Expat is a library, written in C, for parsing XML documents. It's
 the underlying XML parser for the open source Mozilla project, Perl's
 XML::Parser, Python's xml.parsers.expat, and
 other open-source XML parsers.
This library is the creation of James Clark, who's also given us groff (an nroff look-alike), Jade (an implementation of ISO's DSSSL stylesheet language for SGML), XP (a Java XML parser package), XT (a Java XSL engine). James was also the technical lead on the XML Working Group at W3C that produced the XML specification.
This is free software, licensed under the MIT/X Consortium license. You may download it from the Expat home page.
The bulk of this document was originally commissioned as an article by XML.com. They graciously allowed Clark Cooper to retain copyright and to distribute it with Expat. This version has been substantially extended to include documentation on features which have been added since the original article was published, and additional information on using the original interface.
Table of Contents
- Overview
 - Building and Installing
 - Using Expat
 - Reference
   
- Parser Creation Functions
 - Parsing Functions
 - Handler Setting Functions
     
- XML_SetStartElementHandler
 - XML_SetEndElementHandler
 - XML_SetElementHandler
 - XML_SetCharacterDataHandler
 - XML_SetProcessingInstructionHandler
 - XML_SetCommentHandler
 - XML_SetStartCdataSectionHandler
 - XML_SetEndCdataSectionHandler
 - XML_SetCdataSectionHandler
 - XML_SetDefaultHandler
 - XML_SetDefaultHandlerExpand
 - XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandler
 - XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandlerArg
 - XML_SetSkippedEntityHandler
 - XML_SetUnknownEncodingHandler
 - XML_SetStartNamespaceDeclHandler
 - XML_SetEndNamespaceDeclHandler
 - XML_SetNamespaceDeclHandler
 - XML_SetXmlDeclHandler
 - XML_SetStartDoctypeDeclHandler
 - XML_SetEndDoctypeDeclHandler
 - XML_SetDoctypeDeclHandler
 - XML_SetElementDeclHandler
 - XML_SetAttlistDeclHandler
 - XML_SetEntityDeclHandler
 - XML_SetUnparsedEntityDeclHandler
 - XML_SetNotationDeclHandler
 - XML_SetNotStandaloneHandler
 
 - Parse Position and Error Reporting Functions
 - Attack Protection
 - Miscellaneous Functions
     
- XML_SetUserData
 - XML_GetUserData
 - XML_UseParserAsHandlerArg
 - XML_SetBase
 - XML_GetBase
 - XML_GetSpecifiedAttributeCount
 - XML_GetIdAttributeIndex
 - XML_GetAttributeInfo
 - XML_SetEncoding
 - XML_SetParamEntityParsing
 - XML_SetHashSalt
 - XML_UseForeignDTD
 - XML_SetReturnNSTriplet
 - XML_DefaultCurrent
 - XML_ExpatVersion
 - XML_ExpatVersionInfo
 - XML_GetFeatureList
 - XML_FreeContentModel
 - XML_MemMalloc
 - XML_MemRealloc
 - XML_MemFree
 
 
 
Overview
Expat is a stream-oriented parser. You register callback (or handler) functions with the parser and then start feeding it the document. As the parser recognizes parts of the document, it will call the appropriate handler for that part (if you've registered one.) The document is fed to the parser in pieces, so you can start parsing before you have all the document. This also allows you to parse really huge documents that won't fit into memory.
Expat can be intimidating due to the many kinds of handlers and options you can set. But you only need to learn four functions in order to do 90% of what you'll want to do with it:
XML_ParserCreate- Create a new parser object.
 XML_SetElementHandler- Set handlers for start and end tags.
 XML_SetCharacterDataHandler- Set handler for text.
 XML_Parse- Pass a buffer full of document to the parser
 
These functions and others are described in the reference part of this document. The reference section also describes in detail the parameters passed to the different types of handlers.
Let's look at a very simple example program that only uses 3 of the
 above functions (it doesn't need to set a character handler.) The
 program outline.c prints an
 element outline, indenting child elements to distinguish them from the
 parent element that contains them. The start handler does all the
 work.  It prints two indenting spaces for every level of ancestor
 elements, then it prints the element and attribute
 information. Finally it increments the global Depth
 variable.
 int Depth;
 
 void XMLCALL
 start(void *data, const char *el, const char **attr) {
   int i;
 
   for (i = 0; i < Depth; i++)
     printf("  ");
 
   printf("%s", el);
 
   for (i = 0; attr[i]; i += 2) {
     printf(" %s='%s'", attr[i], attr[i + 1]);
   }
 
   printf("\n");
   Depth++;
 }  /* End of start handler */
 
 
 The end tag simply does the bookkeeping work of decrementing
 Depth.
 void XMLCALL
 end(void *data, const char *el) {
   Depth--;
 }  /* End of end handler */
 
 
 Note the XMLCALL annotation used for the callbacks.
 This is used to ensure that the Expat and the callbacks are using the
 same calling convention in case the compiler options used for Expat
 itself and the client code are different.  Expat tries not to care
 what the default calling convention is, though it may require that it
 be compiled with a default convention of "cdecl" on some platforms.
 For code which uses Expat, however, the calling convention is
 specified by the XMLCALL annotation on most platforms;
 callbacks should be defined using this annotation.
The XMLCALL annotation was added in Expat 1.95.7, but
 existing working Expat applications don't need to add it (since they
 are already using the "cdecl" calling convention, or they wouldn't be
 working).  The annotation is only needed if the default calling
 convention may be something other than "cdecl".  To use the annotation
 safely with older versions of Expat, you can conditionally define it
 after including Expat's header file:
#include <expat.h> #ifndef XMLCALL #if defined(_MSC_EXTENSIONS) && !defined(__BEOS__) && !defined(__CYGWIN__) #define XMLCALL __cdecl #elif defined(__GNUC__) #define XMLCALL __attribute__((cdecl)) #else #define XMLCALL #endif #endif
After creating the parser, the main program just has the job of shoveling the document to the parser so that it can do its work.
Building and Installing Expat
The Expat distribution comes as a compressed (with GNU gzip) tar file. You may download the latest version from Source Forge. After unpacking this, cd into the directory. Then follow either the Win32 directions or Unix directions below.
Building under Win32
If you're using the GNU compiler under cygwin, follow the Unix
 directions in the next section. Otherwise if you have Microsoft's
 Developer Studio installed,
 you can use CMake to generate a .sln file, e.g.
 
 cmake -G"Visual Studio 16 2019" -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo .
 , and build Expat using msbuild /m expat.sln after.
Alternatively, you may download the Win32 binary package that contains the "expat.h" include file and a pre-built DLL.
Building under Unix (or GNU)
First you'll need to run the configure shell script in order to configure the Makefiles and headers for your system.
If you're happy with all the defaults that configure picks for you, and you have permission on your system to install into /usr/local, you can install Expat with this sequence of commands:
./configure make make install
There are some options that you can provide to this script, but the
 only one we'll mention here is the --prefix option. You
 can find out all the options available by running configure with just
 the --help option.
By default, the configure script sets things up so that the library
 gets installed in /usr/local/lib and the associated
 header file in /usr/local/include.  But if you were to
 give the option, --prefix=/home/me/mystuff, then the
 library and header would get installed in
 /home/me/mystuff/lib and
 /home/me/mystuff/include respectively.
Configuring Expat Using the Pre-Processor
Expat's feature set can be configured using a small number of pre-processor definitions. The symbols are:
- XML_GE
 - 
 Added in Expat 2.6.0.
 Include support for
 general entities
 (syntax 
&e1;to reference and syntax<!ENTITY e1 'value1'>(an internal general entity) or<!ENTITY e2 SYSTEM 'file2'>(an external general entity) to declare). WithXML_GEenabled, general entities will be replaced by their declared replacement text; for this to work for external general entities, in addition anXML_ExternalEntityRefHandlermust be set usingXML_SetExternalEntityRefHandler. Also, enablingXML_GEmakes the functionsXML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionMaximumAmplificationandXML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionActivationThresholdavailable.
WithXML_GEdisabled, Expat has a smaller memory footprint and can be faster, but will not load external general entities and will replace all general entities (except the predefined five:amp,apos,gt,lt,quot) with a self-reference: for example, referencing an entitye1via&e1;will be replaced by text&e1;. - XML_DTD
 - Include support for using and reporting DTD-based content.  If
 this is defined, default attribute values from an external DTD subset
 are reported and attribute value normalization occurs based on the
 type of attributes defined in the external subset.  Without
 this, Expat has a smaller memory footprint and can be faster, but will
 not load external parameter entities or process conditional sections. If defined, makes
 the functions 
XML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionMaximumAmplificationandXML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionActivationThresholdavailable. - XML_NS
 - When defined, support for the Namespaces in XML specification is included.
 - XML_UNICODE
 - When defined, character data reported to the application is
 encoded in UTF-16 using wide characters of the type
 
