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I have a file xml file with the below structure on mac

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Profile xmlns="http://test.com/data">
    <userPermissions>
        <enabled>true</enabled>
        <name>View</name>
    </userPermissions>
    <userPermissions>
        <enabled>true</enabled>
        <name>Edit</name>
    </userPermissions>  
    <userPermissions>
        <enabled>true</enabled>
        <name>Delete</name>
    </userPermissions>  
</Profile>

I would like to have a bash/cli script to remove the below section from it.

<userPermissions>
    <enabled>true</enabled>
    <name>Delete</name>
</userPermissions>  

How can I do this with sed/awk/xmlstarlet ?

I tried the below. Don't get an error but it does not do the job either.

sed -i '' 's#</userPermissions><userPermissions><enabled>true</enabled><name>Delete</name></userPermissions>#</userPermissions>#' FileName.Profile

sed -i '' 's/<\/userPermissions><userPermissions><enabled>true<\/enabled><name>Delete<\/name><\/userPermissions>/<\/userPermissions>/' FileName.Profile

tried below with XMLSTARLET as well but no luck

XMLStarlet ed --ps -d "/Profile/userPermissions[name='Delete'] FileName.profile"
6
  • What have you tried so far?
    – lurker
    Apr 17, 2019 at 11:33
  • sed -i 's/<\/userPermissions><userPermissions><enabled>true<\/enabled><name>Delete<\/name><\/userPermissions>/<\/userPermissions>/' FileName.Profile .. also tried this ... error I get is sed: 1: "FileName.Profile": invalid command code F
    – HSG
    Apr 17, 2019 at 11:40
  • sed/awk/grep is not 100% safe for your requirement. A valid xml file can have different formats, i.e. one line, 3 lines, with/out indent...
    – Kent
    Apr 17, 2019 at 12:31
  • @Kent What would be a preferred option to achieve this ? Ultimately I need to add a script to my CI/CD jobs.
    – HSG
    Apr 17, 2019 at 12:52
  • A tool that can parse XML such as XmlStarlet would make sense. Apr 17, 2019 at 13:07

2 Answers 2

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Using XMLStarlet you can execute the following command:

xml ed -L -N d="http://test.com/data" -d "d:Profile/d:userPermissions[child::d:name[.='Delete']]" FileName.profile

Note: You may need to replace the initial xml part of the command above with xmlstarlet

Explanation:

  1. Your source xml includes a Namespace, (i.e. the xmlns="http://test.com/data" declaration in the document element's start-tag), so you'll need to utilize XMLStarlet's -N option to predefine it when editing xml documents using the ed command.

    As you can see in the command (above) the part that reads;

    -N d="http://test.com/data"
    

    predefines the Namespace using the name d.

  2. The part that reads:

    "d:Profile/d:userPermissions[child::d:name[.='Delete']]"
    

    defines the Xpath expression to address the part(s) of the XML document that we're interested in - in this scenario it addresses the element(s) that we want to delete.

    As you can see each reference to an element node is prefixed with d:

    Essentially, this xpath expression; matches any element nodes named userPermissions (belonging to the Namespace; http://test.com/data) only if they have a child element node named name whose text node equals the word; "Delete".

  3. The -d option/flag is used to delete what the Xpath expression matches.

  4. The -L option/flag edits the file inplace. You may want to initially remove the this option/flag for test purposes.

Result

Given your source XML executing the command (above) will produce the following in the file named FileName.Profile:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Profile xmlns="http://test.com/data">
  <userPermissions>
    <enabled>true</enabled>
    <name>View</name>
  </userPermissions>
  <userPermissions>
    <enabled>true</enabled>
    <name>Edit</name>
  </userPermissions>
</Profile>
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  • Thanks. This works perfectly. Appreciate the detail explanation as well for XMLStarlet
    – HSG
    May 13, 2019 at 12:04
0

For what it's worth, this is how you would use github.com/mikefarah/yq:

yq -p=xml -o=xml 'del(.Profile.userPermissions[] | select(.name=="Delete"))' Filename.profile 

Explanation:

  • del(....) will delete all matching nodes
  • inside del, we find all the userPermissions that have name == "Delete"

The flags:

  • -p=xml tells yq to parse xml
  • -o=xml tells yq to output xml

Disclaimer: I wrote yq

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