Provided by: libxml-checker-perl_0.13-7_all bug

NAME

       XML::Checker - A perl module for validating XML

SYNOPSIS

       XML::Checker::Parser - an XML::Parser that validates at parse time

       XML::DOM::ValParser - an XML::DOM::Parser that validates at parse time

       (Some of the package names may change! This is only an alpha release...)

DESCRIPTION

       XML::Checker can be used in different ways to validate XML. See the manual pages of XML::Checker::Parser
       and XML::DOM::ValParser for more information.

       This document only describes common topics like error handling and the XML::Checker class itself.

       WARNING: Not all errors are currently checked. Almost everything is subject to change. Some reported
       errors may not be real errors.  For production code, it is recommended that you use XML::LibXML or
       XML::GDOME instead of XML::Checker.  Both modules share the same DTD validation code with libxml2 and
       XML::LibXML is easier to install.

ERROR HANDLING

       Whenever XML::Checker (or one of the packages that uses XML::Checker) detects a potential error, the
       'fail handler' is called. It is currently also called to report information, like how many times an
       Entity was referenced.  (The whole error handling mechanism is subject to change, I'm afraid...)

       The default fail handler is XML::Checker::print_error(), which prints an error message to STDERR. It does
       not stop the XML::Checker, so it will continue looking for other errors.  The error message is created
       with XML::Checker::error_string().

       You can define your own fail handler in two ways, locally and globally. Use a local variable to
       temporarily override the fail handler. This way the default fail handler is restored when the local
       variable goes out of scope, esp. when exceptions are thrown e.g.

        # Using a local variable to temporarily override the fail handler (preferred)
        { # new block - start of local scope
          local $XML::Checker::FAIL = \&my_fail;
          ... your code here ...
        } # end of block - the previous fail handler is restored

       You can also set the error handler globally, risking that your code may not be reusable or may clash with
       other modules that use XML::Checker.

        # Globally setting the fail handler (not recommended)
        $XML::Checker::FAIL = \&my_fail;
        ... rest of your code ...

       The fail handler is called with the following parameters ($code, $msg, @context), where $code is the
       error code, $msg is the error description and @context contains information on where the error occurred.
       The @context is a (ordered) list of (key,value) pairs and can easily be turned into a hash.  It contains
       the following information:

        Element - tag name of Element node (if applicable)
        Attr - attribute name (if applicable)
        ChildElementIndex - if applicable (see error 157)
        line - only when parsing
        column - only when parsing
        byte - only when parsing (-1 means: end of file)

       Some examples of fail handlers:

        # Don't print info messages
        sub my_fail
        {
            my $code = shift;
            print STDERR XML::Checker::error_message ($code, @_)
                if $code < 300;
        }

        # Die when the first error is encountered - this will stop
        # the parsing process. Ignore information messages.
        sub my_fail
        {
            my $code = shift;
            die XML::Checker::error_message ($code, @_) if $code < 300;
        }

        # Count the number of undefined NOTATION references
        # and print the error as usual
        sub my_fail
        {
            my $code = shift;
            $count_undef_notations++ if $code == 100;
            XML::Checker::print_error ($code, @_);
        }

        # Die when an error is encountered.
        # Don't die if a warning or info message is encountered, just print a message.
        sub my_fail {
            my $code = shift;
            die XML::Checker::error_string ($code, @_) if $code < 200;
            XML::Checker::print_error ($code, @_);
        }

INSIGNIFICANT WHITESPACE

       XML::Checker keeps track of whether whitespace found in character data is significant or not. It is
       considered insignicant if it is found inside an element that has a ELEMENT rule that is not of type Mixed
       or of type ANY.  (A Mixed ELEMENT rule does contains the #PCDATA keyword.  An ANY rule contains the ANY
       keyword. See the XML spec for more info.)

       XML::Checker can not determine whether whitespace is insignificant in those two cases, because they both
       allow regular character data to appear within XML elements and XML::Checker can therefore not deduce
       whether whitespace is part of the actual data or was just added for readability of the XML file.

