RPC::XML::Parser - A container class for XML::Parser
SYNOPSIS
use RPC::XML::Parser;
...
$P = RPC::XML::Parser->new();
$P->parse($message);
DESCRIPTION
The RPC::XML::Parser class encapsulates the parsing process, for turning a
string or an input stream into a RPC::XML::request or RPC::XML::response
object. The XML::Parser class is used internally, with a new instance
created for each call to "parse" (detailed below). This allows the
RPC::XML::Parser object to be reusable, even though the XML::Parser
objects are not. The methods are:
new([ARGS])
Create a new instance of the class. Any extra data passed to the constructor
is taken as key/value pairs (not a hash reference) and attached to the
object.
The following parameters are currently recognized:
base64_to_fh
If passed with a true value, this tells the parser that incoming Base64 data
is to be spooled to a filehandle opened onto an anonymous temporary file. The
file itself is unlinked after opening, though the resulting RPC::XML::base64
object can use its "to_file" method to save the data to a specific file at a
later point. No checks on size are made; if this option is set, all Base64
data goes to filehandles.
base64_temp_dir
If this argument is passed, the value is taken as the directory under which
the temporary files are created. This is so that the application is not locked
in to the list of directories that File::Spec defaults to with its
"tmpdir" method. If this is not passed, the previously-mentioned method is
used to derive the directory in which to create the temporary files. Only
relevant if base64_to_fh is set.
parse [ { STRING | STREAM } ]
Parse the XML document specified in either a string or a stream. The stream
may be any file descriptor, derivative of IO::Handle, etc. The return
value is either an object reference (to one of RPC::XML::request or
RPC::XML::response) or an error string. Any non-reference return value
should be treated as an error condition.
If no argument is given, then the "parse_start" method of XML::Parser is
used to create a XML::Parser::ExpatNB object, which is returned. This
object may then be used to parse the data in chunks, rather than a steady
stream. See the XML::Parser manual page for more details on how this
works.
DIAGNOSTICS
The constructor returns "undef" upon failure, with the error message available
in the global variable $RPC::XML::ERROR.
CAVEATS
This began as a reference implementation in which clarity of process and
readability of the code took precedence over general efficiency. It is now
being maintained as production code, but may still have parts that could be
written more efficiently.
CREDITS
The XML-RPC standard is Copyright (c) 1998-2001, UserLand Software, Inc.
See <http://www.xmlrpc.com> for more information about the XML-RPC
specification.