| Table of Content: General overviewThe basic buffer typeInput I/O handlersOutput I/O handlersThe entities loaderExample of customized I/O
 The module xmlIO.hprovides
the interfaces to the libxml2 I/O system. This consists of 4 main parts: The general mechanism used when loading http://rpmfind.net/xml.html for
example in the HTML parser is the following: The default entity loader calls xmlNewInputFromFile()with
    the parsing context and the URI string.the URI string is checked against the existing registered handlers
    using their match() callback function, if the HTTP module was compiled
    in, it is registered and its match() function will succeedsthe open() function of the handler is called and if successful will
    return an I/O Input bufferthe parser will the start reading from this buffer and progressively
    fetch information from the resource, calling the read() function of the
    handler until the resource is exhaustedif an encoding change is detected it will be installed on the input
    buffer, providing buffering and efficient use of the conversion
  routinesonce the parser has finished, the close() function of the handler is
    called once and the Input buffer and associated resources are
  deallocated.
 The user defined callbacks are checked first to allow overriding of the
default libxml2 I/O routines. All the buffer manipulation handling is done using the
xmlBuffertype define intree.h which is a
resizable memory buffer. The buffer allocation strategy can be selected to be
either best-fit or use an exponential doubling one (CPU vs. memory use
trade-off). The values areXML_BUFFER_ALLOC_EXACTandXML_BUFFER_ALLOC_DOUBLEIT, and can be set individually or on a
system wide basis usingxmlBufferSetAllocationScheme(). A number
of functions allows to manipulate buffers with names starting with thexmlBuffer...prefix. An Input I/O handler is a simple structure
xmlParserInputBuffercontaining a context associated to the
resource (file descriptor, or pointer to a protocol handler), the read() and
close() callbacks to use and an xmlBuffer. And extra xmlBuffer and a charset
encoding handler are also present to support charset conversion when
needed. An Output handler xmlOutputBufferis completely similar to an
Input one except the callbacks are write() and close(). The entity loader resolves requests for new entities and create inputs for
the parser. Creating an input from a filename or an URI string is done
through the xmlNewInputFromFile() routine.  The default entity loader do not
handle the PUBLIC identifier associated with an entity (if any). So it just
calls xmlNewInputFromFile() with the SYSTEM identifier (which is mandatory in
XML). If you want to hook up a catalog mechanism then you simply need to
override the default entity loader, here is an example: #include <libxml/xmlIO.h>
xmlExternalEntityLoader defaultLoader = NULL;
xmlParserInputPtr
xmlMyExternalEntityLoader(const char *URL, const char *ID,
                               xmlParserCtxtPtr ctxt) {
    xmlParserInputPtr ret;
    const char *fileID = NULL;
    /* lookup for the fileID depending on ID */
    ret = xmlNewInputFromFile(ctxt, fileID);
    if (ret != NULL)
        return(ret);
    if (defaultLoader != NULL)
        ret = defaultLoader(URL, ID, ctxt);
    return(ret);
}
int main(..) {
    ...
    /*
     * Install our own entity loader
     */
    defaultLoader = xmlGetExternalEntityLoader();
    xmlSetExternalEntityLoader(xmlMyExternalEntityLoader);
    ...
}This example come from a
real use case,  xmlDocDump() closes the FILE * passed by the application
and this was a problem. The solution was to redefine a
new output handler with the closing call deactivated: First define a new I/O output allocator where the output don't close
    the file:
    xmlOutputBufferPtr
xmlOutputBufferCreateOwn(FILE *file, xmlCharEncodingHandlerPtr encoder) {
    xmlOutputBufferPtr ret;
    
    if (xmlOutputCallbackInitialized == 0)
        xmlRegisterDefaultOutputCallbacks();
    if (file == NULL) return(NULL);
    ret = xmlAllocOutputBuffer(encoder);
    if (ret != NULL) {
        ret->context = file;
        ret->writecallback = xmlFileWrite;
        ret->closecallback = NULL;  /* No close callback */
    }
    return(ret);
} And then use it to save the document:
    FILE *f;
xmlOutputBufferPtr output;
xmlDocPtr doc;
int res;
f = ...
doc = ....
output = xmlOutputBufferCreateOwn(f, NULL);
res = xmlSaveFileTo(output, doc, NULL);
    
 Daniel Veillard |