int, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) The return type of each function is xml. If tableforest is false, then the resulting XML document looks like this: <tablename> <row> <columnname1>data</columnname1> <columnname2>data</columnname2> </row> <row> ... </row> ... </tablename> If tableforest is true, the result is an XML content fragment that looks like this: <tablename> <columnname1>data</columnname1> <columnname2>data</columnname2> </tablename> <tablename> ... </tablename> ... If no table name is available, that is, when mapping a query or a cursor, the string table is used in the first format, row in the second format. The choice between these formats is up to the user. The first
format is a proper XML document, which will be important in many
applications. The second format tends to be more useful in the
The data values are mapped in the same way as described for the
function The parameter nulls determines whether null values should be included in the output. If true, null values in columns are represented as: <columnname xsi:nil="true"/> where xsi is the XML namespace prefix for XML Schema Instance. An appropriate namespace declaration will be added to the result value. If false, columns containing null values are simply omitted from the output. The parameter targetns specifies the desired XML namespace of the result. If no particular namespace is wanted, an empty string should be passed. The following functions return XML Schema documents describing the mappings performed by the corresponding functions above: table_to_xmlschema(tbl regclass, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) query_to_xmlschema(query text, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) cursor_to_xmlschema(cursor refcursor, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) It is essential that the same parameters are passed in order to obtain matching XML data mappings and XML Schema documents. The following functions produce XML data mappings and the corresponding XML Schema in one document (or forest), linked together. They can be useful where self-contained and self-describing results are wanted: table_to_xml_and_xmlschema(tbl regclass, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) query_to_xml_and_xmlschema(query text, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text)
In addition, the following functions are available to produce analogous mappings of entire schemas or the entire current database: schema_to_xml(schema name, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) schema_to_xmlschema(schema name, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) schema_to_xml_and_xmlschema(schema name, nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) database_to_xml(nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) database_to_xmlschema(nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) database_to_xml_and_xmlschema(nulls boolean, tableforest boolean, targetns text) Note that these potentially produce a lot of data, which needs to be built up in memory. When requesting content mappings of large schemas or databases, it might be worthwhile to consider mapping the tables separately instead, possibly even through a cursor. The result of a schema content mapping looks like this: <schemaname> table1-mapping table2-mapping ... </schemaname> where the format of a table mapping depends on the tableforest parameter as explained above. The result of a database content mapping looks like this: <dbname> <schema1name> ... </schema1name> <schema2name> ... </schema2name> ... </dbname> where the schema mapping is as above. As an example of using the output produced by these functions,
Figure 9-1 shows an XSLT stylesheet that
converts the output of
Figure 9-1. XSLT Stylesheet for Converting SQL/XML Output to HTML <?xml version="1.0"?> <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" > <xsl:output method="xml" doctype-system="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" doctype-public="-//W3C/DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" indent="yes"/> <xsl:template match="/*"> <xsl:variable name="schema" select="//xsd:schema"/> <xsl:variable name="tabletypename" select="$schema/xsd:element[@name=name(current())]/@type"/> <xsl:variable name="rowtypename" select="$schema/xsd:complexType[@name=$tabletypename]/xsd:sequence/xsd:element[@name='row']/@type"/> <html> <head> <title><xsl:value-of select="name(current())"/></title> </head> <body> <table> <tr> <xsl:for-each select="$schema/xsd:complexType[@name=$rowtypename]/xsd:sequence/xsd:element/@name"> <th><xsl:value-of select="."/></th> </xsl:for-each> </tr> <xsl:for-each select="row"> <tr> <xsl:for-each select="*"> <td><xsl:value-of select="."/></td> </xsl:for-each> </tr> </xsl:for-each> </table> </body> </html> </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet> |
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