Net::XMPP::Namespaces - phpMan

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NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION AUTHOR COPYRIGHT
NAME
    Net::XMPP::Namespaces - In depth discussion on how namespaces are
    handled

SYNOPSIS
    Net::XMPP::Namespaces provides an depth look at how Net::XMPP handles
    namespacs, and how to add your own custom ones. It also serves as the
    storage bin for all of the Namespace information Net::XMPP requires.

DESCRIPTION
    XMPP as a protocol is very well defined. There are three main top level
    packets (message, iq, and presence). There is also a way to extend the
    protocol in a very clear and strucutred way, via namespaces.

    Two major ways that namespaces are used in Jabber is for making the
    <iq/> a generic wrapper, and as a way for adding data to any packet via
    a child tag <x/>. We will use <x/> to represent the packet, but in
    reality it could be any child tag: <foo/>, <data/>, <error/>, etc.

    The Info/Query <iq/> packet uses namespaces to determine the type of
    information to access. Usually there is a <query/> tag in the <iq/> that
    represents the namespace, but in fact it can be any tag. The definition
    of the Query portion, is the first tag that has a namespace.

        <iq type="get"><query xmlns="..."/></iq>

    or

        <iq type="get"><foo xmlns="..."/></iq>

    After that Query stanza can be any number of other stanzas (<x/> tags)
    you want to include. The Query packet is represented and available by
    calling GetQuery() or GetChild(), and the other namespaces are available
    by calling GetChild().

    The X tag is just a way to piggy back data on other packets. Like
    embedding the timestamp for a message using jabber:x:delay, or signing
    you presence for encryption using jabber:x:signed.

    To this end, Net::XMPP has sought to find a way to easily, and clearly
    define the functions needed to access the XML for a namespace. We will
    go over the full docs, and then show two examples of real namespaces so
    that you can see what we are talking about.

  Overview
    To avoid a lot of nasty modules populating memory that are not used, and
    to avoid having to change 15 modules when a minor change is introduced,
    the Net::XMPP modules have taken AUTOLOADing to the extreme.
    Namespaces.pm is nothing but a set of function calls that generates a
    big hash of hashes. The hash is accessed by the Stanza.pm AUTOLOAD
    function to do something. (This will make sense, I promise.)

    Before going on, I highly suggest you read a Perl book on AUTOLOAD and
    how it works. From this point on I will assume that you understand it.

    When you create a Net::XMPP::IQ object and add a Query to it (NewChild)
    several things are happening in the background. The argument to NewChild
    is the namespace you want to add. (custom-namespace)

    Now that you have a Query object to work with you will call the GetXXX
    functions, and SetXXX functions to set the data. There are no defined
    GetXXX and SetXXXX functions. You cannot look in the Namespaces.pm file
    and find them. Instead you will find something like this:

      &add_ns(ns    => "mynamespace",
              tag   => "mytag",
              xpath => {
                        JID       => { type=>'jid', path => '@jid' },
                        Username  => { path => 'username/text()' },
                        Test      => { type => 'master' }
                       }
             );

    When the GetUsername() function is called, the AUTOLOAD function looks
    in the Namespaces.pm hash for a "Username" key. Based on the "type" of
    the field (scalar being the default) it will use the "path" as an XPath
    to retrieve the data and call the XPathGet() method in Stanza.pm.

    Confused yet?

  Net::XMPP private namespaces
    Now this is where this starts to get a little sticky. When you see a
    namespace with __netxmpp__, or __netjabber__ from Net::Jabber, at the
    beginning it is usually something custom to Net::XMPP and NOT part of
    the actual XMPP protocol.

    There are some places where the structure of the XML allows for multiple
    children with the same name. The main places you will see this behavior
    is where you have multiple tags with the same name and those have
    children under them (jabber:iq:roster).

    In jabber:iq:roster, the <item/> tag can be repeated multiple times, and
    is sort of like a mini-namespace in itself. To that end, we treat it
    like a separate namespace and defined a __netxmpp__:iq:roster:item
    namespace to hold it. What happens is this, in my code I define that the
    <item/>s tag is "item" and anything with that tag name is to create a
    new Net::XMPP::Stanza object with the namespace
    __netxmpp__:iq:roster:item which then becomes a child of the
    jabber:iq:roster Stanza object. Also, when you want to add a new item to
    a jabber:iq:roster project you call NewQuery with the private namespace.

