/* * reserved comment block * DO NOT REMOVE OR ALTER! */ /* * Copyright 1999-2004 The Apache Software Foundation. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ /* * $Id: CachedXPathAPI.java,v 1.2.4.1 2005/09/10 03:47:42 jeffsuttor Exp $ */ package com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal; import javax.xml.transform.TransformerException; import com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.utils.PrefixResolver; import com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.utils.PrefixResolverDefault; import com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject; import org.w3c.dom.Document; import org.w3c.dom.Node; import org.w3c.dom.NodeList; import org.w3c.dom.traversal.NodeIterator; /** * The methods in this class are convenience methods into the * low-level XPath API. * * These functions tend to be a little slow, since a number of objects must be * created for each evaluation. A faster way is to precompile the * XPaths using the low-level API, and then just use the XPaths * over and over. * * This is an alternative for the old XPathAPI class, which provided * static methods for the purpose but had the drawback of * instantiating a new XPathContext (and thus building a new DTMManager, * and new DTMs) each time it was called. XPathAPIObject instead retains * its context as long as the object persists, reusing the DTMs. This * does have a downside: if you've changed your source document, you should * obtain a new XPathAPIObject to continue searching it, since trying to use * the old DTMs will probably yield bad results or malfunction outright... and * the cached DTMs may consume memory until this object and its context are * returned to the heap. Essentially, it's the caller's responsibility to * decide when to discard the cache. * * @see XPath Specification * */ public class CachedXPathAPI { /** XPathContext, and thus the document model system (DTMs), persists through multiple calls to this object. This is set in the constructor. */ protected XPathContext xpathSupport; /** *
Default constructor. Establishes its own {@link XPathContext}, and hence * its own {@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTMManager}. * Good choice for simple uses.
*Note that any particular instance of {@link CachedXPathAPI} must not be * operated upon by multiple threads without synchronization; we do * not currently support multithreaded access to a single * {@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTM}.
*/ public CachedXPathAPI() { xpathSupport = new XPathContext(); } /** *This constructor shares its {@link XPathContext} with a pre-existing * {@link CachedXPathAPI}. That allows sharing document models * ({@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTM}) and previously established location * state.
*Note that the original {@link CachedXPathAPI} and the new one should * not be operated upon concurrently; we do not support multithreaded access * to a single {@link com.sun.org.apache.xml.internal.dtm.DTM} at this time. Similarly, * any particular instance of {@link CachedXPathAPI} must not be operated * upon by multiple threads without synchronization.
*%REVIEW% Should this instead do a clone-and-reset on the XPathSupport object?
* */ public CachedXPathAPI(CachedXPathAPI priorXPathAPI) { xpathSupport = priorXPathAPI.xpathSupport; } /** Returns the XPathSupport object used in this CachedXPathAPI * * %REVIEW% I'm somewhat concerned about the loss of encapsulation * this causes, but the xml-security folks say they need it. * */ public XPathContext getXPathContext() { return this.xpathSupport; } /** * Use an XPath string to select a single node. XPath namespace * prefixes are resolved from the context node, which may not * be what you want (see the next method). * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @return The first node found that matches the XPath, or null. * * @throws TransformerException */ public Node selectSingleNode(Node contextNode, String str) throws TransformerException { return selectSingleNode(contextNode, str, contextNode); } /** * Use an XPath string to select a single node. * XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode. * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces. * @return The first node found that matches the XPath, or null. * * @throws TransformerException */ public Node selectSingleNode( Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode) throws TransformerException { // Have the XObject return its result as a NodeSetDTM. NodeIterator nl = selectNodeIterator(contextNode, str, namespaceNode); // Return the first node, or null return nl.nextNode(); } /** * Use an XPath string to select a nodelist. * XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the contextNode. * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @return A NodeIterator, should never be null. * * @throws TransformerException */ public NodeIterator selectNodeIterator(Node contextNode, String str) throws TransformerException { return selectNodeIterator(contextNode, str, contextNode); } /** * Use an XPath string to select a nodelist. * XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode. * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces. * @return A NodeIterator, should never be