XML::LibXML::Devel - makes functions from LibXML.xs available
/**********************************************
* C functions you want to access
*/
xmlNode *return_node();
void receive_node(xmlNode *);
###############################################
# XS Code
void *
xs_return_node
CODE:
RETVAL = return_node();
OUTPUT:
RETVAL
void
xs_receive_node
void *n
CODE:
receive_node(n);
###############################################
# Perl code
use XML::LibXML::Devel;
sub return_node
{
my $raw_node = xs_return_node();
my $node = XML::LibXML::Devel::node_to_perl($raw_node);
XML::LibXML::Devel::refcnt_inc($raw_node);
return $node;
}
sub receive_node
{
my ($node) = @_;
my $raw_node = XML::LibXML::Devel::node_from_perl($node);
xs_receive_node($raw_node);
XML::LibXML::Devel::refcnt_inc($raw_node);
}
XML::LibXML::Devel makes functions from LibXML.xs available that
are needed to wrap libxml2 nodes in and out of XML::LibXML::Nodes.
This gives cleaner dependencies than using LibXML.so directly.
To XS a library that uses libxml2 nodes the first step is to
do this so that xmlNodePtr is passed as void *. These raw nodes
are then turned into libxml nodes by using this Devel functions.
Be aware that this module is currently rather experimental. The function
names may change if I XS more functions and introduce a reasonable
naming convention.
Be also aware that this module is a great tool to cause segfaults and
introduce memory leaks. It does however provide a partial cure by making
xmlMemUsed available as mem_used .
- node_to_perl
-
node_to_perl($raw_node);
Returns a LibXML::Node object. This has a proxy node with a reference
counter and an owner attached. The raw node will be deleted as soon
as the reference counter reaches zero.
If the C library is keeping a
pointer to the raw node, you need to call refcnt_inc immediately.
You also need to replace xmlFreeNode by a call to refcnt_dec.
- node_to_perlnode_to_perl
-
node_from_perl($node);
Returns a raw node. This is a void * pointer and you can do nothing
but passing it to functions that treat it as an xmlNodePtr. The
raw node will be freed as soon as its reference counter reaches zero.
If the C library is keeping a
pointer to the raw node, you need to call refcnt_inc immediately.
You also need to replace xmlFreeNode by a call to refcnt_dec.
- refcnt_inc
-
refcnt_inc($raw_node);
Increments the raw nodes reference counter. The raw node must already
be known to perl to have a reference counter.
- refcnt_dec
-
refcnt_dec($raw_node);
Decrements the raw nodes reference counter and returns the value it
had before. if the counter becomes zero or less,
this method will free the proxy node holding the reference counter.
If the node is part of a
subtree, refcnt_dec will fix the reference counts and delete
the subtree if it is not required any more.
- refcnt
-
refcnt($raw_node);
Returns the value of the reference counter.
- fix_owner
-
fix_owner($raw_node, $raw_parent);
This functions fixes the reference counts for an entire subtree.
it is very important to fix an entire subtree after node operations
where the documents or the owner node may get changed. this method is
aware about nodes that already belong to a certain owner node.
- $ENV{DEBUG_MEMORY}
-
BEGIN {$ENV{DEBUG_MEMORY} = 1;};
use XML::LibXML;
This turns on libxml2 memory debugging. It must be set before
XML::LibXML is loaded.
- mem_used
-
mem_used();
Returns the number of bytes currently allocated.
None by default.
This was created to support the needs of Apache2::ModXml2. So this
can serve as an example.
Joachim Zobel <jz-2011@heute-morgen.de>
Copyright (C) 2011 by Joachim Zobel
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.10.1 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
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