    I know this sounds complicated. And if after reading this entire
    document it is still complicated, email me, ask questions, and I will
    monitor it and adjust these docs to answer the questions that people
    ask.

  add_ns()
    To repeat, here is an example call to add_ns():

        add_ns(ns    => "mynamespace",
                tag   => "mytag",
                xpath => {
                          JID       => { type=>'jid', path => '@jid' },
                          Username  => { path => 'username/text()' },
                          Test      => { type => 'master' }
                         }
               );

    ns - This is the new namespace that you are trying to add.

    tag - This is the root tag to use for objects based on this namespace.

    xpath - The hash reference passed in the add_ns call to each name of
    entry tells Net::XMPP how to handle subsequent GetXXXX(), SetXXXX(),
    DefinedXXXX(), RemoveXXXX(), AddXXXX() calls. The basic options you can
    pass in are:

    type - This tells Stanza how to handle the call. The possible values
    are:

               array - The value to set and returned is an an array
                       reference.  For example, <group/> in jabber:iq:roster.

               child - This tells Stanza that it needs to look for the
                       __netxmpp__ style namesapced children.  AddXXX() adds
                       a new child, and GetXXX() will return a new Stanza
                       object representing the packet.

               flag - This is for child elements that are tags by themselves:
                      <foo/>.  Since the presence of the tag is what is
                      important, and there is no cdata to store, we just call
                      it a flag.

               jid - The value is a Jabber ID.  GetXXX() will return a
                     Net::XMPP::JID object unless you pass it "jid", then it
                     returns a string.

               master - The GetXXX() and SetXXX() calls return and take a
                        hash representing all of the GetXXX() and SetXXX()
                        calls.  For example:

                          SetTest(foo=>"bar",
                                  bar=>"baz");

                        Translates into:

                          SetFoo("bar");
                          SetBar("baz");

                        GetTest() would return a hash containing what the
                        packet contains:

                          { foo=>"bar",  bar=>"baz" }

               raw - This will stick whatever raw XML you specify directly
                     into the Stanza at the point where the path specifies.

               scalar - This will set and get a scalar value.  This is the
                        main workhorse as attributes and CDATA is represented
                        by a scalar.  This is the default setting if you do
                        not provide one.

               special - The special type is unique in that instead of a
                         string "special", you actually give it an array:

                           [ "special" , <subtype> ]

                         This allows Net::XMPP to be able to handle the
                         SetXXXX() call in a special manner according to your
                         choosing.  Right now this is mainly used by
                         jabber:iq:time to automatically set the time info in
                         the correct format, and jabber:iq:version to set the
                         machine OS and add the Net::Jabber version to the
                         return packet.  You will likely NOT need to use
                         this, but I wanted to mention it.

               timestamp - If you call SetXXX() but do not pass it anything,
                           or pass it "", then Net::XMPP will place a
                           timestamp in the xpath location.

         path - This is the XPath path to where the bit data lives.  The
                difference.  Now, this is not full XPath due to the nature
                of how it gets used.  Instead of providing a rooted path
                all the way to the top, it's a relative path ignoring what
                the parent is.  For example, if the "tag" you specified was
                "foo", and the path is "bar/text()", then the XPath will be
                rooted in the XML of the <foo/> packet.  It will set and get
                the CDATA from:

                   <foo><bar>xxxxx</bar></foo>

                For a flag and a child type, just specify the child element.
                Take a look at the code in this file for more help on what
                this means.  Also, read up on XPath if you don't already know
                what it is.

         child - This is a hash reference that tells Net::XMPP how to handle
                 adding and getting child objects.  The keys for the hash are
                 as follows:

                 ns - the real or custom (__netxmpp__) namesapce to use for
                      this child packet.

                 skip_xmlns => 1 - this tells Net::XMPP not to add an
                                   xmlns='' into the XML for the child
                                   object.

                 specify_name => 1 - allows you to call NewChild("ns","tag")
                                     and specify the tag to use for the child
                                     object.  This, IMHO, is BAD XML
                                     practice.  You should always know what
                                     the tag of the child is and use an
                                     attribute or CDATA to change the type
                                     of the stanza.  You do not want to use
                                     this.

                 tag - If you use specify_name, then this is the default tag
                       to use.  You do not want to use this.

         calls - Array reference telling Net::XMPP what functions to create
                 for this name.  For most of the types above you will get
                 Get, Set, Defined, and Remove.  For child types you need to
                 decide how you API will look and specify them yourself:

                   ["Get","Defined"]
                   ["Add"]
                   ["Get","Add","Defined"]

                It all depends on how you want your API to look.

      Once more... The following:

        &add_ns(ns    => "mynamespace",
                tag   => "mytag",
                xpath => {
                          JID       => { type=>'jid', path => '@jid' },
                          Username  => { path => 'username/text()' },
                          Test      => { type => 'master' }
                         }
               );

      generates the following API calls:

        GetJID()
        SetJID()
        DefinedJID()
        RemoveJID()
        GetUsername()
        SetUsername()
        DefinedUsername()
        RemoveUsername()
        GetTest()
        SetTest()

  Wrap Up
    Well. I hope that I have not scared you off from writing a custom
    namespace for you application and use Net::XMPP. Look in the
    Net::XMPP::Protocol manpage for an example on using the add_ns()
    function to register your custom namespace so that Net::XMPP can
    properly handle it.

AUTHOR
    Originally authored by Ryan Eatmon.

    Previously maintained by Eric Hacker.

    Currently maintained by Darian Anthony Patrick.

COPYRIGHT
    This module is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the LGPL 2.1.


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