       XML::Checker::Parser and XML::DOM::ValParser both have the option to skip insignificant whitespace when
       setting SkipInsignifWS to 1 in their constructor.  If set, they will not call the Char handler when
       insignificant whitespace is encountered. This means that in XML::DOM::ValParser no Text nodes are created
       for insignificant whitespace.

       Regardless of whether the SkipInsignifWS options is set, XML::Checker always keeps track of whether
       whitespace is insignificant. After making a call to XML::Checker's Char handler, you can find out if it
       was insignificant whitespace by calling the isInsignifWS method.

       When using multiple (nested) XML::Checker instances or when using XML::Checker without using
       XML::Checker::Parser or XML::DOM::ValParser (which hardly anybody probably will), make sure to set a
       local variable in the scope of your checking code, e.g.

         { # new block - start of local scope
           local $XML::Checker::INSIGNIF_WS = 0;
           ... insert your code here ...
         } # end of scope

ERROR CODES

       There are 3 categories, errors, warnings and info messages.  (The codes are still subject to change, as
       well the error descriptions.)

       Most errors have a link to the appropriate Validaty Constraint (VC) or other section in the XML
       specification.

   ERROR Messages
   100 - 109100 - undefined NOTATION [$notation] in ATTLIST

           The  ATTLIST  contained  a  Notation  reference  that  was not defined in a NOTATION definition.  VC:
           Notation Attributes <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#notatn>

       •   101 - undefined ELEMENT [$tagName]

           The specified Element was never defined in an ELEMENT definition.  This is not an error according  to
           the XML spec.  See Element Type Declarations <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#elemdecls>

       •   102 - undefined unparsed ENTITY [$entity]

           The    attribute    value    referenced    an   undefined   unparsed   entity.    VC:   Entity   Name
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#entname>

       •   103 - undefined attribute [$attrName]

           The specified attribute was not defined in an ATTLIST for that Element.   VC:  Attribute  Value  Type
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#ValueType>

   110 - 119110 - attribute [$attrName] of element [$tagName] already defined

           The specified attribute was already defined in this ATTLIST definition or in a previous one.  This is
           not  an  error according to the XML spec.  See Attribute-List Declarations <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#attdecls>

       •   111 - ID [$value] already defined

           An ID with the specified value was already defined in an attribute within the same document.  VC:  ID
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#id>

       •   112 - unparsed ENTITY [$entity] already defined

           This  is  not an error according to the XML spec.  See Entity Declarations <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#sec-entity-decl>

       •   113 - NOTATION [$notation] already defined

       •   114 - ENTITY [$entity] already defined

           This is not an error according to the XML spec.  See Entity  Declarations  <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#sec-entity-decl>

       •   115  - ELEMENT [$name] already defined VC: Unique Element Type Declaration <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#EDUnique>

   120 - 129120 - invalid default ENTITY [$default]

           (Or IDREF or NMTOKEN instead of ENTITY.)  The ENTITY, IDREF  or  NMTOKEN  reference  in  the  default
           attribute  value  for  an attribute with types ENTITY, IDREF or NMTOKEN was not valid.  VC: Attribute
           Default Legal <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#defattrvalid>

       •   121 - invalid default [$token] in ENTITIES [$default]

           (Or IDREFS or NMTOKENS instead of ENTITIES) One of the ENTITY, IDREF or  NMTOKEN  references  in  the
           default  attribute value for an attribute with types ENTITIES, IDREFS or NMTOKENS was not valid.  VC:
           Attribute Default Legal <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#defattrvalid>

       •   122 - invalid default attribute value [$default]

           The specified default attribute value is not a valid attribute value.  VC:  Attribute  Default  Legal
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#defattrvalid>

       •   123 - invalid default ID [$default], must be #REQUIRED or #IMPLIED

           The  default  attribute  value  for  an attribute of type ID has to be #REQUIRED or #IMPLIED.  VC: ID
           Attribute Default <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#id-default>

