This is a fork of the original xml-doc crate, which is now obsolete. It fixes some minor issues and introduces new APIs for easier manipulation of XML elements with namespaces.
xml-doc is a rust library to read, modify, and write XML documents. Documentation
It's aim is to be able to read any xml files, and modify only the parts you want to.
Features:
- Supports reading from most encodings, including UTF-16. (With the notable exception of UTF-32)
- You can have references to the parts of the tree, and still mutate the tree.
- Elements stores reference to its parent element, so traveling up the tree is fast.
- One of the fastest XML tree-like parser & writer. See #Performance.
- Supports attribute value normalization, character/entity references.
Due to its architecture, you can't exchange nodes or elements between documents. If your project modifies multiple xml documents at the same time, this library may not be a good fit.
use biodivine_xml_doc::{Document, Element};
let XML = r#"<?xml version="1.0"?>
<package xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">
<metadata>
<dc:title>xml-doc</dc:title>
<dc:rights>MIT or Apache 2.0</dc:rights>
</metadata>
</package>
"#;
let doc = Document::parse_str(XML).unwrap();
let package = doc.root_element().unwrap();
let metadata = package.find(&doc, "metadata").unwrap();
let title = metadata.find(&doc, "title").unwrap();
title.set_attribute("xml:lang", "en");
// Add an element to metadata: <dc:creator id="author">Yoonchae Lee</dc:creator>
let author = Element::build("dc:creator")
.text_content("Yoonchae Lee")
.attribute("id", "author")
.push_to(&mut doc, metadata);
let new_xml = doc.write_str();
To run benchmark: cd benches ; cargo bench
.
tiny(5KB) medium(1.5MB) large(25MB) medium(UTF-16)
xml-doc v0.2.0: 81.02us 31.08ms 355.04ms 33.33ms
minidom v0.12.0: 94.93us 43.39ms 610.41ms
roxmltree v0.14.1: 52.73us 17.23ms 353.79ms
xmltree v0.10.3: 4305.7 us 1355.0 ms 22769. ms
Only roxmltree which doesn't support writing, is considerably faster than xml_doc. (Benchmark results).
This crate uses [quick-xml] to parse/write xml, which seems to be the fastest xml event parser. (Benchmark results).
tiny(5KB) medium(1.5MB) large(25MB)
quick-xml v0.17.2: 21.11us 6.63ms 97.79ms
xml-rs v0.8.4: 343.56us 96.17ms 1671.8 ms
xml5ever v0.16.2: 127.83us 42.46ms 550.83ms
RustyXML v0.3.0: 103.07us 36.40ms 710.93ms