148
votes

When doing shell scripting, typically data will be in files of single line records like csv. It's really simple to handle this data with grep and sed. But I have to deal with XML often, so I'd really like a way to script access to that XML data via the command line. What are the best tools?

14
xml_grep is fine for grepping, as stated in stackoverflow.com/a/2222224/871134 - Deleplace

14 Answers

105
votes

I've found xmlstarlet to be pretty good at this sort of thing.

http://xmlstar.sourceforge.net/

Should be available in most distro repositories, too. An introductory tutorial is here:

http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/x-starlet.html

36
votes

Some promising tools:

  • nokogiri: parsing HTML/XML DOMs in ruby using XPath & CSS selectors

  • hpricot: deprecated

  • fxgrep: Uses its own XPath-like syntax to query documents. Written in SML, so installation may be difficult.

  • LT XML: XML toolkit derived from SGML tools, including sggrep, sgsort, xmlnorm and others. Uses its own query syntax. The documentation is very formal. Written in C. LT XML 2 claims support of XPath, XInclude and other W3C standards.

  • xmlgrep2: simple and powerful searching with XPath. Written in Perl using XML::LibXML and libxml2.

  • XQSharp: Supports XQuery, the extension to XPath. Written for the .NET Framework.

  • xml-coreutils: Laird Breyer's toolkit equivalent to GNU coreutils. Discussed in an interesting essay on what the ideal toolkit should include.

  • xmldiff: Simple tool for comparing two xml files.

  • xmltk: doesn't seem to have package in debian, ubuntu, fedora, or macports, hasn't had a release since 2007, and uses non-portable build automation.

xml-coreutils seems the best documented and most UNIX-oriented.

25
votes

To Joseph Holsten's excellent list, I add the xpath command-line script which comes with Perl library XML::XPath. A great way to extract information from XML files:

 xpath -q -e '/entry[@xml:lang="fr"]' *xml
25
votes

There is also xml2 and 2xml pair. It will allow usual string editing tools to process XML.

Example. q.xml:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<foo>
    text
    more text
    <textnode>ddd</textnode><textnode a="bv">dsss</textnode>
    <![CDATA[ asfdasdsa <foo> sdfsdfdsf <bar> ]]>
</foo>

xml2 < q.xml

/foo=
/foo=   text
/foo=   more text
/foo=   
/foo/textnode=ddd
/foo/textnode
/foo/textnode/@a=bv
/foo/textnode=dsss
/foo=
/foo=    asfdasdsa <foo> sdfsdfdsf <bar> 
/foo=

xml2 < q.xml | grep textnode | sed 's!/foo!/bar/baz!' | 2xml

<bar><baz><textnode>ddd</textnode><textnode a="bv">dsss</textnode></baz></bar>

P.S. There are also html2 / 2html.

15
votes

You can use xmllint:

xmllint --xpath //title books.xml

Should be bundled with most distros, and is also bundled with Cygwin.

$ xmllint --version
xmllint: using libxml version 20900

See:

$ xmllint
Usage : xmllint [options] XMLfiles ...
        Parse the XML files and output the result of the parsing
        --version : display the version of the XML library used
        --debug : dump a debug tree of the in-memory document
        ...
        --schematron schema : do validation against a schematron
        --sax1: use the old SAX1 interfaces for processing
        --sax: do not build a tree but work just at the SAX level
        --oldxml10: use XML-1.0 parsing rules before the 5th edition
        --xpath expr: evaluate the XPath expression, inply --noout
9
votes

If you're looking for a solution on Windows, Powershell has built-in functionality for reading and writing XML.

test.xml:

<root>
  <one>I like applesauce</one>
  <two>You sure bet I do!</two>
</root>

Powershell script:

# load XML file into local variable and cast as XML type.
$doc = [xml](Get-Content ./test.xml)

$doc.root.one                                   #echoes "I like applesauce"
$doc.root.one = "Who doesn't like applesauce?"  #replace inner text of <one> node