XML_Char. This is implied ifXML_UNICODE_WCHAR_Tis defined. - XML_UNICODE_WCHAR_T
 - If defined, causes the 
XML_Charcharacter type to be defined using thewchar_ttype; otherwise,unsigned shortis used. Defining this impliesXML_UNICODE. - XML_LARGE_SIZE
 - If defined, causes the 
XML_SizeandXML_Indexinteger types to be at least 64 bits in size. This is intended to support processing of very large input streams, where the return values ofXML_GetCurrentByteIndex,XML_GetCurrentLineNumberandXML_GetCurrentColumnNumbercould overflow. It may not be supported by all compilers, and is turned off by default. - XML_CONTEXT_BYTES
 - The number of input bytes of markup context which the parser will
 ensure are available for reporting via 
XML_GetInputContext. This is normally set to 1024, and must be set to a positive integer to enable. If this is set to zero, the input context will not be available andXML_GetInputContextwill always reportNULL. Without this, Expat has a smaller memory footprint and can be faster. - XML_STATIC
 - On Windows, this should be set if Expat is going to be linked statically with the code that calls it; this is required to get all the right MSVC magic annotations correct. This is ignored on other platforms.
 - XML_ATTR_INFO
 - If defined, makes the additional function 
XML_GetAttributeInfoavailable for reporting attribute byte offsets. 
Using Expat
Compiling and Linking Against Expat
Unless you installed Expat in a location not expected by your
 compiler and linker, all you have to do to use Expat in your programs
 is to include the Expat header (#include <expat.h>)
 in your files that make calls to it and to tell the linker that it
 needs to link against the Expat library.  On Unix systems, this would
 usually be done with the -lexpat argument.  Otherwise,
 you'll need to tell the compiler where to look for the Expat header
 and the linker where to find the Expat library.  You may also need to
 take steps to tell the operating system where to find this library at
 run time.
On a Unix-based system, here's what a Makefile might look like when Expat is installed in a standard location:
 CC=cc
 LDFLAGS=
 LIBS= -lexpat
 xmlapp: xmlapp.o
         $(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o xmlapp xmlapp.o $(LIBS)
 
 
 If you installed Expat in, say, /home/me/mystuff, then
 the Makefile would look like this:
 CC=cc
 CFLAGS= -I/home/me/mystuff/include
 LDFLAGS=
 LIBS= -L/home/me/mystuff/lib -lexpat
 xmlapp: xmlapp.o
         $(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o xmlapp xmlapp.o $(LIBS)
 
 
 You'd also have to set the environment variable
 LD_LIBRARY_PATH to /home/me/mystuff/lib (or
 to ${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:/home/me/mystuff/lib if
 LD_LIBRARY_PATH already has some directories in it) in order to run
 your application.
Expat Basics
As we saw in the example in the overview, the first step in parsing
 an XML document with Expat is to create a parser object. There are three functions in the Expat API for creating a
 parser object.  However, only two of these (XML_ParserCreate and XML_ParserCreateNS) can be used for
 constructing a parser for a top-level document.  The object returned
 by these functions is an opaque pointer (i.e. "expat.h" declares it as
 void *) to data with further internal structure. In order to free the
 memory associated with this object you must call XML_ParserFree. Note that if you have
 provided any user data that gets stored in the
 parser, then your application is responsible for freeing it prior to
 calling XML_ParserFree.
The objects returned by the parser creation functions are good for parsing only one XML document or external parsed entity. If your application needs to parse many XML documents, then it needs to create a parser object for each one. The best way to deal with this is to create a higher level object that contains all the default initialization you want for your parser objects.
Walking through a document hierarchy with a stream oriented parser will require a good stack mechanism in order to keep track of current context. For instance, to answer the simple question, "What element does this text belong to?" requires a stack, since the parser may have descended into other elements that are children of the current one and has encountered this text on the way out.
The things you're likely to want to keep on a stack are the currently opened element and it's attributes. You push this information onto the stack in the start handler and you pop it off in the end handler.
For some tasks, it is sufficient to just keep information on what the depth of the stack is (or would be if you had one.) The outline program shown above presents one example. Another such task would be skipping over a complete element. When you see the start tag for the element you want to skip, you set a skip flag and record the depth at which the element started. When the end tag handler encounters the same depth, the skipped element has ended and the flag may be cleared. If you follow the convention that the root element starts at 1, then you can use the same variable for skip flag and skip depth.
 void
 init_info(Parseinfo *info) {
   info->skip = 0;
   info->depth = 1;
   /* Other initializations here */
 }  /* End of init_info */
 
 void XMLCALL
 rawstart(void *data, const char *el, const char **attr) {
   Parseinfo *inf = (Parseinfo *) data;
 
   if (! inf->skip) {
     if (should_skip(inf, el, attr)) {
       inf->skip = inf->depth;
     }
     else
       start(inf, el, attr);     /* This does rest of start handling */
   }
 
   inf->depth++;
 }  /* End of rawstart */
 
 void XMLCALL
 rawend(void *data, const char *el) {
   Parseinfo *inf = (Parseinfo *) data;
 
   inf->depth--;
 
   if (! inf->skip)
     end(inf, el);              /* This does rest of end handling */
 
   if (inf->skip == inf->depth)
     inf->skip = 0;
 }  /* End rawend */
 
 
 Notice in the above example the difference in how depth is manipulated in the start and end handlers. The end tag handler should be the mirror image of the start tag handler. This is necessary to properly model containment. Since, in the start tag handler, we incremented depth after the main body of start tag code, then in the end handler, we need to manipulate it before the main body. If we'd decided to increment it first thing in the start handler, then we'd have had to decrement it last thing in the end handler.
Communicating between handlers
In order to be able to pass information between different handlers
 without using globals, you'll need to define a data structure to hold
 the shared variables. You can then tell Expat (with the XML_SetUserData function) to pass a
 pointer to this structure to the handlers.  This is the first
 argument received by most handlers.  In the reference section, an argument to a callback function is named
 userData and have type void * if the user
 data is passed; it will have the type XML_Parser if the
 parser itself is passed.  When the parser is passed, the user data may
 be retrieved using XML_GetUserData.
One common case where multiple calls to a single handler may need
 to communicate using an application data structure is the case when
 content passed to the character data handler (set by XML_SetCharacterDataHandler) needs to be accumulated.  A
 common first-time mistake with any of the event-oriented interfaces to
 an XML parser is to expect all the text contained in an element to be
 reported by a single call to the character data handler.  Expat, like
 many other XML parsers, reports such data as a sequence of calls;
 there's no way to know when the end of the sequence is reached until a
 different callback is made.  A buffer referenced by the user data
 structure proves both an effective and convenient place to accumulate
 character data.
XML Version
Expat is an XML 1.0 parser, and as such never complains based on
 the value of the version pseudo-attribute in the XML
 declaration, if present.
If an application needs to check the version number (to support
 alternate processing), it should use the XML_SetXmlDeclHandler function to
 set a handler that uses the information in the XML declaration to
 determine what to do.  This example shows how to check that only a
 version number of "1.0" is accepted:
 static int wrong_version;
 static XML_Parser parser;
 
 static void XMLCALL
 xmldecl_handler(void            *userData,
                 const XML_Char  *version,
                 const XML_Char  *encoding,
                 int              standalone)
 {
   static const XML_Char Version_1_0[] = {'1', '.', '0', 0};
 
   int i;
 
   for (i = 0; i < (sizeof(Version_1_0) / sizeof(Version_1_0[0])); ++i) {
     if (version[i] != Version_1_0[i]) {
       wrong_version = 1;
       /* also clear all other handlers: */
       XML_SetCharacterDataHandler(parser, NULL);
       ...
       return;
     }
   }
   ...
 }
 
