AddXml (HttpRequest subroutine): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 01:17, 15 June 2011
<section begin=dpl_desc/>Add XmlDoc object to HTTP Post data<section end=dpl_desc/>
This subroutine adds a Janus SOAP XmlDoc object instance to the HTTP Post data that is subsequently sent on a Post method invocation.
Syntax
%httpreq:AddXML(%xmldoc, [xmloptions])
Syntax terms
%httpreq | A previously defined and instantiated HTTPRequest object. |
---|---|
%xmldoc | An XmlDoc object that contains an instantiated XmlDoc object. |
xmloptions | Any combination of the following options (but single occurrences only):
|
Usage notes
- The XmlDoc that is passed is serialized into the post data of the request being built. It is not required that you serialize the XmlDoc first.
- Invoking this method erases any post data previously added by AddXML or AddLongString method calls.
- As of Sirius Mods version 6.6, if you do not explicitly set a content-type HTTP request header via AddHeader, AddXml generates a content-type header of “text/xml” upon a Post. To suppress this automatic header generation, you can set the AutoSendXMLContentType property to False.
- The xmloptions may be specified in any case, for example, you can use
either
NoXmlDecl
ornoxmldecl
, interchangeably. - If one of the line-end
(
CR
,LF
,CRLF
) options or ifIndent
is specified, and an element to be serialized has thexml:space="preserve"
attribute, then within the serialization of that element and its descendants, no line-end (nor indentation) characters are inserted to provide readability. In addition, thexml:space="default"
attribute has no effect under these options: specified by itself, it does not influence serialization, nor does it cause resumption of readability line-ends or indents if they were suspended by a containingxml:space="preserve"
. - As of version 6.7, the AddXml method uses the
character references specified in the XML Canonicalization specification
(http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-c14n) to
display the following characters:
- For Attribute nodes: tab, carriage return, and linefeed
- For Text nodes: carriage return
Since the character references are not subject to the standard XML whitespace normalization (so not removed), a serialized document (or subtree) that is then deserialized will retain this whitespace.
These character references are used:
tab 	 CR 
 LF 
 The EBCDIC and corresponding ASCII encodings of the characters is:
EBCDIC ASCII tab X'05' X'09' CR X'0D' X'0D' LF X'25' X'0A' For more information about XML document whitespace handling, see "Normalizing whitespace characters".
- The following example shows the effect of the SortCanonical option:
Begin %d is object Xmldoc %d = new %htr is object HttpRequest %htr = new %sl is object Stringlist %sl = new Text To %sl <top p:abc="p" q:xyz="q" xmlns:p="urn:p" xmlns:q="http://q.com" xmlns="urn:default" name="t" id="z15" /> End Text %d:LoadXml(%sl) %htr:AddXml(%d, 'SortCanonical NoEmptyElt') Print %d:Serial(, 'EBCDIC SortCanonical NoEmptyElt') End
The Print statement above (which uses the Serial (XmlDoc/XmlNode function) method of the Janus SOAP XmlDoc API) displays the resulting XmlDoc content added to the HTTPRequest object (formatted with some newlines for the sake of instruction):<top xmlns="urn:default" xmlns:p="urn:p" xmlns:q="http://q.com" id="z15" name="t" q:xyz="q" p:abc="p" > </top>
Comments:
- The reason for the name (SortCanonical) is that this ordering is part of the specification of the Canonical XML Recommendation (http://www.w3.org/TR/xml&hyph.c14n) and the Exclusive Canonical XML Recommendation (http://www.w3.org/TR/xml&hyph.exc&hyph.c14n), which constrain serializations to facilitate processing such as digital signatures.
- Notice the use of the NoEmptyElt option above. This produces an STag (
<top ...>
) and an ETag (</top>
) for an empty element, rather than just the EmptyElemTag (<top ...>
). The canonical XML recommendations state that an STag/ETag pair, rather than an EmptyElemTag, is the serialization for an empty element. - Although SortCanonical uses the Unicode sort sequence, this is limited to Unicode values less than 256 (as of version 6.9 of Janus SOAP, so it is accomplished with an 8-byte EBCDIC to 8-byte Unicode table, which is (for all intents and purposes) merely an EBCDIC-to-ASCII translation.