Difference between revisions of "Xml grep"

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To get all attributes of the e element that has the lm "cake":
To get all attributes of the e element that has the lm "cake":
<pre>
<pre>
$ xmllint --xpath '//e[lm="cake"]/@*' apertium-eng.eng.dix
$ xmllint --xpath '//e[@lm="cake"]/@*' apertium-eng.eng.dix
</pre>
</pre>


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==But I want XML awk/sed/diff/patch/join/etc.!==
==But I want XML awk/sed/diff/patch/join/etc.!==
To do more complex xml munging, you might want to install [http://xmlstar.sourceforge.net/ XML Starlet].
To do more complex xml munging, you might want to install [http://xmlstar.sourceforge.net/ XML Starlet]. The syntax takes a bit of getting used to, but it's quite powerful. If nothing else, it's worth getting because it can append newlines after each selection. E.g.


$ xmllint --xpath '//e[@r="LR"]//text()' apertium-eng.eng.dix

would get text content of entries marked LR, but there will be no separator between each match. XML Starlet requires -a -few -more -options, but can output newlines after each match:

$ xmlstarlet sel -t -m '//e[@r="LR"]//text()' -c . -n apertium-eng.eng.dix

"sel" means select/query, -t means output as text, -m means "match this XPath expression", "-c ." here means "output what was matched" and -n means add a newline.

To use xmlstarlet as a sed replacement, try e.g.

$ xmlstarlet ed -P -u '//e[@lm="Norge"]/@r' -v "LR" apertium-nno.nno.dix

to make r be LR on the entry with lemma Norge.


You can have several -c's (and -n's and -o's) per -m, so if you wanted to output all the text from &lt;l&gt;'s and &lt;r&gt;'s under the same &lt;p&gt; in a file, tab-separated, you could do:

$ xmlstarlet sel -t -o $'LEFT\tRIGHT' -n -m '//e/p' -c 'l/text()' -o $'\t' -c 'r/text()' -n apertium-nno-nob.nno-nob.dix



Note that on some systems, the command for xmlstarlet is simply "xml".

==It's slow on big files==
Both xmllint and xmlstarlet seem to sponge the whole file into ram before doing anything.

What if you just want to run on the first 1000 lines? If you try "head -1000 file | xmlstarlet" it'll complain since your tags aren't closed. Here's a trick to avoid that:

<pre>
xzcat corpus.xml.xz | head -1000 | xmllint --recover - | xmllint --xpath '//foo/bar'
</pre>

The --recover option to xmllint will close end tags for you :-) and prints what it closed to stderr.


E.g. to get some articles out of a wikipedia dump:

<code>
bzcat [https://dumps.wikimedia.org/dawiki/20160111/dawiki-20160111-pages-articles.xml.bz2 dawiki-20160111-pages-articles.xml.bz2] \
| head -1000 \
| xmllint --recover - \
| xmlstarlet sel -N w='http://www.mediawiki.org/xml/export-0.10/' -t -c '//w:text/text()'
</code>


Another alternative is <code>xml_grep<code>. Do
<pre>
sudo apt install xml-twig-tools
</pre>
to install it. It seems to run fine on huge input without eating memory :-)
<pre>
xzcat corpus.xml.xz | xml_grep -p --cond='foo[@id="a"]//[@class="meh"]'
</pre>

==I get "Unknown option --xpath"==
You need to upgrade your libxml2 (--xpath was added in 2.7.7, back in Mar 15 2010). Or use xmlstarlet.


==External links==
==External links==
* http://oreilly.com/perl/excerpts/system-admin-with-perl/ten-minute-xpath-utorial.html
* http://oreilly.com/perl/excerpts/system-admin-with-perl/ten-minute-xpath-utorial.html
==See also==

* [[ Dixtools: Grep ]]
[[Category:Documentation in English]]
[[Category:Documentation in English]]
[[Category:XML]]
[[Category:XML]]

Latest revision as of 09:04, 10 October 2017

When working with xml, you'll often want to grep out an element that spans several lines. This can be hacked with awk or perl, but a more elegant solution is to use the parser in libxml2 (which is a requirement when installing apertium, so should be installed on your system already). This lets you use a simple version of XPath expressions to grep out full XML elements, without falling for the tempation to parse XML with regex.

