Oracle® XML DB Developer's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E10492-02 |
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The XML Schema Recommendation was created by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to describe the content and structure of XML documents in XML. It includes the full capabilities of Document Type Definitions (DTDs) so that existing DTDs can be converted to XML Schema. XML schemas have additional capabilities compared to DTDs.
This chapter provides basic information about using XML Schema with Oracle XML DB. It explains how to do the following:
Register, update, and delete an XML schema
Create storage structures for XML schema-based data
Map XML Schema data types to SQL data types and binary XML encoding types
This chapter contains these topics:
See Also:
Chapter 9, "XML Schema Storage and Query: Advanced" for more advanced information about using XML Schema with Oracle XML DB
Chapter 8, "XPath Rewrite for Structured Storage" for information about the optimization of XPath expressions in Oracle XML DB
http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-0/
for an introduction to XML Schema
XML Schema is a schema definition language written in XML. It can be used to describe the structure and semantics of conforming instance documents. For example, the following XML schema definition, purchaseOrder.xsd
, describes the structure and other properties of purchase-order XML documents.
This manual refers to an XML schema instance definition as an XML schema.
Example 7-1 shows an XML schema that declares a complexType
called purchaseOrderType
and a global element PurchaseOrder
of this type. This is the same schema as Example 3-8, "Purchase-Order XML Schema, purchaseOrder.xsd", with the exception of the lines in bold
here, which are additional. For brevity, part of the schema is omitted here (marked ...
).
Example 7-1 XML Schema Instance purchaseOrder.xsd
<xs:schema targetNamespace="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder" xmlns:po="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder" xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" version="1.0"> <xs:element name="PurchaseOrder" type="po:PurchaseOrderType"/> <xs:complexType name="PurchaseOrderType"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="Reference" type="po:ReferenceType"/> <xs:element name="Actions" type="po:ActionsType"/> <xs:element name="Reject" type="po:RejectionType" minOccurs="0"/> <xs:element name="Requestor" type="po:RequestorType"/> <xs:element name="User" type="po:UserType"/> <xs:element name="CostCenter" type="po:CostCenterType"/> <xs:element name="ShippingInstructions" type="po:ShippingInstructionsType"/> <xs:element name="SpecialInstructions" type="po:SpecialInstructionsType"/> <xs:element name="LineItems" type="po:LineItemsType"/> <xs:element name="Notes" type="po:NotesType"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="LineItemsType"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="LineItem" type="po:LineItemType" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> ... <xs:simpleType name="DescriptionType"> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:minLength value="1"/> <xs:maxLength value="256"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="NotesType"> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:minLength value="1"/> <xs:maxLength value="32767"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> </xs:schema>
Example 7-2 shows an XML document that conforms to XML schema purchaseOrder.xsd
:
Example 7-2 purchaseOrder.xml: Document That Conforms to purchaseOrder.xsd
<po:PurchaseOrder xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:po="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder" xsi:schemaLocation= "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd"> <Reference>SBELL-2002100912333601PDT</Reference> <Actions> <Action> <User>SVOLLMAN</User> </Action> </Actions> <Reject/> <Requestor>Sarah J. Bell</Requestor> <User>SBELL</User> <CostCenter>S30</CostCenter> <ShippingInstructions> <name>Sarah J. Bell</name> <address>400 Oracle Parkway Redwood Shores CA 94065 USA </address> <telephone>650 506 7400</telephone> </ShippingInstructions> <SpecialInstructions>Air Mail</SpecialInstructions> <LineItems> <LineItem ItemNumber="1"> <Description>A Night to Remember</Description> <Part Id="715515009058" UnitPrice="39.95" Quantity="2"/> </LineItem> <LineItem ItemNumber="2"> <Description>The Unbearable Lightness Of Being</Description> <Part Id="37429140222" UnitPrice="29.95" Quantity="2"/> </LineItem> <LineItem ItemNumber="3"> <Description>Sisters</Description> <Part Id="715515011020" UnitPrice="29.95" Quantity="4"/> </LineItem> </LineItems> <Notes>Section 1.10.32 of "de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum", written by Cicero in 45 BC "Sed ut perspiciatis unde omnis iste natus error sit voluptatem accusantium doloremque laudantium, totam rem aperiam, eaque ips ... tiae consequatur, vel illum qui dolorem eum fugiat quo voluptas nulla pariatur?" 1914 translation by H. Rackham "But I must explain to you how all this mistaken idea of denouncing pleasure and praising pain was born and I will give you a c ... o avoids a pain that produces no resultant pleasure?" Section 1.10.33 of "de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum", written by Cicero in 45 BC "At vero eos et accusamus et iusto odio dignissimos ducimus qui blanditiis praesentium voluptatum deleniti atque corrupti quos ... delectus, ut aut reiciendis voluptatibus maiores alias consequatur aut perferendis doloribus asperiores repellat." 1914 translation by H. Rackham "On the other hand, we denounce with righteous indignation and dislike men who are so beguiled and demoralized by the charms of ... secure other greater pleasures, or else he endures pains to avoid worse pains." </Notes> </po:PurchaseOrder>
Note:
The URL used is a name that uniquely identifies the registered XML schema within the database:http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd
. This need not point to a location where the XML schema document is located. The target namespace of the XML schema is another URL, different from the XML schema location URL, which specifies an abstract namespace within which elements and types get declared.
An XML schema can optionally specify the target namespace URL. If this attribute is omitted, the XML schema has no target namespace. The target namespace is commonly the same as the URL of the XML schema.
An XML instance document must specify the namespace of the root element (same as the target namespace of the XML schema) and the location (URL) of the XML schema that defines this root element. The location is specified with attribute xsi:schemaLocation
. When the XML schema has no target namespace, use attribute xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation
to specify the schema URL.
Oracle XML DB exploits the strong typing and other powerful properties of XML Schema to process XML database data safely and efficiently.
Note:
With XML data that is stored using binary XML storage, you can use a DTD to obtain the XML entities defined there. However, the structural and type information in the DTD is not used by Oracle XML DB; the entities are the only information used.Oracle XML DB uses annotated XML schemas as metadata. The standard XML Schema definitions are used, along with several Oracle namespace attributes. These attributes determine how XML instance documents get mapped to the database. Because these attributes are in a different namespace from the XML Schema namespace, such annotated XML schemas are legal XML Schema documents.
See Also:
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
When using Oracle XML DB with XML Schema, you must first register the XML schema. You can then use the XML schema URLs while creating XMLType
tables, columns, and views. The XML schema URL identifies the XML schema in the database. It is associated with parameter schemaurl
of PL/SQL procedure DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.registerSchema
.
Oracle XML DB provides XML Schema support for the following tasks:
Registering a W3C-compliant XML schemas, both local and global.
Validating your XML documents against registered XML schema definitions.
Generating XML schemas from SQL object types.
Referencing an XML schema owned by another user.
Explicitly referencing a global XML schema when a local XML schema exists with the same name.
Generating a database mapping from your XML schemas during XML schema registration. This includes generating SQL object types, collection types, and default tables, and capturing the mapping information using XML schema attributes.
Specifying a particular SQL data type mapping when there are multiple allowed mappings.
Creating XMLType
tables, views, and columns based on registered XML schemas.
Manipulating and querying XML schema-based XMLType
tables.
Automatically inserting data into default tables when XML schema-based documents are inserted into Oracle XML DB Repository using protocols (FTP, HTTP(S)/WebDAV) and languages besides SQL.
See Also:
Chapter 3, "Using Oracle XML DB"XMLType
is an abstract data type that facilitates storing XML data in database columns and tables. XML Schema offers you additional storage and access options for XML data. You can use XML schemas to define which XML elements and attributes, which kinds of element nesting, and which data types can be used.
XML Schema lets you verify that your XML data conforms to its intended definition: the data is validated against the XML schemas that define its proper structure. This definition includes data types, numbers of allowed item occurrences, and allowed lengths of items. When storing XML Schema-based documents in Oracle XML DB using protocols such as FTP or HTTP(S), the XML schema information can improve the efficiency of document insertion. When XML instances must be handled without any prior information about them, XML schemas can be useful in predicting optimum storage, fidelity, and access.
If your XML data is highly structured, then you might want to store it object-relationally. In that case, XML Schema is used to efficiently map XML (Schema) data types to SQL data types and object-relational tables and columns. You can take advantage of the strong typing and other advantages of XML Schema for unstructured or semi-structured XML data, as well as for structured data, by storing the data as binary XML.
A DTD is a set of rules that define the allowable structure of an XML document. DTDs are text files that derive their format from SGML and can be associated with an XML document either by using the DOCTYPE
element or by using an external file through a DOCTYPE
reference. In addition to supporting XML Schema, which provides a structured mapping to object-relational storage or binary XML storage, Oracle XML DB also supports DTD specifications in XML instance documents. Though DTDs are not used to derive the mapping, XML processors can still access and interpret the DTDs.
When an XML instance document has an inline DTD definition, it is used during document parsing. Any DTD validations and entity declaration handling is done at this point. However, once parsed, the entity references are replaced with actual values and the original entity reference is lost.
Oracle XML DB also supports external DTD definitions if they are stored in Oracle XML DB Repository. Applications needing to process an XML document containing an external DTD definition such as /public/flights.dtd
, must first ensure that the DTD document is stored in Oracle XML DB at path /public/flights.xsd
.
Before an XML schema can be used by Oracle XML DB, it must be registered with Oracle Database. You register an XML schema using the PL/SQL package DBMS_XMLSCHEMA
.
Some of the main DBMS_XMLSCHEMA
procedures are these:
registerSchema
– register an XML schema with Oracle Database
deleteSchema
– delete a previously registered XML schema.
copyEvolve
– update a registered XML schema; see Chapter 10, "XML Schema Evolution".
The main arguments to procedure DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.registerSchema
are these:
SCHEMAURL
– the XML schema URL. This is a unique identifier for the XML schema within Oracle XML DB. It is conventionally in the form of a URL; however, this is not a requirement. The XML schema URL is used with Oracle XML DB to identify instance documents, by making the schema location hint identical to the XML schema URL. Oracle XML DB never tries to access the Web server identified by the specified URL.
Note:
You cannot register an XML schema using the sameSCHEMAURL
as any system-defined XML schema.SCHEMADOC
– The XML schema source document. This is a VARCHAR
, CLOB
, BLOB
, BFILE
, XMLType
, or URIType
value.
CSID
– The character-set ID of the source-document encoding, when schemaDoc
is a BFILE
or BLOB
value.
OPTIONS
– Options that specify how the XML schema should be registered. The most important option is REGISTER_BINARYXML
, which indicates that the XML schema is used for binary XML storage. Another option is REGISTER_NT_AS_IOT
.
Note:
If you specify optionREGISTER_BINARYXML
, then you must also set parameter GENTYPES
to FALSE
.The code in Example 7-3 registers the XML schema at URL http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd
. This example shows how to register an XML schema using the BFILE
mechanism to read the source document from a file on the local file system of the database server.
When you register an XML schema, keep in mind that the act of registering a schema has no effect on the status of any instance documents already loaded into Oracle XML DB Repository that reference the XML schema. Because the XML schema was not yet registered, such instance documents were non-schema-based when they were loaded. They remain non-schema-based after the schema is registered.
