Provided by: libxml-rss-perl_1.63-1_all bug

NAME

       XML::RSS - creates and updates RSS files

VERSION

       version 1.63

SYNOPSIS

        # create an RSS 1.0 file (http://purl.org/rss/1.0/)
        use XML::RSS;
        my $rss = XML::RSS->new(version => '1.0');
        $rss->channel(
          title        => "freshmeat.net",
          link         => "http://freshmeat.net",
          description  => "the one-stop-shop for all your Linux software needs",
          dc => {
            date       => '2000-08-23T07:00+00:00',
            subject    => "Linux Software",
            creator    => 'scoop@freshmeat.net',
            publisher  => 'scoop@freshmeat.net',
            rights     => 'Copyright 1999, Freshmeat.net',
            language   => 'en-us',
          },
          syn => {
            updatePeriod     => "hourly",
            updateFrequency  => "1",
            updateBase       => "1901-01-01T00:00+00:00",
          },
          taxo => [
            'http://dmoz.org/Computers/Internet',
            'http://dmoz.org/Computers/PC'
          ]
        );

        $rss->image(
          title  => "freshmeat.net",
          url    => "http://freshmeat.net/images/fm.mini.jpg",
          link   => "http://freshmeat.net",
          dc => {
            creator  => "G. Raphics (graphics at freshmeat.net)",
          },
        );

        $rss->add_item(
          title       => "GTKeyboard 0.85",
          link        => "http://freshmeat.net/news/1999/06/21/930003829.html",
          description => "GTKeyboard is a graphical keyboard that ...",
          dc => {
            subject  => "X11/Utilities",
            creator  => "David Allen (s2mdalle at titan.vcu.edu)",
          },
          taxo => [
            'http://dmoz.org/Computers/Internet',
            'http://dmoz.org/Computers/PC'
          ]
        );

        $rss->textinput(
          title        => "quick finder",
          description  => "Use the text input below to search freshmeat",
          name         => "query",
          link         => "http://core.freshmeat.net/search.php3",
        );

        # Optionally mixing in elements of a non-standard module/namespace

        $rss->add_module(prefix=>'my', uri=>'http://purl.org/my/rss/module/');

        $rss->add_item(
          title       => "xIrc 2.4pre2",
          link        => "http://freshmeat.net/projects/xirc/",
          description => "xIrc is an X11-based IRC client which ...",
          my => {
            rating    => "A+",
            category  => "X11/IRC",
          },
        );

         $rss->add_item (title=>$title, link=>$link, slash=>{ topic=>$topic });

        # create an RSS 2.0 file
        use XML::RSS;
        my $rss = XML::RSS->new (version => '2.0');
        $rss->channel(title          => 'freshmeat.net',
                      link           => 'http://freshmeat.net',
                      language       => 'en',
                      description    => 'the one-stop-shop for all your Linux software needs',
                      rating         => '(PICS-1.1 "http://www.classify.org/safesurf/" 1 r (SS~~000 1))',
                      copyright      => 'Copyright 1999, Freshmeat.net',
                      pubDate        => 'Thu, 23 Aug 1999 07:00:00 GMT',
                      lastBuildDate  => 'Thu, 23 Aug 1999 16:20:26 GMT',
                      docs           => 'http://www.blahblah.org/fm.cdf',
                      managingEditor => 'scoop@freshmeat.net',
                      webMaster      => 'scoop@freshmeat.net'
                      );

        $rss->image(title       => 'freshmeat.net',
                    url         => 'http://freshmeat.net/images/fm.mini.jpg',
                    link        => 'http://freshmeat.net',
                    width       => 88,
                    height      => 31,
                    description => 'This is the Freshmeat image stupid'
                    );

        $rss->add_item(title => "GTKeyboard 0.85",
               # creates a guid field with permaLink=true
               permaLink  => "http://freshmeat.net/news/1999/06/21/930003829.html",
               # alternately creates a guid field with permaLink=false
               # guid     => "gtkeyboard-0.85"
               enclosure   => { url=>$url, type=>"application/x-bittorrent" },
               description => 'blah blah'
       );

        $rss->textinput(title => "quick finder",
                        description => "Use the text input below to search freshmeat",
                        name  => "query",
                        link  => "http://core.freshmeat.net/search.php3"
                        );

        # create an RSS 0.9 file
        use XML::RSS;
        my $rss = XML::RSS->new( version => '0.9' );
        $rss->channel(title => "freshmeat.net",
                      link  => "http://freshmeat.net",
                      description => "the one-stop-shop for all your Linux software needs",
                      );

