# quick-xml **Repository Path**: mirrors_tafia/quick-xml ## Basic Information - **Project Name**: quick-xml - **Description**: Rust high performance xml reader and writer - **Primary Language**: Unknown - **License**: MIT - **Default Branch**: master - **Homepage**: None - **GVP Project**: No ## Statistics - **Stars**: 0 - **Forks**: 0 - **Created**: 2022-01-05 - **Last Updated**: 2026-03-01 ## Categories & Tags **Categories**: Uncategorized **Tags**: None ## README # quick-xml ![status](https://github.com/tafia/quick-xml/actions/workflows/rust.yml/badge.svg) [![Crate](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/quick-xml.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/quick-xml) [![docs.rs](https://docs.rs/quick-xml/badge.svg)](https://docs.rs/quick-xml) [![codecov](https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/tafia/quick-xml)](https://codecov.io/gh/tafia/quick-xml) [![MSRV](https://img.shields.io/badge/rustc-1.56.0+-ab6000.svg)](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2021/10/21/Rust-1.56.0.html) High performance xml pull reader/writer. The reader: - is almost zero-copy (use of `Cow` whenever possible) - is easy on memory allocation (the API provides a way to reuse buffers) - support various encoding (with `encoding` feature), namespaces resolution, special characters. Syntax is inspired by [xml-rs](https://github.com/netvl/xml-rs). ## Example ### Reader ```rust use quick_xml::events::Event; use quick_xml::reader::Reader; let xml = r#" Test Test 2 "#; let mut reader = Reader::from_str(xml); reader.config_mut().trim_text(true); let mut count = 0; let mut txt = Vec::new(); let mut buf = Vec::new(); // The `Reader` does not implement `Iterator` because it outputs borrowed data (`Cow`s) loop { // NOTE: this is the generic case when we don't know about the input BufRead. // when the input is a &str or a &[u8], we don't actually need to use another // buffer, we could directly call `reader.read_event()` match reader.read_event_into(&mut buf) { Err(e) => panic!("Error at position {}: {:?}", reader.error_position(), e), // exits the loop when reaching end of file Ok(Event::Eof) => break, Ok(Event::Start(e)) => { match e.name().as_ref() { b"tag1" => println!("attributes values: {:?}", e.attributes().map(|a| a.unwrap().value) .collect::>()), b"tag2" => count += 1, _ => (), } } Ok(Event::Text(e)) => txt.push(e.decode().unwrap().into_owned()), // There are several other `Event`s we do not consider here _ => (), } // if we don't keep a borrow elsewhere, we can clear the buffer to keep memory usage low buf.clear(); } ``` ### Writer ```rust use quick_xml::events::{Event, BytesEnd, BytesStart}; use quick_xml::reader::Reader; use quick_xml::writer::Writer; use std::io::Cursor; let xml = r#"text"#; let mut reader = Reader::from_str(xml); reader.config_mut().trim_text(true); let mut writer = Writer::new(Cursor::new(Vec::new())); loop { match reader.read_event() { Ok(Event::Start(e)) if e.name().as_ref() == b"this_tag" => { // creates a new element ... alternatively we could reuse `e` by calling // `e.into_owned()` let mut elem = BytesStart::new("my_elem"); // collect existing attributes elem.extend_attributes(e.attributes().map(|attr| attr.unwrap())); // copy existing attributes, adds a new my-key="some value" attribute elem.push_attribute(("my-key", "some value")); // writes the event to the writer assert!(writer.write_event(Event::Start(elem)).is_ok()); }, Ok(Event::End(e)) if e.name().as_ref() == b"this_tag" => { assert!(writer.write_event(Event::End(BytesEnd::new("my_elem"))).is_ok()); }, Ok(Event::Eof) => break, // we can either move or borrow the event to write, depending on your use-case Ok(e) => assert!(writer.write_event(e).is_ok()), Err(e) => panic!("Error at position {}: {:?}", reader.error_position(), e), } } let result = writer.into_inner().into_inner(); let expected = r#"text"#; assert_eq!(result, expected.as_bytes()); ``` ## Serde When using the `serialize` feature, quick-xml can be used with serde's `Serialize`/`Deserialize` traits. The mapping between XML and Rust types, and in particular the syntax that allows you to specify the distinction between *elements* and *attributes*, is described in detail in the documentation for [deserialization](https://docs.rs/quick-xml/latest/quick_xml/de/). ### Credits This has largely been inspired by [serde-xml-rs](https://github.com/RReverser/serde-xml-rs). quick-xml follows its convention for deserialization, including the [`$value`](https://github.com/RReverser/serde-xml-rs#parsing-the-value-of-a-tag) special name. ### Parsing the "value" of a tag If you have an input of the form `bar`, and you want to get at the `bar`, you can use either the special name `$text`, or the special name `$value`: ```rust,ignore struct Foo { #[serde(rename = "@abc")] pub abc: String, #[serde(rename = "$text")] pub body: String, } ``` Read about the difference in the [documentation](https://docs.rs/quick-xml/latest/quick_xml/de/index.html#difference-between-text-and-value-special-names). ### Performance Note that despite not focusing on performance (there are several unnecessary copies), it remains about 10x faster than serde-xml-rs. # Features - `encoding`: support non utf8 xmls - `serialize`: support serde `Serialize`/`Deserialize` ## Performance Benchmarking is hard and the results depend on your input file and your machine. Here on my particular file, quick-xml is around **50 times faster** than [xml-rs](https://crates.io/crates/xml-rs) crate. ``` // quick-xml benches test bench_quick_xml ... bench: 198,866 ns/iter (+/- 9,663) test bench_quick_xml_escaped ... bench: 282,740 ns/iter (+/- 61,625) test bench_quick_xml_namespaced ... bench: 389,977 ns/iter (+/- 32,045) // same bench with xml-rs test bench_xml_rs ... bench: 14,468,930 ns/iter (+/- 321,171) // serde-xml-rs vs serialize feature test bench_serde_quick_xml ... bench: 1,181,198 ns/iter (+/- 138,290) test bench_serde_xml_rs ... bench: 15,039,564 ns/iter (+/- 783,485) ``` For a feature and performance comparison, you can also have a look at RazrFalcon's [parser comparison table](https://github.com/RazrFalcon/roxmltree#parsing). ## Contribute Any PR is welcomed! ## License MIT