StAX

Most current XML APIs fall into one of two broad classes: event-based APIs like SAX and XNI or tree-based APIs like DOM, XOM, and JDOM. Most programmers find the tree-based APIs to be easier to use; but such APIs are less efficient, especially with respect to memory usage. An in-memory tree tends to be several times larger than the document it models. Thus tree APIs are normally not practical for documents larger than a few megabytes in size or in memory constrained environments such as J2ME. In these situations, a streaming API such as SAX or XNI is normally preferred. A streaming API uses much less memory than a tree API since it doesn’t have to hold the entire document in memory at the same time. It can process the document in small pieces. Furthermore streaming APIs are fast. They can start generating output from the input almost immediately without waiting for the entire document to be read. They don’t have to build excessively complicated tree- data structures they’ll just pull apart again into smaller pieces. However, the common streaming APIs like SAX are all push APIs. They feed the content of the document to the application as soon as they see it, whether the application is ready to receive that data or not. SAX and XNI are fast and efficient, but the patterns they require programmers to adopt are unfamiliar and uncomfortable to many developers.

Pull APIs are a more comfortable alternative for streaming processing of XML. A pull API is based around the more familiar iterator design pattern rather than the less well-known observer design pattern. In a pull API, the client program asks the parser for the next piece of information rather than the parser telling the client program when the next datum is available. In a pull API the client program drives the parser. In a push API, the parser drives the client.

Just about two years ago, I wrote an article for xml.com discussing what until now has been the preeminent pull API, XMLPULL. This article identified a number of problems with XMLPULL. The last two paragraphs of that article summed up:

These problems are not casual bugs. They are deliberate design decisions, based on a desire to reduce the footprint of XMLPULL to the minimum possible for J2ME environments. None of these problems are likely to be fixed in the future. The trade-offs made in the name of size may be acceptable if you’re working in J2ME. They are completely unacceptable in a desktop or server environment. Thus XMLPULL seems destined to remain a niche API for developers seeking efficiency at all costs.

Nonetheless, there are some interesting ideas here. Most importantly, the problems I’ve identified stem from implementation issues, not from anything fundamental to a pull-based model for XML processing. A future pull-API that learned from XMLPULL’s mistakes could easily become a real alternative to SAX and DOM.

Now it’s two years later, and I am very pleased to report that the next generation API is here. BEA Systems, working in conjunction with Sun, XMLPULL developers Stefan Haustein and Aleksandr Slominski, XML heavyweight James Clark, and others in the Java Community Process are on the verge of releasing StAX, the Streaming API for XML. StAX is a pull parsing API for XML that avoids most of the pitfalls I noted in XMLPULL. XMLPULL was a nice proof of concept. StAX is suitable for real work.

Like SAX, StAX is a parser independent, pure Java API based on interfaces that can be implemented by multiple parsers. Currently StAX is not bundled with the JDK, even in Java 1.5, but there are at least three implementations:

In addition, I’m aware of at least one more under development, and a couple of adapters between StAX and other parser models.

StAX shares with SAX the ability to read arbitrarily large documents. However, in StAX the application is in control rather than the parser. The application tells the parser when it wants to receive the next data chunk rather than the parser telling the client when the next chunk of data is ready. Furthermore, StAX exceeds SAX by allowing programs to both read existing XML documents and create new ones. Unlike SAX, StAX is a bidirectional API.

Reading Documents with StAX

XMLStreamReader is the key interface in StAX. This interface represents a cursor that’s moved across an XML document from beginning to end. At any given time, this cursor points at one thing: a text node, a start-tag, a comment, the beginning of the document, etc. The cursor always moves forward, never backward, and normally only moves one item at a time. You invoke methods such as getName() and getText() on the XMLStreamReader to retrieve information about the item the cursor is currently positioned at.

