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Application programming interface
General architecture of how an XQJ driver is used to communicate with an XML Database from Java Applications.XQuery API for Java (XQJ) refers to the common Java API for the W3C XQuery 1.0 specification.
The XQJ API enables Java programmers to execute XQuery against an XML data source (e.g. an XML database) while reducing or eliminating vendor lock in.
The XQJ API provides Java developers with an interface to the XQuery Data Model.[1] Its design is similar to the JDBC API which has a client/server feel and as such lends itself well to Server-based XML Databases and less well to client-side XQuery processors, although the "connection" part is a very minor part of the entire API. Users of the XQJ API can bind Java values to XQuery expressions, preventing code injection attacks.[2] Also, multiple XQuery expressions can be executed as part of an atomic transaction.
History and implementation[edit]The XQuery API for Java was developed at the Java Community Process as JSR 225. It had some big technology backers such as Oracle,[3][4][5][6] IBM,[5][6] BEA Systems,[7] Software AG,[8] Intel, Nokia and DataDirect.[4]
Version 1.0 of the XQuery API for Java Specification was released on June 24, 2009,[9] along with JavaDocs, a reference implementation and a TCK (Technology Compatibility Kit) which implementing vendors must conform to.
The XQJ classes are contained in the Java package javax.xml.xquery
There is no (visible) activity to create a version of XQJ that provides support for XQuery 3.0 or 3.1, for example by providing Java bindings for additions to the data model such as functions, arrays, or maps.
XQJ allows multiple implementations to exist and be used by the same application.
XQJ connections support creating and executing XQuery expressions. Expressions may be updating[10] and may include full text searches.[11] XQJ represents XQuery expressions using one of the following classes:
XQExpression
– the expression is sent to the XQuery processor every time.XQPreparedExpression
– the expression is cached and the execution path is pre-determined allowing it to be executed multiple times in an efficient manner.XQuery expressions return a result sequence of XDM[1] items which in XQJ are represented through the XQResultSequence
interface. The programmer can use an XQResultSequence
to walk over individual XDM[1] items in the result sequence. Each item in the sequence has XDM[1] type information associated with it, such as its node type e.g. element()
, document-node()
or an XDM atomic type such as xs:string
, xs:integer
or xs:dateTime
. XDM type information in XQJ can be retrieved via the XQItemType
interface.
Atomic XQuery items can be easily cast to Java primitives via XQItemAccessor
methods such as getByte()
and getFloat()
. Also XQuery items and sequences can be serialized to DOM Node
, SAX ContentHandler
, StAX XMLStreamReader
and the generic IO Reader
and InputStream
classes.
The following example illustrates creating a connection to an XML Database, submitting an XQuery expression, then processing the results in Java. Once all of the results have been processed, the connection is closed to free up all resources associated with it.
// Create a new connection to an XML database XQConnection conn = vendorDataSource.getConnection("myUser", "myPassword"); XQExpression expr = conn.createExpression(); // Create a reusable XQuery Expression object XQResultSequence result = expr.executeQuery( "for $n in fn:collection('catalog')//item " + "return fn:data($n/name)"); // execute an XQuery expression // Process the result sequence iteratively while (result.next()) { // Print the current item in the sequence System.out.println("Product name: " + result.getItemAsString(null)); } // Free all resources created by the connection conn.close();Binding a value to an external variable[edit]
The following example illustrates how a Java value can be bound to an external variable in an XQuery expression. Assume that the connection conn
already exists:
XQExpression expr = conn.createExpression(); // The XQuery expression to be executed String es = "declare variable $x as xs:integer external;" + " for $n in fn:collection('catalog')//item" + " where $n/price <= $x" + " return fn:data($n/name)"; // Bind a value (21) to an external variable with the QName x expr.bindInt(new QName("x"), 21, null); // Execute the XQuery expression XQResultSequence result = expr.executeQuery(es); // Process the result (sequence) iteratively while (result.next()) { // Process the result ... }Default data type mapping[edit]
Mapping between Java and XQuery data types is largely flexible, however the XQJ 1.0 specification does have default mapping rules mapping data types when they are not specified by the user. These mapping rules bear great similarities to the mapping rules found in JAXB.
The following table illustrates the default mapping rules for when binding Java values to external variables in XQuery expressions.
Default conversion rules when mapping from Java data types to XQuery data types Java Datatype Default XQuery Data Type(s)boolean
xs:boolean
byte
xs:byte
byte[]
xs:hexBinary
double
xs:double
float
xs:float
int
xs:int
long
xs:long
short
xs:short
Boolean
xs:boolean
Byte
xs:byte
Float
xs:float
Double
xs:double
Integer
xs:int
Long
xs:long
Short
xs:short
String
xs:string
BigDecimal
xs:decimal
BigInteger
xs:integer
Duration
xs:dayTimeDuration
if the Duration
Object's state is xs:dayTimeDuration
xs:yearMonthDuration
if the Duration
Object's state is xs:yearMonthDuration
xs:duration
if the Duration
Object's state is xs:duration
XMLGregorianCalendar
xs:date
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:date
xs:dateTime
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:dateTime
xs:gDay
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:gDay
xs:gMonth
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:gMonth
xs:gMonthDay
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:gMonthDay
xs:gYear
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:gYear
xs:gYearMonth
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:gYearMonth
xs:time
if the XMLGregorianCalendar
Object's state is xs:time
QName
xs:QName
Document
document-node(element(*, xs:untyped))
DocumentFragment
document-node(element(*, xs:untyped))
Element
element(*, xs:untyped)
Attr
attribute(*, xs:untypedAtomic)
Comment
comment()
ProcessingInstruction
processing-instruction()
Text
text()
Known implementations[edit] Native XML databases[edit]
The following is a list of Native XML Databases which are known to have XQuery API for Java implementations.
Relational databases[edit]DataDirect provide XQJ adapters for relational databases, by translating XQuery code into SQL on the fly, then converting SQL result sets into a format suitable for XQJ to process further. The following is a couple of known implementations.
Non-database implementations[edit]The following is a list of non-database XQuery processors which provide an XQuery API for Java interface (typically allowing query against documents parsed from XML in filestore, and held in memory as DOM or similar trees).
The specification is marked as "Copyright © 2003, 2006 - 2009 Oracle. All rights reserved."
The specification contains two separate licenses: a "specification license" and a "reference implementation license".
The specification license allows free copying of the specification provided that copyright notices are retained; it also grants a license to create and distribute an implementation of the specification provided that it fully implements the entire specification, that it does not modify or extend any interfaces, and that it passes the compatibility tests.
This provision has caused some controversy. Firstly, it is not universally accepted that implementing a published specification is something that requires a license (that is, that copyright law would disallow this in the absence of a license).[20][21] Secondly, the license does not meet the criteria to qualify as an open source license (see Open Source Definition), because of the ban on making extensions and modifications. This has led some open source enthusiasts to challenge whether XQJ implementations can ever be considered truly open source.
The license for the reference implementation is a fairly conventional BSD-style open source license.
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