 
 Namespace Processing
When the parser is created using the XML_ParserCreateNS, function, Expat
 performs namespace processing. Under namespace processing, Expat
 consumes xmlns and xmlns:... attributes,
 which declare namespaces for the scope of the element in which they
 occur. This means that your start handler will not see these
 attributes.  Your application can still be informed of these
 declarations by setting namespace declaration handlers with XML_SetNamespaceDeclHandler.
Element type and attribute names that belong to a given namespace
 are passed to the appropriate handler in expanded form. By default
 this expanded form is a concatenation of the namespace URI, the
 separator character (which is the 2nd argument to XML_ParserCreateNS), and the local
 name (i.e. the part after the colon). Names with undeclared prefixes
 are not well-formed when namespace processing is enabled, and will
 trigger an error. Unprefixed attribute names are never expanded,
 and unprefixed element names are only expanded when they are in the
 scope of a default namespace.
However if XML_SetReturnNSTriplet has been called with a non-zero
 do_nst parameter, then the expanded form for names with
 an explicit prefix is a concatenation of: URI, separator, local name,
 separator, prefix.
You can set handlers for the start of a namespace declaration and
 for the end of a scope of a declaration with the XML_SetNamespaceDeclHandler
 function.  The StartNamespaceDeclHandler is called prior to the start
 tag handler and the EndNamespaceDeclHandler is called after the
 corresponding end tag that ends the namespace's scope.  The namespace
 start handler gets passed the prefix and URI for the namespace.  For a
 default namespace declaration (xmlns='...'), the prefix will be
 NULL.
 The URI will be NULL for the case where the default namespace is being
 unset.  The namespace end handler just gets the prefix for the closing
 scope.
These handlers are called for each declaration. So if, for instance, a start tag had three namespace declarations, then the StartNamespaceDeclHandler would be called three times before the start tag handler is called, once for each declaration.
Character Encodings
While XML is based on Unicode, and every XML processor is required to recognized UTF-8 and UTF-16 (1 and 2 byte encodings of Unicode), other encodings may be declared in XML documents or entities. For the main document, an XML declaration may contain an encoding declaration:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-2"?>
External parsed entities may begin with a text declaration, which looks like an XML declaration with just an encoding declaration:
<?xml encoding="Big5"?>
With Expat, you may also specify an encoding at the time of creating a parser. This is useful when the encoding information may come from a source outside the document itself (like a higher level protocol.)
There are four built-in encodings in Expat:
- UTF-8
 - UTF-16
 - ISO-8859-1
 - US-ASCII
 
Anything else discovered in an encoding declaration or in the
 protocol encoding specified in the parser constructor, triggers a call
 to the UnknownEncodingHandler. This handler gets passed
 the encoding name and a pointer to an XML_Encoding data
 structure. Your handler must fill in this structure and return
 XML_STATUS_OK if it knows how to deal with the
 encoding. Otherwise the handler should return
 XML_STATUS_ERROR.  The handler also gets passed a pointer
 to an optional application data structure that you may indicate when
 you set the handler.
Expat places restrictions on character encodings that it can
 support by filling in the XML_Encoding structure.
 include file:
- Every ASCII character that can appear in a well-formed XML document must be represented by a single byte, and that byte must correspond to it's ASCII encoding (except for the characters $@\^'{}~)
 - Characters must be encoded in 4 bytes or less.
 - All characters encoded must have Unicode scalar values less than or equal to 65535 (0xFFFF)This does not apply to the built-in support for UTF-16 and UTF-8
 - No character may be encoded by more that one distinct sequence of bytes
 
XML_Encoding contains an array of integers that
 correspond to the 1st byte of an encoding sequence. If the value in
 the array for a byte is zero or positive, then the byte is a single
 byte encoding that encodes the Unicode scalar value contained in the
 array. A -1 in this array indicates a malformed byte. If the value is
 -2, -3, or -4, then the byte is the beginning of a 2, 3, or 4 byte
 sequence respectively. Multi-byte sequences are sent to the convert
 function pointed at in the XML_Encoding structure. This
 function should return the Unicode scalar value for the sequence or -1
 if the sequence is malformed.
One pitfall that novice Expat users are likely to fall into is that although Expat may accept input in various encodings, the strings that it passes to the handlers are always encoded in UTF-8 or UTF-16 (depending on how Expat was compiled). Your application is responsible for any translation of these strings into other encodings.
Handling External Entity References
Expat does not read or parse external entities directly. Note that
 any external DTD is a special case of an external entity.  If you've
 set no ExternalEntityRefHandler, then external entity
 references are silently ignored. Otherwise, it calls your handler with
 the information needed to read and parse the external entity.
Your handler isn't actually responsible for parsing the entity, but
 it is responsible for creating a subsidiary parser with XML_ExternalEntityParserCreate that will do the job. This
 returns an instance of XML_Parser that has handlers and
 other data structures initialized from the parent parser. You may then
 use XML_Parse or XML_ParseBuffer calls against this
 parser.  Since external entities my refer to other external entities,
 your handler should be prepared to be called recursively.
Parsing DTDs
In order to parse parameter entities, before starting the parse,
 you must call XML_SetParamEntityParsing with one of the following
 arguments:
XML_PARAM_ENTITY_PARSING_NEVER- Don't parse parameter entities or the external subset
 XML_PARAM_ENTITY_PARSING_UNLESS_STANDALONE- Parse parameter entities and the external subset unless
 
standalonewas set to "yes" in the XML declaration. XML_PARAM_ENTITY_PARSING_ALWAYS- Always parse parameter entities and the external subset
 
In order to read an external DTD, you also have to set an external entity reference handler as described above.
Temporarily Stopping Parsing
Expat 1.95.8 introduces a new feature: its now possible to stop parsing temporarily from within a handler function, even if more data has already been passed into the parser. Applications for this include
- Supporting the XInclude specification.
 - Delaying further processing until additional information is available from some other source.
 - Adjusting processor load as task priorities shift within an application.
 - Stopping parsing completely (simply free or reset the parser instead of resuming in the outer parsing loop). This can be useful if an application-domain error is found in the XML being parsed or if the result of the parse is determined not to be useful after all.
 
To take advantage of this feature, the main parsing loop of an application needs to support this specifically. It cannot be supported with a parsing loop compatible with Expat 1.95.7 or earlier (though existing loops will continue to work without supporting the stop/resume feature).
An application that uses this feature for a single parser will have the rough structure (in pseudo-code):
 fd = open_input()
 p = create_parser()
 
 if parse_xml(p, fd) {
   /* suspended */
 
   int suspended = 1;
 
   while (suspended) {
     do_something_else()
     if ready_to_resume() {
       suspended = continue_parsing(p, fd);
     }
   }
 }
 
 
 An application that may resume any of several parsers based on input (either from the XML being parsed or some other source) will certainly have more interesting control structures.
This C function could be used for the parse_xml
 function mentioned in the pseudo-code above:
 #define BUFF_SIZE 10240
 
 /* Parse a document from the open file descriptor 'fd' until the parse
    is complete (the document has been completely parsed, or there's
    been an error), or the parse is stopped.  Return non-zero when
    the parse is merely suspended.
 */
 int
 parse_xml(XML_Parser p, int fd)
 {
   for (;;) {
     int last_chunk;
     int bytes_read;
     enum XML_Status status;
 
     void *buff = XML_GetBuffer(p, BUFF_SIZE);
     if (buff == NULL) {
       /* handle error... */
       return 0;
     }
     bytes_read = read(fd, buff, BUFF_SIZE);
     if (bytes_read < 0) {
       /* handle error... */
       return 0;
     }
     status = XML_ParseBuffer(p, bytes_read, bytes_read == 0);
     switch (status) {
       case XML_STATUS_ERROR:
         /* handle error... */
         return 0;
       case XML_STATUS_SUSPENDED:
         return 1;
     }
     if (bytes_read == 0)
       return 0;
   }
 }
 
 
 The corresponding continue_parsing function is
 somewhat simpler, since it only need deal with the return code from
 XML_ResumeParser; it can
 delegate the input handling to the parse_xml
 function:
 /* Continue parsing a document which had been suspended.  The 'p' and
    'fd' arguments are the same as passed to parse_xml().  Return
    non-zero when the parse is suspended.
 */
 int
 continue_parsing(XML_Parser p, int fd)
 {
   enum XML_Status status = XML_ResumeParser(p);
   switch (status) {
     case XML_STATUS_ERROR:
       /* handle error... */
       return 0;
     case XML_ERROR_NOT_SUSPENDED:
       /* handle error... */
       return 0;.
     case XML_STATUS_SUSPENDED:
       return 1;
   }
   return parse_xml(p, fd);
 }
 
 
 Now that we've seen what a mess the top-level parsing loop can
 become, what have we gained?  Very simply, we can now use the XML_StopParser function to stop
 parsing, without having to go to great lengths to avoid additional
 processing that we're expecting to ignore.  As a bonus, we get to stop
 parsing temporarily, and come back to it when we're
 ready.
To stop parsing from a handler function, use the XML_StopParser function.  This function
 takes two arguments; the parser being stopped and a flag indicating
 whether the parse can be resumed in the future.
Expat Reference
Parser Creation
XML_ParserCreate
XML_Parser XMLCALL XML_ParserCreate(const XML_Char *encoding);
 Construct a new parser. If encoding is non-NULL, it specifies a
 character encoding to use for the document. This overrides the document
 encoding declaration. There are four built-in encodings:
 
- US-ASCII
 - UTF-8
 - UTF-16
 - ISO-8859-1
 
Any other value will invoke a call to the UnknownEncodingHandler.
XML_ParserCreateNS
 XML_Parser XMLCALL
 XML_ParserCreateNS(const XML_Char *encoding,
                    XML_Char sep);
 