A typical StAX program begins by using the XMLInputFactory class to load an implementation dependent instance of XMLStreamReader:

URL u = new URL("http://www.cafeconleche.org/");
InputStream in = u.openStream();
XMLInputFactory factory = XMLInputFactory.newInstance();
XMLStreamReader parser = factory.createXMLStreamReader(in);

You can also create an XMLStreamReader from a java.io.Reader or a javax.xml.transform.Source. A little surprisingly you can’t create one from a URL, either a java.net.URL object or a string containing a URL.

If anything goes wrong with this, then an XMLStreamException, a checked exception, is thrown.

Now it’s time to actually read the document. The next() method in XMLStreamReader advances the cursor to the next item. Various getter methods to extract data from the current item. Some of the most important of these getters include:

public QName    getName()
public String   getLocalName()
public String   getNamespaceURI()
public String   getText()
public String   getElementText()
public int      getEventType()
public Location getLocation()
public int      getAttributeCount()
public QName    getAttributeName(int index)
public String   getAttributeValue(String namespaceURI, String localName)

For example, here’s a simple bit of code that iterates through an XML document and prints out the names of the different elements it encounters:

  while (true) {
    int event = parser.next();
    if (event == XMLStreamConstants.END_DOCUMENT) {
      parser.close();
      break;
    }
    if (event == XMLStreamConstants.START_ELEMENT) {
      System.out.println(parser.getLocalName());
    }
  }

Here’s the beginning of the output when I ran this across a simple well-formed HTML file:

html
head
title
meta
meta
link
meta
script
body
div
a
a
...

Not all of the getter methods work all the time. For instance, if the cursor is positioned on an end-tag, then you can get the name and namespace but not the attributes or the element text. If the cursor is positioned on a text node, then you can get the text but not the name, namespace, prefix, or attributes. Text nodes just don’t have these things. Calling an inapplicable method normally returns null. To find out what kind of node the parser is currently positioned on, you call the getEventType() method. This returns one of these seventeen int constants:

  • XMLStreamConstants.START_DOCUMENT
  • XMLStreamConstants.END_DOCUMENT
  • XMLStreamConstants.START_ELEMENT
  • XMLStreamConstants.END_ELEMENT
  • XMLStreamConstants.ATTRIBUTE
  • XMLStreamConstants.CHARACTERS
  • XMLStreamConstants.CDATA
  • XMLStreamConstants.SPACE
  • XMLStreamConstants.COMMENT
  • XMLStreamConstants.DTD
  • XMLStreamConstants.START_ENTITY
  • XMLStreamConstants.END_ENTITY
  • XMLStreamConstants.ENTITY_DECLARATION
  • XMLStreamConstants.ENTITY_REFERENCE
  • XMLStreamConstants.NAMESPACE
  • XMLStreamConstants.NOTATION_DECLARATION
  • XMLStreamConstants.PROCESSING_INSTRUCTION

For a slightly more realistic example, consider an outliner program that reads through an XHTML document and prints out the contents of all the heading elements: h1, h2, h3, and so forth. A while loop calls the next() method until the end of the document is seen. Each event is tested for its type. If the event is a start-tag and its name indicates it’s a heading such as h1, then the inHeader int flag is incremented. If the event is a header end-tag, then the inHeader int flag is decremented. If the event is a characters event and inHeader is greater than 0, then the content of the characters event is printed. All other events are ignored.

import javax.xml.stream.*;
import java.net.URL;
import java.io.*;

 
public class XHTMLOutliner {

  public static void main(String[] args) {

    if (args.length == 0) {
      System.err.println("Usage: java XHTMLOutliner url" );
      return;
    }
    String input = args[0];

    try {
      URL u = new URL(input);
      InputStream in = u.openStream();
      XMLInputFactory factory = XMLInputFactory.newInstance();
      XMLStreamReader parser = factory.createXMLStreamReader(in);
        
