5

I am attempting to parse, not evaluate, rails ERB files in a Hpricot/Nokogiri type manner. The files I am attempting to parse contain HTML fragments intermixed with dynamic content generated using ERB (standard rails view files) I am looking for a library that will not only parse the surrounding content, much the way that Hpricot or Nokogiri will but will also treat the ERB symbols, <%, <%= etc, as though they were html/xml tags.

Ideally I would get back a DOM like structure where the <%, <%= etc symbols would be included as their own node types.

I know that it is possible to hack something together using regular expressions but I was looking for something a bit more reliable as I am developing a tool that I need to run on a very large view code base where both the html content and the erb content are important.

For example, content such as:

blah blah blah
<div>My Great Text <%= my_dynamic_expression %></div>

Would return a tree structure like:

root
 - text_node (blah blah blah)
 - element (div)
    - text_node (My Great Text )
        - erb_node (<%=)

2 Answers 2

5

I eventually ended up solving this problem by using RLex, http://raa.ruby-lang.org/project/ruby-lex/, the ruby version of lex with the following grammer:

%{

#define NUM 257

#define OPTOK 258
#define IDENT 259
#define OPETOK 260
#define CLSTOK 261
#define CLTOK 262
#define FLOAT 263
#define FIXNUM 264
#define WORD 265
#define STRING_DOUBLE_QUOTE 266
#define STRING_SINGLE_QUOTE 267

#define TAG_START 268
#define TAG_END 269
#define TAG_SELF_CONTAINED 270
#define ERB_BLOCK_START 271
#define ERB_BLOCK_END 272
#define ERB_STRING_START 273
#define ERB_STRING_END 274
#define TAG_NO_TEXT_START 275
#define TAG_NO_TEXT_END 276
#define WHITE_SPACE 277
%}

digit   [0-9]
blank   [ ]
letter  [A-Za-z]
name1   [A-Za-z_]
name2   [A-Za-z_0-9]
valid_tag_character [A-Za-z0-9"'=@_():/ ] 
ignore_tags style|script
%%

{blank}+"\n"                  { return [ WHITE_SPACE, yytext ] } 
"\n"{blank}+                  { return [ WHITE_SPACE, yytext ] } 
{blank}+"\n"{blank}+                  { return [ WHITE_SPACE, yytext ] } 

"\r"                  { return [ WHITE_SPACE, yytext ] } 
"\n"            { return[ yytext[0], yytext[0..0] ] };
"\t"            { return[ yytext[0], yytext[0..0] ] };

^{blank}+       { return [ WHITE_SPACE, yytext ] }

{blank}+$       { return [ WHITE_SPACE, yytext ] };

""   { return [ TAG_NO_TEXT_START, yytext ] }
""  { return [ TAG_NO_TEXT_END, yytext ] }
""                   { return [ TAG_SELF_CONTAINED, yytext ] }
""  { return [ TAG_SELF_CONTAINED, yytext ] }
""    { return [ TAG_START, yytext ] }
""   { return [ TAG_END, yytext ] }

""  { return [ ERB_BLOCK_END, yytext ] }
""  { return [ ERB_STRING_END, yytext ] }


{letter}+       { return [ WORD, yytext ] }


\".*\"          { return [ STRING_DOUBLE_QUOTE, yytext ] }
'.*'                    { return [ STRING_SINGLE_QUOTE, yytext ] }
.           { return [ yytext[0], yytext[0..0] ] }

%%

This is not a complete grammer but for my purposes, locating and re-emitting text, it worked. I combined that grammer with this small piece of code:

    text_handler = MakeYourOwnCallbackHandler.new

    l = Erblex.new
    l.yyin = File.open(file_name, "r")