 '\xFF' is not legal in UTF-8, and
 '\xFFFF' is not legal in UTF-16. There is a special case when
 sep is the null character '\0': the namespace URI and
 the local part will be concatenated without any separator - this is intended
 to support RDF processors. It is a programming error to use the null separator
 with namespace triplets.Note: Expat does not validate namespace URIs (beyond encoding) against RFC 3986 today (and is not required to do so with regard to the XML 1.0 namespaces specification) but it may start doing that in future releases. Before that, an application using Expat must be ready to receive namespace URIs containing non-URI characters.
XML_ParserCreate_MM
 XML_Parser XMLCALL
 XML_ParserCreate_MM(const XML_Char *encoding,
                     const XML_Memory_Handling_Suite *ms,
 		    const XML_Char *sep);
 
 
 typedef struct {
   void *(XMLCALL *malloc_fcn)(size_t size);
   void *(XMLCALL *realloc_fcn)(void *ptr, size_t size);
   void (XMLCALL *free_fcn)(void *ptr);
 } XML_Memory_Handling_Suite;
 
 Construct a new parser using the suite of memory handling functions
 specified in ms. If ms is NULL, then use the
 standard set of memory management functions. If sep is
 non-NULL, then namespace processing is enabled in the created parser
 and the character pointed at by sep is used as the separator between
 the namespace URI and the local part of the name.
XML_ExternalEntityParserCreate
 XML_Parser XMLCALL
 XML_ExternalEntityParserCreate(XML_Parser p,
                                const XML_Char *context,
                                const XML_Char *encoding);
 
 XML_Parser object for parsing an external
 general entity. Context is the context argument passed in a call to a
 ExternalEntityRefHandler. Other state information such as handlers,
 user data, namespace processing is inherited from the parser passed as
 the 1st argument. So you shouldn't need to call any of the behavior
 changing functions on this parser (unless you want it to act
 differently than the parent parser).
 XML_ParserFree
void XMLCALL XML_ParserFree(XML_Parser p);
XML_ParserReset
 XML_Bool XMLCALL
 XML_ParserReset(XML_Parser p,
                 const XML_Char *encoding);
 
 parser is
 ready to start parsing a new document.  All handlers are cleared from
 the parser, except for the unknownEncodingHandler.  The parser's external
 state is re-initialized except for the values of ns and ns_triplets.
 This function may not be used on a parser created using XML_ExternalEntityParserCreate; it will return XML_FALSE in that case.  Returns
 XML_TRUE on success.  Your application is responsible for
 dealing with any memory associated with user data.
 Parsing
To state the obvious: the three parsing functions XML_Parse, 
 XML_ParseBuffer and 
 XML_GetBuffer must not be called from within a handler
 unless they operate on a separate parser instance, that is, one that
 did not call the handler. For example, it is OK to call the parsing
 functions from within an XML_ExternalEntityRefHandler,
 if they apply to the parser created by
 XML_ExternalEntityParserCreate.
Note: The len argument passed to these functions
 should be considerably less than the maximum value for an integer,
 as it could create an integer overflow situation if the added
 lengths of a buffer and the unprocessed portion of the previous buffer
 exceed the maximum integer value. Input data at the end of a buffer
 will remain unprocessed if it is part of an XML token for which the
 end is not part of that buffer.
The application must make a concluding
 XML_Parse or
 XML_ParseBuffer call
 with isFinal set to XML_TRUE.
XML_Parse
 enum XML_Status XMLCALL
 XML_Parse(XML_Parser p,
           const char *s,
           int len,
           int isFinal);
 
 
 enum XML_Status {
   XML_STATUS_ERROR = 0,
   XML_STATUS_OK = 1
 };
 
 
 Parse some more of the document. The string s is a buffer
 containing part (or perhaps all) of the document. The number of bytes of s
 that are part of the document is indicated by len. This means
 that s doesn't have to be null-terminated. It also means that
 if len is larger than the number of bytes in the block of
 memory that s points at, then a memory fault is likely.
 Negative values for len are rejected since Expat 2.2.1.
 The
 isFinal parameter informs the parser that this is the last
 piece of the document. Frequently, the last piece is empty (i.e.
 len is zero.)
 
 If a parse error occurred, it returns XML_STATUS_ERROR.
 Otherwise it returns XML_STATUS_OK value.
 Note that regardless of the return value, there is no guarantee that all
 provided input has been parsed; only after the
 concluding call will all handler callbacks and parsing errors have
 happened.
 
 Simplified, XML_Parse can be considered a convenience wrapper
 that is pairing calls
 to XML_GetBuffer
 and XML_ParseBuffer
 (when Expat is built with macro XML_CONTEXT_BYTES
 defined to a positive value, which is both common and default).
 XML_Parse is then functionally equivalent to calling
 XML_GetBuffer,
 memcpy, and
 XML_ParseBuffer.
 
 To avoid double copying of the input, direct use of functions
 XML_GetBuffer and
 XML_ParseBuffer is advised
 for most production use, e.g.
 if you're using read or similar functionality to fill your
 buffers, fill directly into the buffer from
 XML_GetBuffer,
 then parse with XML_ParseBuffer.
 
XML_ParseBuffer
 enum XML_Status XMLCALL
 XML_ParseBuffer(XML_Parser p,
                 int len,
                 int isFinal);
 
 
 This is just like XML_Parse,
 except in this case Expat provides the buffer.  By obtaining the
 buffer from Expat with the XML_GetBuffer function, the application can avoid double
 copying of the input.
 
 Negative values for len are rejected since Expat 2.6.3.
 
XML_GetBuffer
 void * XMLCALL
 XML_GetBuffer(XML_Parser p,
               int len);
 
 len to read a piece of the document
 into. A NULL value is returned if Expat can't allocate enough memory for
 this buffer. A NULL value may also be returned if len is zero.
 This has to be called prior to every call to
 XML_ParseBuffer. A
 typical use would look like this:
 
 
 for (;;) {
   int bytes_read;
   void *buff = XML_GetBuffer(p, BUFF_SIZE);
   if (buff == NULL) {
     /* handle error */
   }
 
   bytes_read = read(docfd, buff, BUFF_SIZE);
   if (bytes_read < 0) {
     /* handle error */
   }
 
   if (! XML_ParseBuffer(p, bytes_read, bytes_read == 0)) {
     /* handle parse error */
   }
 
   if (bytes_read == 0)
     break;
 }
 
 XML_StopParser
 enum XML_Status XMLCALL
 XML_StopParser(XML_Parser p,
                XML_Bool resumable);
 
 Stops parsing, causing XML_Parse or XML_ParseBuffer to return.  Must be called from within a
 call-back handler, except when aborting (when resumable
 is XML_FALSE) an already suspended parser.  Some
 call-backs may still follow because they would otherwise get
 lost, including
- the end element handler for empty elements when stopped in the start element handler,
 - the end namespace declaration handler when stopped in the end element handler,
 - the character data handler when stopped in the character data handler while making multiple call-backs on a contiguous chunk of characters,
 
and possibly others.
This can be called from most handlers, including DTD related
 call-backs, except when parsing an external parameter entity and
 resumable is XML_TRUE.  Returns
 XML_STATUS_OK when successful,
 XML_STATUS_ERROR otherwise.  The possible error codes
 are:
- 
+  
 XML_ERROR_NOT_STARTED
+  - + when stopping or suspending a parser before it has started, + added in Expat 2.6.4. +
 XML_ERROR_SUSPENDED- when suspending an already suspended parser.
 XML_ERROR_FINISHED- when the parser has already finished.
 XML_ERROR_SUSPEND_PE- when suspending while parsing an external PE.
 
