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Represent an XML 1.0 document as a read-only tree.

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roxmltree-relaxed

This is a fork of https://github.com/RazrFalcon/roxmltree that exposes options to support some of the relaxed parsing needs I have for some projects.

If you file a PR, make sure the default behavior is identical to that of the original roxmltree.

It also depends on https://github.com/kavika13/xmlparser-relaxed, which itself is forked from https://github.com/RazrFalcon/xmlparser.

roxmltree

Build Status Crates.io Documentation Rust 1.36+

Represents an XML 1.0 document as a read-only tree.

// Find element by id.
let doc = roxmltree_relaxed::Document::parse("<rect id='rect1'/>")?;
let elem = doc.descendants().find(|n| n.attribute("id") == Some("rect1"))?;
assert!(elem.has_tag_name("rect"));

Why read-only?

Because in some cases all you need is to retrieve some data from an XML document. And for such cases, we can make a lot of optimizations.

As for roxmltree, it's fast not only because it's read-only, but also because it uses xmlparser, which is many times faster than xml-rs. See the Performance section for details.

Parsing behavior

Sadly, XML can be parsed in many different ways. roxmltree tries to mimic the behavior of Python's lxml. But unlike lxml, roxmltree does support comments outside the root element.

For more details see docs/parsing.md.

Alternatives

Feature/Crate roxmltree libxml2 xmltree sxd-document
Element namespace resolving ~1
Attribute namespace resolving
Entity references × ×
Character references
Attribute-Value normalization
Comments
Processing instructions
UTF-8 BOM × ×
Non UTF-8 input
Complete DTD support
Position preserving2
HTML support
Tree modification
Writing
No unsafe
Language Rust C Rust Rust
Size overhead4 ~55KiB ~1.4MiB5 ~78KiB ~102KiB
Dependencies 1 ?5 2 2
Tested version 0.18.0 2.9.8 0.10.2 0.3.2
License MIT / Apache-2.0 MIT MIT MIT

Legend:

  • ✓ - supported
  • × - parsing error
  • ~ - partial
  • nothing - not supported

Notes:

  1. No default namespace propagation.
  2. roxmltree keeps all node and attribute positions in the original document, so you can easily retrieve it if you need it. See examples/print_pos.rs for details.
  3. In the memchr crate.
  4. Binary size overhead according to cargo-bloat.
  5. Depends on build flags.

There is also elementtree and treexml crates, but they are abandoned for a long time.

Performance

Parsing

test huge_roxmltree      ... bench:   3,152,020 ns/iter (+/- 38,556)
test huge_libxml         ... bench:   6,779,906 ns/iter (+/- 184,744)
test huge_sdx_document   ... bench:   8,289,337 ns/iter (+/- 378,131)
test huge_xmltree        ... bench:  45,309,549 ns/iter (+/- 1,591,562)

test large_roxmltree     ... bench:   1,568,688 ns/iter (+/- 9,956)
test large_libxml        ... bench:   3,199,587 ns/iter (+/- 139,486)
test large_sdx_document  ... bench:   3,731,708 ns/iter (+/- 92,787)
test large_xmltree       ... bench:  15,605,566 ns/iter (+/- 331,504)

test medium_roxmltree    ... bench:     430,778 ns/iter (+/- 18,070)
test medium_libxml       ... bench:     932,408 ns/iter (+/- 8,763)
test medium_sdx_document ... bench:   1,452,152 ns/iter (+/- 54,983)
test medium_xmltree      ... bench:   4,903,558 ns/iter (+/- 116,875)

test tiny_roxmltree      ... bench:       2,630 ns/iter (+/- 41)
test tiny_libxml         ... bench:       9,113 ns/iter (+/- 183)
test tiny_sdx_document   ... bench:      10,388 ns/iter (+/- 116)
test tiny_xmltree        ... bench:      22,067 ns/iter (+/- 228)

roxmltree uses xmlparser internally, while sdx-document uses its own implementation, xmltree uses the xml-rs. Here is a comparison between xmlparser, xml-rs and quick-xml:

test huge_xmlparser      ... bench:   1,744,585 ns/iter (+/- 28,509)
test huge_quick_xml      ... bench:   2,818,954 ns/iter (+/- 66,923)
test huge_xmlrs          ... bench:  41,072,412 ns/iter (+/- 519,803)

test large_xmlparser     ... bench:     756,125 ns/iter (+/- 13,995)
test large_quick_xml     ... bench:   1,401,189 ns/iter (+/- 28,295)
test large_xmlrs         ... bench:  12,920,333 ns/iter (+/- 143,508)

test medium_quick_xml    ... bench:     216,080 ns/iter (+/- 5,479)
test medium_xmlparser    ... bench:     258,587 ns/iter (+/- 3,684)
test medium_xmlrs        ... bench:   4,629,016 ns/iter (+/- 109,023)

test tiny_xmlparser      ... bench:       1,087 ns/iter (+/- 16)
test tiny_quick_xml      ... bench:       2,420 ns/iter (+/- 51)
test tiny_xmlrs          ... bench:      18,974 ns/iter (+/- 162)

Iteration


test roxmltree_iter_descendants_expensive   ... bench:     255,261 ns/iter (+/- 1,424)
test xmltree_iter_descendants_expensive     ... bench:     354,316 ns/iter (+/- 3,383)

test roxmltree_iter_descendants_inexpensive ... bench:      20,736 ns/iter (+/- 218)
test xmltree_iter_descendants_inexpensive   ... bench:     125,849 ns/iter (+/- 1,200)

test roxmltree_iter_children                ... bench:       1,409 ns/iter (+/- 54)

Where expensive refers to the matching done on each element. In these benchmarks, expensive means searching for any node in the document which contains a string. And inexpensive means searching for any element with a particular name.

Notes

The benchmarks were taken on a Apple M1 Pro. You can try running the benchmarks yourself by running cargo bench in the benches dir.

  • Since all libraries have a different XML support, benchmarking is a bit pointless.
  • Tree crates may use different xml-rs crate versions.
  • We bench libxml2 using the rust-libxml wrapper crate
  • quick-xml is faster than xmlparser because it's more forgiving for the input, while xmlparser is very strict and does a lot of checks, which are expensive. So performance difference is mainly due to validation.

Memory Overhead

roxmltree tries to use as little memory as possible to allow parsing very large (multi-GB) XML files.

The peak memory usage doesn't directly correlates with the file size but rather with the amount of nodes and attributes a file has. How many attributes had to be normalized (i.e. allocated). And how many text nodes had to be preprocessed (i.e. allocated).

roxmltree never allocates element and attribute names, processing instructions and comments.

By disabling the positions feature, you can shave by 8 bytes from each node and attribute.

On average, the overhead is around 6-8x the file size. For example, our 1.1GB sample XML will peak at 7.6GB RAM with default features enabled and at 6.8GB RAM when positions is disabled.

Safety

  • This library must not panic. Any panic should be considered a critical bug and reported.
  • This library forbids unsafe code.

Non-goals

  • Complete XML support.
  • Tree modification and writing.
  • XPath/XQuery.

API

This library uses Rust's idiomatic API based on iterators. In case you are more familiar with browser/JS DOM APIs - you can check out tests/dom-api.rs to see how it can be converted into a Rust one.

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

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