xml, schemas, and xpath zachary g. ives university of pennsylvania cis 550 – database &...

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XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 me slide content courtesy of Susan Davidson & Raghu Ramakrishnan

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Page 1: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

XML, Schemas, and XPath

Zachary G. IvesUniversity of Pennsylvania

CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems

October 14, 2004

Some slide content courtesy of Susan Davidson & Raghu Ramakrishnan

Page 2: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Announcements

Homework 3 due today Homework 4 handed out Midterm: Thursday 10/28

Page 3: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Why We’re Interested in XML

Can get data from all sorts of sources Allows us to touch data we don’t own! This was actually a huge change in the DB community

Used for sharing dataInteresting relationships with DB techniques

Useful to do relational-style operations Leverages ideas from object-oriented, semistructured

data

Blends schema and data into one format Unlike relational model, where we need schema first … But too little schema can be a drawback, too!

Page 4: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Basic XML Anatomy<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?> <dblp> <mastersthesis mdate="2002-01-03" key="ms/Brown92">  <author>Kurt P. Brown</author>   <title>PRPL: A Database Workload Specification Language</title>   <year>1992</year>   <school>Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison</school>   </mastersthesis> <article mdate="2002-01-03" key="tr/dec/SRC1997-018">  <editor>Paul R. McJones</editor>   <title>The 1995 SQL Reunion</title>   <journal>Digital System Research Center Report</journal>   <volume>SRC1997-018</volume>   <year>1997</year>   <ee>db/labs/dec/SRC1997-018.html</ee>   <ee>http://www.mcjones.org/System_R/SQL_Reunion_95/</ee>   </article>

Processing Instr.

Element

Attribute

Close-tag

Open-tag

Page 5: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Well-Formed XML

A legal XML document – fully parsable by an XML parser All open-tags have matching close-tags (unlike

so many HTML documents!), or a special:<tag/> shortcut for empty tags (equivalent to

<tag></tag>

Attributes (which are unordered, in contrast to elements) only appear once in an element

There’s a single root element XML is case-sensitive

Page 6: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML as a Data Model

XML “information set” includes 7 types of nodes: Document (root) Element Attribute Processing instruction Text (content) Namespace: Comment

XML data model includes this, plus typing info, plus order info and a few other things

Page 7: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML Data Model Visualized(and simplified!)

Root

?xml dblp

mastersthesis article

mdate key

author title year school editor title yearjournal volume eeee

mdatekey

2002…

ms/Brown92

Kurt P….

PRPL…

1992

Univ….

2002…

tr/dec/…

Paul R.

The…

Digital…

SRC…

1997

db/labs/dec

http://www.

attributeroot

p-i element

text

Page 8: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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What Does XML Do?

Serves as a document format (super-HTML) Allows custom tags (e.g., used by MS Word,

openoffice) Supplement it with stylesheets (XSL) to define

formatting

Data exchange format (must agree on terminology)

Marshalling and unmarshalling data in SOAP and Web Services

Page 9: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML as a Super-HTML(MS Word)

<h1 class="Section1"><a name="_top“ />CIS 550: Database and Information Systems</h1><h2 class="Section1">Fall 2004</h2><p class="MsoNormal">

<place>311 Towne</place>, Tuesday/Thursday<time Hour="13" Minute="30">1:30PM –

3:00PM</time></p>

Page 10: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML Easily Encodes Relations

sid

serno

exp-grade

1 570103

B

23 550103

A<student-course-grade><tuple><sid>1</sid><serno>570103</serno><exp-grade>B</exp-grade></tuple><tuple><sid>23</sid><serno>550103</serno><exp-grade>A</exp-grade></tuple>

</student-course-grade>

Student-course-grade

Page 11: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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But XML is More Flexible…“Non-First-Normal-Form” (NF2)

<parents> <parent name=“Jean” >

<son>John</son><daughter>Joan</daughter><daughter>Jill</daughter>

</parent> <parent name=“Feng”>

<daughter>Felicity</daughter> </parent>… Coincides with “semi-structured data”,

invented by DB people at Penn and Stanford

Page 12: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML and Code

Web Services (.NET, recent Java web service toolkits) are using XML to pass parameters and make function calls Why?

Easy to be forwards-compatible Easy to read over and validate (?) Generally firewall-compatible

Drawbacks? XML is a verbose and inefficient encoding!

