#!/home/satfoto/bin/perl use warnings; use strict; use XML::Compile::Schema (); use XML::Compile::Util qw/type_of_node/; use Getopt::Long qw/GetOptions :config gnu_compat bundling/; my ($xml_input, $root_type, @schemas, $outfile); my $format = 'PERL'; my $show = 'ALL'; GetOptions 'format|f=s' => \$format , "output|o=s" => \$outfile , "schema|s=s" => \@schemas , "show=s" => \$show , "type|t=s" => \$root_type , "xml|x=s" => \$xml_input; $xml_input = '-' if @schemas && !defined $xml_input; if(@ARGV) { die "ERROR: either use options or no options, not mixed\n" if defined $xml_input && @ARGV; ($xml_input, @schemas) = @ARGV; } defined $xml_input or die "ERROR: no input message specified\n"; @schemas or die "ERROR: no schema's specified\n"; @schemas = map { split /\,/ } @schemas; $format = uc $format; die "ERROR: format must be either 'PERL' or 'XML'\n" if $format ne 'PERL' && $format ne 'XML'; my $parser = XML::LibXML->new; my $msg = $xml_input eq '-' ? $parser->parse_fh(\*STDIN) : $parser->parse_file($xml_input); my $top = $msg->documentElement; $root_type ||= type_of_node $top; my $schema = XML::Compile::Schema->new; $schema->importDefinitions($_) for @schemas; my $output = $schema->template ( $format , $root_type , show => $show ); if($outfile) { open OUT, ">:utf8", $outfile or die "ERROR: cannot write yaml to $outfile: $!\n"; print OUT $output; close OUT or die "ERROR: write error for $outfile: $!\n"; } else { print $output; } exit 0; __END__ =head1 NAME xml2example - convert XML schema knowledge into Perl or XML examples =head1 SYNOPSIS xml2example xml-file schema-file(s) >outfile xml2example -x xml-file -s schema-file(s) -o outfile =head1 DESCRIPTION XML schemas are quite hard to read, certainly when multiple name-spaces are involved. The template() function in XML::Compile::Schema function can help displaying the expected structure of a message; this module is a wrapper around that function. =head2 Options You can either specify an XML message filename and one or more schema filenames as arguments, or use the options. =over 4 =item --xml|-x filename The file which contains the xml message. A single dash means "stdin". =item --schema|-s filename(s) This option can be repeated, or the filenames separated by comma's, if you have more than one schema file to parse. All imported and included schema components have to be provided explicitly. =item --type|-t TYPE The type of the root element, required if the XML is not namespaceo qualified, although the schema is. If not specified, the root element is automatically inspected. The TYPE notation is C<{namespace}localname>. Be warned to use quoting on the UNIX command-line, because curly braces have a special meaning for the shell. =item --output|-o filename By default, the output is to stdout. =item --show STRING A comma seperated list of comment components which should be included, by default C. An empty string or C will exclude all comments. The STRING can also be a comma separated combination of C, C, C, and C. =back =head1 SEE ALSO This module is part of Perl's XML-Compile distribution. Website: F =head1 LICENSE Copyrights 2008 by Mark Overmeer. For other contributors see ChangeLog. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See F