/*
* Copyright (c) 2017, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
*/
/*
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
* The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
* the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal;
import javax.xml.transform.TransformerException;
import com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.utils.PrefixResolver;
import com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.utils.PrefixResolverDefault;
import com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject;
import jdk.xml.internal.JdkXmlUtils;
import org.w3c.dom.Document;
import org.w3c.dom.Node;
import org.w3c.dom.NodeList;
import org.w3c.dom.traversal.NodeIterator;
The methods in this class are convenience methods into the
low-level XPath API.
These functions tend to be a little slow, since a number of objects must be
created for each evaluation. A faster way is to precompile the
XPaths using the low-level API, and then just use the XPaths
over and over.
This is an alternative for the old XPathAPI class, which provided
static methods for the purpose but had the drawback of
instantiating a new XPathContext (and thus building a new DTMManager,
and new DTMs) each time it was called. XPathAPIObject instead retains
its context as long as the object persists, reusing the DTMs. This
does have a downside: if you've changed your source document, you should
obtain a new XPathAPIObject to continue searching it, since trying to use
the old DTMs will probably yield bad results or malfunction outright... and
the cached DTMs may consume memory until this object and its context are
returned to the heap. Essentially, it's the caller's responsibility to
decide when to discard the cache.
See Also:
/**
* The methods in this class are convenience methods into the
* low-level XPath API.
*
* These functions tend to be a little slow, since a number of objects must be
* created for each evaluation. A faster way is to precompile the
* XPaths using the low-level API, and then just use the XPaths
* over and over.
*
* This is an alternative for the old XPathAPI class, which provided
* static methods for the purpose but had the drawback of
* instantiating a new XPathContext (and thus building a new DTMManager,
* and new DTMs) each time it was called. XPathAPIObject instead retains
* its context as long as the object persists, reusing the DTMs. This
* does have a downside: if you've changed your source document, you should
* obtain a new XPathAPIObject to continue searching it, since trying to use
* the old DTMs will probably yield bad results or malfunction outright... and
* the cached DTMs may consume memory until this object and its context are
* returned to the heap. Essentially, it's the caller's responsibility to
* decide when to discard the cache.
*
* @see <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath">XPath Specification</a>
* */
public class CachedXPathAPI
{
XPathContext, and thus the document model system (DTMs), persists through multiple
calls to this object. This is set in the constructor.
/** XPathContext, and thus the document model system (DTMs), persists through multiple
calls to this object. This is set in the constructor.
*/
protected XPathContext xpathSupport;
Default constructor. Establishes its own XPathContext
, and hence its own DTMManager
. Good choice for simple uses.
Note that any particular instance of CachedXPathAPI
must not be operated upon by multiple threads without synchronization; we do not currently support multithreaded access to a single DTM
.
/**
* <p>Default constructor. Establishes its own {@link XPathContext}, and hence
* its own {@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTMManager}.
* Good choice for simple uses.</p>
* <p>Note that any particular instance of {@link CachedXPathAPI} must not be
* operated upon by multiple threads without synchronization; we do
* not currently support multithreaded access to a single
* {@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTM}.</p>
*/
public CachedXPathAPI()
{
xpathSupport = new XPathContext(JdkXmlUtils.OVERRIDE_PARSER_DEFAULT);
}
This constructor shares its XPathContext
with a pre-existing CachedXPathAPI
. That allows sharing document models (DTM
) and previously established location state.
Note that the original CachedXPathAPI
and the new one should not be operated upon concurrently; we do not support multithreaded access to a single DTM
at this time. Similarly, any particular instance of CachedXPathAPI
must not be operated upon by multiple threads without synchronization.
%REVIEW% Should this instead do a clone-and-reset on the XPathSupport object?
/**
* <p>This constructor shares its {@link XPathContext} with a pre-existing
* {@link CachedXPathAPI}. That allows sharing document models
* ({@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTM}) and previously established location
* state.</p>
* <p>Note that the original {@link CachedXPathAPI} and the new one should
* not be operated upon concurrently; we do not support multithreaded access
* to a single {@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTM} at this time. Similarly,
* any particular instance of {@link CachedXPathAPI} must not be operated
* upon by multiple threads without synchronization.</p>
* <p>%REVIEW% Should this instead do a clone-and-reset on the XPathSupport object?</p>
*
*/
public CachedXPathAPI(CachedXPathAPI priorXPathAPI)
{
xpathSupport = priorXPathAPI.xpathSupport;
}
Returns the XPathSupport object used in this CachedXPathAPI
%REVIEW% I'm somewhat concerned about the loss of encapsulation
this causes, but the xml-security folks say they need it.
/** Returns the XPathSupport object used in this CachedXPathAPI
*
* %REVIEW% I'm somewhat concerned about the loss of encapsulation
* this causes, but the xml-security folks say they need it.
* */
public XPathContext getXPathContext()
{
return this.xpathSupport;
}
Use an XPath string to select a single node. XPath namespace
prefixes are resolved from the context node, which may not
be what you want (see the next method).
Params: - contextNode – The node to start searching from.
- str – A valid XPath string.
Throws: Returns: The first node found that matches the XPath, or null.
/**
* Use an XPath string to select a single node. XPath namespace
* prefixes are resolved from the context node, which may not
* be what you want (see the next method).
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @return The first node found that matches the XPath, or null.
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public Node selectSingleNode(Node contextNode, String str)
throws TransformerException
{
return selectSingleNode(contextNode, str, contextNode);
}
Use an XPath string to select a single node.
XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
Params: - contextNode – The node to start searching from.
- str – A valid XPath string.
- namespaceNode – The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
Throws: Returns: The first node found that matches the XPath, or null.