       •   124 - bad model [$model] for ELEMENT [$name]

           The model in the ELEMENT definition did not conform to the XML syntax for Mixed  models.   See  Mixed
           Content <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#sec-mixed-content>

   130 - 139130 - invalid NMTOKEN [$attrValue]

           The  attribute  value  is  not  a  valid  NmToken  token.  VC: Enumeration <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#enum>

       •   131 - invalid ID [$attrValue]

           The specified attribute value is not a valid Name token.  VC: ID <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#id>

       •   132 - invalid IDREF [$value]

           The specified attribute value is not  a  valid  Name  token.   VC:  IDREF  <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#idref>

       •   133 - invalid ENTITY name [$name]

           The  specified attribute value is not a valid Name token.  VC: Entity Name <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#entname>

       •   134 - invalid Enumeration value [$value] in ATTLIST

           The specified value is not a valid NmToken (see  XML  spec  for  def.)   See  definition  of  NmToken
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#NT-Nmtoken>

       •   135 - empty NOTATION list in ATTLIST

           The  NOTATION list of the ATTLIST definition did not contain any NOTATION references.  See definition
           of NotationType <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#NT-NotationType>

       •   136 - empty Enumeration list in ATTLIST

           The ATTLIST definition of the attribute  of  type  Enumeration  did  not  contain  any  values.   See
           definition of Enumeration <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#NT-Enumeration>

       •   137 - invalid ATTLIST type [$type]

           The  attribute  type has to be one of: ID, IDREF, IDREFS, ENTITY, ENTITIES, NMTOKEN, NMTOKENS, CDATA,
           NOTATION or an Enumeration.  See definition of AttType <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#NT-AttType>

   149 - 159149 - invalid text content [$value]

           A text was found in an element that should only include sub-elements The text is  not  made  of  non-
           significant whitespace.

           150 - bad #FIXED attribute value [$value], it should be [$default]

           The  specified  attribute  was  defined  as  #FIXED in the ATTLIST definition and the found attribute
           $value   differs   from   the   specified   $default   value.    VC:    Fixed    Attribute    Default
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#FixedAttr>

       •   151 - only one ID allowed in ATTLIST per element first=[$attrName]

           The ATTLIST definitions for an Element may contain only one attribute with the type ID. The specified
           $attrName  is  the  one that was found first.  VC: One ID per Element Type <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-
           xml#one-id-per-el>

       •   152 - Element should be EMPTY, found Element [$tagName]

           The ELEMENT definition for the specified Element said it should be EMPTY, but  a  child  Element  was
           found.  VC: Element Valid (sub1) <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#elementvalid>

       •   153 - Element should be EMPTY, found text [$text]

           The  ELEMENT  definition  for  the  specified  Element  said  it should be EMPTY, but text was found.
           Currently, whitespace is not allowed between the open and close tag. (This may be wrong, please  give
           feedback.)  To allow whitespace (subject to change), set:

               $XML::Checker::Context::EMPTY::ALLOW_WHITE_SPACE = 1;

           VC: Element Valid (sub1) <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#elementvalid>

       •   154 - bad order of Elements Found=[$found] RE=[$re]

           The child elements of the specified Element did not match the regular expression found in the ELEMENT
           definition.  $found  contains  a  comma  separated  list of all the child element tag names that were
           found.  $re contains the (decoded) regular expression that was used internally.   VC:  Element  Valid
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#elementvalid>

       •   155 - more than one root Element [$tags]

           An  XML  Document may only contain one Element.  $tags is a comma separated list of element tag names
           encountered sofar.  XML::Parser (expat) throws 'no element found' exception.  See  two_roots.xml  for
           an example.  See definition of document <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#dt-root>

       •   156 - unexpected root Element [$tagName], expected [$rootTagName]

           The  tag  name of the root Element of the XML Document differs from the name specified in the DOCTYPE
           section.  XML::Parser (expat) throws 'not well-formed' exception.  See bad_root.xml for  an  example.
           VC: Root Element Type <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#vc-roottype>

       •   157 - unexpected Element [$tagName]

           The  ELEMENT  definition  for  the specified Element does not allow child Elements with the specified
           $tagName.  VC: Element Valid <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#elementvalid>

           The error context contains ChildElementIndex which is the index within its parent  Element  (counting
           only Element nodes.)