You must delete such instance documents, and reload them after registering the schema, in order to obtain schema-based documents.
As part of registering an XML schema, Oracle XML DB also performs several tasks that facilitate storing, accessing, and manipulating XML instances that conform to the XML schema. These steps include:
Mapping XML Schema data types to Oracle XML DB storage. When XML schema-based data is stored, its storage data types are derived from the XML Schema data types using a default mapping and, optionally, using mapping information that you specify using XML schema annotations. For binary XML storage, XML Schema types are mapped to binary XML encoding types. For object-relational storage, XML schema registration creates the appropriate SQL object types for the structured storage of conforming documents.
Creating default tables. XML schema registration generates default XMLType
tables for all global elements. You can use XML-schema annotations to control the names of the tables, and to provide column-level and table-level storage clauses and constraints for use during table creation.
After XML schema registration, documents that reference the XML schema using the XML Schema instance mechanism can be processed automatically by Oracle XML DB. For XML data that is stored object-relationally, XMLType
tables and columns can be created that are constrained to the global elements defined by the XML schema.
See Also:
Chapter 3, "Using Oracle XML DB"Like all DDL operations, XML schema registration is non-transactional. However, registration is atomic, in this sense:
If registration succeeds, then the operation is auto-committed.
If registration fails, then the database is rolled back to the state before registration began.
Because XML schema registration potentially involves creating object types and tables, error recovery involves dropping any types and tables thus created. The entire XML schema registration process is guaranteed to be atomic: either it succeeds or the database is restored to its state before the start of registration.
XML schema documents are themselves stored in Oracle XML DB as XMLType
instances. XML schema-related XMLType
types and tables are created as part of the Oracle XML DB installation script, catxdbs.sql
.
The XML schema for Oracle XML DB XML schemas is called the root XML Schema, XDBSchema.xsd
. The root XML schema describes any valid XML schema that can be registered with Oracle XML DB. You can access XDBSchema.xsd
at Oracle XML DB Repository location /sys/schemas/PUBLIC/xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/XDBSchema.xsd
.
For XML data stored object-relationally, you can monitor the object types and tables created during XML schema registration by setting the following event before calling DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.registerSchema
:
ALTER SESSION SET EVENTS = '31098 trace name context forever'
Setting this event causes the generation of a log of all of the CREATE TYPE
and CREATE TABLE
statements. This log is written to the user session trace file, typically found in ORACLE_BASE/diag/rdbms/ORACLE_SID/ORACLE_SID/udump
. This script can be a useful aid in diagnosing problems during XML schema registration.
If parameter GENTYPES
is TRUE
when an XML schema is registered for use with XML data stored object-relationally, then Oracle XML DB creates the appropriate SQL object types that enable structured storage of conforming XML documents. By default, all SQL object types are created in the database schema of the user who registers the XML schema. If annotation xdb:defaultSchema
is used, then Oracle XML DB attempts to create the object type using the specified database schema. The current user must have the necessary privileges to create these object types.
Example 7-4 shows the SQL object types that are created automatically when XML schema purchaseOrder.xsd
is registered with Oracle XML DB.
Example 7-4 Creating SQL Object Types to Store XMLType Tables
DESCRIBE "PurchaseOrderType1668_T" "PurchaseOrderType1668_T" is NOT FINAL Name Null? Type -------------------- ------ ------------------------------- SYS_XDBPD$ XDB.XDB$RAW_LIST_T Reference VARCHAR2(30 CHAR) Actions ActionsType1661_T Reject RejectionType1660_T Requestor VARCHAR2(128 CHAR) User VARCHAR2(10 CHAR) CostCenter VARCHAR2(4 CHAR) ShippingInstructions ShippingInstructionsTyp1659_T SpecialInstructions VARCHAR2(2048 CHAR) LineItems LineItemsType1666_T Notes VARCHAR2(4000 CHAR) DESCRIBE "LineItemsType1666_T" "LineItemsType1666_T" is NOT FINAL Name Null? Type -------------------- ----- ------------------------------- SYS_XDBPD$ XDB.XDB$RAW_LIST_T LineItem LineItem1667_COLL DESCRIBE "LineItem1667_COLL" "LineItem1667_COLL" VARRAY(2147483647) OF LineItemType1665_T "LineItemType1665_T" is NOT FINAL Name Null? Type ------------------- ----- -------------------------------- SYS_XDBPD$ XDB.XDB$RAW_LIST_T ItemNumber NUMBER(38) Description VARCHAR2(256 CHAR) Part PartType1664_T
Note:
By default, the names of the SQL object types and attributes are system-generated. This is the case in Example 7-4. If the XML schema does not contain attributeSQLName
, then the SQL name is derived from the XML name. You can use XML schema annotations to provide user-defined names (see "Oracle XML Schema Annotations" for details).As part of XML schema registration for XML data, you can create default tables. Default tables are most useful when documents conforming to the XML schema are inserted through APIs and protocols such as FTP and HTTP(S) that do not provide any table specification. In such cases, the XML instance is inserted into the default table.
Example 7-5 Default Table for Global Element PurchaseOrder
DESCRIBE "purchaseorder1669_tab" Name Null? Type --------------------------- ----- ----------------------- TABLE of SYS.XMLTYPE( XMLSchema "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd" Element "PurchaseOrder") STORAGE OBJECT-RELATIONAL TYPE "PurchaseOrderType1668_T"
If you provide a value for attribute xdb:defaultTable
, then the XMLType
table is created with that name. Otherwise it is created with an internally generated name.
Any text specified using attributes xdb:tableProps
and xdb:columnProps
is appended to the generated CREATE TABLE
statement.
The names of any SQL tables, object, and attributes generated by XML schema registration are case sensitive. For instance, in Example 7-3, a table named PurchaseOrder1669_TAB
is created automatically during registration of the XML schema. Since this table name was derived from the element name, PurchaseOrder
, the table name is also mixed case. This means that you must refer to this table in SQL code by using a quoted identifier: "
PurchaseOrder1669_TAB
"
. Failure to do so results in an object-not-found error, such as ORA-00942: table or view does not exist
.
The following database objects are dependent on registered XML schemas:
Tables or views that have an XMLType
column that conforms to an element in an XML schema.
Other XML schemas that include or import a given XML schema as part of their definition.
Cursors that reference an XML schema. This includes references within functions of package DBMS_XMLGEN
. Such cursors are purely transient objects.
Example 7-6 shows how to use DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.registerSchema
to obtain a list of all XML schemas registered with Oracle XML DB. You can also examine USER_XML_SCHEMAS
, ALL_XML_SCHEMAS
, USER_XML_TABLES
, and ALL_XML_TABLES
.
Example 7-6 Data Dictionary Table for Registered Schemas
DESCRIBE DBA_XML_SCHEMAS Name Null? Type ------------ ----- ----------------------- OWNER VARCHAR2(30) SCHEMA_URL VARCHAR2(700) LOCAL VARCHAR2(3) SCHEMA XMLTYPE(XMLSchema "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/XDBSchema.xsd" Element "schema") INT_OBJNAME VARCHAR2(4000) QUAL_SCHEMA_URL VARCHAR2(767) HIER_TYPE VARCHAR2(11) BINARY VARCHAR2(3) SCHEMA_ID RAW(16) HIDDEN VARCHAR2(3) SELECT OWNER, LOCAL, SCHEMA_URL FROM DBA_XML_SCHEMAS; OWNER LOC SCHEMA_URL ----- --- ---------------------- XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/XDBSchema.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/XDBResource.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/acl.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/dav.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/XDBStandard.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/log/xdblog.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/log/ftplog.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/log/httplog.xsd XDB NO http://www.w3.org/2001/xml.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/XDBFolderListing.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/stats.xsd XDB NO http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/xdbconfig.xsd SCOTT YES http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd 13 rows selected. DESCRIBE DBA_XML_TABLES Name Null? Type ------------ ----- ----------------------- OWNER VARCHAR2(30) TABLE_NAME VARCHAR2(30) XMLSCHEMA VARCHAR2(700) SCHEMA_OWNER VARCHAR2(30) ELEMENT_NAME VARCHAR2(2000) STORAGE_TYPE VARCHAR2(17) ANYSCHEMA VARCHAR2(3) NONSCHEMA VARCHAR2(3) SELECT TABLE_NAME FROM DBA_XML_TABLES WHERE XMLSCHEMA = 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd'; TABLE_NAME --------------------- PurchaseOrder1669_TAB 1 row selected.
You can delete a registered XML schema by using procedure DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.
deleteSchema
. This does the following, by default:
Checks that the current user has the appropriate privileges to delete the resource corresponding to the XML schema within Oracle XML DB Repository. You can control which users can delete which XML schemas, by setting the appropriate ACLs on the XML schema resources.
Checks whether there are any tables dependent on the XML schema to be deleted. If so, raises an error and cancels the deletion. This check is not performed if option delete_invalidate
or delete_cascade_force
is used; in that case, no error is raised.
Removes the XML schema document from the Oracle XML DB Repository (folder /sys/schemas
).
Removes the XML schema document from DBA_XML_SCHEMAS
, unless it was registered for use with binary XML instances and neither delete_invalidate
nor delete_cascade_force
is used.
Drops the default table, if either delete_cascade
or delete_cascade_force
is used. Raises an error if delete_cascade_force
is specified and there are instances in other tables that are also dependent on the XML schema.
The following values are available for option DELETE_OPTION
of procedure DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.deleteSchema
:
DELETE_RESTRICT
– Raise an error and cancel deletion if dependencies are detected. This is the default behavior.
DELETE_INVALIDATE
– Do not raise an error if dependencies are detected. Instead, mark each of the dependencies as being invalid. If the XML schema was registered for use with binary XML, do not remove it from DBA_XMLSCHEMAS
.
DELETE_CASCADE
– Drop all types and default tables that were generated during XML schema registration. Raise an error if there are instances that depend upon the XML schema that are stored in tables other than the default table. However, do not raise an error for any such instances that are stored in XMLType
columns that were created using ANY_SCHEMA
. If the XML schema was registered for use with binary XML, do not remove it from DBA_XMLSCHEMAS
.
DELETE_CASCADE_FORCE
– Drop all types and default tables that were generated during XML schema registration. Do not raise an error if there are instances that depend upon the XML schema that are stored in tables other than the default table. Instead, mark each of the dependencies as being invalid. Remove the XML schema from DBA_XMLSCHEMAS
.
Example 7-7 illustrates the use of DELETE_CASCADE_FORCE
.
Example 7-7 Deleting an XML Schema with DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.DELETESCHEMA
BEGIN
DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.deleteSchema(
SCHEMAURL => 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd',
DELETE_OPTION => DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.DELETE_CASCADE_FORCE);
END;
/
If an XML schema was registered for use with binary XML, it is not removed from DBA_XMLSCHEMAS
when you delete it using option DELETE_RESTRICT
(the default value) or DELETE_CASCADE
. As a consequence, although you can no longer use the XML schema to encode new XML instance documents, any existing documents in Oracle XML DB that reference the XML schema can still be decoded using it.
This remains the case, until you remove the XML schema from DBA_XMLSCHEMAS
using DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.
purgeSchema
. Oracle recommends that, in general, you use delete_restrict
or delete_cascade
. Instead of using DELETE_CASCADE_FORCE
, call DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.purgeSchema
when you are sure you no longer need the XML schema.
