I want to read a large xml file (100+M). Due to its size, I do not want to load it in memory using XElement. I am using linq-xml queries to parse and read it.
What\
The example code in the MSDN documentation for the XNode.ReadFrom
method is as follows:
class Program
{
static IEnumerable<XElement> StreamRootChildDoc(string uri)
{
using (XmlReader reader = XmlReader.Create(uri))
{
reader.MoveToContent();
// Parse the file and display each of the nodes.
while (reader.Read())
{
switch (reader.NodeType)
{
case XmlNodeType.Element:
if (reader.Name == "Child")
{
XElement el = XElement.ReadFrom(reader) as XElement;
if (el != null)
yield return el;
}
break;
}
}
}
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
IEnumerable<string> grandChildData =
from el in StreamRootChildDoc("Source.xml")
where (int)el.Attribute("Key") > 1
select (string)el.Element("GrandChild");
foreach (string str in grandChildData)
Console.WriteLine(str);
}
}
But I've found that the StreamRootChildDoc
method in the example needs to be modified as follows:
static IEnumerable<XElement> StreamRootChildDoc(string uri)
{
using (XmlReader reader = XmlReader.Create(uri))
{
reader.MoveToContent();
// Parse the file and display each of the nodes.
while (!reader.EOF)
{
if (reader.NodeType == XmlNodeType.Element && reader.Name == "Child")
{
XElement el = XElement.ReadFrom(reader) as XElement;
if (el != null)
yield return el;
}
else
{
reader.Read();
}
}
}
}
Just keep in mind that you will have to read the file sequentially and referring to siblings or descendants is going to be slow at best and impossible at worst. Otherwise @MartinHonnn has the key.
Yes, you can combine XmlReader with the method XNode.ReadFrom, see the example in the documentation which uses C# to selectively process nodes found by the XmlReader as an XElement.