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Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| Anatomy Class | Let's take a closer look at how I accomplished this. 1. The first step is, obviously, to include the XML_Serializer class file: // include class file include("Serializer.php"); ?> You can either provide an absolute path to this file, or do what most lazy programmers do - include the path to your PEAR installation in PHP's "include_path" variable, so that you can access any of the PEAR classes without needing to type in long, convoluted file paths. 2. Next, an object of the class needs to be initialized, and assigned to a PHP variable. // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer(); ?> This variable serves as the control point for future manipulation of XML_Serializer properties and methods. 3. Next, you need to put together the data that you plan to encode in XML. The simplest way to do this is to create a nested set of arrays whose structure mimics that of the final XML document you desire. // create array to be serialized $xml = array ( "book" => array ( "title" => "Oliver Twist", "author" => "Charles Dickens")); ?> 4. With all the pieces in place, all that's left is to perform the transformation. This is done via the object's serialize() method, which accepts a PHP structure and returns a result code indicating whether or not the serialization was successful. // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($xml); ?> 5. Once the serialization is complete, you can do something useful with it - write it to a file, pass it through a SAX parser or - as I've done here - simply output it to the screen for all to admire: // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> The getSerializedData() method returns the serialized XML document tree as is, and serves a very useful purpose in debugging - you'll see it often over the next few pages. |
Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| Total Satisfaction | Now, if you're a nitpicker, the output of the example on the previous page still won't satisfy you. Here's why: 1. The serialized XML document does not contain the XML declaration at the top. 2. The root element of the document is called , whereas what you actually want is for it to be . 3. The XML document is not correctly indented. In order to account for these requirements, XML_Serializer comes with a setOption() method, which allows you to customize the behaviour of the serializer to your needs. To illustrate, consider the following example, which solves the first problem noted above: // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer(); // create array to be serialized $xml = array ( "book" => array ( "title" => "Oliver Twist", "author" => "Charles Dickens")); // add XML declaration $serializer->setOption("addDecl", true); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($xml); // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> Here's the output: Charles Dickens Thus, the setOption() method takes two arguments - a variable and its value - and uses that information to tell the serializer how to return the XML document. Next, how about fixing the root element and the indentation? // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer(); // create array to be serialized $xml = array ( "book" => array ( "title" => "Oliver Twist", "author" => "Charles Dickens")); // add XML declaration $serializer->setOption("addDecl", true); // indent elements $serializer->setOption("indent", " "); // set name for root element $serializer->setOption("rootName", "library"); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($xml); // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> And here's the result: Charles Dickens Pretty, isn't it? |
Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| No Attribution | Now, what about those pesky attributes? Well, XML_Serializer comes with an option that allows you to represent array keys as attributes of the enclosing element (instead of elements themselves). Take a look: // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer(); // create array to be serialized $xml = array ( "book" => array ( "title" => "Oliver Twist", "author" => "Charles Dickens")); // add XML declaration $serializer->setOption("addDecl", true); // indent elements $serializer->setOption("indent", " "); // set name for root element $serializer->setOption("rootName", "library"); // represent scalar values as attributes instead of element $serializer->setOption("scalarAsAttributes", true); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($xml); // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> Here's the output: Note that in order for this to work, the array key which is to be represented as an attribute should point to a single scalar value and not another array or object. To understand this better, consider the following example, which demonstrates the difference: // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer(); // create array to be serialized $xml = array ( "book" => array ( "title" => "Oliver Twist", "author" => "Charles Dickens", "price" => array ( "currency" => "USD", "amount" => 24.50))); // add XML declaration $serializer->setOption("addDecl", true); // indent elements $serializer->setOption("indent", " "); // set name for root element $serializer->setOption("rootName", "library"); // represent scalar values as attributes instead of element $serializer->setOption("scalarAsAttributes", true); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($xml); // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> And here's the revised output: To add attributes to the root node, set them with the "rootAttributes" option, as below: // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer(); // create array $xml = array("name" => "John Doe", "age" => 34, "sex" => "male"); // add XML declaration $serializer->setOption("addDecl", true); // indent elements $serializer->setOption("indent", " "); // set name for root element $serializer->setOption("rootName", "person"); // set attributes for root element $serializer->setOption("rootAttributes", array("id" => 346747)); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($xml); // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> Here's the output: John Doe 34 male |
Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| An Object Lesson | You can also serialize objects, in much the same way as you serialize arrays. Take a look at the following example, which demonstrates how: // object definition class Automobile { // object properties var $color; var $year; var $model; function setAttributes($c, $y, $m) { $this->color = $c; $this->year = $y; $this->model = $m; } } // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer(); // create object to be serialized $car = new Automobile; $car->setAttributes("blue", 1982, "Mustang"); // add XML declaration $serializer->setOption("addDecl", true); // indent elements $serializer->setOption("indent", " "); // set name for root element $serializer->setOption("rootName", "car"); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($car); // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> In this example, I've first defined a class called Automobile, and created some methods and properties for it. Then, further down in the script, I've instantiated an object of the class and set some very specific values for the object's properties. This object has then been serialized via XML_Serializer's serialize() method. Here's the result: blue 1982 Mustang |
Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| Not My Type | One of XML_Serializer's other interesting features is its ability to store data type information along with each value in the XML document. Called "type hints", this data type information can help in distinguishing between the integer 6 and the string "6", and comes in handy if your XML application is strongly typed. To enable type hints, you need to simply set the "typeHints" option to true. The following example illustrates: // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // set options $options = array( "addDecl" => true, "indent" => " ", "rootName" => "car", "typeHints" => true); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer($options); // create array $car = array("color" => "blue", "year" => 1982, "model" => "Mustang", "price" => 15000.00); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($car); // check result code and display XML if success if($result === true) { echo $serializer->getSerializedData(); } ?> Once type hints are enabled, every element within the XML document will bear an additional attribute indicating the data type of the value contained within it. Here's what the output of the example above looks like: blue 1982 Mustang 15000 Note that in the example above, I've used a slightly different method to set serializer options - I've created an array of options and values, and passed the array to the object constructor. When you have a large number of options to set, this method can save you a few lines of code. |
Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| Travelling In Reverse | Good things come in twos - Mickey and Donald, Tom and Jerry, yin and yang - and so it's no surprise that XML_Serializer has a doppelganger of its own. Called XML_Unserializer, this class can take an XML document and convert it into a series of nested PHP structures, suitable for use in a PHP script. In order to understand how this works, consider the following XML document: Arthur Conan Doyle 24.95 Yann Martel 7.99 Lonely Planet 16.99 Now, in order to convert this XML document into a PHP structure, simply put XML_Unserializer to work on it, as below: // include class file include("Unserializer.php"); // create object $unserializer = &new XML_Unserializer(); // unserialize the document $result = $unserializer->unserialize("library.xml", true); // dump the result $data = $unserializer->getUnserializedData(); print_r($data); ?> Here, the unserialize() method accepts either a string containing XML data or an XML file (set the second argument to false or true depending on which one you are passing) and returns a PHP structure representing the XML document. Here's what the output looks like: Array ( [book] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [title] => The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes [author] => Arthur Conan Doyle [price] => 24.95 ) [1] => Array ( [title] => Life of Pi [author] => Yann Martel [price] => 7.99 ) [2] => Array ( [title] => Europe on a Shoestring [author] => Lonely Planet [price] => 16.99 ) ) ) Now, in order to access the title of the third book (for example), you would use the notation $data['book'][2]['title']; which would return Europe on a Shoestring Note that XML_Unserializer uses the type hints generated in the serialization process to accurately map XML elements to PHP data types. If these hints are unavailable (as in the example above), XML_Unserializer will "guess" the type of each value. A look at the source code of the class reveals that "complex structures will be arrays and tags with only CData in them will be strings." |
|
Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| Employment Options | Now, while all this is fine and dandy, how about using all this new-found knowledge for something practical? This next example does just that, demonstrating how the XML_Serializer class can be used to convert data stored in a MySQL database into an XML document, and write it to a file for later use. Here's the MySQL table I'll be using, mysql> SELECT * FROM employees; +-----+--------+--------+-----+-----+----------------+---------+ | id | lname | fname | age | sex | department | country | +-----+--------+--------+-----+-----+----------------+---------+ | 54 | Doe | John | 27 | M | Engineering | US | | 127 | Jones | Sue | 31 | F | Finance | UK | | 113 | Woo | David | 26 | M | Administration | CN | | 175 | Thomas | James | 34 | M | Finance | US | | 168 | Kent | Jane | 29 | F | Administration | US | | 12 | Kamath | Ravina | 35 | F | Finance | IN | +-----+--------+--------+-----+-----+----------------+---------+ 6 rows in set (0.11 sec) and here's what I want my target XML document to look like: Doe John 27 M Engineering US Jones Sue 31 F Finance UK Woo David 26 M Administration CN Thomas James 34 M Finance US Kent Jane 29 F Administration US Kamath Ravina 35 F Finance IN With XML_Serializer, accomplishing this is a matter of a few lines of code. Here they are: // include class file include("Serializer.php"); // set output filename $filename = 'employees.xml'; // set options $options = array( "addDecl" => true, "defaultTagName" => "employee", "indent" => " ", "rootName" => "employees"); // create object $serializer = new XML_Serializer($options); // open connection to database $connection = mysql_connect("localhost", "user", "secret") or die ("Unable to connect!"); // select database mysql_select_db("db1") or die ("Unable to select database!"); // execute query $query = "SELECT * FROM employees"; $result = mysql_query($query) or die ("Error in query: $query. " . mysql_error()); // iterate through rows and print column data while ($row = mysql_fetch_array($result)) { $xml[] = array ( "lname" => $row[1], "fname" => $row[2], "age" => $row[3], "sex" => $row[4], "department" => $row[5], "country" => $row[6]); } // close database connection mysql_close($connection); // perform serialization $result = $serializer->serialize($xml); // open file if (!$handle = fopen($filename, 'w')) { print "Cannot open file ($filename)"; exit; } // write XML to file if (!fwrite($handle, $serializer->getSerializedData())) { print "Cannot write to file ($filename)"; exit; } // close file fclose($handle); ?> Pretty simple, once you know how it works. First, I've opened up a connection to the database and retrieved all the records from the table. Then I've instantiated a new document tree and iterated over the result set, adding a new set of nodes to the tree at each iteration. Finally, once all the rows have been processed, the dynamically generated tree is written to a file for later use. |
Serializing XML With PHP |
Build nested XML documents from PHP data structures with XML_Serializer |
| Linking Out | And that's about it for this article. Over the last few pages, I showed you how you to build an XML document tree even if your PHP build doesn't support the XML DOM, via the free add-on XML_Serializer class from PEAR. I showed you how to programmatically create an XML document from an array or an object, how to indent XML document nodes, how to attach attributes to elements, and how to customize the behaviour of the serializer. I also showed you to how to reverse-serialize XML documents into PHP arrays or objects for use within a PHP script, together with examples of how type hints could help to make this a more accurate process. Finally, I wrapped things up with a composite example that demonstrated a practical, real-world use for all this code - converting the data in a MySQL database into XML and writing it to a file. All this is, of course, only the tip of the iceberg - there are an infinite number of possibilities with power like this at your disposal. To find out what else you can do with XML and PHP, I'd encourage you to visit the following links: XML Basics, at http://www.melonfire.com/community/columns/trog/article.php?id=78 XSL Basics, at http://www.melonfire.com/community/columns/trog/article.php?id=82 Using PHP With XML, at http://www.melonfire.com/community/columns/trog/article.php?id=71 XSLT Transformation With PHP And Sablotron, at http://www.melonfire.com/community/columns/trog/article.php?id=97 Building XML Trees With PHP, at http://www.melonfire.com/community/columns/trog/article.php?id=180 The XML and PHP book, at http://www.xmlphp.com/ Till next time...be good! |