Procedure purgeSchema
removes the XML schema completely from Oracle XML DB; in particular, it removes it from DBA_XMLSCHEMAS
. Before you use DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.purgeSchema
, be sure that you have transformed all existing XML documents that reference the XML schema to be purged, so they reference a different XML schema or no XML schema. Otherwise, it will be impossible to decode them after the purge.
Table 7-1 lists some of the XMLType
methods that are useful for working with XML schemas.
Table 7-1 XMLType Methods Related to XML Schema
XML schemas can be registered as local or global:
A local xml schema is, by default, visible only to its owner.
A global xml schema is, by default, visible and usable by all database users.
When you register an XML schema, PL/SQL package DBMS_XMLSCHEMA
adds a corresponding resource to Oracle XML DB Repository. The XML schema URL determines the path name of the XML schema resource in the repository (and it is associated with the SCHEMAURL
parameter of registerSchema
).
Note:
In Oracle Enterprise Manager, local and global registered XML schemas are referred to as private and public, respectively.By default, an XML schema belongs to you after you register it with Oracle XML DB. A reference to the XML schema document is stored in Oracle XML DB Repository. Such XML schemas are referred to as local. By default, they are usable only by you, the owner. In Oracle XML DB, local XML schema resources are created under folder /sys/schemas/
username
. The rest of the repository path name is derived from the schema URL.
Example 7-8 Registering a Local XML Schema
BEGIN
DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.registerSchema(
SCHEMAURL => 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd',
SCHEMADOC => bfilename('XMLDIR','purchaseOrder.xsd'),
LOCAL => TRUE,
GENTYPES => TRUE,
GENTABLES => FALSE,
CSID => nls_charset_id('AL32UTF8'));
END;
/
If this local XML schema is registered by user QUINE
, it is given this path name:
/sys/schemas/QUINE/xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd
Database users need appropriate permissions and Access Control Lists (ACLs) to create a resource with this path name, in order to register the XML schema as a local XML schema.
Note:
Typically, only the owner of the XML schema can use it to defineXMLType
tables, columns, or views, validate documents, and so on. However, Oracle XML DB supports fully qualified XML schema URLs. For example: http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/schemas/QUINE/xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd
. Privileged users can use such an extended URL to specify XML schemas belonging to other users.In contrast to local schemas, a privileged user can register an XML schema as global by specifying an argument in the DBMS_XMLSCHEMA
registration function. Global XML schemas are visible to all users. They are stored under folder /sys/schemas/PUBLIC/
in Oracle XML DB Repository.
Note:
Access to folder/sys/schemas/PUBLIC
is controlled by access control lists (ACLs). By default, this folder is writable only by a database administrator. You need write privileges on this folder to register global XML schemas. Role XDBADMIN
provides write access to this folder, assuming that it is protected by the default ACLs. See Chapter 27, "Access Control Lists and Security Classes".You can register a local schema with the same URL as an existing global schema. A local schema always shadows (hides) any global schema with the same name (URL). Example 7-9 illustrates registration of a global schema.
Example 7-9 Registering a Global XML Schema
GRANT XDBADMIN TO QUINE; Grant succeeded. CONNECT quine Enter password: password Connected. BEGIN DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.registerSchema( SCHEMAURL => 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd', SCHEMADOC => bfilename('XMLDIR','purchaseOrder.xsd'), LOCAL => FALSE, GENTYPES => TRUE, GENTABLES => FALSE, CSID => nls_charset_id('AL32UTF8')); END; /
If this global XML schema is registered by user QUINE
, it is given this path name:
/sys/schemas/PUBLIC/xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd
Database users need appropriate permissions (ACL access) to create this resource in order to register the XML schema as global.
Document Object Model (DOM) fidelity is the concept of retaining the structure of a retrieved XML document, compared to the original XML document, for DOM traversals. DOM fidelity is needed to ensure the accuracy and integrity of XML documents stored in Oracle XML DB.
See Also:
DOM fidelity means that all information in an XML document is preserved, except whitespace that is insignificant. With DOM fidelity, XML data retrieved from the database has the same information as before it was inserted into the database, with the single exception of insignificant whitespace. The term "DOM fidelity" is used because this kind of fidelity is particularly important for DOM traversals.
With binary XML storage of XML data, all of the significant information is encoded in the binary XML format, ensuring DOM fidelity. With structured storage of XML data, the elements and attributes declared in an XML schema are mapped to separate attributes in the corresponding SQL object types. However, the following information in XML instance documents is not stored in these object attributes:
Namespace declarations
Comments
Prefix information
Instead, Oracle XML DB uses a separate mechanism to keep track of this information; it is recorded as instance-level metadata.
In order to provide DOM fidelity for XML data stored object-relationally, Oracle XML DB maintains instance-level metadata. This metadata is tracked at the type level using the system-defined binary object attribute SYS_XDBPD$
. This object attribute is referred to as the positional descriptor, or PD for short. The PD is intended for Oracle XML DB internal use only. You should never directly access or manipulate column PD.
The positional descriptor stores all information that cannot be stored in any of the other object attributes. PD information is used to ensure the DOM fidelity of all XML documents stored in Oracle XML DB. Examples of PD information include: ordering information, comments, processing instructions, and namespace prefixes.
If DOM fidelity is not required, you can suppress the use of SYS_XDBPD$
by setting attribute xdb:maintainDOM
to false
in the XML schema, at the type level.
Note:
For clarity, object attributeSYS_XDBPD$
is omitted in many examples in this book. However, it is always present as a positional descriptor (PD) column in all SQL object types that are generated by the XML schema registration process.
In general, Oracle recommends that you do not suppress the PD attribute, because the extra information, such as comments and processing instructions, could be lost if there is no PD column.
You can store your security objects in Oracle XML DB Repository as XMLType
instances. You can use any storage model for these instances: structured (object-relational storage), unstructured (CLOB
), or binary XML. These security objects also contain some strings that must be translated, which you can search for or display in various languages. The translations for these strings are also stored in the Oracle XML DB Repository, along with the original strings, because they must be associated with the original document. You can retrieve and operate on these strings, depending on your language settings.
Note:
XML schemas stored object-relationally are not translatable.This section describes the changes that are required to be made to the XML schema and the XML instance document to make it translatable.
Attribute xdb:translate
must be specified in the XML schema for each element that is to be translated. The following restrictions apply to attribute xdb:translate
.
Attribute xdb:translate
can be specified only on complexType
elements that have simpleContent
. Here, simpleContent
must be an extension or a restriction of type string
. However, if a complexType
element has the xdb:translate
flag set, then none of its descendants can have this flag set.
Attribute xdb:translate
can be set only on a single-valued element; that is, elements that have exactly one translation. For these elements, the value of maxoccurs
must be 0
or 1
. If you want to set this attribute on a multiple-valued element, the element must have an ID
attribute, which uniquely identifies the element.
During XML schema registration, procedure registerSchema
checks whether the XML schema satisfies these restrictions.
The following translation language attributes are supported:
xml:lang
: For an instance document associated with an XML schema that supports translations, you must specify the translation language. You can do this by annotating each translation with attribute xml:lang
. The allowed values of the xml:lang
attribute are the language identifiers identified by IETF RFC 3066.
xdb:srclang
: For multiple-valued elements, that is, elements that can have multiple translations, only one translation can be used as the source language translation. That translation is specified by attribute xdb:srclang
. This is the default translation, which is returned when the session language is not specified.
In this section, we use the translation-specifying XML schema attributes to make elements in a sample document translatable. Example 7-10 shows an XML schema that defines security class documents.
Example 7-10 XML Schema Defining Security-Class Documents
<schema xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xdbsc="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:xdb="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb.xsd" targetNamespace="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" elementFormDefault="qualified" version="1.0"> <annotation> <documentation> This XML schema describes the structure of Security Class documents. </documentation> </annotation> <element name="securityClass" xdb:defaultTable=""> <complexType> <sequence> <element name="name" type="string"/> <element name="title" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <element name="inherits-from" type="QName" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <element name="privlist" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <complexType> <choice minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element ref="xdbsc:privilege"/> <element ref="xdbsc:aggregatePrivilege"/> </choice> </complexType> </element> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information for a security class in general e.g. reason for creation --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="targetNamespace" type="anyURI" use="required"/> <!-- all privileges in this security class are under this target namespace --> </complexType> </element> <element name="aggregatePrivilege"> <complexType> <sequence> <element name="title" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <sequence maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element name="privilegeRef"> <complexType> <attribute name="name" type="QName" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information an aggregate privilege e.g. translations --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="name" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <element name="privilege"> <complexType> <sequence minOccurs="0"> <element name="title" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <sequence minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element name="columnRef"> <complexType> <attribute name="schema" type="string" use="required"/> <attribute name="table" type="string" use="required"/> <attribute name="column" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information for a privilege e.g. translations --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="name" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> </schema>
Example 7-11 shows the security class document that is associated with the XML schema of Example 7-10.
Example 7-11 Security Class Document Associated with the XML Schema
<securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps" targetNamespace="xmlns.oracle.com/example"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title> Security Class Example </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> <privlist> <privilege name="privilege1"/> <aggregatePrivilege name="iStorePOApprover"> <title> iStore Purchase Order Approver </title> <privilegeRef name="is:privilege1"/> <privilegeRef name="oa:submitPO"/> <privilegeRef name="oa:privilege3"/> </aggregatePrivilege> <privilege name="privilege2"> <title> secondary privilege </title> <columnRef schema="APPS" table="PurchaseOrder" column="POId"/> <columnRef schema="APPS" table="PurchaseOrder" column="Amount"/> </privilege> </privlist> </securityClass>
To make the security class or title translatable, set xdb:translate
to true
. This is a single-valued element, because as xdb:maxOccurs
is 1
. Example 7-12 describes the new XML schema, where attribute xdb:translate
is set to true
.
Example 7-12 XML Schema with Attribute xdb:translate Set to True for a Single-Valued Element
<schema xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xdbsc="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:xdb="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb.xsd" targetNamespace="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" elementFormDefault="qualified" version="1.0"> <xs:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" schemaLocation="http://www.w3.org/2001/xml.xsd"/> <xs:import namespace-"http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb" schemaLocation="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/xmltr.xsd"/> <annotation> <documentation> This XML schema describes the structure of Security Class documents. </documentation> </annotation> <element name="securityClass" xdb:defaultTable=""> <complexType> <sequence> <element name="name" type="string"/> <element ref="titleref" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:maxOccurs="1" xdb:translate="true"/> <element name="inherits-from" type="QName" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <element name="privlist" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:maxOccurs="1"> <complexType> <choice minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element ref="xdbsc:privilege"/> <element ref="xdbsc:aggregatePrivilege"/> </choice> </complexType> </element> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information for a security class in general e.g. reason for creation --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="targetNamespace" type="anyURI" use="required"/> <!-- all privileges in this security class are under this target namespace --> </complexType> </element> <element name="aggregatePrivilege"> <complexType> <sequence> <element name="title" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <sequence maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element name="privilegeRef"> <complexType> <attribute name="name" type="QName" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information an aggregate privilege e.g. translations --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="name" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <element name="privilege"> <complexType> <sequence minOccurs="0"> <element name="title" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <sequence minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element name="columnRef"> <complexType> <attribute name="schema" type="string" use="required"/> <attribute name="table" type="string" use="required"/> <attribute name="column" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information for a privilege e.g. translations --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="name" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <element name="titleref"> <complexType> <simpleContent> <extension base="xs:string"> <attribute ref="xml:lang"/> <attribute ref="xdb:srclang"/> </extension> </simpleContent> </complexType> </element> </schema>
Example 7-13 shows the security class document after the translation.