        $rss->image(title => "freshmeat.net",
                    url   => "http://freshmeat.net/images/fm.mini.jpg",
                    link  => "http://freshmeat.net"
                    );

        $rss->add_item(title => "GTKeyboard 0.85",
                       link  => "http://freshmeat.net/news/1999/06/21/930003829.html"
                       );

        $rss->textinput(title => "quick finder",
                        description => "Use the text input below to search freshmeat",
                        name  => "query",
                        link  => "http://core.freshmeat.net/search.php3"
                        );

        # print the RSS as a string
        print $rss->as_string;

        # or save it to a file
        $rss->save("fm.rdf");

        # insert an item into an RSS file and removes the oldest ones if
        # there are already 15 items or more
        my $rss = XML::RSS->new;
        $rss->parsefile("fm.rdf");

        while (@{$rss->{'items'}} >= 15)
        {
            shift (@{ $rss->{'items'} });
        }

        $rss->add_item(title => "MpegTV Player (mtv) 1.0.9.7",
                       link  => "http://freshmeat.net/news/1999/06/21/930003958.html",
                       mode  => 'insert'
                       );

        # parse a string instead of a file
        $rss->parse($string);

        # print the title and link of each RSS item
        foreach my $item (@{$rss->{'items'}}) {
            print "title: $item->{'title'}\n";
            print "link: $item->{'link'}\n\n";
        }

        # output the RSS 0.9 or 0.91 file as RSS 1.0
        $rss->{output} = '1.0';
        print $rss->as_string;

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides a basic framework for creating and maintaining RDF Site Summary (RSS) files. This
       distribution also contains many examples that allow you to generate HTML from an RSS, convert between
       0.9, 0.91, 1.0, and 2.0 version, and other nifty things.  This might be helpful if you want to include
       news feeds on your Web site from sources like Slashdot and Freshmeat or if you want to syndicate your own
       content.

       XML::RSS currently supports versions 0.9 <http://www.rssboard.org/rss-0-9-0>, 0.91
       <http://www.rssboard.org/rss-0-9-1>, 1.0 <http://web.resource.org/rss/1.0/>, and 2.0
       <http://www.rssboard.org/rss-2-0> of RSS.

       RSS was originally developed by Netscape as the format for Netscape Netcenter channels, however, many Web
       sites have since adopted it as a simple syndication format. With the advent of RSS 1.0, users are now
       able to syndication many different kinds of content including news headlines, threaded messages, products
       catalogs, etc.

       Note: In order to parse and generate dates (such as "pubDate" and "dc:date") it is recommended to use
       DateTime::Format::Mail and DateTime::Format::W3CDTF , which is what XML::RSS uses internally and
       requires. It should also be possible to pass DateTime objects which will be formatted accordingly. E.g:

           use DateTime ();

           my $dt = DateTime->from_epoch(epoch => 1_500_000_000);

           $rss->channel(
               pubDate => $dt,
               .
               .
               .
           );

METHODS

       XML::RSS->new(version=>$version, encoding=>$encoding, output=>$output, stylesheet=>$stylesheet_url,
       'xml:base'=>$base)
           Constructor  for  XML::RSS.  It returns a reference to an XML::RSS object.  You may also pass the RSS
           version and the XML encoding to use. The default version is 1.0. The default encoding is  UTF-8.  You
           may also specify the output format regardless of the input version. This comes in handy when you want
           to  convert  RSS  between versions. The XML::RSS modules will convert between any of the formats.  If
           you set <encode_output> XML::RSS will make sure to encode any entities in generated RSS.  This is now
           on by default.

           You  can  also  pass  an  optional  URL  to  an  XSL  stylesheet  that  can  be  used  to  output  an
           "<?xsl-stylesheet ... ?>" meta-tag in the header that will allow some browsers to render the RSS file
           as HTML.

           You  can  also set "encode_cb" to a reference to a subroutine that will encode the output in a custom
           way.     This     subroutine     accepts     two     parameters:     a     reference      to      the
           "XML::RSS::Private::Output::Base"-derived object (which should normally not concern you) and the text
           to  encode.  It  should  return the text to encode. If not set, then the module will encode using its
           custom encoding routine.

           xml:base will set an "xml:base" property as per

               http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlbase/

           Note that in order to encode properly,  you  need  to  handle  "CDATA"  sections  properly.  Look  at
           XML::RSS::Private::Output::Base's "_default_encode()" method for how to do it properly.

       add_item (title=>$title, link=>$link, description=>$desc, mode=>$mode)
           Adds  an item to the XML::RSS object. mode and description are optional.  The default mode is append,
           which adds the item to the end of the list. To insert an item, set the mode to insert.

