XML XPath and XQuery Zachary G Ives University

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XML, XPath, and XQuery Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database

XML, XPath, and XQuery Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 550 – Database & Information Systems Some slide content courtesy of Susan Davidson & Raghu Ramakrishnan

The XML Story, So Far § XML met the desire for a platform-neutral format

The XML Story, So Far § XML met the desire for a platform-neutral format for data, documents, and Web content § It also became the foundation for cross-platform applications (via Web services) § Our focus here will be on the data applications § The data model (primarily the “XML Infoset”) § Merged documents via XML namespaces § … and schemas and querying (discussed today) 2

XML Isn’t Enough on Its Own It’s too unconstrained for many cases! § How

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 3

Structural Constraints: Document Type Definitions (DTDs) The DTD is an EBNF grammar defining XML

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 4

Structural Constraints: Document Type Definitions (DTDs) The DTD is an EBNF grammar defining XML

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 5

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

An Example DTD: <!ELEMENT dblp((mastersthesis | article)*)> <!ELEMENT mastersthesis(author, title, year, school, committeemember*)> <!ATTLIST mastersthesis(mdate CDATA #REQUIRED key ID #REQUIRED advisor 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>… 6

Representing Graphs and Links in XML <? xml version="1. 0" encoding="ISO-8859 -1" ? >

Representing Graphs and Links in XML <? xml version="1. 0" encoding="ISO-8859 -1" ? > <!DOCTYPE graph SYSTEM “special. dtd"> <graph> <author id=“author 1”> <name>John Smith</name> </author> <article> <author ref=“author 1” /> <title>Paper 1</title> </article> <author ref=“author 1” /> <title>Paper 2</title> </article> … 7

Graph Data Model Root graph ? xml !DOCTYPE author id name article author title

Graph Data Model Root graph ? xml !DOCTYPE author id name article author title Paper 1 author 1 ref author ref title Paper 2 John Smith author 1 8

Graph Data Model Root graph ? xml !DOCTYPE author id name article author title

Graph Data Model Root graph ? xml !DOCTYPE author id name article author title Paper 1 author 1 ref author ref title Paper 2 John Smith 9

DTDs Aren’t Expressive Enough DTDs capture grammatical structure, but have some drawbacks: § Not

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 10

XML Schema Aims to address the shortcomings of DTDs § XML syntax § Can

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 11

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

Basics of XML Schema Need to use the XML Schema namespace (generally named xsd) § simple. Types are a way of restricting domains on scalars § Can define a simple. Type based on integer, with values within a particular range § complex. Types are a way of defining element/attribute structures § Basically equivalent to !ELEMENT, but more powerful § Specify sequence, choice between child elements § Specify min. Occurs and max. Occurs (default 1) § Must associate an element/attribute with a simple. Type, or an element with a complex. Type 12

Simple Schema Example <xsd: schema xmlns: xsd="http: //www. w 3. org/2001/XMLSchema"> <xsd: element name=“mastersthesis"

Simple Schema Example <xsd: schema xmlns: xsd="http: //www. w 3. org/2001/XMLSchema"> <xsd: element name=“mastersthesis" type=“Thesis. Type"/> <xsd: complex. Type name=“Thesis. Type"> <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=“Committee. Type” min. Occurs=“ 0"/> </xsd: sequence> </xsd: complex. Type> </xsd: schema> 13

Designing an XML Schema/DTD Not as formalized as relational data design § We can

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! 14

Recap: XML as a Data Model XML is a non-first-normal-form (NF 2) representation §

Recap: XML as a Data Model XML is a non-first-normal-form (NF 2) representation § Can represent documents, data § Standard data exchange format § Several competing schema formats – esp. , DTD and XML Schema – provide typing information 15

Querying XML How do you query a directed graph? a tree? The standard approach

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 16

XPaths In its simplest form, an XPath is like a path in a file

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 17

Sample XML <? xml version="1. 0" encoding="ISO-8859 -1" ? > <dblp> <mastersthesis mdate="2002 -01