Example 7-13 Security Class Document After Translation
<securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title xml:lang="en" xdb:srclang="true"> Security Class Example </title> <title xml:lang="es"> Security Class Example - Spanish </title> <title xml:lang="fr"> Security Class Example - French </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> <privlist> <privilege name="privilege1"/> <aggregatePrivilege name="iStorePOApprover"> <title> iStore Purchase Order Approver </title> <privilegeRef name="is:privilege1"/> <privilegeRef name="oa:submitPO"/> <privilegeRef name="oa:privilege3"/> </aggregatePrivilege> <privilege name="privilege2"> <title> secondary privilege </title> <columnRef schema="APPS" table="PurchaseOrder" column="POId"/> <columnRef schema="APPS" table="PurchaseOrder" column="Amount"/> </privilege> </privlist> </securityClass>
To make the security class or title translatable in the case of a multi-valued element, set xdb:maxOccurs
to unbounded
. However, xdb:translate
cannot be set to true
for a multiple-valued element, unless there is an identifier attribute that uniquely identifies each element. Example 7-14 describes the new XML schema, where an identifier attribute, id
, is set for the title
element.
Example 7-14 XML Schema with Attribute xdb:translate Set to True for a Multi-Valued Element
<schema xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xdbsc="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:xdb="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb.xsd" targetNamespace="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" elementFormDefault="qualified" version="1.0"> <xs:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" schemaLocation="http://www.w3.org/2001/xml.xsd"/> <xs:import namespace-"http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb" schemaLocation="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/xmltr.xsd"/> <annotation> <documentation> This XML schema describes the structure of Security Class documents. </documentation> </annotation> <element name="securityClass" xdb:defaultTable=""> <complexType> <sequence> <element name="name" type="string"/> <element name="title" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:maxOccurs="1"/> <element name="inherits-from" type="QName" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> <element name="privlist" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:maxOccurs="1"> <complexType> <choice minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element ref="xdbsc:privilege"/> <element ref="xdbsc:aggregatePrivilege"/> </choice> </complexType> </element> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information for a security class in general e.g. reason for creation --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="targetNamespace" type="anyURI" use="required"/> <!-- all privileges in this security class are under this target namespace --> </complexType> </element> <element name="aggregatePrivilege"> <complexType> <sequence> <element name="titleref" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:maxoccurs="unbounded" xdb:translate="true"/> <sequence maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element name="privilegeRef"> <complexType> <attribute name="name" type="QName" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information an aggregate privilege e.g. translations --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="name" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <element name="privilege"> <complexType> <sequence minOccurs="0"> <element name="titleref" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:maxoccurs="unbounded" xdb:translate="true"/> <sequence minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"> <element name="columnRef"> <complexType> <attribute name="schema" type="string" use="required"/> <attribute name="table" type="string" use="required"/> <attribute name="column" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <!-- this "any" contains all application specific information for a privilege e.g. translations --> <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/> </sequence> <attribute name="name" type="string" use="required"/> </complexType> </element> <element name="titleref"> <complexType> <simpleContent> <extension base="xs:string"> <attribute ref="xml:lang"/> <attribute ref="xdb:srclang"/> <attribute name="id" type="integer"/> </extension> </simpleContent> </complexType> </element> </schema>
Example 7-15 shows the security class document associated with the XML schema in Example 7-14.
Example 7-15 Security Class Document for an XML Schema with Multiple-Valued Elements
<securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title> Security Class Example </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> <privlist> <privilege name="privilege1"/> <aggregatePrivilege name="iStorePOApprover"> <title> iStore Purchase Order Approver </title> <privilegeRef name="is:privilege1"/> <privilegeRef name="oa:submitPO"/> <privilegeRef name="oa:privilege3"/> </aggregatePrivilege> <privilege name="privilege2"> <title id="2" xml:lang="en" xdb:srclang="true"> secondary privilege - english </title> <title id="1" xml:lang="fr"> primary privilege - french </title> <title id="1" xml:lang="en" xdb:srclang="true"> primary privilege - english </title> <columnRef schema="APPS" table="PurchaseOrder" column="POId"/> <columnRef schema="APPS" table="PurchaseOrder" column="Amount"/> </privilege> </privlist> </securityClass>
You can perform the following operations on translated documents:
Insert: You can insert a document into Oracle XML DB, if it conforms to an XML schema that supports translations. For the document that contains translations, you can either provide the language information or use the session language translation.
When the document does not contain the language information and the xml:lang
attribute is not set, the session language is used for translation. Example 7-16 describes a security class document with a session language in Japanese. Attribute xml:lang
is set to session language
, and attribute xdb:srclang
is set to true
.
Example 7-16 Inserting a Document with No Language Information
<securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps" targetNamespace="xmlns.oracle.com/example"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title> Security Class Example </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> </securityClass>
Example 7-17 shows the security class document after it is inserted in Oracle XML DB.
Example 7-17 Security Class Document After Insertion
<securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps" targetNamespace="xmlns.oracle.com/example"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title xml:lang="jp" xdb:srclang="true"> Security Class Example </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> </securityClass>
When you provide the language information, you set attribute xml:lang
by either explicitly marking a translation as xdb:srclang=true
or using the session language translation in attribute xdb:srclang
. If you do neither, then an arbitrary translation is picked, for which xdb:srclang
is set to true
.
Example 7-18 describes a security class document with a session language of Japanese.
Example 7-18 Inserting a Document with Language Information
<securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps" targetNamespace="xmlns.oracle.com/example"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title xml:lang="en"> Security Class Example </title> <title xml:lang="fr"> Security Class Example - FR </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> </securityClass>
Example 7-19 shows the security class document after it is inserted in Oracle XML DB.
Example 7-19 Security Class Document After Insertion
<securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps" targetNamespace="xmlns.oracle.com/example"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title xml:lang="en" xdb:srclang="true"> Security Class Example </title> <title xml:lang="fr"> Security Class Example - FR </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> </securityClass>
Query: If you query nodes that involve translated elements, the query displays the translation's default behavior. In order to specify that the translation's default behavior should be applied to the query result, you need to use the Oracle XPath function ora:translate
. This is the syntax of the function:
Nodeset translate(Nodeset parent, String childname, String childnsp)
Function ora:translate
returns a positive integer when the name of the parent node matches the name of the specified child node, and the xml:lang
value is same as the session language or the language for which xdb:srclang
is true
. In this syntax description, parent
is the parent node under which you want to search for the translated nodes, childname
is the name of the child node, and childnsp
is the namespace URL of the child node.
When SQL functions such as XMLQuery
are applied to translated documents, they return the session language translation, if present, or the source language translation, otherwise. For example, this query returns the session language translation:
SELECT XMLQuery('$x/securityClass/title' PASSING x.OBJECT_VALUE AS "x" RETURNING CONTENT) FROM some_table x;
This is the output of that query:
<title xml:lang="fr"> Security Class Example - FR </title>
To obtain the result in a particular language, specify it in the XPath expression.
SELECT XMLQuery('$x/securityClass/title[@xml:lang="en"]' PASSING x.OBJECT_VALUE AS "x" RETURNING CONTENT) FROM some_table x;
This is the output of that query:
<title xml:lang="en" xdb:srclang="true"> Security Class Example </title>
Because you can store translated documents only as text (CLOB
) or binary XML, only functional evaluation and queries with a function-based index, an XMLIndex
index, or a CONTEXT
index are possible. For XMLIndex
index and CONTEXT
index queries, if the document has a session language translation, then that is returned, otherwise the source language translation is returned. However, for queries with a function-based index, you need to create an index with an explicit xml:lang
predicate for every language for which you want to use the index.
When you retrieve the complete document using SQL functions such as XMLSerialize
and XDBURIType
, only the translations that match the session language translations are returned. For protocols, you can set your language preferences, and the document is returned in that language only.
The following PL/SQL procedures and functions support XML translations:
DBMS_XMLTRANSLATIONS.translateXML
: Translate a document to the specified language. If the specified language translation is present, it is returned, otherwise, the source language translation is returned.
For example, if you write TRANSLATEXML (doc,'fr')
to specify French as the translation language for the Example 7-19, it returns the following code and ignores all other translations:
securityClass xmlns="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/security.xsd" xmlns:is="xmlns.oracle.com/iStore" xmlns:oa="xmlns.oracle.com/OracleApps" targetNamespace="xmlns.oracle.com/example"> <name> securityClassExample </name> <title xml:lang="fr"> Security Class Example - FR </title> <inherits-from>is:iStorePurchaseOrder</inherits-from> </securityClass>
DBMS_XMLTRANSLATIONS.enableTranslation
, DBMS_XMLTRANSLATIONS.disableTranslation
: Enable or disable translations at the session level. Queries work on the base document if the translation is disabled and on the translated document if it is enabled.
DBMS_XMLTRANSLATIONS.getBaseDocument
: Returns the entire document, with all of the translations.
Update: You can use Oracle SQL function updateXML
to update the translated nodes. However, an error is raised if you try to update a translated node without specifying the translation language. The following PL/SQL procedures support update operations on translated documents:
DBMS_XMLTRANSLATIONS.updateTranslation
: This function updates the translation at a specified xpath
in a particular language. If the translation in a particular language is not present, then it is inserted.
DBMS_XMLTRANSLATIONS.setSourceLang
: This procedure sets the source language at a specified xpath to the specified language.
Using Oracle XML DB, you can create XMLType
tables and columns that are constrained to a global element defined by a registered XML schema. After an XMLType
column has been constrained to a particular element and a particular XML schema, it can contain only documents that are compliant with the schema definition of that element. You constrain an XMLType
table column to a particular element and XML schema by adding appropriate XMLSCHEMA
and ELEMENT
clauses to the CREATE TABLE
operation.
Figure 7-1 through Figure 7-4 show the syntax for creating an XMLType
table.
See Also:
Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for the complete description ofCREATE TABLE
, including syntax elements, such as object_properties, that are referrred to here but not detailed here.Note:
To create anXMLType
table in a different database schema from your own, you must have not only privilege CREATE ANY TABLE
but also privilege CREATE ANY INDEX
. This is because a unique index is created on column OBJECT_ID
when you create the table. Column OBJECT_ID
stores a system-generated object identifier.Figure 7-1 Creating an XMLType Table – CREATE TABLE
Figure 7-2 Creating an XMLType Table – XMLType_table
Figure 7-3 Creating an XMLType Table – table_properties
Figure 7-4 Creating an XMLType Table – XMLType_virtual_columns
A subset of the XPointer notation can also be used to provide a single URL that contains the XML schema location and element name. See also Chapter 4, "XMLType Operations".
