[XSL-LIST Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Tree Comparing Algorithm
Am 03.02.2020 um 14:47 schrieb Vasu Chakkera vasucv@xxxxxxxxx: > Hi All, > I am planning to write a XML Tree comparing XSLT using streaming. > The XML Trees look something like this > > <root path="" mhash =" "> > > <folder path ="" mhash =""> > > <folder path ="" mhash =""> > > <leaf path ="" mhash =""> > > </leaf> > > </folder> > > </folder> > > </root> > > There will be two such XML files to compare . These two XMLs are > generated before and after moving a folder from source to destination. > Source and destination could be two different OS. > > This is essentially the serialized Merkle Tree output of a folder > structure. The idea is to run a Merkle Tree comparator that will pick > the nodes that did not match. Rules are as follows. > > 1. If the root node in both the tree matches, then there is not > difference in the entire tree(because of how the Merkle tree is > generated) > 2. If root node hash does not match, we go to the child container and > compare the hash of the child container in both the XML files. ( > the XML folders structureB will be identical with respect to the > hash, but the folder path may be different because of the linux, > windows path conventions. Otherwise the folder structure is meant > to be the same.) > 3. If the hash of a folder from both the trees are same, the entire > tree under the folder that matches the hash is ignored. > 4. if the hash of a folder from both the trees are not the same, then > the tree is further traversed and the step 3 is repeated. > 5. The XSLT keeps writing out the nodes that do not match the hashes > in the source and target xml files > > > So at the end of the processing, A comparator tree should be > serialized, that has the nodes that have a non matching leaf node. > Looking at the serialized tree, we can determine, which files got > messed up while doing a transfer from Source to target. > > > > I am able to do this using non streaming xslt, but with streaming, > since we need to stream two trees at a time and match compare the > nodes,B i am not very sure how to proceed. > I am able to do manipulations on one XML with streaming. I tried a few > tricks, but did not get anywhere ( I am not very comfortable copying > my code scribbling here) > > I need streaming because the XML files may be big. > If someone has done something similar, or point me to an intelligent > way to do this, I will be thankful. > I am not sure there is an option within the XSLT 3 spec constraints as the `xsl:merge` allows you to process more than one merge-source with streaming but always takes a snapshot, so any attempt to recursively process your files would take a snapshot at the highest selected level and that way not really save memory. And using two xsl:source-document to process two documents at the same time with a function or template for recursion seems to be difficult with the constraints that streamable nodes need to be passed in as the first argument. That made me think about trying to pass in an array in Saxon 9.9 EE with the saxon:stream function used: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" B B B xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" B B B xmlns:saxon="http://saxon.sf.net/" B B B xmlns:mf="http://example.com/mf" B B B exclude-result-prefixes="#all" B B B version="3.0"> B B B <xsl:output method="text"/> B B B <xsl:function name="mf:compare" streamability="absorbing"> B B B B B B B <xsl:param name="pair" as="array(element())"/> B B B B B B B <xsl:value-of select="$pair?1!node-name(), $pair?2!node-name(), $pair?1!node-name() = $pair?2!node-name(), $pair?1!@name = $pair?2!@name"/> B B B B B B B <xsl:text> </xsl:text> B B B B B B B <xsl:sequence select="for-each-pair($pair?1!*, $pair?2!*, function($el1, $el2) { mf:compare([$el1, $el2]) })"/> B B B </xsl:function> B B B <xsl:template name="xsl:initial-template"> B B B B B B B <xsl:sequence select="mf:compare([saxon:stream(doc('file1.xml')/*), saxon:stream(doc('file2.xml')/*)])"/> B B B </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet> Saxon doesn't complain and reports it is streaming, the output when run with options -t -it against two files is like Streaming file:/SomePath/file1.xml URIResolver.resolve href="file1.xml" base="file:/SomePath/sheet2.xsl" Streaming input document file:/SomePath/file1.xml Using parser com.sun.org.apache.xerces.internal.jaxp.SAXParserImpl$JAXPSAXParser Streaming file:/SomePath/file2.xml URIResolver.resolve href="file2.xml" base="file:/SomePath/sheet2.xsl" Streaming input document file:/SomePath/file2.xml root root true false folder folder true true leaf leaf true true folder folder true false leaf leaf true true I am not sure what happens with the `saxon:stream` function in future releases or whether that whole approach is useful, I am not sure it does really recursively process both files with streaming.
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