           The items are stored in the array "@{$obj->{'items'}}" where $obj  is  a  reference  to  an  XML::RSS
           object.

           One can specify a category by using the 'category' key. 'category' can point to an array reference of
           categories:

               $rss->add_item(
                   title => "Foo&Bar",
                   link => "http://www.my.tld/",
                   category => ["OneCat", "TooCat", "3Kitties"],
               );

       as_string;
           Returns  a  string  containing the RSS for the XML::RSS object.  This method will also encode special
           characters along the way.

       channel (title=>$title, link=>$link, description=>$desc, language=>$language, rating=>$rating,
       copyright=>$copyright, pubDate=>$pubDate, lastBuildDate=>$lastBuild, docs=>$docs,
       managingEditor=>$editor, webMaster=>$webMaster)
           Channel information is required in RSS. The title cannot be more the 40 characters, the link 500, and
           the description 500 when outputting RSS 0.9. title, link, and description, are required for RSS  1.0.
           language is required for RSS 0.91.  The other parameters are optional for RSS 0.91 and 1.0.

           To  retrieve  the  values of the channel, pass the name of the value (title, link, or description) as
           the first and only argument like so:

           $title = channel('title');

       image (title=>$title, url=>$url, link=>$link, width=>$width, height=>$height, description=>$desc)
           Adding an image is not required. url is the URL of the image, link is the URL the image is linked to.
           title, url, and link parameters are required if you are going to use an image in your RSS  file.  The
           remaining  image  elements  are  used  in RSS 0.91 or optionally imported into RSS 1.0 via the rss091
           namespace.

           The method for retrieving the values for the image is the same as it is for channel().

       parse ($string, \%options)
           Parses an RDF Site Summary which is passed into parse() as the first parameter. Returns the  instance
           of the object so one can say "$rss->parse($string)->other_method()".

           See the add_module() method for instructions on automatically adding modules as a string is parsed.

           %options is a list of options that specify how parsing is to be done. The available options are:

           •   allow_multiple

               Takes  an  array  ref  of names which indicates which elements should be allowed to have multiple
               occurrences. So, for example, to parse feeds with multiple enclosures

                  $rss->parse($xml, { allow_multiple => ['enclosure'] });

           •   hashrefs_instead_of_strings

               If true, then some items (so far ""description"") will become hash-references instead of  strings
               (with a content key containing their content , if they have XML attributes. Without this key, the
               attributes  will  be  ignored  and  there will only be a string. Thus, specifying this option may
               break compatibility.

           •   modules_as_arrays

               This option when true, will parse the  modules  key-value-pairs  as  an  arrayref  of  "{  el  =>
               $key_name,  value  =>  $value,  }" hash-refs to gracefully handle duplicate items (see below). It
               will not affect the known modules such as dc ("Dublin Core").

           •   allow_empty

               Takes an array ref of names which indicates which elements are  allowed  to  be  empty.  So,  for
               example,  to parse feeds with custom fields with the form "<foo bar="1" baz="2" />" which have no
               content, only attributes, add:

                  $rss->parse($xml, { allow_empty => ['foo'] });

               ( Added in XML::RSS v 1.63 .)

       parsefile ($file, \%options)
           Same as parse() except it parses a file rather than a string.

           See the add_module() method for instructions on automatically adding modules as a string is parsed.

       save ($file)
           Saves the RSS to a specified file.

       skipDays (day => $day)
           Populates the skipDays element with the day $day.

       skipHours (hour => $hour)
           Populates the skipHours element, with the hour $hour.

       strict ($boolean)
           If it's set to 1, it will adhere to the lengths as specified by Netscape Netcenter requirements. It's
           set to 0 by default.  Use it if the RSS file you're generating is for Netcenter.   strict  will  only
           work for RSS 0.9 and 0.91. Do not use it for RSS 1.0.

       textinput (title=>$title, description=>$desc, name=>$name, link=>$link);
           This  RSS  element  is  also  optional. Using it allows users to submit a Query to a program on a Web
           server via an HTML form. name is the HTML form name and link is the URL to the  program.  Content  is
           submitted using the GET method.

           Access to the textinput values is the same as channel() and image().

       add_module(prefix=>$prefix, uri=>$uri)
           Adds a module namespace declaration to the XML::RSS object, allowing you to add modularity outside of
           the  standard  RSS  1.0  modules.   At present, the standard modules Dublin Core (dc) and Syndication
           (syn) are predefined for your convenience. The Taxonomy (taxo) module is also internally supported.

           The modules are stored in the hash %{$obj->{'modules'}} where $obj is  a  reference  to  an  XML::RSS
           object.

