MARC::File::XML(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | MARC::File::XML(3pm) |
MARC::File::XML - Work with MARC data encoded as XML
## Loading with USE options use MARC::File::XML ( BinaryEncoding => 'utf8', RecordFormat => 'UNIMARC' ); ## Setting the record format without USE options MARC::File::XML->default_record_format('USMARC'); ## reading with MARC::Batch my $batch = MARC::Batch->new( 'XML', $filename ); my $record = $batch->next(); ## or reading with MARC::File::XML explicitly my $file = MARC::File::XML->in( $filename ); my $record = $file->next(); ## serialize a single MARC::Record object as XML print $record->as_xml(); ## write a bunch of records to a file my $file = MARC::File::XML->out( 'myfile.xml' ); $file->write( $record1 ); $file->write( $record2 ); $file->write( $record3 ); $file->close(); ## instead of writing to disk, get the xml directly my $xml = join( "\n", MARC::File::XML::header(), MARC::File::XML::record( $record1 ), MARC::File::XML::record( $record2 ), MARC::File::XML::footer() );
The MARC-XML distribution is an extension to the MARC-Record distribution for working with MARC21 data that is encoded as XML. The XML encoding used is the MARC21slim schema supplied by the Library of Congress. More information may be obtained here: http://www.loc.gov/standards/marcxml/
You must have MARC::Record installed to use MARC::File::XML. In fact once you install the MARC-XML distribution you will most likely not use it directly, but will have an additional file format available to you when you use MARC::Batch.
This version of MARC-XML supersedes an the versions ending with 0.25 which were used with the MARC.pm framework. MARC-XML now uses MARC::Record exclusively.
If you have any questions or would like to contribute to this module please sign on to the perl4lib list. More information about perl4lib is available at <http://perl4lib.perl.org>.
When you use MARC::File::XML your MARC::Record objects will have two new additional methods available to them:
Sets or returns the default record format used by MARC::File::XML. Valid formats are MARC21, USMARC, UNIMARC and UNIMARCAUTH.
MARC::File::XML->default_record_format('UNIMARC');
Returns a MARC::Record object serialized in XML. You can pass an optional format parameter to tell MARC::File::XML what type of record (USMARC, UNIMARC, UNIMARCAUTH) you are serializing.
print $record->as_xml([$format]);
Returns a MARC::Record object serialized in XML without a collection wrapper. You can pass an optional format parameter to tell MARC::File::XML what type of record (USMARC, UNIMARC, UNIMARCAUTH) you are serializing.
print $record->as_xml_record('UNIMARC');
If you have a chunk of XML and you want a record object for it you can use this method to generate a MARC::Record object. You can pass an optional encoding parameter to specify which encoding (UTF-8 or MARC-8) you would like the resulting record to be in. You can also pass a format parameter to specify the source record type, such as UNIMARC, UNIMARCAUTH, USMARC or MARC21.
my $record = MARC::Record->new_from_xml( $xml, $encoding, $format );
Note: only works for single record XML chunks.
If you want to write records as XML to a file you can use out() with write() to serialize more than one record as XML.
A constructor for creating a MARC::File::XML object that can write XML to a file. You must pass in the name of a file to write XML to. If the $encoding parameter or the DefaultEncoding (see above) is set to UTF-8 then the binmode of the output file will be set appropriately.
my $file = MARC::File::XML->out( $filename [, $encoding] );
Used in tandem with out() to write records to a file.
my $file = MARC::File::XML->out( $filename ); $file->write( $record1 ); $file->write( $record2 );
When writing records to disk the filehandle is automatically closed when you the MARC::File::XML object goes out of scope. If you want to close it explicitly use the close() method.
If you want to generate batches of records as XML, but don't want to write to disk you'll have to use header(), record() and footer() to generate the different portions.
$xml = join( "\n", MARC::File::XML::header(), MARC::File::XML::record( $record1 ), MARC::File::XML::record( $record2 ), MARC::File::XML::record( $record3 ), MARC::File::XML::footer() );
Returns a string of XML to use as the header to your XML file.
Returns a string of XML to use at the end of your XML file.
Returns a chunk of XML suitable for placement between the header and the footer.
You probably don't ever want to call this method directly. If you do you should pass in a chunk of XML as the argument.
It is normally invoked by a call to next(), see MARC::Batch or MARC::File.
Pass a XML::LibXML parser to MARC::File::XML for it to use. This is optional, meant for use by applications that maintain a shared parser object or which require that external entities be processed. Note that the latter is a potential security risk; see <https://www.owasp.org/index.php/XML_External_Entity_(XXE)_Processing>.
You probably want to use the as_xml() method on your MARC::Record object instead of calling this directly. But if you want to you just need to pass in the MARC::Record object you wish to encode as XML, and you will be returned the XML as a scalar.
2022-01-20 | perl v5.32.1 |