    loop do
      a,v = l.yylex
      break if a == 0

      if( a < WORD )
        text_handler.character( v.to_s, a )
      else
        case a
        when WORD
          text_handler.text( v.to_s )
        when TAG_START
          text_handler.start_tag( v.to_s )
        when TAG_END
          text_handler.end_tag( v.to_s )
        when WHITESPACE
          text_handler.white_space( v.to_s )
        when ERB_BLOCK_START
          text_handler.erb_block_start( v.to_s )
        when ERB_BLOCK_END
          text_handler.erb_block_end( v.to_s )      
        when ERB_STRING_START
          text_handler.erb_string_start( v.to_s )
        when ERB_STRING_END
          self.text_handler.erb_string_end( v.to_s )
        when TAG_NO_TEXT_START
          text_handler.ignorable_tag_start( v.to_s )
        when TAG_NO_TEXT_END
          text_handler.ignorable_tag_end( v.to_s )
        when STRING_DOUBLE_QUOTE
          text_handler.string_double_quote( v.to_s )
        when STRING_SINGLE_QUOTE
          text_handler.string_single_quote( v.to_s )
        when TAG_SELF_CONTAINED
          text_handler.tag_self_contained( v.to_s )
        end
      end  
    end
4
  • Did you have any trouble with the Lexer.rb/Erblex.rb generated by rlex being incomplete? I've tried in both OS X and Ubuntu, but the generated lexer RB ends suddenly in the middle of a big case/when block. I've tried just rlex grammar and rlex --output LexerClassName grammar, where 'grammar' corresponds to a file named 'grammar.rl'. I've got Ruby 1.8.7. Oct 22, 2010 at 20:35
  • Hi Sarah, I did in fact have that problem. I submitted a bug fix to the rlex owner. I can send you the patch file if you are interested but it is a bug that you have to repair ir rlex. Nov 10, 2010 at 19:08
  • Could you publish the patch somehow?
    – user43685
    Dec 17, 2010 at 17:30
  • I eventually found a better solution to this problem when creating the HerbGobbler, an open source english text extractor for i18n, by using Treetop rather than RLex. Much less buggy. Much easier to support. My grammer can be found here: github.com/douglasjsellers/herbgobbler/blob/master/grammer/… Jan 20, 2011 at 17:03
3

I recently had a similar problem. The approach that I took was to write a small script (erblint.rb) do a string substitution to convert the ERB tags (<% %> and <%= %>) to XML tags, and then parse using Nokogiri.

See the following code to see what I mean:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'rubygems'
require 'nokogiri'

# This is a simple program that reads in a Ruby ERB file, and parses
# it as an XHTML file. Specifically, it makes a decent attempt at
# converting the ERB tags (<% %> and <%= %>) to XML tags (<erb-disp/>
# and <erb-eval/> respectively.
#
# Once the document has been parsed, it will be validated and any
# error messages will be displayed.
#
# More complex option and error handling is left as an exercise to the user.

abort 'Usage: erb.rb <filename>' if ARGV.empty?

filename = ARGV[0]

begin
  doc = ""
  File.open(filename) do |file|
    puts "\n*** Parsing #{filename} ***\n\n"
    file.read(nil, s = "")

    # Substitute the standard ERB tags to convert them to XML tags
    #   <%= ... %> for <erb-disp> ... </erb-disp>
    #   <% ... %>  for <erb-eval> ... </erb-eval>
    #
    # Note that this won't work for more complex expressions such as:
    #   <a href=<% @some_object.generate_url -%> >link text</a>
    # Of course, this is not great style, anyway...
    s.gsub!(/<%=(.+?)%>/m, '<erb-disp>\1</erb-disp>')
    s.gsub!(/<%(.+?)%>/m, '<erb-eval>\1</erb-eval>')
    doc = Nokogiri::XML(s) do |config|
      # put more config options here if required
      # config.strict
    end
  end

  puts doc.to_xhtml(:indent => 2, :encoding => 'UTF-8')
  puts "Huzzah, no errors!" if doc.errors.empty?

  # Otherwise, print each error message
  doc.errors.each { |e| puts "Error at line #{e.line}: #{e}" }
rescue
  puts "Oops! Cannot open #{filename}"
end

I've posted this as a gist on Github: https://gist.github.com/787145

1
  • Love it! I actually put it inside an html comment to avoid interference between anything at the ERB that would resamble html value = value.gsub(/<%=(.+?)%>/m, '<erb-disp><!--\1--></erb-disp>')
    – viniciusnz
    Aug 3, 2017 at 16:13

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