Example 7-20 shows two CREATE TABLE
statements. The first creates XMLType
table purchaseorder_as_table
. The second creates relational table purchaseorder_as_column
, which has XMLType
column xml_document
. In each table, the XMLType
instance is constrained to the PurchaseOrder
element that is defined by the XML schema registered with URL http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd
.
Example 7-20 Creating XML Schema-Based XMLType Tables and Columns
CREATE TABLE purchaseorder_as_table OF XMLType XMLSCHEMA "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd" ELEMENT "PurchaseOrder"; CREATE TABLE purchaseorder_as_column (id NUMBER, xml_document XMLType) XMLTYPE COLUMN xml_document ELEMENT "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd#PurchaseOrder";
There are two ways to specify XMLSchema
and Element
:
as separate clauses, XMLSchema
and Element
using only the Element
clause with an XPointer notation
The data associated with an XMLType
table or column that is constrained to an XML schema can be stored in different ways:
Decomposed and stored object-relationally (structured storage)
Stored as text, using a single CLOB
column (unstructured storage)
Stored as binary XML, using a single binary-XML column (binary XML storage)
When you create a table that stores XML instance documents that reference an XML schema, you can specify storage options to use. The default storage model is structured storage. To use binary XML or unstructured storage instead, you use the STORE AS
clause in the CREATE TABLE
statement.
This section describes what you need to know about specifying storage options for XML schema-based data.
You use STORE AS BINARY_XML
during table creation to specify binary XML storage. If you do this, and you specify an XML schema that the XML documents must conform to, then you can only use that XML schema to create XMLType
tables and columns that are stored as binary XML; you cannot use the same XML schema to create XMLType
tables and columns that are stored object-relationally or as CLOB
instances.
The converse is also true: If you use a storage model other than binary XML for the registered XML schema, then you can only use that XML schema to create XMLType
tables and columns that are not stored object-relationally or as CLOB
instances.
Binary XML storage offers a great deal of flexibility for XML data, especially concerning the use of XML schemas. Binary XML encodes XML data differently, depending upon whether or not an XML schema is used for the encoding, and it can encode the same data differently using different XML schemas.
When an XML schema is taken into account for encoding binary XML data, the XML Schema data types are mapped to encoded types for storage. Alternatively, you can encode XML data, whether or not it references an XML schema, as non-schema-based binary XML. In that case, any referenced XML schema is ignored, and there is no encoding of XML Schema data types.
When you create an XMLType
table or column and you specify binary XML storage, you can also specify how to encode the column or table to make use of XML schemas. There are three possibilities to choose from:
Encode the column or table data as non-schema-based binary XML. The XML data stored in the column can nevertheless conform to an XML schema, but it need not. Any referenced XML schema is ignored for encoding purposes, and documents are not automatically validated when they are inserted or updated.
You can nevertheless explicitly validate an XML schema-based document that is encoded as non-schema-based binary XML. This represents an important use case: situations where you do not want to tie documents too closely to a particular XML schema, because you might change it or delete it.
Encode the column or table data to conform to a single XML schema. All rows (documents) must conform to the same XML schema. You can nevertheless specify, as an option, that non-schema-based documents can also be stored in the same column.
Encode the column or table data to conform to whatever XML schema it references Each row (document) can reference any XML schema, and that XML schema is used to encode that particular XML document. In this case also, you can specify, as an option, that non-schema-based documents can also be stored in the same column.
Note that you can use multiple versions of the same XML schema in this way: store documents that conform to different versions; each is encoded according to the XML schema that it references.
You can specify that any XML schema can be used for encoding by using option ALLOW ANYSCHEMA
when you create the table.
Note:
If you use option ALLOW ANYSCHEMA
, then any XML schema referenced by your instance documents is used only for validation; it is not used at query time. Queries of your data treat it as if it were non XML schema-based data.
Oracle recommends that you do not use option ALLOW ANYSCHEMA
if you anticipate using copy-based XML schema evolution (see "Using Copy-Based Schema Evolution"). If you use this option, it is impossible to determine which rows (documents) might conform to the XML schema that is evolved. Conforming rows are not transformed during copy-based evolution, and afterward they are not decodable.
You can specify, for tables and columns that use XML schema-based encodings, that they can accept also non-schema-based documents by using option ALLOW NONSCHEMA
. In the absence of keyword XMLSCHEMA
, encoding is for non-schema-based documents. In the absence of the keywords ALLOW NONSCHEMA
but the presence of keyword XMLSCHEMA
, encoding is for the single XML schema specified. In the absence of the keywords ALLOW NONSCHEMA
but the presence of the keywords ALLOW ANYSCHEMA
, encoding is for any XML schema that is referenced.
An error is raised if you try to insert an XML document into an XMLType
table or column that does not correspond to the document.
The various possibilities are summarized in Table 7-2.
Table 7-2 CREATE TABLE Encoding Options for Binary XML
Storage Options | Encoding Effect |
---|---|
STORE AS BINARY XML |
Encodes all documents using the non-schema-based encoding. |
STORE AS BINARY XML XMLSCHEMA ... |
Encodes all documents using an encoding based on the referenced XML schema. Trying to insert or update a document that does not conform to the XML schema raises an error. |
STORE AS BINARY XML XMLSCHEMA ... ALLOW NONSCHEMA |
Encodes all XML schema-based documents using an encoding based on the referenced XML schema. Encodes all non-schema-based documents using the non-schema-based encoding. Trying to insert or update an XML schema-based document that does not conform to the referenced XML schema raises an error. |
STORE AS BINARY XML ALLOW ANYSCHEMA |
Encodes all XML schema-based documents using an encoding based on the XML schema referenced by the document. Trying to insert or update a document that does not reference a registered XML schema or that does not conform to the XML schema it references raises an error. |
STORE AS BINARY XML ALLOW ANYSCHEMA ALLOW NONSCHEMA |
Encodes all XML schema-based documents using an encoding based on the XML schema referenced by the document. Encodes all non-schema-based documents using the non-schema-based encoding. Trying to insert or update an XML schema-based document that does not conform to the registered XML schema it references raises an error. |
Note:
If you useCREATE TABLE
with ALLOW NONSCHEMA
but not ALLOW ANYSCHEMA
, then all documents, even XML schema-based documents, are encoded using the non-schema-based encoding. If you later use ALTER TABLE
with ALLOW ANYSCHEMA
on the same table, this has no effect on the encoding of documents that were stored prior to the ALTER TABLE
operation — all such documents continue to be encoded using the non-schema-based encoding, regardless of whether they reference an XML schema. Only XML schema-based documents that you insert in the table after the ALTER TABLE
operation are encoded using XML schema-based encodings.You use STORE AS CLOB
during table creation to specify unstructured storage. In this case, an entire XML document is stored in a single CLOB
column.
Example 7-21 shows how to create an XMLType
table and a table with an XMLType
column, where the contents of the XMLType
are constrained to a global element defined by a registered XML schema, and the contents of the XMLType
are stored using a single CLOB
column.
Example 7-21 Specifying CLOB Storage for Schema-Based XMLType Tables and Columns
CREATE TABLE purchaseorder_as_table OF XMLType XMLTYPE STORE AS CLOB XMLSCHEMA "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd" ELEMENT "PurchaseOrder"; CREATE TABLE purchaseorder_as_column (id NUMBER, xml_document XMLType) XMLTYPE COLUMN xml_document STORE AS CLOB XMLSCHEMA "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd" ELEMENT "PurchaseOrder";
You can add LOB storage parameters to the STORE AS CLOB
clause.
Structured storage is the default XMLType
storage model. With structured storage, collections are mapped into SQL varray values. An XML collection is any element that has maxOccurs
> 1, allowing it to appear multiple times. By default, the entire contents of such a varray is stored as a set of rows in an ordered collection table (OCT).
You can override the default storage options. Example 7-22 illustrates this. First, it stores the LineItem
collection varray not as a table, but as a LOB. Second, it specifies that the tablespace to use for storing the Notes
element is USERS
.
Example 7-22 Specifying Structured Storage Options for Schema-Based XMLType Tables and Columns
CREATE TABLE purchaseorder_as_table OF XMLType (UNIQUE ("XMLDATA"."Reference"), FOREIGN KEY ("XMLDATA"."User") REFERENCES hr.employees (email)) ELEMENT "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd#PurchaseOrder" VARRAY "XMLDATA"."LineItems"."LineItem" STORE AS LOB lineitem_lob LOB ("XMLDATA"."Notes") STORE AS (TABLESPACE USERS ENABLE STORAGE IN ROW STORAGE(INITIAL 4K NEXT 32K)); CREATE TABLE purchaseorder_as_column ( id NUMBER, xml_document XMLType, UNIQUE (xml_document."XMLDATA"."Reference"), FOREIGN KEY (xml_document."XMLDATA"."User") REFERENCES hr.employees (email)) XMLTYPE COLUMN xml_document XMLSCHEMA "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd" ELEMENT "PurchaseOrder" VARRAY xml_document."XMLDATA"."LineItems"."LineItem" STORE AS LOB lineitem_lob LOB (xml_document."XMLDATA"."Notes") STORE AS (TABLESPACE USERS ENABLE STORAGE IN ROW STORAGE(INITIAL 4K NEXT 32K));
Note:
In releases prior to Oracle Database 11gR2, the default behavior forCREATE TABLE
was to store a collection using a varray stored as a LOB, not a varray stored as a table.As a convenience, if you need to specify that all varrays in an XMLType
table or column are to be stored as LOBs, or all are to be stored as tables, then you can use the syntax clause STORE ALL VARRAYS AS
, followed by LOBS
or TABLES
, respectively. This is a convenient alternative to using multiple VARRAY
...STORE AS
clauses, one for each collection. Example 7-23 illustrates this.
Example 7-23 Using STORE ALL VARRAYS AS
CREATE TABLE purchaseorder_as_table OF XMLType (UNIQUE ("XMLDATA"."Reference"),
FOREIGN KEY ("XMLDATA"."User") REFERENCES hr.employees (email))
ELEMENT
"http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd#PurchaseOrder"
STORE ALL VARRAYS AS LOBS;
The storage method specified using STORE ALL VARRAYS AS
overrides any storage method specified using xdb:storeVarrayAsTable
in the corresponding XML schema.
See Also:
"Controlling How Collections Are Stored for Object-Relational XMLType Storage" for information about collection storage using default tables
Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for information about using STORE ALL VARRAYS AS LOBS
When you store XML data using structured storage, typical relational constraints can be specified for elements and attributes that occur only once in an XML document. Example 7-22 shows how to use object-relational notation to define a unique constraint and a foreign key constraint when creating the table.
It is not possible to define constraints for XMLType
tables and columns that make use of unstructured storage.
See Also:
"Partitioning or Constraining Binary XML Data using Virtual Columns" for how to define constraints on XML data stored as binary XML
"Adding Unique Constraints to the Parent Element of an Attribute"
You can annotate XML schemas to influence the objects and tables that are generated by the XML schema registration process. This means that you add Oracle-specific attributes to complexType
, element
, and attribute
definitions that are declared by the XML schema.
Most XML attributes used by Oracle XML DB belong to the namespace http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb
. XML attributes used for encoding XML data as binary XML belong to the namespace http://xmlns.oracle.com/2004/CSX
. To simplify the process of annotating an XML schema, Oracle recommends that you declare namespace prefixes in the root element of the XML schema.