           If   you   want  to  automatically  add  modules  that  the  parser  finds  in  namespaces,  set  the
           $XML::RSS::AUTO_ADD variable to a true value.  By default the value is  false.  (N.B.  AUTO_ADD  only
           updates the %{$obj->{'modules'}} hash.  It does not provide the other benefits of using add_module.)

   RSS 1.0 MODULES
       XML-Namespace-based  modularization  affords  RSS  1.0 compartmentalized extensibility.  The only modules
       that ship "in the box" with RSS 1.0 are Dublin  Core  (http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/dc/),  Syndication
       (http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/), and Taxonomy (http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/taxonomy/).
       Consult the appropriate module's documentation for further information.

       Adding  items from these modules in XML::RSS is as simple as adding other attributes such as title, link,
       and description.  The only difference is the compartmentalization of their key/value paris in  a  second-
       level hash.

         $rss->add_item (title=>$title, link=>$link, dc=>{ subject=>$subject, creator=>$creator, date=>$date });

       For elements of the Dublin Core module, use the key 'dc'.  For elements of the Syndication module, 'syn'.
       For  elements of the Taxonomy module, 'taxo'. These are the prefixes used in the RSS XML document itself.
       They are associated with appropriate URI-based namespaces:

         syn:  http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/
         dc:   http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/
         taxo: http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/taxonomy/

       The Dublin Core ('dc') hash keys may be point to an array reference, which in turn will specify  multiple
       such keys, and render them one after the other. For example:

           $rss->add_item (
               title => $title,
               link => $link,
               dc => {
                   subject=> ["Jungle", "Desert", "Swamp"],
                   creator=>$creator,
                   date=>$date
               },
           );

       Dublin Core elements may occur in channel, image, item(s), and textinput -- albeit uncomming to find them
       under  image  and  textinput.  Syndication elements are limited to the channel element. Taxonomy elements
       can occur in the channel or item elements.

       Access to module elements after parsing an RSS 1.0 document using XML::RSS is via either  the  prefix  or
       namespace URI for your convenience.

         print $rss->{items}->[0]->{dc}->{subject};

         or

         print $rss->{items}->[0]->{'http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/'}->{subject};

       XML::RSS  also  has  support  for  "non-standard" RSS 1.0 modularization at the channel, image, item, and
       textinput levels.  Parsing an RSS document grabs any elements of other  namespaces  which  might  appear.
       XML::RSS  also  allows  the  inclusion of arbitrary namespaces and associated elements when building  RSS
       documents.

       For example, to add elements of a made-up "My" module, first  declare  the  namespace  by  associating  a
       prefix with a URI:

         $rss->add_module(prefix=>'my', uri=>'http://purl.org/my/rss/module/');

       Then proceed as usual:

         $rss->add_item (title=>$title, link=>$link, my=>{ rating=>$rating });

       You  can  also  set  the value of the module's prefix to an array reference of "{ el => , val => }" hash-
       references, in which case duplicate elements are possible:

         $rss->add_item(title=>$title, link=>$link, my=> [
           {el => "rating", value => $rating1, }
           {el => "rating", value => $rating2, },
         ]

       Non-standard namespaces are not, however, currently accessible via a simple prefix; access them via their
       namespace URL like so:

         print $rss->{items}->[0]->{'http://purl.org/my/rss/module/'}->{rating};

       XML::RSS will continue to provide built-in support for standard RSS 1.0 modules as they appear.

Non-API Methods

   $rss->as_rss_0_9()
       WARNING: this function is not an API function and should not be called directly. It is  kept  as  is  for
       backwards compatibility with legacy code. Use the following code instead:

           $rss->{output} = "0.9";
           my $text = $rss->as_string();

       This function renders the data in the object as an RSS version 0.9 feed, and returns the resultant XML as
       text.

   $rss->as_rss_0_9_1()
       WARNING:  this  function  is  not an API function and should not be called directly. It is kept as is for
       backwards compatibility with legacy code. Use the following code instead:

           $rss->{output} = "0.91";
           my $text = $rss->as_string();

       This function renders the data in the object as an RSS version 0.91 feed, and returns the  resultant  XML
       as text.

   $rss->as_rss_1_0()
       WARNING:  this  function  is  not an API function and should not be called directly. It is kept as is for
       backwards compatibility with legacy code. Use the following code instead:

           $rss->{output} = "1.0";
           my $text = $rss->as_string();

       This function renders the data in the object as an RSS version 1.0 feed, and returns the resultant XML as
       text.