XML is used to represent: SOAP: the “envelope” that data is marshalled into XML Schema: gives some typing info about structures being

passed WSDL: the IDL (interface def language) UDDI: provides an interface for querying about web services

Page 13: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Integrating XML: What If We Have Multiple Sources with the Same Tags?

Namespaces allow us to specify a context for different tags

Two parts: Binding of namespace to URI Qualified names

<root xmlns=“http://www.first.com/aspace” xmlns:otherns=“…”>

<tag xmlns:myns=“http://www.fictitious.com/mypath”><thistag>is in the default namespace (aspace)</thistag><myns:thistag>is in myns</myns:thistag><otherns:thistag>is a different tag in otherns</otherns:thistag>

</tag></root>

Page 14: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML Isn’t Enough on Its Own

It’s too unconstrained for many cases! How will we know when we’re getting garbage? How will we query? How will we understand what we got?

We also need:Some idea of the structure

Our focus next

Presentation, in some cases – XSL(T) We’ll talk about this soon

Some way of interpreting the tags…? We’ll talk about this later in the semester

Page 15: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Structural Constraints:Document Type Definitions (DTDs)

The DTD is an EBNF grammar defining XML structure XML document specifies an associated DTD, plus

the root element DTD specifies children of the root (and so on)

DTD defines special significance for attributes: IDs – special attributes that are analogous to keys

for elements IDREFs – references to IDs IDREFS – a nasty hack that represents a list of

IDREFs

Page 16: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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An Example DTD

Example DTD:<!ELEMENT dblp((mastersthesis | article)*)><!ELEMENT mastersthesis(author,title,year,school,committeemember*)><!ATTLIST mastersthesis(mdate CDATA #REQUIRED

key ID #REQUIREDadvisor CDATA #IMPLIED>

<!ELEMENT author(#PCDATA)>

…Example use of DTD in XML file:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?> <!DOCTYPE dblp SYSTEM “my.dtd"> <dblp>…

Page 17: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Representing Graphs and Links in XML

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?> <!DOCTYPE graph SYSTEM “special.dtd"> <graph>

<author id=“author1”><name>John Smith</name>

</author><article>

<author ref=“author1” /> <title>Paper1</title></article><article>

<author ref=“author1” /> <title>Paper2</title></article>

Page 18: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Graph Data ModelRoot

!DOCTYPE

graph

authorarticle

nametitle

refref

John Smith

author1author1

Paper2

?xml

article

id

author1

author authortitle

Paper1

Page 19: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Graph Data ModelRoot

!DOCTYPE

graph

authorarticle

nametitle

refref

John Smith

Paper2

?xml

article

id

author1

author authortitle

Paper1

Page 20: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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DTDs Aren’t Expressive Enough

DTDs capture grammatical structure, but have some drawbacks: Not themselves in XML – inconvenient to build

tools for them Don’t capture database datatypes’ domains IDs aren’t a good implementation of keys

Why not?

No way of defining OO-like inheritance

Page 21: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML Schema

Aims to address the shortcomings of DTDs XML syntax Can define keys using XPaths Type subclassing that’s more complex than in

a programming language Programming languages don’t consider order of

member variables! Subclassing “by extension” and “by restriction”

… And, of course, domains and built-in datatypes

Page 22: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Basics of XML Schema

Need to use the XML Schema namespace (generally named xsd)

simpleTypes are a way of restricting domains on scalars Can define a simpleType based on integer, with values within

a particular range

complexTypes are a way of defining element/attribute structures Basically equivalent to !ELEMENT, but more powerful Specify sequence, choice between child elements Specify minOccurs and maxOccurs (default 1)

Must associate an element/attribute with a simpleType, or an element with a complexType

Page 23: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Simple Schema Example

<xsd:schema xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"> <xsd:element name=“mastersthesis" type=“ThesisType"/> <xsd:complexType name=“ThesisType">

<xsd:attribute name=“mdate" type="xsd:date"/><xsd:attribute name=“key" type="xsd:string"/><xsd:attribute name=“advisor" type="xsd:string"/><xsd:sequence>

<xsd:element name=“author" type=“xsd:string"/> <xsd:element name=“title" type=“xsd:string"/> <xsd:element name=“year" type=“xsd:integer"/> <xsd:element name=“school" type=“xsd:string”/> <xsd:element name=“committeemember"

type=“CommitteeType” minOccurs=“0"/> </xsd:sequence>

</xsd:complexType> </xsd:schema>

Page 24: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Designing an XML Schema/DTD

Not as formalized as relational data design We can still use ER diagrams to break into entity,

relationship sets ER diagrams have extensions for “aggregation” – treating

smaller diagrams as entities – and for composite attributes Note that often we already have our data in relations and

need to design the XML schema to export them!