Common reasons for wanting to annotate an XML schema include the following:
To ensures that the names of the tables, objects, and object attributes created by registerSchema
for structured storage of XML data are well-known names, compliant with any application-naming standards. Set GENTYPES
or GENTABLES
to TRUE
for this.
To map between the XML schema and existing objects and tables within the database. Set GENTYPES
or GENTABLES
to FALSE
for this.
To prevent the generation of mixed-case names that require the use of quoted identifiers when working directly with SQL.
To allow XPath rewrite for object-relational storage in the case of document-correlated recursive XPath queries. This applies to certain applications of SQL/XML access and query functions whose XQuery-expression argument targets recursive XML data.
The most commonly used XML schema annotations are the following:
xdb:defaultTable
– Name of the default table generated for each global element when parameter GENTABLES
is FALSE
. Setting this to the empty string, ""
, prevents a default table from being generated for the element in question.
xdb:SQLName
– Name of the SQL object attribute that corresponds to each element or attribute defined in the XML schema.
xdb:SQLType
– For complexType
definitions, the corresponding object type. For simpleType
definitions, SQLType
is used to override the default mapping between XML schema data types and SQL data types. A common use of SQLType
is to define when unbounded strings should be stored as CLOB
values, rather than as VARCHAR(4000) CHAR
values (the default). Note: You cannot use data type NCHAR
, NVARCHAR
, or NCLOB
as the value of a SQLType
annotation.
xdb:SQLCollType
– Used to specify the varray type that manages a collection of elements.
xdb:maintainDOM
– Used to determine whether or not DOM fidelity should be maintained for a given complexType
definition
xdb:storeVarrayAsTable
– Specified in the root element of the XML schema. Used to force all collections to be stored as ordered collection tables (OCTs). An OCT is created for each element that is specified with maxOccurs > 1
. The OCTs are created with system-generated names. The default value of storeVarrayAsTable
is true
.
You need not specify values for any of these attributes. Oracle XML DB provides appropriate values by default during the XML schema registration process. However, if you are using structured storage, then Oracle recommends that you specify the names of at least the top-level SQL types, so that you can reference them later.
Example 7-24 shows a partial listing of the XML schema in Example 7-1, modified to include some of the most important Oracle XML DB annotations.
Example 7-24 Using Common Schema Annotations
<xs:schema targetNamespace="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder" xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xdb="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb" xmlns:po="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder" version="1.0" xdb:storeVarrayAsTable="true"> <xs:element name="PurchaseOrder" type="po:PurchaseOrderType" xdb:defaultTable="PURCHASEORDER"/> <xs:complexType name="PurchaseOrderType" xdb:SQLType="PURCHASEORDER_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="Reference" type="po:ReferenceType" minOccurs="1" xdb:SQLName="REFERENCE"/> <xs:element name="Actions" type="po:ActionsType" xdb:SQLName="ACTION_COLLECTION"/> <xs:element name="Reject" type="po:RejectionType" minOccurs="0"/> <xs:element name="Requestor" type="po:RequestorType"/> <xs:element name="User" type="po:UserType" minOccurs="1" xdb:SQLName="EMAIL"/> <xs:element name="CostCenter" type="po:CostCenterType"/> <xs:element name="ShippingInstructions" type="po:ShippingInstructionsType"/> <xs:element name="SpecialInstructions" type="po:SpecialInstructionsType"/> <xs:element name="LineItems" type="po:LineItemsType" xdb:SQLName="LINEITEM_COLLECTION"/> <xs:element name="Notes" type="po:NotesType" xdb:SQLType="CLOB"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="LineItemsType" xdb:SQLType="LINEITEMS_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="LineItem" type="po:LineItemType" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:SQLCollType="LINEITEM_V" xdb:SQLName="LINEITEM_VARRAY"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="LineItemType" xdb:SQLType="LINEITEM_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="Description" type="po:DescriptionType"/> <xs:element name="Part" type="po:PartType"/> </xs:sequence> <xs:attribute name="ItemNumber" type="xs:integer"/> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="PartType" xdb:SQLType="PART_T" xdb:maintainDOM="false"> <xs:attribute name="Id"> <xs:simpleType> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:minLength value="10"/> <xs:maxLength value="14"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> </xs:attribute> <xs:attribute name="Quantity" type="po:moneyType"/> <xs:attribute name="UnitPrice" type="po:quantityType"/> </xs:complexType> </xs:schema>
The schema
element includes the declaration of the xdb
namespace. It also includes the annotation xdb:storeVarrayAsTable = "true"
(which is the default value). This causes all collections within the XML schema to be managed using ordered collection tables (OCTs).
The definition of global element PurchaseOrder
includes a defaultTable
annotation that specifies that the name of the default table associated with this element is purchaseorder
.
The definition of global complex type PurchaseOrderType
includes a SQLType
annotation that specifies that the generated SQL object type is named purchaseorder_t
. Within the definition of this type, the following annotations are used:
The definition of element Reference
includes a SQLName
annotation that specifies that the SQL attribute corresponding to XML element Reference
is named reference
.
The definition of element Actions
includes a SQLName
annotation that specifies that the SQL attribute corresponding to XML element Actions
is named action_collection
.
The definition of element USER
includes a SQLName
annotation that specifies that the SQL attribute corresponding to XML element User
is named email
.
The definition of element LineItems
includes a SQLName
annotation that specifies that the SQL attribute corresponding to XML element LineItems
is named lineitem_collection
.
The definition of element Notes
includes a SQLType
annotation that specifies that the data type of the SQL attribute corresponding to XML element Notes
is CLOB
.
The definition of global complex type LineItemsType
includes a SQLType
annotation that specifies that the generated SQL object type is named lineitems_t
. Within the definition of this type, the following annotations are used:
The definition of element LineItem
includes a SQLName
annotation that specifies that the data type of the SQL attribute corresponding to XML element LineItems
is named lineitem_varray
, and a SQLCollName
annotation that specifies that the SQL object type that manages the collection is named lineitem_v
.
The definition of global complex type LineItemType
includes a SQLType
annotation that specifies that generated SQL object type is named lineitem_t
.
The definition of complex type PartType
includes a SQLType
annotation that specifies that the SQL object type is named part_t
. It also includes the annotation xdb:maintainDOM = "false"
, specifying that there is no need for Oracle XML DB to maintain DOM fidelity for elements based on this data type.
Example 7-25 shows some of the tables and objects that are created when the annotated XML schema is registered.
Example 7-25 Registering an Annotated XML Schema
BEGIN DBMS_XMLSCHEMA.registerSchema( SCHEMAURL => 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd', SCHEMADOC => bfilename('XMLDIR', 'purchaseOrder.Annotated.xsd'), LOCAL => TRUE, GENTYPES => TRUE, GENTABLES => TRUE, CSID => nls_charset_id('AL32UTF8')); END; / SELECT table_name, xmlschema, element_name FROM USER_XML_TABLES; TABLE_NAME XMLSCHEMA ELEMENT_NAME ------------- ----------------------------------- ------------- PURCHASEORDER http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documen PurchaseOrder tation/purchaseOrder.xsd 1 row selected. DESCRIBE purchaseorder Name Null? Type ------------------------------ ----- ----------------- TABLE of SYS.XMLTYPE(XMLSchema "http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd" ELEMENT "PurchaseOrder") STORAGE Object-relational TYPE "PURCHASEORDER_T" DESCRIBE purchaseorder_t PURCHASEORDER_T is NOT FINAL Name Null? Type -------------------- ----- -------------------------- SYS_XDBPD$ XDB.XDB$RAW_LIST_T REFERENCE VARCHAR2(30 CHAR) ACTION_COLLECTION ACTIONS_T REJECT REJECTION_T REQUESTOR VARCHAR2(128 CHAR) EMAIL VARCHAR2(10 CHAR) COSTCENTER VARCHAR2(4 CHAR) SHIPPINGINSTRUCTIONS SHIPPING_INSTRUCTIONS_T SPECIALINSTRUCTIONS VARCHAR2(2048 CHAR) LINEITEM_COLLECTION LINEITEMS_T Notes CLOB DESCRIBE lineitems_t LINEITEMS_T is NOT FINAL Name Null? Type -------------------- ----- -------------------------- SYS_XDBPD$ XDB.XDB$RAW_LIST_T LINEITEM_VARRAY LINEITEM_V DESCRIBE lineitem_v LINEITEM_V VARRAY(2147483647) OF LINEITEM_T LINEITEM_T is NOT FINAL Name Null? Type -------------------- ----- -------------------------- SYS_XDBPD$ XDB.XDB$RAW_LIST_T ITEMNUMBER NUMBER(38) DESCRIPTION VARCHAR2(256 CHAR) PART PART_T DESCRIBE part_t PART_T is NOT FINAL Name Null? Type -------------------- ----- -------------------------- ID VARCHAR2(14 CHAR) QUANTITY NUMBER(12,2) UNITPRICE NUMBER(8,4) SELECT table_name, parent_table_column FROM USER_NESTED_TABLES WHERE parent_table_name = 'purchaseorder'; TABLE_NAME PARENT_TABLE_COLUMN ---------- ----------------------- SYS_NTNOHV+tfSTRaDTA9FETvBJw== "XMLDATA"."LINEITEM_COLLECTION"."LINEITEM_VARRAY" SYS_NTV4bNVqQ1S4WdCIvBK5qjZA== "XMLDATA"."ACTION_COLLECTION"."ACTION_VARRAY" 2 rows selected.
The following are results of this XML schema registration:
A table called purchaseorder
was created.
Types called purchaseorder_t
, lineitems_t
, lineitem_v
, lineitem_t
, and part_t
were created. The attributes defined by these types are named according to supplied the SQLName
annotations.
The Notes
attribute defined by purchaseorder_t
is of data type CLOB
.
Type part_t
does not include a positional descriptor (PD) attribute.
Ordered collection tables (OCTs) were created to manage the collections of LineItem
and Action
elements.
Table 7-3, Table 7-4, and Table 7-5 list Oracle XML DB annotations that you can specify in element and attribute declarations. All annotations except those that have the prefix csx
are applicable to XML schemas registered for structured storage. This includes the portions of hybrid storage that are stored object-relationally.
The following annotations apply to XML schemas registered for unstructured storage:
xdb:defaultTable
xdb:defaultTableSchema
The following annotations apply to XML schemas registered for binary XML storage:
xdb:defaultTable
xdb:defaultTableSchema
xdb:tableProps
csx:encodingType
Table 7-3 Annotations in Elements
Attribute | Values | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Any column storage clause |
|
Specifies the |
|
Any table name |
Based on element name |
Specifies the name of the SQL table into which XML instances of this XML schema are stored. This is most useful in cases where the XML data is inserted from APIs and protocols, such as FTP and HTTP(S), where the table name is not specified. Applicable to structured storage and binary XML storage. |
|
Any SQL user name |
User registering XML schema |
Name of the database user (database schema) who owns the type specified by |
|
Any binary XML encoding typeFoot 1 |
Based on XML Schema data type |
Specifies the encoding type to be used to encode the node value of this element or attribute. This can be used only within elements |
|
|
|
If If |
|
|
|
If If |
|
Any positive integer |
1 |
Specifies the maximum number of times an element can appear. If the value is |
|
Any SQL user name |
User registering XML schema |
Name of the database user (database schema) who owns the type specified by |
|
Any SQL collection type |
Name generated from element name |
Name of the SQL collection type that corresponds to this XML element. The XML element must be specified with |
|
|
|
If If |
|
Any SQL identifier |
Element name |
Name of the attribute within the SQL object that maps to this XML element. |
|
Any SQL user name |
User registering XML schema |
Name of the database user (database schema) who owns the type specified by |
|
Any SQL data typeFoot 2 , except |
Name generated from element name |
Name of the SQL type corresponding to this XML element declaration. |
|
|
true |
If |
|
Any table storage clause |
|
Specifies the |
|
|
|
If |
Footnote 1 See "Mapping XML Schema Data Types To Binary XML Encoding Types".