Since the stop/resume feature requires application support in the outer parsing loop, it is an error to call this function for a parser not being handled appropriately; see Temporarily Stopping Parsing for more information.
When resumable is XML_TRUE then parsing
 is suspended, that is, XML_Parse and XML_ParseBuffer return XML_STATUS_SUSPENDED.
 Otherwise, parsing is aborted, that is, XML_Parse and XML_ParseBuffer return
 XML_STATUS_ERROR with error code
 XML_ERROR_ABORTED.
Note:
 This will be applied to the current parser instance only, that is, if
 there is a parent parser then it will continue parsing when the
 external entity reference handler returns.  It is up to the
 implementation of that handler to call XML_StopParser on the parent parser
 (recursively), if one wants to stop parsing altogether.
When suspended, parsing can be resumed by calling XML_ResumeParser.
New in Expat 1.95.8.
XML_ResumeParser
enum XML_Status XMLCALL XML_ResumeParser(XML_Parser p);
Resumes parsing after it has been suspended with XML_StopParser.  Must not be called from
 within a handler call-back.  Returns same status codes as XML_Parse or XML_ParseBuffer.  An additional error
 code, XML_ERROR_NOT_SUSPENDED, will be returned if the
 parser was not currently suspended.
Note:
 This must be called on the most deeply nested child parser instance
 first, and on its parent parser only after the child parser has
 finished, to be applied recursively until the document entity's parser
 is restarted.  That is, the parent parser will not resume by itself
 and it is up to the application to call XML_ResumeParser on it at the
 appropriate moment.
New in Expat 1.95.8.
XML_GetParsingStatus
 void XMLCALL
 XML_GetParsingStatus(XML_Parser p,
                      XML_ParsingStatus *status);
 
 
 enum XML_Parsing {
   XML_INITIALIZED,
   XML_PARSING,
   XML_FINISHED,
   XML_SUSPENDED
 };
 
 typedef struct {
   enum XML_Parsing parsing;
   XML_Bool finalBuffer;
 } XML_ParsingStatus;
 
 Returns status of parser with respect to being initialized,
 parsing, finished, or suspended, and whether the final buffer is being
 processed.  The status parameter must not be
 NULL.
New in Expat 1.95.8.
Handler Setting
Although handlers are typically set prior to parsing and left alone, an
 application may choose to set or change the handler for a parsing event
 while the parse is in progress. For instance, your application may choose
 to ignore all text not descended from a para element. One
 way it could do this is to set the character handler when a para start tag
 is seen, and unset it for the corresponding end tag.
A handler may be unset by providing a NULL pointer to the
 appropriate handler setter. None of the handler setting functions have
 a return value.
Your handlers will be receiving strings in arrays of type
 XML_Char. This type is conditionally defined in expat.h as
 either char, wchar_t or unsigned short.
 The former implies UTF-8 encoding, the latter two imply UTF-16 encoding.
 Note that you'll receive them in this form independent of the original
 encoding of the document.
XML_SetStartElementHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetStartElementHandler(XML_Parser p,
                            XML_StartElementHandler start);
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_StartElementHandler)(void *userData,
                                    const XML_Char *name,
                                    const XML_Char **atts);
 
 Set handler for start (and empty) tags. Attributes are passed to the start
 handler as a pointer to a vector of char pointers. Each attribute seen in
 a start (or empty) tag occupies 2 consecutive places in this vector: the
 attribute name followed by the attribute value. These pairs are terminated
 by a NULL pointer.
Note that an empty tag generates a call to both start and end handlers (in that order).
XML_SetEndElementHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetEndElementHandler(XML_Parser p,
                          XML_EndElementHandler);
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_EndElementHandler)(void *userData,
                                  const XML_Char *name);
 
 Set handler for end (and empty) tags. As noted above, an empty tag generates a call to both start and end handlers.
XML_SetElementHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetElementHandler(XML_Parser p,
                       XML_StartElementHandler start,
                       XML_EndElementHandler end);
 
 Set handlers for start and end tags with one call.
XML_SetCharacterDataHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetCharacterDataHandler(XML_Parser p,
                             XML_CharacterDataHandler charhndl)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_CharacterDataHandler)(void *userData,
                                     const XML_Char *s,
                                     int len);
 
 Set a text handler. The string your handler receives
 is NOT null-terminated. You have to use the length argument
 to deal with the end of the string. A single block of contiguous text
 free of markup may still result in a sequence of calls to this handler.
 In other words, if you're searching for a pattern in the text, it may
 be split across calls to this handler. Note: Setting this handler to NULL
 may NOT immediately terminate call-backs if the parser is currently
 processing such a single block of contiguous markup-free text, as the parser
 will continue calling back until the end of the block is reached.
XML_SetProcessingInstructionHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetProcessingInstructionHandler(XML_Parser p,
                                     XML_ProcessingInstructionHandler proc)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_ProcessingInstructionHandler)(void *userData,
                                             const XML_Char *target,
                                             const XML_Char *data);
 
 
 Set a handler for processing instructions. The target is the first word in the processing instruction. The data is the rest of the characters in it after skipping all whitespace after the initial word.
XML_SetCommentHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetCommentHandler(XML_Parser p,
                       XML_CommentHandler cmnt)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_CommentHandler)(void *userData,
                               const XML_Char *data);
 
 Set a handler for comments. The data is all text inside the comment delimiters.
XML_SetStartCdataSectionHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetStartCdataSectionHandler(XML_Parser p,
                                 XML_StartCdataSectionHandler start);
 
 typedef void (XMLCALL *XML_StartCdataSectionHandler)(void *userData);
Set a handler that gets called at the beginning of a CDATA section.
XML_SetEndCdataSectionHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetEndCdataSectionHandler(XML_Parser p,
                               XML_EndCdataSectionHandler end);
 
 typedef void (XMLCALL *XML_EndCdataSectionHandler)(void *userData);
Set a handler that gets called at the end of a CDATA section.
XML_SetCdataSectionHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetCdataSectionHandler(XML_Parser p,
                            XML_StartCdataSectionHandler start,
                            XML_EndCdataSectionHandler end)
 
 Sets both CDATA section handlers with one call.
XML_SetDefaultHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetDefaultHandler(XML_Parser p,
                       XML_DefaultHandler hndl)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_DefaultHandler)(void *userData,
                               const XML_Char *s,
                               int len);
 
 
 Sets a handler for any characters in the document which wouldn't otherwise be handled. This includes both data for which no handlers can be set (like some kinds of DTD declarations) and data which could be reported but which currently has no handler set. The characters are passed exactly as they were present in the XML document except that they will be encoded in UTF-8 or UTF-16. Line boundaries are not normalized. Note that a byte order mark character is not passed to the default handler. There are no guarantees about how characters are divided between calls to the default handler: for example, a comment might be split between multiple calls. Setting the handler with this call has the side effect of turning off expansion of references to internally defined general entities. Instead these references are passed to the default handler.
See also XML_DefaultCurrent.
XML_SetDefaultHandlerExpand
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetDefaultHandlerExpand(XML_Parser p,
                             XML_DefaultHandler hndl)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_DefaultHandler)(void *userData,
                               const XML_Char *s,
                               int len);
 
 This sets a default handler, but doesn't inhibit the expansion of internal entity references. The entity reference will not be passed to the default handler.
See also XML_DefaultCurrent.
XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandler(XML_Parser p,
                                 XML_ExternalEntityRefHandler hndl)
 
 
 typedef int
 (XMLCALL *XML_ExternalEntityRefHandler)(XML_Parser p,
                                         const XML_Char *context,
                                         const XML_Char *base,
                                         const XML_Char *systemId,
                                         const XML_Char *publicId);
 
 Set an external entity reference handler. This handler is also
 called for processing an external DTD subset if parameter entity parsing
 is in effect. (See 
 XML_SetParamEntityParsing.)
The context parameter specifies the parsing context in
 the format expected by the context argument to XML_ExternalEntityParserCreate.  code is
 valid only until the handler returns, so if the referenced entity is
 to be parsed later, it must be copied.  context is NULL
 only when the entity is a parameter entity, which is how one can
 differentiate between general and parameter entities.
The base parameter is the base to use for relative
 system identifiers.  It is set by XML_SetBase and may be NULL. The
 publicId parameter is the public id given in the entity
 declaration and may be NULL.  systemId is the system
 identifier specified in the entity declaration and is never NULL.
There are a couple of ways in which this handler differs from
 others.  First, this handler returns a status indicator (an
 integer). XML_STATUS_OK should be returned for successful
 handling of the external entity reference.  Returning
 XML_STATUS_ERROR indicates failure, and causes the
 calling parser to return an
 XML_ERROR_EXTERNAL_ENTITY_HANDLING error.
Second, instead of having the user data as its first argument, it
 receives the parser that encountered the entity reference. This, along
 with the context parameter, may be used as arguments to a call to
 XML_ExternalEntityParserCreate.  Using the returned
 parser, the body of the external entity can be recursively parsed.
Since this handler may be called recursively, it should not be saving information into global or static variables.
XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandlerArg
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandlerArg(XML_Parser p,
                                    void *arg)
 
 Set the argument passed to the ExternalEntityRefHandler.  If
 arg is not NULL, it is the new value passed to the
 handler set using XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandler; if arg is
 NULL, the argument passed to the handler function will be the parser
 object itself.
Note:
 The type of arg and the type of the first argument to the
 ExternalEntityRefHandler do not match.  This function takes a
 void * to be passed to the handler, while the handler
 accepts an XML_Parser.  This is a historical accident,
 but will not be corrected before Expat 2.0 (at the earliest) to avoid
 causing compiler warnings for code that's known to work with this
 API.  It is the responsibility of the application code to know the
 actual type of the argument passed to the handler and to manage it
 properly.
XML_SetSkippedEntityHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetSkippedEntityHandler(XML_Parser p,
                             XML_SkippedEntityHandler handler)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_SkippedEntityHandler)(void *userData,
                                     const XML_Char *entityName,
                                     int is_parameter_entity);
 
