NAME
XML::Schematron::XPath - Perl extension for validating XML with XPath expressions.
SYNOPSIS
use XML::Schematron
my $pseudotron = XML::Schematron->new_with_traits( traits => ['XPath'], schema => 'my_schema.xml' );
# optionally, add some addition tests from perl-space
$pseudotron->add_tests( @some_tests );
my $messages = $pseudotron->verify('my_file.xml');
if ($messages) {
# we got warnings or errors during validation...
...
}
OR, in an array context
my @messages = $pseudotron->verify('my_file.xml');
DESCRIPTION
XML::Schematron::XPath serves as a simple validator for XML based on Rick JELLIFFE's Schematron XSLT script. A Schematron schema defines a set of rules in the XPath language that are used to examine the contents of an XML document tree.
A simplified example:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<schema>
<pattern>
<rule context="page">
<assert test="count(*)=count(title|body)">The page element may only contain title or body elements.</assert>
<assert test="@name">A page element must contain a name attribute.</assert>
<report test="string-length(@name) < 5">A page element name attribute must be at least 5 characters long.</report>
</rule>
</pattern>
</schema>
Note that an 'assert' rule will return if the result of the test expression is not true, while a 'report' rule will return only if the test expression evalutes to true.
METHODS
- add_test(\%args);
-
The
add_test()
method allows you push additional a additional test on to the stack before validation. This method's argument must be anXML::Schematron::Test
object or a hash reference with the following structure:Arguments for this method:
expression (required)
The XPath expression to evaluate.
context (required)
An element name or XPath location to use as the context of the test expression.
test_type (required)
The test_type argument must be set to either 'assert' or 'report'. Assert tests will return the associated message only if the the corresponding test expression is not true, while 'report' tests will return only if their associated test expression are true.
message (required)
The text message to display when the test condition is met.
pattern (optional)
Optional descriptive text for the returned message that allows a logical grouping of tests.
Example:
$obj->add_test({expr => 'count(@*) > 0', context => '/pattern', message => 'Pattern should have at least one attribute', type => 'assert', pattern => 'Basic tests'});
Note that
add_test()
pushes a new test on to the existing test list, whiletests()
redefines the entire list.
- add_tests( @tests );
-
The
add_tests()
method allows you push an additional list of tests on to the stack before validation. Each element must be an XML::Schematron::Test object or a hash reference. See above for the list of key/value pairs expected if hashrefs are used. - verify('my_xml_file.xml' or $some_xml_string)
-
The
verify()
method takes the path to the XML document that you wish to validate, or a scalar containing the entire document as a string, as its sole argument. It returns the messages that are returned during validation. When called in an array context, this method returns an array of the messages generated during validation. When called in a scalar context, this method returns a concatenated string of all output.
CONFORMANCE
XML::Schematron::XPath does not conform to the current Schematron specification since more modern versions allow XSLT-specific expressions to be used as tests. Please note, however, that robust validation is still quite possible using just the XPath language.
AUTHOR
Kip Hampton, khampton@totalcinema.com
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2000-2010 Kip Hampton. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
For information about Schematron, sample schemas, and tutorials to help you write your own schmemas, please visit the Schematron homepage at: https://www.schematron.com/
For detailed information about the XPath syntax, please see the W3C XPath Specification at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath.html