       •   158 - unspecified value for #IMPLIED attribute [$attrName]

           The  ATTLIST  for  the  specified  attribute  said  the  attribute was #IMPLIED, which means the user
           application should supply a value, but the attribute value  was  not  specified.  (User  applications
           should pass a value and set $specified to 1 in the Attr handler.)

       •   159 - unspecified value for #REQUIRED attribute [$attrName]

           The  ATTLIST  for  the specified attribute said the attribute was #REQUIRED, which means that a value
           should have been specified.  VC: Required Attribute <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#RequiredAttr>

   160 - 169160 - invalid Enumeration value [$attrValue]

           The specified attribute value does not match one of the  Enumeration  values  in  the  ATTLIST.   VC:
           Enumeration <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#enum>

       •   161 - invalid NOTATION value [$attrValue]

           The  specified  attribute value was not found in the list of possible NOTATION references as found in
           the ATTLIST definition.  VC: Notation Attributes <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#notatn>

       •   162 - undefined NOTATION [$attrValue]

           The NOTATION referenced by the specified attribute value was not defined.   VC:  Notation  Attributes
           <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#notatn>

   WARNING Messages (200 and up)200 - undefined ID [$id] was referenced [$n] times

           The  specified ID was referenced $n times, but never defined in an attribute value with type ID.  VC:
           IDREF <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml#idref>

   INFO Messages (300 and up)300 - [$n] references to ID [$id]

           The specified ID was referenced $n times.

   Not checked
       The following errors are already checked  by  XML::Parser  (expat)  and  are  currently  not  checked  by
       XML::Checker:

       (?? TODO - add more info)

       root element is missing
           XML::Parser (expat) throws 'no element found' exception.  See no_root.xml for an example.

XML::Checker

       XML::Checker  can  be  easily  plugged  into  your  application.   It uses mostly the same style of event
       handlers (or callbacks) as XML::Parser.  See XML::Parser manual page for descriptions of most handlers.

       It also implements PerlSAX style event handlers. See "PerlSAX interface".

       Currently, the XML::Checker object is a blessed hash with the following (potentially useful) entries:

        $checker->{RootElement} - root element name as found in the DOCTYPE
        $checker->{NOTATION}->{$notation} - is 1 if the NOTATION was defined
        $checker->{ENTITY}->{$name} - contains the (first) ENTITY value if defined
        $checker->{Unparsed}->{$entity} - is 1 if the unparsed ENTITY was defined
        $checker->{ID}->{$id} - is 1 if the ID was defined
        $checker->{IDREF}->{$id} - number of times the ID was referenced

        # Less useful:
        $checker->{ERule}->{$tag} - the ELEMENT rules by Element tag name
        $checker->{ARule}->{$tag} - the ATTLIST rules by Element tag name
        $checker->{Context} - context stack used internally
        $checker->{CurrARule} - current ATTLIST rule for the current Element

   XML:Checker methods
       This section is only interesting when using XML::Checker  directly.   XML::Checker  supports  most  event
       handlers  that  XML::Parser  supports  with  minor  differences. Note that the XML::Checker event handler
       methods are instance methods and not static, so don't forget to call  them  like  this,  without  passing
       $expat (as in the XML::Parser) handlers:

        $checker->Start($tagName);

       Constructor
            $checker = new XML::Checker;
            $checker = new XML::Checker (%user_args);

           User data may be stored by client applications. Only $checker->{User} is guaranteed not to clash with
           internal hash keys.

       getRootElement ()
            $tagName = $checker->getRootElement;

           Returns the root element name as found in the DOCTYPE

   Expat interface
       XML::Checker  supports  what  I call the Expat interface, which is the collection of methods you normally
       specify as the callback handlers when using XML::Parser.