Sample XML <? xml version="1. 0" encoding="ISO-8859 -1" ? > <dblp> <mastersthesis mdate="2002 -01 -03" key="ms/Brown 92"> <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/SRC 1997 -018"> <editor>Paul R. Mc. Jones</editor> <title>The 1995 SQL Reunion</title> <journal>Digital System Research Center Report</journal> <volume>SRC 1997 -018</volume> <year>1997</year> <ee>db/labs/dec/SRC 1997 -018. html</ee> <ee>http: //www. mcjones. org/System_R/SQL_Reunion_95/</ee> </article> 18

XML Data Model Visualized Root ? xml 2002… element article mdate author title year

XML Data Model Visualized Root ? xml 2002… element article mdate author title year school 1992 key editor title journal volume year ee ee 2002… tr/dec/… PRPL… Kurt P…. p-i dblp key ms/Brown 92 attribute text mastersthesis mdate root Digital… Univ…. 1997 The… Paul R. db/labs/dec SRC… http: //www. 19

Some Example XPath Queries § § /dblp/mastersthesis/title /dblp/*/editor //title/text() 20

Some Example XPath Queries § § /dblp/mastersthesis/title /dblp/*/editor //title/text() 20

Context Nodes and Relative Paths XPath has a notion of a context node: it’s

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 Ø By default, the document root is the context node 21

Predicates – Selection Operations A predicate allows us to filter the node set based

Predicates – Selection Operations A predicate allows us to filter the node set based on selection-like conditions over sub-XPaths: /dblp/article[title = “Paper 1”] which is equivalent to: /dblp/article[. /title/text() = “Paper 1”] 22

Axes: More Complex Traversals Thus far, we’ve seen XPath expressions that go down the

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 descendant-or-self: : path-step preceding-sibling: : path-step preceding: : path-step parent: : path-step ancestor-or-self: : path-step following-sibling: : path-step following: : path-step § The previous XPaths we saw were in “abbreviated form” 23

Querying Order § We saw in the previous slide that we could query for

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 0 th & last element matching the last step: § fn: : position() gives the relative count of the current node child: : article[fn: : position() = fn: : last()] 24

Users of XPath § XML Schema uses simple XPaths in defining keys and uniqueness

Users of XPath § XML Schema uses simple XPaths in defining keys and uniqueness constraints § XQuery § XSLT § XLink and XPointer, hyperlinks for XML 25

XQuery A strongly-typed, Turing-complete XML manipulation language § Attempts to do static typechecking against

XQuery A strongly-typed, Turing-complete XML manipulation language § Attempts to do static typechecking against XML Schema § Based on an object model derived from Schema Unlike SQL, fully compositional, highly orthogonal: § Inputs & outputs collections (sequences or bags) of XML nodes § Anywhere a particular type of object may be used, may use the results of a query of the same type § Designed mostly by DB and functional language people Attempts to satisfy the needs of data management and document management § The database-style core is mostly complete (even has support for NULLs in XML!!) § The document keyword querying features are still in the works – shows in the order-preserving default model 26

XQuery’s Basic Form § Has an analogous form to SQL’s SELECT. . FROM. .

XQuery’s Basic Form § Has an analogous form to SQL’s SELECT. . FROM. . WHERE. . GROUP BY. . ORDER BY § The model: bind nodes (or node sets) to variables; operate over each legal combination of bindings; produce a set of nodes § “FLWOR” statement: for {iterators that bind variables} let {collections} where {conditions} order by {order-conditions} (the handout uses old “SORTBY”) return {output constructor} 27

“Iterations” in XQuery A series of (possibly nested) FOR statements assigning the results of

“Iterations” in XQuery A series of (possibly nested) FOR statements assigning the results of XPaths to variables for $root in document(“http: //my. org/my. xml”) for $sub in $root/root. Element, $sub 2 in $sub/sub. Element, … § Something like a template that pattern-matches, produces a “binding tuple” § For each of these, we evaluate the WHERE and possibly output the RETURN template § document() or doc() function specifies an input file as a URI § Old version was “document”; now “doc” but it depends on your XQuery implementation 28