null. * * @throws TransformerException */ public NodeIterator selectNodeIterator( Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode) throws TransformerException { // Execute the XPath, and have it return the result XObject list = eval(contextNode, str, namespaceNode); // Have the XObject return its result as a NodeSetDTM. return list.nodeset(); } /** * Use an XPath string to select a nodelist. * XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the contextNode. * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @return A NodeIterator, should never be null. * * @throws TransformerException */ public NodeList selectNodeList(Node contextNode, String str) throws TransformerException { return selectNodeList(contextNode, str, contextNode); } /** * Use an XPath string to select a nodelist. * XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode. * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces. * @return A NodeIterator, should never be null. * * @throws TransformerException */ public NodeList selectNodeList( Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode) throws TransformerException { // Execute the XPath, and have it return the result XObject list = eval(contextNode, str, namespaceNode); // Return a NodeList. return list.nodelist(); } /** * Evaluate XPath string to an XObject. Using this method, * XPath namespace prefixes will be resolved from the namespaceNode. * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null. * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag * * @throws TransformerException */ public XObject eval(Node contextNode, String str) throws TransformerException { return eval(contextNode, str, contextNode); } /** * Evaluate XPath string to an XObject. * XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode. * The implementation of this is a little slow, since it creates * a number of objects each time it is called. This could be optimized * to keep the same objects around, but then thread-safety issues would arise. * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @param namespaceNode The node from which prefixes in the XPath will be resolved to namespaces. * @return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null. * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag * * @throws TransformerException */ public XObject eval(Node contextNode, String str, Node namespaceNode) throws TransformerException { // Since we don't have a XML Parser involved here, install some default support // for things like namespaces, etc. // (Changed from: XPathContext xpathSupport = new XPathContext(); // because XPathContext is weak in a number of areas... perhaps // XPathContext should be done away with.) // Create an object to resolve namespace prefixes. // XPath namespaces are resolved from the input context node's document element // if it is a root node, or else the current context node (for lack of a better // resolution space, given the simplicity of this sample code). PrefixResolverDefault prefixResolver = new PrefixResolverDefault( (namespaceNode.getNodeType() == Node.DOCUMENT_NODE) ? ((Document) namespaceNode).getDocumentElement() : namespaceNode); // Create the XPath object. XPath xpath = new XPath(str, null, prefixResolver, XPath.SELECT, null); // Execute the XPath, and have it return the result // return xpath.execute(xpathSupport, contextNode, prefixResolver); int ctxtNode = xpathSupport.getDTMHandleFromNode(contextNode); return xpath.execute(xpathSupport, ctxtNode, prefixResolver); } /** * Evaluate XPath string to an XObject. * XPath namespace prefixes are resolved from the namespaceNode. * The implementation of this is a little slow, since it creates * a number of objects each time it is called. This could be optimized * to keep the same objects around, but then thread-safety issues would arise. * * @param contextNode The node to start searching from. * @param str A valid XPath string. * @param prefixResolver Will be called if the parser encounters namespace * prefixes, to resolve the prefixes to URLs. * @return An XObject, which can be used to obtain a string, number, nodelist, etc, should never be null. * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XObject * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNull * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XBoolean * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XNumber * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XString * @see com.sun.org.apache.xpath.internal.objects.XRTreeFrag * * @throws TransformerException */ public XObject eval( Node contextNode, String str, PrefixResolver prefixResolver) throws TransformerException { // Since we don't have a XML Parser involved here, install some default support // for things like namespaces, etc. // (Changed from: XPathContext xpathSupport = new XPathContext(); // because XPathContext is weak in a number of areas... perhaps // XPathContext should be done away with.) // Create the XPath object. XPath xpath = new XPath(str, null, prefixResolver, XPath.SELECT, null); // Execute the XPath, and have it return the result XPathContext xpathSupport = new XPathContext(); int ctxtNode = xpathSupport.getDTMHandleFromNode(contextNode); return xpath.execute(xpathSupport, ctxtNode, prefixResolver); } }