Footnote 2 See "Mapping XML Schema Data Types to SQL Data Types".
Table 7-4 Annotations in Elements Declaring Global complexType Elements
Attribute | Values | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Any binary XML encoding typeFoot 1 |
Based on XML Schema data type |
The encoding type to be used to encode the node value of this element or attribute. This can be used only within elements |
|
|
|
If If |
|
Any SQL user name |
User registering XML schema |
Name of the database user (database schema) who owns the type specified by |
|
Any SQL data typeFoot 2 except |
Name generated from element name |
Name of the SQL type that corresponds to this XML element declaration. |
Footnote 1 See "Mapping XML Schema Data Types To Binary XML Encoding Types".
Footnote 2 See "Mapping XML Schema Data Types to SQL Data Types".
Table 7-5 Annotations in XML Schema Declarations
Attribute | Values | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
If If |
|
|
|
If If |
See Also:
"Changing an XML Schema and XML Instance Documents for Translation" for more information onxdb:maxOccurs
, xdb:translate
, and xdb:srclang
.For XMLType
data stored object-relationally (structured storage), careful planning is called for, to optimize performance. Similar considerations are in order as for ordinary relational data: the entity-relationship model, indexing, data types, table partitions, and so on.
To enable XPath rewrite and achieve optimal performance, you implement many such design choices using XML schema annotations. This section provides annotation guidelines to optimize the use of XMLType
data stored object-relationally.
By default, XML schema registration creates a top-level table for each top-level element defined in the XML schema. Some such elements are used as top-level elements in XML instances that conform to the XML schema. Others might not. It is common, for example, for elements in an XML schema to be top-level in order to be used as a REF
target.
Whenever a top-level element in an XML schema is never used at the top level in any corresponding XML instance, you can avoid the creation of the associated unnecessary tables by adding annotatoin xdb:defaultTable =
""
to the element in the XML schema. An empty value for this attribute prevents default-table creation.
For tuning purposes, you examine execution plan output for queries you are interested in. This output refers to the tables that underly XMLType data stored object-relationally. By default, these tables have system-generated names. Oracle recommends that you provide your own table names, especially for tables that you are sure to be interested in. You do that using annotation xdb:defaultTable
.
By default, XML schema registration generates tables that store XML data in such a way that DOM fidelity is maintained. It is often the case that for data-centric XML data DOM fidelity is not needed. You can improve the performance of storage, queries, and data modification by instead using object-relational tables that do not maintain DOM fidelity. You use the annotation xdb:maintainDOM = "
false
"
to do that.
See Also:
"DOM Fidelity"If the order among collection elements is not important, then use annotation xdb:maintainOrder = "
false
"
. This can allow more optimization in XPath rewrite and can generally lead to more efficient query execution.
If your application needs to work with time-zone indicators, then annotate any XML schema elements of type xs:time
and xs:dateTime
with xdb:SQLType = "
TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
"
. This ensures that values containing time-zone indicators can be stored, retrieved, and compared.
If a table or column underlying XML data needs additional properties, such as partition and tablespace clauses, then use annotation xdb:tableProps
or xdb:columnProps
as needed to provide them. This lets users add primary keys or constraints.
When the total number of elements and attributes defined by a complexType
reaches 1000, it is not possible to create a single table that can manage the SQL objects that are generated when an instance of that type is stored in the database. If you have large collections, then you might run up against this limit of 1000 columns for a table.
You can use annotations xdb:defaultTable
and xdb:SQLInline
to specify that such collection elements be stored out of line. That means that their data is stored in a separate table — only a reference to a row in that table is stored in the main collection table. Use xdb:defaultTable to name the out-of -line table. Annotate each element of a potentially large collection with xdb:SQLInline = "
false
",
to store it out of line.
The registered version of an XML schema contains a full set of Oracle XML DB annotations. As shown in Example 7-8 and Example 7-9, the location of the registered XML schema depends on whether it is local or global.
A registered XML schema can be queried for the annotations that were supplied by the user or added by the schema registration process. Example 7-26 shows the set of global complexType
definitions declared by an XML schema for structured storage of XML data, and the corresponding SQL object types and DOM fidelity values.
Example 7-26 Querying Metadata from a Registered XML Schema
SELECT ct.xmlschema_type_name, ct.sql_type_name, ct.dom_fidelity FROM RESOURCE_VIEW, XMLTable( XMLNAMESPACES( 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/XDBResource.xsd' AS "r", 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder' AS "po", 'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema' AS "xs", 'http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb' AS "xdb"), '/r:Resource/r:Contents/xs:schema/xs:complexType' PASSING RES COLUMNS xmlschema_type_name VARCHAR2(30) PATH '@name', sql_type_name VARCHAR2(30) PATH '@xdb:SQLType', dom_fidelity VARCHAR2(6) PATH '@xdb:maintainDOM') ct WHERE equals_path( RES, '/sys/schemas/SCOTT/xmlns.oracle.com/xdb/documentation/purchaseOrder.xsd') =1; XMLSCHEMA_TYPE_NAME SQL_TYPE_NAME DOM_FIDELITY ------------------------- ----------------------- ------------ PurchaseOrderType PURCHASEORDER_T true LineItemsType LINEITEMS_T true LineItemType LINEITEM_T true PartType PART_T true ActionsType ACTIONS_T true RejectionType REJECTION_T true ShippingInstructionsType SHIPPING_INSTRUCTIONS_T true 7 rows selected.
XML data that conforms to an XML schema is typed using XML Schema data types. When this XML data is stored in Oracle XML DB, its storage data types are derived from the XML Schema data types using a default mapping and, optionally, using mapping information that you specify using XML schema annotations.
Whenever you do not specify a data type to use for storage, Oracle XML DB uses the default mapping to annotate the XML schema appropriately, during registration. In this way, the registered XML schema has a complete set of data-type annotations.
For unstructured storage, the data-type mapping is trivial: all of the XML data is stored together as a single CLOB
.
For structured storage, XML Schema data types are mapped to SQL data types.
For binary XML storage, XML Schema data types are mapped to Oracle XML DB binary XML encoding types.
See Also:
Figure 7-5 shows how Oracle XML DB creates XML schema-based XMLType
tables using an XML document and a mapping specified in an XML schema. Depending on the storage method specified in the XML schema, an XML instance document is stored either as a binary XML or CLOB
value in a single XMLType
column, or using multiple object-relational columns.
Figure 7-5 How Oracle XML DB Maps XML Schema-Based XMLType Tables
This section describes how to use PL/SQL package DBMS_XMLSCHEMA
to map data types for XML Schema attributes and elements to SQL data types.
Note:
Do not directly access the SQL data types that are mapped from XML Schema data types during XML schema registration. These SQL types are part of the implementation of Oracle XML DB; they are not exposed for your use. Oracle reserves the right to change the implementation at any time, including in a product patch. Such a change by Oracle will have no effect on applications that abide by the XML abstraction, but it might impact applications that directly access these data types.Example 7-27 shows a simple example of mapping XML Schema data types to SQL data types. It uses attribute SQLType
to specify the data-type mapping. It also uses attribute SQLName
to specify the object attributes to use for various XML elements and attributes.
Example 7-27 Mapping XML Schema Data Types to SQL Data Types using Attribute SQLType
<xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xdb="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb" version="1.0" xdb:storeVarrayAsTable="true"> <xs:element name="PurchaseOrder" type="PurchaseOrderType" xdb:defaultTable="PURCHASEORDER"/> <xs:complexType name="PurchaseOrderType" xdb:SQLType="PURCHASEORDER_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="Reference" type="ReferenceType" minOccurs="1" xdb:SQLName="REFERENCE"/> <xs:element name="Actions" type="ActionsType" xdb:SQLName="ACTIONS"/> <xs:element name="Reject" type="RejectionType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="REJECTION"/> <xs:element name="Requestor" type="RequestorType" xdb:SQLName="REQUESTOR"/> <xs:element name="User" type="UserType" minOccurs="1" xdb:SQLName="USERID"/> <xs:element name="CostCenter" type="CostCenterType" xdb:SQLName="COST_CENTER"/> <xs:element name="ShippingInstructions" type="ShippingInstructionsType" xdb:SQLName="SHIPPING_INSTRUCTIONS"/> <xs:element name="SpecialInstructions" type="SpecialInstructionsType" xdb:SQLName="SPECIAL_INSTRUCTIONS"/> <xs:element name="LineItems" type="LineItemsType" xdb:SQLName="LINEITEMS"/> <xs:element name="Notes" type="po:NotesType" xdb:SQLType="CLOB"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="LineItemsType" xdb:SQLType="LINEITEMS_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="LineItem" type="LineItemType" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:SQLName="LINEITEM" xdb:SQLCollType="LINEITEM_V"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="LineItemType" xdb:SQLType="LINEITEM_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="Description" type="DescriptionType" xdb:SQLName="DESCRIPTION"/> <xs:element name="Part" type="PartType" xdb:SQLName="PART"/> </xs:sequence> <xs:attribute name="ItemNumber" type="xs:integer" xdb:SQLName="ITEMNUMBER" xdb:SQLType="NUMBER"/> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="PartType" xdb:SQLType="PART_T"> <xs:attribute name="Id" xdb:SQLName="PART_NUMBER" xdb:SQLType="VARCHAR2"> <xs:simpleType> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:minLength value="10"/> <xs:maxLength value="14"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> </xs:attribute> <xs:attribute name="Quantity" type="moneyType" xdb:SQLName="QUANTITY"/> <xs:attribute name="UnitPrice" type="quantityType" xdb:SQLName="UNITPRICE"/> </xs:complexType> ... <xs:complexType name="ActionsType" xdb:SQLType="ACTIONS_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="Action" maxOccurs="4" xdb:SQLName="ACTION" xdb:SQLCollType="ACTION_V"> <xs:complexType xdb:SQLType="ACTION_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="User" type="UserType" xdb:SQLName="ACTIONED_BY"/> <xs:element name="Date" type="DateType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="DATE_ACTIONED"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> </xs:element> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="RejectionType" xdb:SQLType="REJECTION_T"> <xs:all> <xs:element name="User" type="UserType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="REJECTED_BY"/> <xs:element name="Date" type="DateType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="DATE_REJECTED"/> <xs:element name="Comments" type="CommentsType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="REASON_REJECTED"/> </xs:all> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="ShippingInstructionsType" xdb:SQLType="SHIPPING_INSTRUCTIONS_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="name" type="NameType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="SHIP_TO_NAME"/> <xs:element name="address" type="AddressType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="SHIP_TO_ADDRESS"/> <xs:element name="telephone" type="TelephoneType" minOccurs="0" xdb:SQLName="SHIP_TO_PHONE"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> ... </xs:schema>
An attribute declaration can specify its XML Schema data type in terms of one of the following:
Primitive type
Global simpleType
, declared within this XML schema or in an external XML schema
Reference to global attribute (ref=".."