PHPSession失效的原因包括配置错误、Cookie问题和Session过期。1.配置错误:检查并设置正确的session.save_path。2.Cookie问题:确保Cookie设置正确。3.Session过期:调整session.gc_maxlifetime值以延长会话时间。

在PHP中调试会话问题的方法包括:1.检查会话是否正确启动;2.验证会话ID的传递;3.检查会话数据的存储和读取;4.查看服务器配置。通过输出会话ID和数据、查看会话文件内容等方法,可以有效诊断和解决会话相关的问题。

多次调用session_start()会导致警告信息和可能的数据覆盖。1)PHP会发出警告,提示session已启动。2)可能导致session数据意外覆盖。3)使用session_status()检查session状态,避免重复调用。

在PHP中配置会话生命周期可以通过设置session.gc_maxlifetime和session.cookie_lifetime来实现。1)session.gc_maxlifetime控制服务器端会话数据的存活时间,2)session.cookie_lifetime控制客户端cookie的生命周期,设置为0时cookie在浏览器关闭时过期。

使用数据库存储会话的主要优势包括持久性、可扩展性和安全性。1.持久性:即使服务器重启,会话数据也能保持不变。2.可扩展性:适用于分布式系统,确保会话数据在多服务器间同步。3.安全性:数据库提供加密存储,保护敏感信息。

在PHP中实现自定义会话处理可以通过实现SessionHandlerInterface接口来完成。具体步骤包括:1)创建实现SessionHandlerInterface的类,如CustomSessionHandler;2)重写接口中的方法(如open,close,read,write,destroy,gc)来定义会话数据的生命周期和存储方式;3)在PHP脚本中注册自定义会话处理器并启动会话。这样可以将数据存储在MySQL、Redis等介质中,提升性能、安全性和可扩展性。

SessionID是网络应用程序中用来跟踪用户会话状态的机制。1.它是一个随机生成的字符串,用于在用户与服务器之间的多次交互中保持用户的身份信息。2.服务器生成并通过cookie或URL参数发送给客户端,帮助在用户的多次请求中识别和关联这些请求。3.生成通常使用随机算法保证唯一性和不可预测性。4.在实际开发中,可以使用内存数据库如Redis来存储session数据,提升性能和安全性。

在无状态环境如API中管理会话可以通过使用JWT或cookies来实现。1.JWT适合无状态和可扩展性,但大数据时体积大。2.Cookies更传统且易实现,但需谨慎配置以确保安全性。


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