      int inHeader = 0;
      for (int event = parser.next();  
       event != XMLStreamConstants.END_DOCUMENT;
       event = parser.next()) {
        switch (event) {
          case XMLStreamConstants.START_ELEMENT:
            if (isHeader(parser.getLocalName())) {
              inHeader++;
            }
            break;
          case XMLStreamConstants.END_ELEMENT:
            if (isHeader(parser.getLocalName())) {
              inHeader--;
              if (inHeader == 0) System.out.println();
            }
            break;
          case XMLStreamConstants.CHARACTERS:
            if (inHeader > 0) System.out.print(parser.getText());
            break;
          case XMLStreamConstants.CDATA:
            if (inHeader > 0) System.out.print(parser.getText());
            break;
        }  // end switch
      }  // end while
      parser.close();
    }
    catch (XMLStreamException ex) {
       System.out.println(ex);
    }
    catch (IOException ex) {
      System.out.println("IOException while parsing " + input);
    }

  }

   /**
    * Determine if this is an XHTML heading element or not
    * @param  name tag name
    * @return boolean true if this is h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, or h6; 
    *                 false otherwise
    */
    private static boolean isHeader(String name) {
      if (name.equals("h1")) return true;
      if (name.equals("h2")) return true;
      if (name.equals("h3")) return true;
      if (name.equals("h4")) return true;
      if (name.equals("h5")) return true;
      if (name.equals("h6")) return true;
      return false;
    }

}

The loop with a switch statement is a very common pattern in StAX. There are a few ways to filter the event stream, and of course you could use a stack of if-else statements instead of the switch, but almost all StAX programs will feature an event loop something like this one. This is probably my only major criticism of StAX. Integer type codes and big switch statements are relics of procedural thinking. Object oriented programs should be based around classes, inheritance hierarchies, and polymorphism instead. The next() method should return an XMLEvent object that has subclasses like StartElement, Characters, and StartDocument instead. NekoPull is an API that does this the right way. The main reason to use integer type codes instead of classes is to avoid Java’s ungodly slow reflection API and instanceof operator. In my opinion, however, what really needs to be fixed is the speed of reflection, not the APIs that depend on it.

This simple example perhaps doesn’t demonstrate the full power of StAX. Since the client application controls the process, it’s easy to write separate methods for different elements. These methods can have detailed knowledge of the internal structure of the type of element they handle. For example, you could write one method that handles headers, one that handles img elements, one that handles tables, one that handles meta tags, and so forth. For example, you might process an html element that contains head and body child elements like this:

public void processHtml(XmlPullParser parser) {
  while (true) {
    int event = parser.next();
    if (event == XMLStreamConstants.START_ELEMENT) {
      if (parser.getLocalName().equals("head")) {
        processHead(parser);
      }
      else if (parser.getLocalName().equals("body")) {
        processBody(parser)
      }
    }
    elseif (event == XMLStreamConstants.END_ELEMENT) { // </html>
      return;
    }
  }
}

Here I’m making a lot of assumptions about exactly which tags appear where when. This isn’t unusual in XML processing . Most programs are written with particular vocabularies in mind. You wouldn’t expect an XHTML outliner to know what to do with a DocBook document, much less an SVG picture, for example. However, it is best to test and verify your expectations about data formats. Normally, this would be done through validation. You can turn on validation by setting the factory’s javax.xml.stream.isValidating property to true before instantiating the parser like this:

factory.setProperty("javax.xml.stream.isValidating", Boolean.TRUE);

You would then register an XMLReporter with the XMLInputFactory to receive notices of the validity errors. For example, using an anonymous inner class,

factory.setXMLReporter(new XMLReporter() {
  public void report(String message, String errorType,
    Object relatedInformation, Location location) {
      System.err.println("Problem in " + location.getLocationURI());	
      System.err.println("at line " + location.getLineNumber() 
        + ", column " + location.getColumnNumber());			
      System.err.println(message);	
  }
});

If you want validity errors to be fatal, throw an XMLStreamException from the report method rather than just printing the error message. However, StAX parsers are not required to be able to validate, and the reference implementation can’t, so this doesn’t yet work.