), declared within this XML schema or in an external XML schema
Local simpleType
In all cases, the SQL data type and associated information (length and precision) as well as the memory mapping information, are derived from the simpleType
on which the attribute is based.
You can explicitly specify a SQLType
value in the input XML schema document. In this case, the data type you specify is used for schema validation. This allows for the following specific forms of overrides:
If the default SQL data type is STRING
, you can override it with CHAR
, VARCHAR
, or CLOB
.
If the default SQL data type is RAW
, you can override it with RAW
or BLOB
.
An element declaration can specify its XML Schema data type in terms of one of the following:
Any of the ways for specifying type for an attribute declaration. See "Mapping XML Schema Attribute Data Types to SQL" .
Global complexType
, specified within this XML schema document or in an external XML schema.
Reference to a global element (ref="..."
), which could itself be within this XML schema document or in an external XML schema.
Local complexType
.
An element based on a complexType
is, by default, mapped to a SQL object type that contains object attributes corresponding to each of the sub-elements and attributes. You can override this mapping by explicitly specifying a value for attribute SQLType
in the input XML schema. The following values for SQLType
are permitted here:
VARCHAR2
RAW
CLOB
BLOB
These represent storage of the XML data in a text form in the database.
For example, to override the SQLType
from VARCHAR2
to CLOB
, declare the xdb
namespace using xmlns:xdb="http://xmlns.oracle.com/xdb"
, and then use xdb:SQLType = "CLOB"
.
The following special cases are handled:
If a cycle is detected when processing the complexType
values that are used to declare elements and the elements declared within the complexType
, the SQLInline
attribute is forced to be false
, and the correct SQL mapping is set to REF
XMLType
.
If maxOccurs > 1
, a varray type might be created.
If SQLInline
= "true"
, then a varray type is created whose element type is the SQL data type previously determined. Cardinality of the varray is based on the value of attribute maxOccurs
. Either you specify the name of the varray type using attribute SQLCollType
, or it is derived from the element name.
If SQLInline = "false"
, then the SQL data type is set to XDB.XDB$XMLTYPE_REF_LIST_T
. This is a predefined data type that represents an array of REF
values pointing to XMLType
instances.
If the element is a global element, or if SQLInline = "false"
, then the system creates a default table. Either you specify the name of the default table, or it is derived from the element name.
See Also:
Chapter 9, "XML Schema Storage and Query: Advanced" for more information about mappingsimpleType
values and complexType
values to SQL.This section describes how XML schema definitions map XML Schema simpleType
to SQL object types. Figure 7-6 shows an example of this.
Figure 7-6 Mapping simpleType: XML Strings to SQL VARCHAR2 or CLOB
Table 7-6 through Table 7-9 present the default mapping of XML Schema simpleType
to SQL, as specified in the XML Schema definition. For example:
A XML Schema primitive type is mapped to the closest SQL data type. For example, DECIMAL
, POSITIVEINTEGER
, and FLOAT
are all mapped to SQL NUMBER
.
An XML Schema enumeration type is mapped to a SQL object type with a single RAW(
n
)
object attribute. The value of n
is determined by the number of possible values in the enumeration declaration.
An XML Schema list or a union type is mapped to a SQL string (VARCHAR2
or CLOB
) data type.
Table 7-6 Mapping XML Schema String Data Types to SQL
XML Schema String Type | Length or MaxLength Facet | Default SQL Data Type | Compatible SQL Data Type |
---|---|---|---|
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Table 7-7 Mapping XML Schema Binary Data Types (hexBinary/base64Binary) to SQL
XML Schema Binary Type | Length or MaxLength Facet | Default SQL Data Type | Compatible SQL Data Type |
---|---|---|---|
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Table 7-8 Default Mapping of Numeric XML Schema Primitive Types to SQL
XML Schema Simple Type | Default SQL Data Type | totalDigits (m), fractionDigits(n) Specified | Compatible SQL Data Types |
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Table 7-9 Mapping XML Schema Date and Time Data Types to SQL
XML Schema Date or Time Type | Default SQL Data Type | Compatible SQL Data Types |
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Table 7-10 Default Mapping of Other XML Schema Primitive and Derived Data Types to SQL
XML Schema Primitive or Derived Type | Default SQL Data Type | Compatible SQL Data Types |
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Oracle XML DB does not support NCHAR
, NVARCHAR
, and NCLOB
as values for attribute SQLType
: you cannot specify that an XML element or attribute is to be of type NCHAR
, NVARCHAR
, or NCLOB
. Also, if you provide your own data type, do not use any of these data types.
See Also:
Appendix B, "Oracle XML DB Restrictions"If an XML schema specifies an XML Schema data type to be a string with a maxLength
less than 4000, then it is mapped to a VARCHAR2
object attribute of the specified length. However, if maxLength
is not specified in the XML schema, then it can only be mapped to a LOB. This is sub-optimal when most of the string values are small and only a small fraction of them are large enough to need a LOB.
The following XML Schema data types allow for an optional time-zone indicator as part of their literal values.
xsd:dateTime
xsd:time
xsd:date
xsd:gYear
xsd:gMonth
xsd:gDay
xsd:gYearMonth
xsd:gMonthDay
By default, XML schema registration maps xsd:dateTime
and xsd:time
to SQL data type TIMESTAMP
and all the other data types to SQL data type DATE
. SQL data types TIMESTAMP
and DATE
do not permit a time-zone indicator.
If your application needs to work with time-zone indicators, then use attribute SQLType
to specify the SQL data type as TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
. This ensures that values containing time-zone indicators can be stored and retrieved correctly. For example:
<element name="dob" type="xsd:dateTime" xdb:SQLType="TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE"/> <attribute name="endofquarter" type="xsd:gMonthDay" xdb:SQLType="TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE"/>
XML Schema lets the time-zone component be specified as Z
, to indicate UTC time zone. When a value with a trailing Z
is stored in a SQL TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
column, the time zone is actually stored as +00:00
. Thus, the retrieved value contains the trailing +00:00
, not the original Z
. For example, if the value in the input XML document is 1973-02-12T13:44:32
Z
, the output is 1973-02-12T13:44:32
.000000+00:00
.
Using XML Schema, a complexType
is mapped to a SQL object type as follows:
XML attributes declared within the complexType
are mapped to SQL object attributes. The simpleType
defining an XML attribute determines the SQL data type of the corresponding object attribute.
XML elements declared within the complexType
are also mapped to SQL object attributes. The simpleType
or complexType
defining an XML element determines the SQL data type of the corresponding object attribute.
If the XML element is declared with attribute maxOccurs
> 1, then it is mapped to a SQL collection (object) attribute. The collection could be a varray value (the default, recommended) or an unordered table (if you set attribute xdb:maintainOrder
to false
). The default storage of a varray value is an ordered collections table (OCT). You can choose LOB storage instead, by setting attribute xdb:storeVarrayAsTable
to false
.
When you have an element based on a global complexType
, both the SQLType
and SQLSchema
attributes must be specified for the complexType
declaration. In addition you can optionally include the same SQLType
and SQLSchema
attributes within the element declaration.
If you do not specify attribute SQLType
for the global complexType
, Oracle XML DB creates a SQLType
attribute with an internally generated name. The elements that reference this global type cannot then have a different value for SQLType
. The following code is acceptable:
<xs:complexType name="LineItemsType" xdb:SQLType="LINEITEMS_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="LineItem" type="LineItemType" maxOccurs="unbounded" xdb:SQLName="LINEITEM" xdb:SQLCollType="LINEITEM_V"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="LineItemType" xdb:SQLType="LINEITEM_T"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="Description" type="DescriptionType" xdb:SQLName="DESCRIPTION"/> <xs:element name="Part" type="PartType" xdb:SQLName="PART"/> </xs:sequence> <xs:attribute name="ItemNumber" type="xs:integer" xdb:SQLName="ITEMNUMBER" xdb:SQLType="NUMBER"/> </xs:complexType> <xs:complexType name="PartType" xdb:SQLType="PART_T"> <xs:attribute name="Id" xdb:SQLName="PART_NUMBER" xdb:SQLType="VARCHAR2"> <xs:simpleType> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:minLength value="10"/> <xs:maxLength value="14"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> </xs:attribute> <xs:attribute name="Quantity" type="moneyType" xdb:SQLName="QUANTITY"/> <xs:attribute name="UnitPrice" type="quantityType" xdb:SQLName="UNITPRICE"/> </xs:complexType>
This section describes how to use PL/SQL package DBMS_XMLSCHEMA
to map the data types used for XML Schema attributes and elements to the encoding types used for binary XML data.
If you register an XML schema using option REGISTER_BINARYXML
, then XML instance documents that reference that XML schema are stored as binary XML, and their XML Schema data types are encoded in the binary XML data. Each XML Schema data type is mapped to a default binary XML encoding type, but you can override this default mapping by using XML attribute csx:encodingType
.
Different XML schemas specify possibly different binary XML encodings. If you used option ALLOW ANYSCHEMA
when you created the XMLType
table or column, then XML documents that reference different XML schemas, and that therefore might have different binary XML encodings, can be stored in the same XMLType
column or table.
Note:
The binary XML encoding type has no effect on the data types of values used in query results.Table 7-11 describes the available binary XML encoding types.Table 7-12 describes how they map to XML Schema data types by default, and which binary XML encoding types you can use to override the default mapping.
Table 7-11 Binary XML Encoding Types
Binary XML Encoding Type | Description |
---|---|
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UTF-8 character data |
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binary data |
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1 for This is always decoded to XML Schema as |
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signed, twos-complement, big-endian integer (1, 2, 4, or 8 bytes) |
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twos-complement, big-endian integer (1, 2, 4, or 8 bytes) |
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IEEE-754 floating-point number (4 or 8 bytes) |
|
Oracle internal number representation (maximum of 22 bytes) Numbers from 1.0 x 10 -130 to 1.0 x 10 126. Maximum precision: 38 digits. Maximum scale: -84 to 127. |
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Oracle internal format for Gregorian dates (7 bytes) No fractional seconds. No time-zone information. |
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Oracle internal format for Gregorian dates with time zone information (timestamp) 1–9 digits for fractional seconds. An XML Schema time-zone component specified originally as |
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number of seconds since January 1, 1970 (4 or 8 bytes, signed binary) No fractional seconds. No time-zone information. |
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same as An XML Schema time-zone component specified originally as |
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unsigned integers, starting with zero, one for each possible enumeration value, in the order of definition in the XML schema |
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token ID followed by prefix ID (4 or 8 bytes, followed by 2 bytes) |
Table 7-12 Mapping XML Schema Data Types to Binary XML Encoding Types
XML Schema Type | Binary XML Encoding Type | Compatible Encoding Types |
---|---|---|
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internal encodingFoot 1 |
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Footnote 1 You cannot specify the encoding type for XML Schema type anyType
.