README.md

    libxml2

    libxml2 is an XML toolkit implemented in C, originally developed for the GNOME Project.

    Official releases can be downloaded from https://download.gnome.org/sources/libxml2/

    The git repository is hosted on GNOME’s GitLab server: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2

    Bugs should be reported at https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues

    Documentation is available at https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/wikis

    License

    This code is released under the MIT License, see the Copyright file.

    Build instructions

    libxml2 can be built with GNU Autotools, CMake, meson or several other build systems in platform-specific subdirectories.

    Autotools (for POSIX systems like Linux, BSD, macOS)

    If you build from a Git tree, you have to install Autotools and start by generating the configuration files with:

    ./autogen.sh [configuration options]
    

    If you build from a source tarball, extract the archive with:

    tar xf libxml2-xxx.tar.gz
    cd libxml2-xxx
    

    Then you can configure and build the library:

    ./configure [configuration options]
    make
    

    The following options disable or enable code modules and relevant symbols:

    --with-c14n             Canonical XML 1.0 support (on)
    --with-catalog          XML Catalogs support (on)
    --with-debug            debugging module (on)
    --with-history          history support for xmllint shell (off)
    --with-readline[=DIR]   use readline in DIR for shell (off)
    --with-html             HTML parser (on)
    --with-http             HTTP support (off)
    --with-iconv[=DIR]      iconv support (on)
    --with-icu              ICU support (off)
    --with-iso8859x         ISO-8859-X support if no iconv (on)
    --with-lzma[=DIR]       use liblzma in DIR (off)
    --with-modules          dynamic modules support (on)
    --with-output           serialization support (on)
    --with-pattern          xmlPattern selection interface (on)
    --with-push             push parser interfaces (on)
    --with-python           Python bindings (on)
    --with-reader           xmlReader parsing interface (on)
    --with-regexps          regular expressions support (on)
    --with-sax1             older SAX1 interface (on)
    --with-schemas          XML Schemas 1.0 and RELAX NG support (on)
    --with-schematron       Schematron support (on)
    --with-threads          multithreading support (on)
    --with-thread-alloc     per-thread malloc hooks (off)
    --with-valid            DTD validation support (on)
    --with-writer           xmlWriter serialization interface (on)
    --with-xinclude         XInclude 1.0 support (on)
    --with-xpath            XPath 1.0 support (on)
    --with-xptr             XPointer support (on)
    --with-zlib[=DIR]       use libz in DIR (off)
    

    Other options:

    --with-minimum          build a minimally sized library (off)
    --with-legacy           maximum ABI compatibility (off)
    

    Note that by default, no optimization options are used. You have to enable them manually, for example with:

    CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-semantic-interposition' ./configure
    

    Now you can run the test suite with:

    make check
    

    Please report test failures to the bug tracker.

    Then you can install the library:

    make install
    

    At that point you may have to rerun ldconfig or a similar utility to update your list of installed shared libs.

    CMake (mainly for Windows)

    Another option for compiling libxml is using CMake:

    cmake -E tar xf libxml2-xxx.tar.gz
    cmake -S libxml2-xxx -B libxml2-xxx-build [possible options]
    cmake --build libxml2-xxx-build
    cmake --install libxml2-xxx-build
    

    Common CMake options include:

    -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF            # build static libraries
    -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release         # specify build type
    -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local  # specify the install path
    -D LIBXML2_WITH_ICONV=OFF           # disable iconv
    -D LIBXML2_WITH_LZMA=OFF            # disable liblzma
    -D LIBXML2_WITH_PYTHON=OFF          # disable Python
    -D LIBXML2_WITH_ZLIB=OFF            # disable libz
    

    You can also open the libxml source directory with its CMakeLists.txt directly in various IDEs such as CLion, QtCreator, or Visual Studio.

    Meson

    Still somewhat experimental, see issue 743.

    Libxml can also be built with meson. Without option, simply call

    meson setup builddir
    ninja -C builddir
    

    To add options, see the meson_options.txt file. For example:

    meson setup \
        -Dprefix=$prefix \
        -Dhistory=enabled \
        -Dhttp=enabled \
        -Dschematron=disabled \
        -Dzlib=enabled \
        builddir
    

    To install libxml:

    ninja -C builddir install
    

    To launch tests:

    meson test -C builddir
    

    Dependencies

    libxml2 supports POSIX and Windows operating systems.

    The iconv function is required for conversion of character encodings. This function is part of POSIX.1-2001. If your platform doesn’t provide iconv, you need an external libiconv library, for example GNU libiconv. Using ICU is also supported but discouraged.

    If enabled, libxml uses libz or liblzma to support reading compressed files. Use of this feature is discouraged.

    The xmllint executable uses libreadline and libhistory if enabled.

    Contributing

    The current version of the code can be found in GNOME’s GitLab at https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2. The best way to get involved is by creating issues and merge requests on GitLab.

    All code must conform to C89 and pass the GitLab CI tests. Add regression tests if possible.

    Authors

    • Daniel Veillard
    • Bjorn Reese
    • William Brack
    • Igor Zlatkovic for the Windows port
    • Aleksey Sanin
    • Nick Wellnhofer
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