 Set a skipped entity handler. This is called in two situations:
- An entity reference is encountered for which no declaration has been read and this is not an error.
 - An internal entity reference is read, but not expanded, because
        
XML_SetDefaultHandlerhas been called. 
The is_parameter_entity argument will be non-zero for
 a parameter entity and zero for a general entity.
Note: Skipped parameter entities in declarations and skipped general entities in attribute values cannot be reported, because the event would be out of sync with the reporting of the declarations or attribute values
XML_SetUnknownEncodingHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetUnknownEncodingHandler(XML_Parser p,
                               XML_UnknownEncodingHandler enchandler,
 			      void *encodingHandlerData)
 
 
 typedef int
 (XMLCALL *XML_UnknownEncodingHandler)(void *encodingHandlerData,
                                       const XML_Char *name,
                                       XML_Encoding *info);
 
 typedef struct {
   int map[256];
   void *data;
   int (XMLCALL *convert)(void *data, const char *s);
   void (XMLCALL *release)(void *data);
 } XML_Encoding;
 
 Set a handler to deal with encodings other than the built in set. This should be done before
 XML_Parse or XML_ParseBuffer have been called on the
 given parser.
If the handler knows how to deal with an encoding
 with the given name, it should fill in the info data
 structure and return XML_STATUS_OK. Otherwise it
 should return XML_STATUS_ERROR. The handler will be called
 at most once per parsed (external) entity. The optional application
 data pointer encodingHandlerData will be passed back to
 the handler.
The map array contains information for every possible leading
 byte in a byte sequence. If the corresponding value is >= 0, then it's
 a single byte sequence and the byte encodes that Unicode value. If the
 value is -1, then that byte is invalid as the initial byte in a sequence.
 If the value is -n, where n is an integer > 1, then n is the number of
 bytes in the sequence and the actual conversion is accomplished by a
 call to the function pointed at by convert. This function may return -1
 if the sequence itself is invalid. The convert pointer may be NULL if
 there are only single byte codes. The data parameter passed to the convert
 function is the data pointer from XML_Encoding. The
 string s is NOT null-terminated and points at the sequence of
 bytes to be converted.
The function pointed at by release is called by the
 parser when it is finished with the encoding. It may be NULL.
XML_SetStartNamespaceDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetStartNamespaceDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_StartNamespaceDeclHandler start);
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_StartNamespaceDeclHandler)(void *userData,
                                          const XML_Char *prefix,
                                          const XML_Char *uri);
 
 Set a handler to be called when a namespace is declared. Namespace declarations occur inside start tags. But the namespace declaration start handler is called before the start tag handler for each namespace declared in that start tag.
XML_SetEndNamespaceDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetEndNamespaceDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_EndNamespaceDeclHandler end);
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_EndNamespaceDeclHandler)(void *userData,
                                        const XML_Char *prefix);
 
 Set a handler to be called when leaving the scope of a namespace declaration. This will be called, for each namespace declaration, after the handler for the end tag of the element in which the namespace was declared.
XML_SetNamespaceDeclHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetNamespaceDeclHandler(XML_Parser p,
                             XML_StartNamespaceDeclHandler start,
                             XML_EndNamespaceDeclHandler end)
 
 Sets both namespace declaration handlers with a single call.
XML_SetXmlDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetXmlDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_XmlDeclHandler xmldecl);
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_XmlDeclHandler)(void            *userData,
                               const XML_Char  *version,
                               const XML_Char  *encoding,
                               int             standalone);
 
 Sets a handler that is called for XML declarations and also for
 text declarations discovered in external entities. The way to
 distinguish is that the version parameter will be NULL
 for text declarations. The encoding parameter may be NULL
 for an XML declaration. The standalone argument will
 contain -1, 0, or 1 indicating respectively that there was no
 standalone parameter in the declaration, that it was given as no, or
 that it was given as yes.
XML_SetStartDoctypeDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetStartDoctypeDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_StartDoctypeDeclHandler start);
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_StartDoctypeDeclHandler)(void           *userData,
                                        const XML_Char *doctypeName,
                                        const XML_Char *sysid,
                                        const XML_Char *pubid,
                                        int            has_internal_subset);
 
 Set a handler that is called at the start of a DOCTYPE declaration,
 before any external or internal subset is parsed. Both sysid
 and pubid may be NULL. The has_internal_subset
 will be non-zero if the DOCTYPE declaration has an internal subset.
XML_SetEndDoctypeDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetEndDoctypeDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_EndDoctypeDeclHandler end);
typedef void (XMLCALL *XML_EndDoctypeDeclHandler)(void *userData);
Set a handler that is called at the end of a DOCTYPE declaration, after parsing any external subset.
XML_SetDoctypeDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetDoctypeDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_StartDoctypeDeclHandler start, XML_EndDoctypeDeclHandler end);
Set both doctype handlers with one call.
XML_SetElementDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetElementDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_ElementDeclHandler eldecl);
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_ElementDeclHandler)(void *userData,
                                   const XML_Char *name,
                                   XML_Content *model);
 
 
 enum XML_Content_Type {
   XML_CTYPE_EMPTY = 1,
   XML_CTYPE_ANY,
   XML_CTYPE_MIXED,
   XML_CTYPE_NAME,
   XML_CTYPE_CHOICE,
   XML_CTYPE_SEQ
 };
 
 enum XML_Content_Quant {
   XML_CQUANT_NONE,
   XML_CQUANT_OPT,
   XML_CQUANT_REP,
   XML_CQUANT_PLUS
 };
 
 typedef struct XML_cp XML_Content;
 
 struct XML_cp {
   enum XML_Content_Type		type;
   enum XML_Content_Quant	quant;
   const XML_Char *		name;
   unsigned int			numchildren;
   XML_Content *			children;
 };
 
 Sets a handler for element declarations in a DTD. The handler gets
 called with the name of the element in the declaration and a pointer
 to a structure that contains the element model. It's the user code's 
 responsibility to free model when finished with it. See 
 XML_FreeContentModel.
 There is no need to free the model from the handler, it can be kept
 around and freed at a later stage.
The model argument is the root of a tree of
 XML_Content nodes. If type equals
 XML_CTYPE_EMPTY or XML_CTYPE_ANY, then
 quant will be XML_CQUANT_NONE, and the other
 fields will be zero or NULL.  If type is
 XML_CTYPE_MIXED, then quant will be
 XML_CQUANT_NONE or XML_CQUANT_REP and
 numchildren will contain the number of elements that are
 allowed to be mixed in and children points to an array of
 XML_Content structures that will all have type
 XML_CTYPE_NAME with no quantification.  Only the root node can be type
 XML_CTYPE_EMPTY, XML_CTYPE_ANY, or
 XML_CTYPE_MIXED.
For type XML_CTYPE_NAME, the name field
 points to the name and the numchildren and
 children fields will be zero and NULL. The
 quant field will indicate any quantifiers placed on the
 name.
Types XML_CTYPE_CHOICE and XML_CTYPE_SEQ
 indicate a choice or sequence respectively. The
 numchildren field indicates how many nodes in the choice
 or sequence and children points to the nodes.
XML_SetAttlistDeclHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetAttlistDeclHandler(XML_Parser p,
                           XML_AttlistDeclHandler attdecl);
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_AttlistDeclHandler)(void           *userData,
                                   const XML_Char *elname,
                                   const XML_Char *attname,
                                   const XML_Char *att_type,
                                   const XML_Char *dflt,
                                   int            isrequired);
 
 Set a handler for attlist declarations in the DTD. This handler is
 called for each attribute. So a single attlist declaration
 with multiple attributes declared will generate multiple calls to this
 handler. The elname parameter returns the name of the
 element for which the attribute is being declared. The attribute name
 is in the attname parameter. The attribute type is in the
 att_type parameter.  It is the string representing the
 type in the declaration with whitespace removed.
The dflt parameter holds the default value. It will be
 NULL in the case of "#IMPLIED" or "#REQUIRED" attributes. You can
 distinguish these two cases by checking the isrequired
 parameter, which will be true in the case of "#REQUIRED" attributes.
 Attributes which are "#FIXED" will have also have a true
 isrequired, but they will have the non-NULL fixed value
 in the dflt parameter.
XML_SetEntityDeclHandler
void XMLCALL XML_SetEntityDeclHandler(XML_Parser p, XML_EntityDeclHandler handler);
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_EntityDeclHandler)(void           *userData,
                                  const XML_Char *entityName,
                                  int            is_parameter_entity,
                                  const XML_Char *value,
                                  int            value_length, 
                                  const XML_Char *base,
                                  const XML_Char *systemId,
                                  const XML_Char *publicId,
                                  const XML_Char *notationName);
 
