I am trying to get the data from a MariaDB database into a 3rd party program running on a machine that does not have access to the DB server, so I need to use flat text files.
CSV is not an option, as the program reading the data does not play well with escapes and quotations.
So I am stuck with XML for now. Luckily MySQL, or MariaDB, allow for the --xml
parameter in both mysql
and mysqldump
command line tool.
However, all columns have the name 'field' with an attribute name="column_name":
shell> mysql --xml -uroot -e "SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'version%'"
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<resultset statement="SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'version%'" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<row>
<field name="Variable_name">version</field>
<field name="Value">5.0.40-debug</field>
</row>
<row>
<field name="Variable_name">version_comment</field>
<field name="Value">Source distribution</field>
</row>
For the program reading this data to be able to understand it, I need it to be in the following format:
<row>
<Variable_name>version</Variable_name>
<Value>5.0.40-debug</Value>
</row>
<row>
<Variable_name>version_comment</Variable_name>
<Value>Source distribution</Value>
</row>
I have written a little XSLT stylesheet to convert this:
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform">
<xsl:output method="xml" encoding="UTF-8"/>
<xsl:template match="@*|node()">
<xsl:copy>
<xsl:apply-templates select="@*|node()"/>
</xsl:copy>
</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="field[@name]">
<xsl:element name="{@name}">
<xsl:value-of select="."/>
</xsl:element>
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>
Which works, but is very slow for larger datasets (100k records, 2M lines XML) using Xalan C++ from the command line. It can take up to 15-30 minutes.
Are there better ways to accomplish this? It is really too bad we can't tell MySQL / MariaDB to output XML using normal tag names instead of these generic ones and having to translate it after the export.
<xsl:strip-space elements="*"/>
to XSLT after the<xsl:output ...>
to speed up processing. Another solution is use a general-purpose language (Java, PHP, Python) that connects to db, iterates through rows, creating a dom XML file.