Generally orient the XML tree around the “central” objects

Big decision: element vs. attribute Element if it has its own properties, or if you *might* have

more than one of them Attribute if it is a single property – or perhaps not!

Page 25: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML as a Data Model

XML is a non-first-normal-form (NF2) representation Can represent documents, data Standard data exchange format Several competing schema formats – esp.,

DTD and XML Schema – provide typing information

Next: basics of querying XML

Page 26: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Querying XML

How do you query a directed graph? a tree?

The standard approach used by many XML, semistructured-data, and object query languages: Define some sort of a template describing

traversals from the root of the directed graph In XML, the basis of this template is called an

XPath

Page 27: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XPaths

In its simplest form, an XPath is like a path in a file system:/mypath/subpath/*/morepath

The XPath returns a node set representing the XML nodes (and their subtrees) at the end of the path

XPaths can have node tests at the end, returning only particular node types, e.g., text(), processing-instruction(), comment(), element(), attribute()

XPath is fundamentally an ordered language: it can query in order-aware fashion, and it returns nodes in order

Page 28: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Sample XML<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?> <dblp> <mastersthesis mdate="2002-01-03" key="ms/Brown92">  <author>Kurt P. Brown</author>   <title>PRPL: A Database Workload Specification Language</title>   <year>1992</year>   <school>Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison</school>   </mastersthesis> <article mdate="2002-01-03" key="tr/dec/SRC1997-018">  <editor>Paul R. McJones</editor>   <title>The 1995 SQL Reunion</title>   <journal>Digital System Research Center Report</journal>   <volume>SRC1997-018</volume>   <year>1997</year>   <ee>db/labs/dec/SRC1997-018.html</ee>   <ee>http://www.mcjones.org/System_R/SQL_Reunion_95/</ee>   </article>

Page 29: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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XML Data Model VisualizedRoot

?xml dblp

mastersthesis article

mdate key

author title year school editor title yearjournal volume eeee

mdatekey

2002…

ms/Brown92

Kurt P….

PRPL…

1992

Univ….

2002…

tr/dec/…

Paul R.

The…

Digital…

SRC…

1997

db/labs/dec

http://www.

attributeroot

p-i element

text

Page 30: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Some Example XPath Queries

/dblp/mastersthesis/title /dblp/*/editor //title //title/text()

Page 31: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Context Nodes and Relative Paths

XPath has a notion of a context node: it’s analogous to a current directory “.” represents this context node “..” represents the parent node We can express relative paths:

subpath/sub-subpath/../.. gets us back to the context node

By default, the document root is the context node

Page 32: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Predicates – Selection Operations

A predicate allows us to filter the node set based on selection-like conditions over sub-XPaths:

/dblp/article[title = “Paper1”]

which is equivalent to:

/dblp/article[./title/text() = “Paper1”]

Page 33: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Axes: More Complex Traversals

Thus far, we’ve seen XPath expressions that go down the tree (and up one step) But we might want to go up, left, right, etc. These are expressed with so-called axes:

self::path-step child::path-step parent::path-step descendant::path-step ancestor::path-step descendant-or-self::path-step ancestor-or-self::path-

step preceding-sibling::path-step following-sibling::path-step preceding::path-step following::path-step

The previous XPaths we saw were in “abbreviated form”

Page 34: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Querying Order

We saw in the previous slide that we could query for preceding or following siblings or nodes

We can also query a node for its position according to some index: fn::first() , fn::last() return index of 0th & last

element matching the last step: fn::position() gives the relative count of the

current node

child::article[fn::position() = fn::last()]

Page 35: XML, Schemas, and XPath Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems October 14, 2004 Some slide content courtesy

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Users of XPath

XML Schema uses simple XPaths in defining keys and uniqueness constraints

XQuery XSLT XLink and XPointer, hyperlinks for XML

Next time we’ll focus on XQuery, the nearly-complete “SQL of XML”…

… And we’ll briefly discuss XSLT, a different attempt to manipulate XML data