StAX does offer an alternative for simple cases. If you expect a particular item to be present in the document, you can require it using a type and an optional name and namespace. For example, if I think that the cursor is positioned at an XHTML <head> start-tag, I’d require it thusly:

parser.require(XMLStreamConstants.START_ELEMENT, 
               "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml", 
               "head");

If my expectation proves wrong, then the require() method throws an XMLStreamException, a checked exception. You can pass null for either the namespace or the element name to indicate that all namespaces and/or names are acceptable. Putting this all together, the general pattern might be ,

try {
  parser.next();
  parser.require(XMLStreamConstants.START_ELEMENT, 
                 "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml", 
                 "head");
  processHead(parser);
}
catch (XMLStreamException ex) {
  // Oops! The head was missing!
}

Output

StAX is not limited to reading XML documents. It can also create them. For output, instead of an XMLStreamReader you use, naturally enough, an XMLStreamWriter. This interface provides methods to write elements, attributes, comments, text, and all the other parts of an XML document. An XMLStreamWriter is created by an XMLOutputFactory like this:

OutputStream out = new FileOutputStream("data.xml");
XMLOutputFactory factory = XMLOutputFactory.newInstance();
XMLStreamWriter writer = factory.createXMLStreamWriter(out);

You write data onto the stream by using various writeFOO methods: writeStartDocument, writeStartElement, writeEndElement, writeCharacters, writeComment, writeCDATA, etc. For example, these lines of code write a simple hello world document:

writer.writeStartDocument("ISO-8859-1", "1.0");
writer.writeStartElement("greeting");
writer.writeAttribute("id", "g1");
writer.writeCharacters("Hello StAX");	
writer.writeEndDocument();

When you’ve finished creating the document, you want to flush and close the writer. This does not close the underlying output stream, so you’ll need to close that too:

writer.flush();	
writer.close();	
out.close();

XMLStreamWriter helps maintain some well-formedness constraints. For instance, endDocument closes all unclosed start-tags, and writeCharacters performs any necessary escaping of reserved characters like & and <. However, the checking is minimal. XMLStreamWriter allows documents with multiple roots, document with more than one XML declaration, element names that contain white space, characters that don’t exist in the output character set, and a lot more. Implementations are allowed but not required to check these things. The reference implementation does not check them. Separate verification and testing of the output is necessary. Creating XML documents with XMLStreamWriter is faster and more efficient than serializing a DOM or XOM tree, but it’s not nearly as robust.

Summing Up

This article has just skimmed along the surface of StAX, StAX is much deeper than this. Like SAX, StAX enables pipelines that chain the output of one process to the input of the next. It can filter the documents it parses to modify or log the documents. It can support XML views of non-XML data. It can marshal data structures and objects into XML documents and it can unmarshal the documents back into objects.

When is StAX not appropriate? Basically whenever a streaming API doesn’t work. Like SAX, StAX still requires you to build data structures as the document is parsed in order to hold onto information for any length of time. In the worst case, these data structures can become as large and complex as the original document. In these cases, a tree-based API such as DOM or XOM may be more appropriate. Such an API definitely provides more convenient random access to the tree than does StAX (or any other streaming API). StAX works well when you need to process a large document a small piece at a time moving from beginning to end, when you can essentially slide a peephole over the complete document. It works much less well when you need to access widely separated parts of the document at the same time in unpredictable orders. However, many of the toughest XML processing problems come from exactly the domain where StAX does work well.

StAX is a fast (potentially extremely fast), straight-forward, memory-thrifty means of loading data from an XML document whose structure is well known in advance. State management is much simpler in StAX than in SAX, so if you find that the SAX logic is just getting way too complex to follow or debug, then StAX is well worth exploring. StAX will be a very useful addition to any Java developer’s XML toolbox.

2 Responses to “StAX”

  1. Paul Findlay » XML Apis Says:

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  2. adult Says:

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