 Sets a handler that will be called for all entity declarations.
 The is_parameter_entity argument will be non-zero in the
 case of parameter entities and zero otherwise.
For internal entities (<!ENTITY foo "bar">),
 value will be non-NULL and systemId,
 publicId, and notationName will all be NULL.
 The value string is not null-terminated; the length is
 provided in the value_length parameter. Do not use
 value_length to test for internal entities, since it is
 legal to have zero-length values. Instead check for whether or not
 value is NULL.
The notationName
 argument will have a non-NULL value only for unparsed entity
 declarations.
XML_SetUnparsedEntityDeclHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetUnparsedEntityDeclHandler(XML_Parser p,
                                  XML_UnparsedEntityDeclHandler h)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_UnparsedEntityDeclHandler)(void *userData,
                                          const XML_Char *entityName, 
                                          const XML_Char *base,
                                          const XML_Char *systemId,
                                          const XML_Char *publicId,
                                          const XML_Char *notationName);
 
 Set a handler that receives declarations of unparsed entities. These are entity declarations that have a notation (NDATA) field:
<!ENTITY logo SYSTEM "images/logo.gif" NDATA gif>
This handler is obsolete and is provided for backwards compatibility. Use instead XML_SetEntityDeclHandler.
XML_SetNotationDeclHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetNotationDeclHandler(XML_Parser p,
                            XML_NotationDeclHandler h)
 
 
 typedef void
 (XMLCALL *XML_NotationDeclHandler)(void *userData, 
                                    const XML_Char *notationName,
                                    const XML_Char *base,
                                    const XML_Char *systemId,
                                    const XML_Char *publicId);
 
 Set a handler that receives notation declarations.
XML_SetNotStandaloneHandler
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetNotStandaloneHandler(XML_Parser p,
                             XML_NotStandaloneHandler h)
 
 typedef int (XMLCALL *XML_NotStandaloneHandler)(void *userData);
Set a handler that is called if the document is not "standalone".
 This happens when there is an external subset or a reference to a
 parameter entity, but does not have standalone set to "yes" in an XML
 declaration.  If this handler returns XML_STATUS_ERROR,
 then the parser will throw an XML_ERROR_NOT_STANDALONE
 error.
Parse position and error reporting functions
These are the functions you'll want to call when the parse
 functions return XML_STATUS_ERROR (a parse error has
 occurred), although the position reporting functions are useful outside
 of errors. The position reported is the byte position (in the original
 document or entity encoding) of the first of the sequence of
 characters that generated the current event (or the error that caused
 the parse functions to return XML_STATUS_ERROR.)  The
 exceptions are callbacks triggered by declarations in the document
 prologue, in which case they exact position reported is somewhere in the
 relevant markup, but not necessarily as meaningful as for other
 events.
The position reporting functions are accurate only outside of the DTD. In other words, they usually return bogus information when called from within a DTD declaration handler.
XML_GetErrorCode
enum XML_Error XMLCALL XML_GetErrorCode(XML_Parser p);
XML_ErrorString
const XML_LChar * XMLCALL XML_ErrorString(enum XML_Error code);
XML_GetErrorCode.
 XML_GetCurrentByteIndex
XML_Index XMLCALL XML_GetCurrentByteIndex(XML_Parser p);
XML_GetCurrentLineNumber and XML_GetCurrentColumnNumber.
 XML_GetCurrentLineNumber
XML_Size XMLCALL XML_GetCurrentLineNumber(XML_Parser p);
1.
 XML_GetCurrentColumnNumber
XML_Size XMLCALL XML_GetCurrentColumnNumber(XML_Parser p);
XML_GetCurrentByteCount
int XMLCALL XML_GetCurrentByteCount(XML_Parser p);
0 if the event is inside a reference to an internal
 entity and for the end-tag event for empty element tags (the later can
 be used to distinguish empty-element tags from empty elements using
 separate start and end tags).
 XML_GetInputContext
 const char * XMLCALL
 XML_GetInputContext(XML_Parser p,
                     int *offset,
                     int *size);
 
 Returns the parser's input buffer, sets the integer pointed at by
 offset to the offset within this buffer of the current
 parse position, and set the integer pointed at by size to
 the size of the returned buffer.
This should only be called from within a handler during an active parse and the returned buffer should only be referred to from within the handler that made the call. This input buffer contains the untranslated bytes of the input.
Only a limited amount of context is kept, so if the event triggering a call spans over a very large amount of input, the actual parse position may be before the beginning of the buffer.
If XML_CONTEXT_BYTES is zero, this will always
 return NULL.
Attack Protection
XML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionMaximumAmplification
 /* Added in Expat 2.4.0. */
 XML_Bool XMLCALL
 XML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionMaximumAmplification(XML_Parser p,
                                                          float maximumAmplificationFactor);
 
 
     Sets the maximum tolerated amplification factor
     for protection against
     billion laughs attacks
     (default: 100.0)
     of parser p to maximumAmplificationFactor, and
     returns XML_TRUE upon success and XML_FALSE upon error.
   
     amplification := (direct + indirect) / direct
   
   .. while parsing, whereas
   direct is the number of bytes read from the primary document in parsing and
   indirect is the number of bytes added by expanding entities and reading of external DTD files, combined.
 
   For a call to XML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionMaximumAmplification to succeed:
- parser 
pmust be a non-NULLroot parser (without any parent parsers) and maximumAmplificationFactormust be non-NaNand greater than or equal to1.0.
Note: If you ever need to increase this value for non-attack payload, please file a bug report.
Note: Peak amplifications of factor 15,000 for the entire payload and of factor 30,000 in the middle of parsing have been observed with small benign files in practice. So if you do reduce the maximum allowed amplification, please make sure that the activation threshold is still big enough to not end up with undesired false positives (i.e. benign files being rejected).
XML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionActivationThreshold
 /* Added in Expat 2.4.0. */
 XML_Bool XMLCALL
 XML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionActivationThreshold(XML_Parser p,
                                                         unsigned long long activationThresholdBytes);
 
 
     Sets number of output bytes (including amplification from entity expansion and reading DTD files)
     needed to activate protection against
     billion laughs attacks
     (default: 8 MiB)
     of parser p to activationThresholdBytes, and
     returns XML_TRUE upon success and XML_FALSE upon error.
   
For a call to XML_SetBillionLaughsAttackProtectionActivationThreshold to succeed:
- parser 
pmust be a non-NULLroot parser (without any parent parsers). 
Note: If you ever need to increase this value for non-attack payload, please file a bug report.
Note: Activation thresholds below 4 MiB are known to break support for DITA 1.3 payload and are hence not recommended.
XML_SetReparseDeferralEnabled
/* Added in Expat 2.6.0. */ XML_Bool XMLCALL XML_SetReparseDeferralEnabled(XML_Parser parser, XML_Bool enabled);
Large tokens may require many parse calls before enough data is available for Expat to parse it in full. If Expat retried parsing the token on every parse call, parsing could take quadratic time. To avoid this, Expat only retries once a significant amount of new data is available. This function allows disabling this behavior.
     The enabled argument should be XML_TRUE or XML_FALSE.
   
     Returns XML_TRUE on success, and XML_FALSE on error.
   
Miscellaneous functions
The functions in this section either obtain state information from the parser or can be used to dynamically set parser options.
XML_SetUserData
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetUserData(XML_Parser p,
                 void *userData);
 
 userData when it is finished with the parser. So if you
 call this when there's already a pointer there, and you haven't freed
 the memory associated with it, then you've probably just leaked
 memory.
 XML_GetUserData
void * XMLCALL XML_GetUserData(XML_Parser p);
XML_UseParserAsHandlerArg
void XMLCALL XML_UseParserAsHandlerArg(XML_Parser p);
userData arguments.  The user data can still be obtained
 using the XML_GetUserData function.
 XML_SetBase
 enum XML_Status XMLCALL
 XML_SetBase(XML_Parser p,
             const XML_Char *base);
 
 XML_STATUS_ERROR if
 there's no memory to store base, otherwise it's
 XML_STATUS_OK.
 XML_GetBase
const XML_Char * XMLCALL XML_GetBase(XML_Parser p);
XML_GetSpecifiedAttributeCount
int XMLCALL XML_GetSpecifiedAttributeCount(XML_Parser p);
atts array passed to the start tag handler of the first
 attribute set due to defaults. It supplies information for the last
 call to a start handler. If called inside a start handler, then that
 means the current call.
 XML_GetIdAttributeIndex
int XMLCALL XML_GetIdAttributeIndex(XML_Parser p);
XML_StartElementHandler, or -1 if there is no ID
 attribute. If called inside a start handler, then that means the
 current call.
 XML_GetAttributeInfo
const XML_AttrInfo * XMLCALL XML_GetAttributeInfo(XML_Parser parser);
 typedef struct {
   XML_Index  nameStart;  /* Offset to beginning of the attribute name. */
   XML_Index  nameEnd;    /* Offset after the attribute name's last byte. */
   XML_Index  valueStart; /* Offset to beginning of the attribute value. */
   XML_Index  valueEnd;   /* Offset after the attribute value's last byte. */
 } XML_AttrInfo;
 