# create new node...
$newNode = $doc.CreateElement("three")
$newNode.set_InnerText("And don't you forget it!")

# ...and position it in the hierarchy
$doc.root.AppendChild($newNode)

# write results to disk
$doc.save("./testNew.xml")

testNew.xml:

<root>
  <one>Who likes applesauce?</one>
  <two>You sure bet I do!</two>
  <three>And don't you forget it!</three>
</root>

Source: https://serverfault.com/questions/26976/update-xml-from-the-command-line-windows

8
votes

There're also xmlsed & xmlgrep of the NetBSD xmltools!

http://blog.huoc.org/xmltools-not-dead.html

6
votes

Depends on exactly what you want to do.

XSLT may be the way to go, but there is a learning curve. Try xsltproc and note that you can hand in parameters.

4
votes

There's also saxon-lint from command line with the ability to use XPath 3.0/XQuery 3.0. (Other command-line tools use XPath 1.0).

EXAMPLES :

http/html:

$ saxon-lint --html --xpath 'count(//a)' http://stackoverflow.com/q/91791
328

xml :

$ saxon-lint --xpath '//a[@class="x"]' file.xml
4
votes

D. Bohdan maintains an open source GitHub repo that keeps a list of command line tools for structured text tools, there a section for XML/HTML tools:

https://github.com/dbohdan/structured-text-tools#xml-html

3
votes

XQuery might be a good solution. It is (relatively) easy to learn and is a W3C standard.

I would recommend XQSharp for a command line processor.

3
votes

I first used xmlstarlet and still using it. When the query gets tough, i need XML's xpath2 and xquery feature support I turn to xidel http://www.videlibri.de/xidel.html

1
votes

Grep Equivalent

You can define a bash function, say "xp" ("xpath") that wraps some python3 code. To use it you need to install python3 and python-lxml. Benefits:

  1. regex matching which you lack in e.g. xmllint.
  2. Use as a filter (in a pipe) on the commandline

It's easy and powerful to use like this:

xmldoc=$(cat <<EOF
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<job xmlns="http://www.sample.com/">programming</job>
EOF
)
selection='//*[namespace-uri()="http://www.sample.com/" and local-name()="job" and re:test(.,"^pro.*ing$")]/text()'
echo "$xmldoc" | xp "$selection"
# prints programming

xp() looks something like this:

xp()
{ 
local selection="$1";
local xmldoc;
if ! [[ -t 0 ]]; then
    read -rd '' xmldoc;
else
    xmldoc="$2";
fi;
python3 <(printf '%b' "from lxml.html import tostring\nfrom lxml import etree\nfrom sys import stdin\nregexpNS = \"http://exslt.org/regular-expressions\"\ntree = etree.parse(stdin)\nfor e in tree.xpath('""$selection""', namespaces={'re':regexpNS}):\n  if isinstance(e, str):\n    print(e)\n  else:\n    print(tostring(e).decode('UTF-8'))") <<< "$xmldoc"
}

Sed Equivalent

Consider using xq which gives you the full power of the jq "programming language". If you have python-pip installed, you can install xq with pip install yq, then in below example we are replacing "Keep Accounts" with "Keep Accounts 2":

xmldoc=$(cat <<'EOF'
<resources>
    <string name="app_name">Keep Accounts</string>
    <string name="login">"login"</string>
    <string name="login_password">"password:"</string>
    <string name="login_account_hint">input to login</string>
    <string name="login_password_hint">input your password</string>
    <string name="login_fail">login failed</string>
</resources>
EOF
)
echo "$xmldoc" | xq '.resources.string = ([.resources.string[]|select(."#text" == "Keep Accounts") ."#text" = "Keep Accounts 2"])' -x
-1
votes

JEdit has a plugin called "XQuery" which provides querying functionality for XML documents.

Not quite the command line, but it works!