/**
* Use an XPath string to select a single node.
* XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
* @return The first node found that matches the XPath, or null.
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public Node selectSingleNode(
Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode)
throws TransformerException
{
// Have the XObject return its result as a NodeSetDTM.
NodeIterator nl = selectNodeIterator(contextNode, str, namespaceNode);
// Return the first node, or null
return nl.nextNode();
}
Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the contextNode.
@param contextNode The node to start searching from.
@param str A valid XPath string.
@return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
Throws:
/**
* Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
* XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the contextNode.
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public NodeIterator selectNodeIterator(Node contextNode, String str)
throws TransformerException
{
return selectNodeIterator(contextNode, str, contextNode);
}
Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
@param contextNode The node to start searching from.
@param str A valid XPath string.
@param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
@return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
Throws:
/**
* Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
* XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
* @return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public NodeIterator selectNodeIterator(
Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode)
throws TransformerException
{
// Execute the XPath, and have it return the result
XObject list = eval(contextNode, str, namespaceNode);
// Have the XObject return its result as a NodeSetDTM.
return list.nodeset();
}
Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the contextNode.
@param contextNode The node to start searching from.
@param str A valid XPath string.
@return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
Throws:
/**
* Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
* XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the contextNode.
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public NodeList selectNodeList(Node contextNode, String str)
throws TransformerException
{
return selectNodeList(contextNode, str, contextNode);
}
Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
@param contextNode The node to start searching from.
@param str A valid XPath string.
@param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
@return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
Throws:
/**
* Use an XPath string to select a nodelist.
* XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
* @return A NodeIterator, should never be null.
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public NodeList selectNodeList(
Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode)
throws TransformerException
{
// Execute the XPath, and have it return the result
XObject list = eval(contextNode, str, namespaceNode);
// Return a NodeList.
return list.nodelist();
}
Evaluate XPath string to an XObject. Using this method,
XPath namespace prefixes will be resolved from the namespaceNode.
@param contextNode The node to start searching from.
@param str A valid XPath string.
@return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null.
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag
Throws:
/**
* Evaluate XPath string to an XObject. Using this method,
* XPath namespace prefixes will be resolved from the namespaceNode.
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null.
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public XObject eval(Node contextNode, String str)
throws TransformerException
{
return eval(contextNode, str, contextNode);
}
Evaluate XPath string to an XObject.
XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
The implementation of this is a little slow, since it creates
a number of objects each time it is called. This could be optimized
to keep the same objects around, but then thread-safety issues would arise.
@param contextNode The node to start searching from.
@param str A valid XPath string.
@param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
@return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null.
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag
Throws:
/**
* Evaluate XPath string to an XObject.
* XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
* The implementation of this is a little slow, since it creates
* a number of objects each time it is called. This could be optimized
* to keep the same objects around, but then thread-safety issues would arise.
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces.
* @return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null.
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public XObject eval(Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode)
throws TransformerException
{
// Since we don't have a XML Parser involved here, install some default support
// for things like namespaces, etc.
// (Changed from: XPathContext xpathSupport = new XPathContext();
// because XPathContext is weak in a number of areas... perhaps
// XPathContext should be done away with.)
// Create an object to resolve namespace prefixes.
// XPath namespaces are resolved from the input context node's document element
// if it is a root node, or else the current context node (for lack of a better
// resolution space, given the simplicity of this sample code).
PrefixResolverDefault prefixResolver = new PrefixResolverDefault(
(namespaceNode.getNodeType() == Node.DOCUMENT_NODE)
? ((Document) namespaceNode).getDocumentElement() : namespaceNode);
// Create the XPath object.
XPath xpath = new XPath(str, null, prefixResolver, XPath.SELECT, null);
// Execute the XPath, and have it return the result
// return xpath.execute(xpathSupport, contextNode, prefixResolver);
int ctxtNode = xpathSupport.getDTMHandleFromNode(contextNode);
return xpath.execute(xpathSupport, ctxtNode, prefixResolver);
}
Evaluate XPath string to an XObject.
XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
The implementation of this is a little slow, since it creates
a number of objects each time it is called. This could be optimized
to keep the same objects around, but then thread-safety issues would arise.
@param contextNode The node to start searching from.
@param str A valid XPath string.
@param prefixResolver Will be called if the parser encounters namespace
prefixes, to resolve the prefixes to URLs.
@return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null.
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString
@see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag
Throws:
/**
* Evaluate XPath string to an XObject.
* XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode.
* The implementation of this is a little slow, since it creates
* a number of objects each time it is called. This could be optimized
* to keep the same objects around, but then thread-safety issues would arise.
*
* @param contextNode The node to start searching from.
* @param str A valid XPath string.
* @param prefixResolver Will be called if the parser encounters namespace
* prefixes, to resolve the prefixes to URLs.
* @return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null.
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString
* @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag
*
* @throws TransformerException
*/
public XObject eval(
Node contextNode, String str, PrefixResolver prefixResolver)
throws TransformerException
{
// Since we don't have a XML Parser involved here, install some default support
// for things like namespaces, etc.
// (Changed from: XPathContext xpathSupport = new XPathContext();
// because XPathContext is weak in a number of areas... perhaps
// XPathContext should be done away with.)
// Create the XPath object.
XPath xpath = new XPath(str, null, prefixResolver, XPath.SELECT, null);
// Execute the XPath, and have it return the result
XPathContext xpathSupport = new XPathContext(JdkXmlUtils.OVERRIDE_PARSER_DEFAULT);
int ctxtNode = xpathSupport.getDTMHandleFromNode(contextNode);
return xpath.execute(xpathSupport, ctxtNode, prefixResolver);
}
}