   $rss->as_rss_2_0()
       WARNING: this function is not an API function and should not be called directly. It is  kept  as  is  for
       backwards compatibility with legacy code. Use the following code instead:

           $rss->{output} = "2.0";
           my $text = $rss->as_string();

       This function renders the data in the object as an RSS version 2.0 feed, and returns the resultant XML as
       text.

   $rss->handle_char()
       Needed for XML::Parser. Don't use this directly.

   $rss->handle_dec()
       Needed for XML::Parser. Don't use this directly.

   $rss->handle_start()
       Needed for XML::Parser. Don't use this directly.

BUGS

       Please use rt.cpan.org for tracking bugs.  The list of current open bugs is at
           <http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=XML-RSS>.

       To report a new bug, go to
           <http://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Create.html?Queue=XML-RSS>

       Please  include a failing test in your bug report.  I'd much rather have a well written test with the bug
       report than a patch.

       When you create diffs (for tests or patches), please use the "-u" parameter to diff.

SOURCE AVAILABILITY

       The source is available from the GitHub repository:

       <https://github.com/shlomif/perl-XML-RSS>

AUTHOR

       Original code: Jonathan Eisenzopf <eisen@pobox.com>

       Further changes: Rael Dornfest <rael@oreilly.com>, Ask Bjoern Hansen <ask@develooper.com>

       Currently: Shlomi Fish <shlomif@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2001 Jonathan Eisenzopf <eisen@pobox.com> and Rael Dornfest  <rael@oreilly.com>,  Copyright
       (C) 2006-2007 Ask Bjoern Hansen <ask@develooper.com>.

LICENSE

       XML::RSS is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

CREDITS

        Wojciech Zwiefka <wojtekz@cnt.pl>
        Chris Nandor <pudge@pobox.com>
        Jim Hebert <jim@cosource.com>
        Randal Schwartz <merlyn@stonehenge.com>
        rjp@browser.org
        Kellan Elliott-McCrea <kellan@protest.net>
        Rafe Colburn <rafe@rafe.us>
        Adam Trickett <atrickett@cpan.org>
        Aaron Straup Cope <asc@vineyard.net>
        Ian Davis <iand@internetalchemy.org>
        rayg@varchars.com
        Shlomi Fish <shlomif@cpan.org>

SEE ALSO

       perl(1), XML::Parser(3).

SUPPORT

   Websites
       The  following websites have more information about this module, and may be of help to you. As always, in
       addition to those websites please use your favorite search engine to discover more resources.

       •   MetaCPAN

           A modern, open-source CPAN search engine, useful to view POD in HTML format.

           <https://metacpan.org/release/XML-RSS>

       •   RT: CPAN's Bug Tracker

           The RT ( Request Tracker ) website is the default bug/issue tracking system for CPAN.

           <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=XML-RSS>

       •   CPANTS

           The CPANTS is a website that analyzes the Kwalitee ( code metrics ) of a distribution.

           <http://cpants.cpanauthors.org/dist/XML-RSS>

       •   CPAN Testers

           The CPAN  Testers  is  a  network  of  smoke  testers  who  run  automated  tests  on  uploaded  CPAN
           distributions.

           <http://www.cpantesters.org/distro/X/XML-RSS>

       •   CPAN Testers Matrix

           The  CPAN  Testers  Matrix  is  a  website  that provides a visual overview of the test results for a
           distribution on various Perls/platforms.

           <http://matrix.cpantesters.org/?dist=XML-RSS>

       •   CPAN Testers Dependencies

           The CPAN Testers Dependencies is a website that shows a chart of the test results of all dependencies
           for a distribution.

           <http://deps.cpantesters.org/?module=XML::RSS>

   Bugs / Feature Requests
       Please report any bugs or feature requests by email to "bug-xml-rss at rt.cpan.org", or through  the  web
       interface   at  <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Report.html?Queue=XML-RSS>.  You  will  be  automatically
       notified of any progress on the request by the system.

   Source Code
       The code is open to the world, and available for you to hack on. Please feel free to browse it  and  play
       with  it,  or  whatever. If you want to contribute patches, please send me a diff or prod me to pull from
       your repository :)

       <https://github.com/shlomif/perl-XML-RSS>

         git clone git://github.com/shlomif/perl-XML-RSS.git

AUTHOR

       Shlomi Fish <shlomif@cpan.org>

BUGS

       Please    report    any    bugs     or     feature     requests     on     the     bugtracker     website
       <https://github.com/shlomif/perl-XML-RSS/issues>

       When  submitting  a  bug  or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that
       illustrates the bug or desired feature.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2001 by Various.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under  the  same  terms  as  the  Perl  5
       programming language system itself.

perl v5.36.0                                       2024-01-01                                      XML::RSS(3pm)