Two XQuery Examples <root-tag> { for $p in document(“dblp. xml”)/dblp/proceedings, $yr in $p/yr where

Two XQuery Examples <root-tag> { for $p in document(“dblp. xml”)/dblp/proceedings, $yr in $p/yr where $yr = “ 1999” return <proc> {$p} </proc> } </root-tag> for $i in document(“dblp. xml”)/dblp/inproceedings[author/text() = “John Smith”] return <smith-paper> <title>{ $i/title/text() }</title> <key>{ $i/@key }</key> { $i/crossref } </smith-paper> 29

Nesting in XQuery Nesting XML trees is perhaps the most common operation In XQuery,

Nesting in XQuery Nesting XML trees is perhaps the most common operation In XQuery, it’s easy – put a subquery in the return clause where you want things to repeat! for $u in document(“dblp. xml”)/universities where $u/country = “USA” return <ms-theses-99> { $u/title } { for $mt in $u/. . /mastersthesis where $mt/year/text() = “ 1999” and ______ return $mt/title } </ms-theses-99> 30

Collections & Aggregation in XQuery In XQuery, many operations return collections § XPaths, sub-XQueries,

Collections & Aggregation in XQuery In XQuery, many operations return collections § XPaths, sub-XQueries, functions over these, … § The let clause assigns the results to a variable Aggregation simply applies a function over a collection, where the function returns a value (very elegant!) let $allpapers : = document(“dblp. xml”)/dblp/article return <article-authors> <count> { fn: count(fn: distinct-values($allpapers/authors)) } </count> { for $paper in doc(“dblp. xml”)/dblp/article let $pauth : = $paper/author return <paper> {$paper/title} <count> { fn: count($pauth) } </count> </paper> } </article-authors> 31

Collections, Ctd. Unlike in SQL, we can compose aggregations and create new collections from

Collections, Ctd. Unlike in SQL, we can compose aggregations and create new collections from old: <result> { let $avg. Items. Sold : = fn: avg( for $order in document(“my. xml”)/orders/order let $total. Sold = fn: sum($order/item/quantity) return $total. Sold) return $avg. Items. Sold } </result> 32

Sorting in XQuery § SQL actually allows you to sort its output, with a

Sorting in XQuery § SQL actually allows you to sort its output, with a special ORDER BY clause (which we haven’t discussed, but which specifies a sort key list) § XQuery borrows this idea § In XQuery, what we order is the sequence of “result tuples” output by the return clause: for $x in document(“dblp. xml”)/proceedings order by $x/title/text() return $x 33

What If Order Doesn’t Matter? By default: § SQL is unordered § XQuery is

What If Order Doesn’t Matter? By default: § SQL is unordered § XQuery is ordered everywhere! § But unordered queries are much faster to answer XQuery has a way of telling the DBMS to avoid preserving order: § unordered { for $x in (mypath) … } 34

Distinct-ness In XQuery, DISTINCT-ness happens as a function over a collection § But since

Distinct-ness In XQuery, DISTINCT-ness happens as a function over a collection § But since we have nodes, we can do duplicate removal according to value or node § Can do fn: distinct-values(collection) to remove duplicate values, or fn: distinct-nodes(collection) to remove duplicate nodes for $years in fn: distinct-values(doc(“dblp. xml”)//year/text() return $years 35

Querying & Defining Metadata – Can’t Do This in SQL Can get a node’s

Querying & Defining Metadata – Can’t Do This in SQL Can get a node’s name by querying node-name(): for $x in document(“dblp. xml”)/dblp/* return node-name($x) Can construct elements and attributes using computed names: for $x in document(“dblp. xml”)/dblp/*, $year in $x/year, $title in $x/title/text(), element node-name($x) { attribute {“year-” + $year} { $title } } 36

XQuery Summary Very flexible and powerful language for XML § Clean and orthogonal: can

XQuery Summary Very flexible and powerful language for XML § Clean and orthogonal: can always replace a collection with an expression that creates collections § DB and document-oriented (we hope) § The core is relatively clean and easy to understand Turing Complete – we’ll talk more about XQuery functions soon 37