<-
Apache > HTTP Server > Documentation > Version 2.4 > Modules

Apache Module mod_xml2enc

Available Languages:  en  |  fr 

Description:Enhanced charset/internationalisation support for libxml2-based filter modules
Status:Base
Module Identifier:xml2enc_module
Source File:mod_xml2enc.c
Compatibility:Version 2.4 and later. Available as a third-party module for 2.2.x versions

Summary

This module provides enhanced internationalisation support for markup-aware filter modules such as mod_proxy_html. It can automatically detect the encoding of input data and ensure they are correctly processed by the libxml2 parser, including converting to Unicode (UTF-8) where necessary. It can also convert data to an encoding of choice after markup processing, and will ensure the correct charset value is set in the HTTP Content-Type header.

Directives

Topics

top

Usage

There are two usage scenarios: with modules programmed to work with mod_xml2enc, and with those that are not aware of it:

Filter modules enabled for mod_xml2enc

Modules such as mod_proxy_html version 3.1 and up use the xml2enc_charset optional function to retrieve the charset argument to pass to the libxml2 parser, and may use the xml2enc_filter optional function to postprocess to another encoding. Using mod_xml2enc with an enabled module, no configuration is necessary: the other module will configure mod_xml2enc for you (though you may still want to customise it using the configuration directives below).

Non-enabled modules

To use it with a libxml2-based module that isn't explicitly enabled for mod_xml2enc, you will have to configure the filter chain yourself. So to use it with a filter foo provided by a module mod_foo to improve the latter's i18n support with HTML and XML, you could use


    FilterProvider iconv    xml2enc Content-Type $text/html
    FilterProvider iconv    xml2enc Content-Type $xml
    FilterProvider markup   foo Content-Type $text/html
    FilterProvider markup   foo Content-Type $xml
    FilterChain     iconv markup
    

mod_foo will now support any character set supported by either (or both) of libxml2 or apr_xlate/iconv.

top

Programming API

Programmers writing libxml2-based filter modules are encouraged to enable them for mod_xml2enc, to provide strong i18n support for your users without reinventing the wheel. The programming API is exposed in mod_xml2enc.h, and a usage example is mod_proxy_html.

top

Detecting an Encoding

Unlike mod_charset_lite, mod_xml2enc is designed to work with data whose encoding cannot be known in advance and thus configured. It therefore uses 'sniffing' techniques to detect the encoding of HTTP data as follows:

  1. If the HTTP Content-Type header includes a charset parameter, that is used.
  2. If the data start with an XML Byte Order Mark (BOM) or an XML encoding declaration, that is used.
  3. If an encoding is declared in an HTML <META> element, that is used.
  4. If none of the above match, the default value set by xml2EncDefault is used.

The rules are applied in order. As soon as a match is found, it is used and detection is stopped.

top

Output Encoding

libxml2 always uses UTF-8 (Unicode) internally, and libxml2-based filter modules will output that by default. mod_xml2enc can change the output encoding through the API, but there is currently no way to configure that directly.

Changing the output encoding should (in theory, at least) never be necessary, and is not recommended due to the extra processing load on the server of an unnecessary conversion.

top

Unsupported Encodings

If you are working with encodings that are not supported by any of the conversion methods available on your platform, you can still alias them to a supported encoding using xml2EncAlias.

top

xml2EncAlias Directive

Description:Recognise Aliases for encoding values
Syntax:xml2EncAlias charset alias [alias ...]
Context:server config
Status:Base
Module:mod_xml2enc

This server-wide directive aliases one or more encoding to another encoding. This enables encodings not recognised by libxml2 to be handled internally by libxml2's encoding support using the translation table for a recognised encoding. This serves two purposes: to support character sets (or names) not recognised either by libxml2 or iconv, and to skip conversion for an encoding where it is known to be unnecessary.

top

xml2EncDefault Directive

Description:Sets a default encoding to assume when absolutely no information can be automatically detected
Syntax:xml2EncDefault name
Context:server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess
Status:Base
Module:mod_xml2enc
Compatibility:Version 2.4.0 and later; available as a third-party module for earlier versions.

If you are processing data with known encoding but no encoding information, you can set this default to help mod_xml2enc process the data correctly. For example, to work with the default value of Latin1 (iso-8859-1 specified in HTTP/1.0, use

xml2EncDefault iso-8859-1
top

xml2StartParse Directive

Description:Advise the parser to skip leading junk.
Syntax:xml2StartParse element [element ...]
Context:server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess
Status:Base
Module:mod_xml2enc

Specify that the markup parser should start at the first instance of any of the elements specified. This can be used as a workaround where a broken backend inserts leading junk that messes up the parser (example here).

It should never be used for XML, nor well-formed HTML.

Available Languages:  en  |  fr 

top

Comments

Notice:
This is not a Q&A section. Comments placed here should be pointed towards suggestions on improving the documentation or server, and may be removed again by our moderators if they are either implemented or considered invalid/off-topic. Questions on how to manage the Apache HTTP Server should be directed at either our IRC channel, #httpd, on Freenode, or sent to our mailing lists.
Comments are disabled for this page at the moment.