Specifying the full path and the full pardef name:

$ xmllint --xpath '/dictionary/pardefs/pardef[@n="gen__apos"]' apertium-eng.eng.dix
<pardef n="gen__apos">
  <e>       <p><l/>          <r/></p></e>
  <e>       <p><l>'</l>         <r><j/>'<s n="gen"/></r></p></e>
</pardef>

But for dix files, it should be the same if you specify a relative path:

$ xmllint --xpath '//pardef[@n="gen__apos"]' apertium-eng.eng.dix
<pardef n="gen__apos">
  <e>       <p><l/>          <r/></p></e>
  <e>       <p><l>'</l>         <r><j/>'<s n="gen"/></r></p></e>
</pardef>

You can also search for substrings by using the 'contains' function:

$ xmllint --xpath '//pardef[contains(@n,"_adj")]' apertium-eng.eng.dix
<pardef n="expensive__adj">
  <e>       <p><l/>          <r><s n="adj"/></r></p></e>
</pardef>
<pardef n="ca__adj">…
# etc; gives all the adj pardefs


To get all c attributes:

$ xmllint --xpath '//@c' apertium-eng.eng.dix

To get c attributes only from <e> elements:

$ xmllint --xpath '//e/@c' apertium-eng.eng.dix

To get all attributes of the e element that has the lm "cake":

$ xmllint --xpath '//e[@lm="cake"]/@*' apertium-eng.eng.dix


To get the second dictionary section:

$ xmllint --xpath '/dictionary/section[2]/' apertium-eng.eng.dix

(or section[position()=2])


To count how many lm attributes (should equal how many lemmas) you have:

$ xmllint --xpath 'count(//e/@lm)' apertium-eng.eng.dix


Some corpora are formatted in XML and put e.g. the real text contents inside a particular element. Say the corpus puts all text inside <sentence> elements, you can grep them out with:

$ xmllint --xpath '*/sentence/text()' corpus.xml

But I want XML awk/sed/diff/patch/join/etc.![edit]

To do more complex xml munging, you might want to install XML Starlet. The syntax takes a bit of getting used to, but it's quite powerful. If nothing else, it's worth getting because it can append newlines after each selection. E.g.

 $ xmllint --xpath '//e[@r="LR"]//text()' apertium-eng.eng.dix

would get text content of entries marked LR, but there will be no separator between each match. XML Starlet requires -a -few -more -options, but can output newlines after each match:

 $ xmlstarlet sel -t -m '//e[@r="LR"]//text()' -c . -n apertium-eng.eng.dix

"sel" means select/query, -t means output as text, -m means "match this XPath expression", "-c ." here means "output what was matched" and -n means add a newline.

To use xmlstarlet as a sed replacement, try e.g.

 $ xmlstarlet ed -P -u '//e[@lm="Norge"]/@r' -v "LR" apertium-nno.nno.dix

to make r be LR on the entry with lemma Norge.


You can have several -c's (and -n's and -o's) per -m, so if you wanted to output all the text from <l>'s and <r>'s under the same <p> in a file, tab-separated, you could do:

 $ xmlstarlet sel -t -o $'LEFT\tRIGHT' -n -m '//e/p' -c 'l/text()' -o $'\t' -c 'r/text()' -n apertium-nno-nob.nno-nob.dix 


Note that on some systems, the command for xmlstarlet is simply "xml".

It's slow on big files[edit]

Both xmllint and xmlstarlet seem to sponge the whole file into ram before doing anything.

What if you just want to run on the first 1000 lines? If you try "head -1000 file | xmlstarlet" it'll complain since your tags aren't closed. Here's a trick to avoid that:

xzcat corpus.xml.xz | head -1000 | xmllint --recover - | xmllint --xpath '//foo/bar'

The --recover option to xmllint will close end tags for you :-) and prints what it closed to stderr.


E.g. to get some articles out of a wikipedia dump:

 bzcat dawiki-20160111-pages-articles.xml.bz2 \
  | head -1000 \
  | xmllint --recover - \
  | xmlstarlet sel -N w='http://www.mediawiki.org/xml/export-0.10/' -t -c '//w:text/text()'


Another alternative is xml_grep. Do

sudo apt install xml-twig-tools

to install it. It seems to run fine on huge input without eating memory :-)

xzcat corpus.xml.xz | xml_grep -p --cond='foo[@id="a"]//[@class="meh"]'

I get "Unknown option --xpath"[edit]

You need to upgrade your libxml2 (--xpath was added in 2.7.7, back in Mar 15 2010). Or use xmlstarlet.

External links[edit]

See also[edit]