 XML_AttrInfo structures for the
 attribute/value pairs passed in the last call to the
 XML_StartElementHandler that were specified
 in the start-tag rather than defaulted. Each attribute/value pair counts
 as 1; thus the number of entries in the array is
 XML_GetSpecifiedAttributeCount(parser) / 2.
 XML_SetEncoding
 enum XML_Status XMLCALL
 XML_SetEncoding(XML_Parser p,
                 const XML_Char *encoding);
 
 NULL encoding argument to the parser creation functions.
 It must not be called after XML_Parse or XML_ParseBuffer have been called on the given parser.
 Returns XML_STATUS_OK on success or
 XML_STATUS_ERROR on error.
 XML_SetParamEntityParsing
 int XMLCALL
 XML_SetParamEntityParsing(XML_Parser p,
                           enum XML_ParamEntityParsing code);
 
 code.
 The choices for code are:
 XML_PARAM_ENTITY_PARSING_NEVERXML_PARAM_ENTITY_PARSING_UNLESS_STANDALONEXML_PARAM_ENTITY_PARSING_ALWAYS
XML_SetParamEntityParsing is called after 
 XML_Parse or XML_ParseBuffer, then it has
 no effect and will always return 0.
 XML_SetHashSalt
 int XMLCALL
 XML_SetHashSalt(XML_Parser p,
                 unsigned long hash_salt);
 
 XML_Parse or XML_ParseBuffer.
 Note: This call is optional, as the parser will auto-generate a new random salt value if no value has been set at the start of parsing.
Note: One should not call XML_SetHashSalt with a
 hash salt value of 0, as this value is used as sentinel value to indicate
 that XML_SetHashSalt has not been called. Consequently
 such a call will have no effect, even if it returns 1.
XML_UseForeignDTD
enum XML_Error XMLCALL XML_UseForeignDTD(XML_Parser parser, XML_Bool useDTD);
This function allows an application to provide an external subset
 for the document type declaration for documents which do not specify
 an external subset of their own.  For documents which specify an
 external subset in their DOCTYPE declaration, the application-provided
 subset will be ignored.  If the document does not contain a DOCTYPE
 declaration at all and useDTD is true, the
 application-provided subset will be parsed, but the
 startDoctypeDeclHandler and
 endDoctypeDeclHandler functions, if set, will not be
 called.  The setting of parameter entity parsing, controlled using
 XML_SetParamEntityParsing, will be honored.
The application-provided external subset is read by calling the
 external entity reference handler set via XML_SetExternalEntityRefHandler with both
 publicId and systemId set to NULL.
If this function is called after parsing has begun, it returns
 XML_ERROR_CANT_CHANGE_FEATURE_ONCE_PARSING and ignores
 useDTD.  If called when Expat has been compiled without
 DTD support, it returns
 XML_ERROR_FEATURE_REQUIRES_XML_DTD.  Otherwise, it
 returns XML_ERROR_NONE.
Note: For the purpose of checking WFC: Entity Declared, passing
 useDTD == XML_TRUE will make the parser behave as if
 the document had a DTD with an external subset. This holds true even if
 the external entity reference handler returns without action.
XML_SetReturnNSTriplet
 void XMLCALL
 XML_SetReturnNSTriplet(XML_Parser parser,
                        int        do_nst);
 
 
 This function only has an effect when using a parser created with
 XML_ParserCreateNS,
 i.e. when namespace processing is in effect. The do_nst
 sets whether or not prefixes are returned with names qualified with a
 namespace prefix. If this function is called with do_nst
 non-zero, then afterwards namespace qualified names (that is qualified
 with a prefix as opposed to belonging to a default namespace) are
 returned as a triplet with the three parts separated by the namespace
 separator specified when the parser was created.  The order of
 returned parts is URI, local name, and prefix.
If
 do_nst is zero, then namespaces are reported in the
 default manner, URI then local_name separated by the namespace
 separator.
XML_DefaultCurrent
void XMLCALL XML_DefaultCurrent(XML_Parser parser);
XML_SetDefaultHandler or
 XML_SetDefaultHandlerExpand.  It does nothing if there is
 not a default handler.
 XML_ExpatVersion
XML_LChar * XMLCALL XML_ExpatVersion();
"expat_1.95.1").
 XML_ExpatVersionInfo
struct XML_Expat_Version XMLCALL XML_ExpatVersionInfo();
 typedef struct {
   int major;
   int minor;
   int micro;
 } XML_Expat_Version;
 
 XML_MAJOR_VERSIONXML_MINOR_VERSIONXML_MICRO_VERSION
XML_GetFeatureList
const XML_Feature * XMLCALL XML_GetFeatureList();
 enum XML_FeatureEnum {
   XML_FEATURE_END = 0,
   XML_FEATURE_UNICODE,
   XML_FEATURE_UNICODE_WCHAR_T,
   XML_FEATURE_DTD,
   XML_FEATURE_CONTEXT_BYTES,
   XML_FEATURE_MIN_SIZE,
   XML_FEATURE_SIZEOF_XML_CHAR,
   XML_FEATURE_SIZEOF_XML_LCHAR,
   XML_FEATURE_NS,
   XML_FEATURE_LARGE_SIZE
 };
 
 typedef struct {
   enum XML_FeatureEnum  feature;
   XML_LChar            *name;
   long int              value;
 } XML_Feature;
 
 Returns a list of "feature" records, providing details on how Expat was configured at compile time. Most applications should not need to worry about this, but this information is otherwise not available from Expat. This function allows code that does need to check these features to do so at runtime.
The return value is an array of XML_Feature,
 terminated by a record with a feature of
 XML_FEATURE_END and name of NULL,
 identifying the feature-test macros Expat was compiled with.  Since an
 application that requires this kind of information needs to determine
 the type of character the name points to, records for the
 XML_FEATURE_SIZEOF_XML_CHAR and
 XML_FEATURE_SIZEOF_XML_LCHAR will be located at the
 beginning of the list, followed by XML_FEATURE_UNICODE
 and XML_FEATURE_UNICODE_WCHAR_T, if they are present at
 all.
Some features have an associated value.  If there isn't an
 associated value, the value field is set to 0.  At this
 time, the following features have been defined to have values:
XML_FEATURE_SIZEOF_XML_CHAR- The number of bytes occupied by one 
XML_Charcharacter. XML_FEATURE_SIZEOF_XML_LCHAR- The number of bytes occupied by one 
XML_LCharcharacter. XML_FEATURE_CONTEXT_BYTES- The maximum number of characters of context which can be
   reported by 
XML_GetInputContext. 
XML_FreeContentModel
void XMLCALL XML_FreeContentModel(XML_Parser parser, XML_Content *model);
model argument passed to the
 XML_ElementDeclHandler callback set using XML_ElementDeclHandler.
 This function should not be used for any other purpose.
 The following functions allow external code to share the memory
 allocator an XML_Parser has been configured to use.  This
 is especially useful for third-party libraries that interact with a
 parser object created by application code, or heavily layered
 applications.  This can be essential when using dynamically loaded
 libraries which use different C standard libraries (this can happen on
 Windows, at least).
XML_MemMalloc
void * XMLCALL XML_MemMalloc(XML_Parser parser, size_t size);
size bytes of memory using the allocator the
 parser object has been configured to use.  Returns a
 pointer to the memory or NULL on failure.  Memory allocated in this
 way must be freed using XML_MemFree.
 XML_MemRealloc
void * XMLCALL XML_MemRealloc(XML_Parser parser, void *ptr, size_t size);
size bytes of memory using the allocator the
 parser object has been configured to use.
 ptr must point to a block of memory allocated by XML_MemMalloc or
 XML_MemRealloc, or be NULL.  This function tries to
 expand the block pointed to by ptr if possible.  Returns
 a pointer to the memory or NULL on failure.  On success, the original
 block has either been expanded or freed.  On failure, the original
 block has not been freed; the caller is responsible for freeing the
 original block.  Memory allocated in this way must be freed using
 XML_MemFree.
 XML_MemFree
void XMLCALL XML_MemFree(XML_Parser parser, void *ptr);
ptr.  The block must
 have been allocated by XML_MemMalloc or XML_MemRealloc, or be NULL.