       Only the following XML::Parser handlers are currently supported: Init, Final, Char, Start, End,  Element,
       Attlist, Doctype, Unparsed, Entity, Notation.

       I don't know how to correctly support the Default handler for all XML::Parser releases. The Start handler
       works  a  little  different  (see below) and I added Attr, InitDomElem, FinalDomElem, CDATA and EntityRef
       handlers.  See XML::Parser for a description of the handlers that are not listed below.

       Note that this interface may disappear, when the PerlSAX interface stabilizes.

       Start ($tag)
            $checker->Start($tag);

           Call this when an Element with the specified $tag name is  encountered.   Different  from  the  Start
           handler in XML::Parser, in that no attributes are passed in (use the Attr handler for those.)

       Attr ($tag, $attrName, $attrValue, $isSpecified)
            $checker->Attr($tag,$attrName,$attrValue,$spec);

           Checks an attribute with the specified $attrName and $attrValue against the ATTLIST definition of the
           element  with the specified $tag name.  $isSpecified means whether the attribute was specified (1) or
           defaulted (0).

       EndAttr ()
            $checker->EndAttr;

           This should be called after all attributes are passed with  Attr().   It  will  check  which  of  the
           #REQUIRED attributes were not specified and generate the appropriate error (159) for each one that is
           missing.

       CDATA ($text)
            $checker->CDATA($text);

           This  should  be  called  whenever CDATASections are encountered.  Similar to Char handler (but might
           perform different checks later...)

       EntityRef ($entity, $isParameterEntity)
            $checker->EntityRef($entity,$isParameterEntity);

           Checks the ENTITY reference. Set $isParameterEntity to 1 for entity references that start with '%'.

       InitDomElem () and FinalDomElem ()
           Used by XML::DOM::Element::check() to initialize (and cleanup) the  context  stack  when  checking  a
           single element.

   PerlSAX interface
       XML::Checker  now  also  supports  the  PerlSAX  interface,  so you can use XML::Checker wherever you use
       PerlSAX handlers.

       XML::Checker implements the following methods: start_document, end_document, start_element,  end_element,
       characters,  processing_instruction,  comment,  start_cdata,  end_cdata, entity_reference, notation_decl,
       unparsed_entity_decl, entity_decl, element_decl, attlist_decl, doctype_decl, xml_decl

       Not implemented: set_document_locator, ignorable_whitespace

       See PerlSAX.pod for details. (It is called lib/PerlSAX.pod in the libxml-perl distribution which  can  be
       found at CPAN.)

CAVEATS

       This  is  an  alpha  release.  It is not actively maintained, patches are accepted and incoporated in new
       releases, but that's about it.  If you are interested in taking over maintimance  of  the  module,  email
       tjmather@tjmather.com.

       For  a  much faster, and correct DTD validator, see XML::LibXML.  It uses the libxml2 library to validate
       DTD.

AUTHOR

       Enno Derksen is the original author.

       Send patches to T.J. Mather at <tjmather@tjmather.com>.

SEE ALSO

       XML::LibXML provides validating parsers against a DTD and is recommended over XML::Checker since it  uses
       the libxml2 library which is fast and well-tested.

       The XML spec (Extensible Markup Language 1.0) at <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml>

       The XML::Parser and XML::Parser::Expat manual pages.

       The other packages that come with XML::Checker: XML::Checker::Parser, XML::DOM::ValParser

       The DOM Level 1 specification at <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-DOM-Level-1>

       The  PerlSAX  specification.  It  is  currently in lib/PerlSAX.pod in the libxml-perl distribution by Ken
       MacLeod.

       The original SAX specification (Simple API for XML) can be found  at  <http://www.megginson.com/SAX>  and
       <http://www.megginson.com/SAX/SAX2>

perl v5.34.0                                       2022-06-28                                  XML::Checker(3pm)