Basically, something similar to System.Xml.XmlWriter - A streaming XML Writer that doesn't incur much of a memory overhead. So that rules out xml.dom and xml.dom.minidom. Suggestions?
6 Answers
I think you'll find XMLGenerator from xml.sax.saxutils is the closest thing to what you want.
import time from xml.sax.saxutils import XMLGenerator from xml.sax.xmlreader import AttributesNSImpl LOG_LEVELS = ['DEBUG', 'WARNING', 'ERROR'] class xml_logger: def __init__(self, output, encoding): """ Set up a logger object, which takes SAX events and outputs an XML log file """ logger = XMLGenerator(output, encoding) logger.startDocument() attrs = AttributesNSImpl({}, {}) logger.startElementNS((None, u'log'), u'log', attrs) self._logger = logger self._output = output self._encoding = encoding return def write_entry(self, level, msg): """ Write a log entry to the logger level - the level of the entry msg - the text of the entry. Must be a Unicode object """ #Note: in a real application, I would use ISO 8601 for the date #asctime used here for simplicity now = time.asctime(time.localtime()) attr_vals = { (None, u'date'): now, (None, u'level'): LOG_LEVELS[level], } attr_qnames = { (None, u'date'): u'date', (None, u'level'): u'level', } attrs = AttributesNSImpl(attr_vals, attr_qnames) self._logger.startElementNS((None, u'entry'), u'entry', attrs) self._logger.characters(msg) self._logger.endElementNS((None, u'entry'), u'entry') return def close(self): """ Clean up the logger object """ self._logger.endElementNS((None, u'log'), u'log') self._logger.endDocument() return if __name__ == "__main__": #Test it out import sys xl = xml_logger(sys.stdout, 'utf-8') xl.write_entry(2, u"Vanilla log entry") xl.close()
You'll probably want to look at the rest of the article I got that from at http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2003/03/12/py-xml.html.
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+1: this is the only streaming answer here that's builtin to python.– Jason SJan 30, 2013 at 20:27
Some years ago I used MarkupWriter
from 4suite
General-purpose utility class for generating XML (may eventually be expanded to produce more output types) Sample usage: from Ft.Xml import MarkupWriter writer = MarkupWriter(indent=u"yes") writer.startDocument() writer.startElement(u'xsa') writer.startElement(u'vendor') #Element with simple text (#PCDATA) content writer.simpleElement(u'name', content=u'Centigrade systems') #Note writer.text(content) still works writer.simpleElement(u'email', content=u"[email protected]") writer.endElement(u'vendor') #Element with an attribute writer.startElement(u'product', attributes={u'id': u"100\u00B0"}) #Note writer.attribute(name, value, namespace=None) still works writer.simpleElement(u'name', content=u"100\u00B0 Server") #XML fragment writer.xmlFragment('<version>1.0</version><last-release>20030401</last-release>') #Empty element writer.simpleElement(u'changes') writer.endElement(u'product') writer.endElement(u'xsa') writer.endDocument() Note on the difference between 4Suite writers and printers Writer - module that exposes a broad public API for building output bit by bit Printer - module that simply takes a DOM and creates output from it as a whole, within one API invokation
Recently i hear a lot about how lxml is great, but I don't have first-hand experience, and I had some fun working with gnosis.
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I'm afraid 4suite is not online any more. As for lxml, it's great but does not have a styreaming facility AFAIK.– rdsJan 6, 2012 at 14:04
Second vote for ElementTree (cElementTree is a C implementation that is a little faster, like cPickle vs pickle). There's some short example code here that you can look at to give you an idea of how it works: http://effbot.org/zone/element-index.htm (this is Fredrik Lundh, who wrote the module in the first place. It's so good it got drafted into the standard library with 2.5 :-) )
xml.etree.cElementTree, included in the default distribution of CPython since 2.5. Lightning fast for both reading and writing XML.
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4Still, cElementTree is not a streaming writer and thus will use memory linear to the size of the XML tree you create, although much less than xml.dom. Sep 20, 2008 at 19:09