Not well-formed

coloradoguys Messages postés 2 Statut Membre -  
[Dal] Messages postés 6122 Date d'inscription   Statut Contributeur Dernière intervention   -
Bonjour,
Dans le cadre d'une supervison de site web a l'aide de centreon et selenium, je recontre l'erreur :

not well-formed (invalid token) at line 1, column 0, byte 0 at /usr/lib64/perl5/XML/Parser.pm line 187

a l'execution d'une de mes commandes.
j'ai pourtant bien mis a jour les modules perl...
a quoi peut etre du mon erreur
merci par avance
Corantin spee

Configuration: Windows / Chrome 83.0.4103.116

3 réponses

  1. [Dal] Messages postés 6122 Date d'inscription   Statut Contributeur Dernière intervention   1 108
     
    Salut coloradoguys,

    Le message d'erreur que tu postes est-il complet ? Y a t-il mention du document XML traité avant cette ligne que tu postes ? On tente manifestement de parser un document XML, mais sans succès, ce qui provoque une erreur du module Perl qui tente de le traiter.

    L'erreur ne vient certainement pas de Perl, ni du module XML::Parser, mais plutôt du fichier XML qui est passé à ce module et qui ne semble pas comporter un contenu XML valide et ce dès la première ligne.

    Dal
    0
  2. coloradoguys
     
    bonjour Dal
    je ne traite pas de document XML ?!
    c'est peut être la le problème ?
    en fait la commande permet de traiter un fichier au format HTML et celui ci est peut etre un peu en java mais je ne sait pas comment le "convertir" si je puis dire

    je vous met le document ci dessous
    # XML::Parser
    #
    # Copyright (c) 1998-2000 Larry Wall and Clark Cooper
    # All rights reserved.
    #
    # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
    # modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

    package XML::Parser;

    use Carp;

    BEGIN {
    require XML::Parser::Expat;
    $VERSION = '2.36';
    die "Parser.pm and Expat.pm versions don't match"
    unless $VERSION eq $XML::Parser::Expat::VERSION;
    }

    use strict;

    use vars qw($VERSION $LWP_load_failed);

    $LWP_load_failed = 0;

    sub new {
    my ($class, %args) = @_;
    my $style = $args{Style};

    my $nonexopt = $args{Non_Expat_Options} ||= {};

    $nonexopt->{Style} = 1;
    $nonexopt->{Non_Expat_Options} = 1;
    $nonexopt->{Handlers} = 1;
    $nonexopt->{_HNDL_TYPES} = 1;
    $nonexopt->{NoLWP} = 1;

    $args{_HNDL_TYPES} = {%XML::Parser::Expat::Handler_Setters};
    $args{_HNDL_TYPES}->{Init} = 1;
    $args{_HNDL_TYPES}->{Final} = 1;

    $args{Handlers} ||= {};
    my $handlers = $args{Handlers};

    if (defined($style)) {
    my $stylepkg = $style;

    if ($stylepkg !~ /::/) {
    $stylepkg = "\u$style";

    eval {
    my $fullpkg = 'XML::Parser::Style::' . $stylepkg;
    my $stylefile = $fullpkg;
    $stylefile =~ s/::/\//g;
    require "$stylefile.pm";
    $stylepkg = $fullpkg;
    };
    if ($@) {
    # fallback to old behaviour
    $stylepkg = 'XML::Parser::' . $stylepkg;
    }
    }

    my $htype;
    foreach $htype (keys %{$args{_HNDL_TYPES}}) {
    # Handlers explicity given override
    # handlers from the Style package
    unless (defined($handlers->{$htype})) {

    # A handler in the style package must either have
    # exactly the right case as the type name or a
    # completely lower case version of it.

    my $hname = "${stylepkg}::$htype";
    if (defined(&$hname)) {
    $handlers->{$htype} = \&$hname;
    next;
    }

    $hname = "${stylepkg}::\L$htype";
    if (defined(&$hname)) {
    $handlers->{$htype} = \&$hname;
    next;
    }
    }
    }
    }

    unless (defined($handlers->{ExternEnt})
    or defined ($handlers->{ExternEntFin})) {

    if ($args{NoLWP} or $LWP_load_failed) {
    $handlers->{ExternEnt} = \&file_ext_ent_handler;
    $handlers->{ExternEntFin} = \&file_ext_ent_cleanup;
    }
    else {
    # The following just bootstraps the real LWP external entity
    # handler

    $handlers->{ExternEnt} = \&initial_ext_ent_handler;

    # No cleanup function available until LWPExternEnt.pl loaded
    }
    }

    $args{Pkg} ||= caller;
    bless \%args, $class;
    } # End of new

    sub setHandlers {
    my ($self, @handler_pairs) = @_;

    croak("Uneven number of arguments to setHandlers method")
    if (int(@handler_pairs) & 1);

    my @ret;
    while (@handler_pairs) {
    my $type = shift @handler_pairs;
    my $handler = shift @handler_pairs;
    unless (defined($self->{_HNDL_TYPES}->{$type})) {
    my @types = sort keys %{$self->{_HNDL_TYPES}};

    croak("Unknown Parser handler type: $type\n Valid types: @types");
    }
    push(@ret, $type, $self->{Handlers}->{$type});
    $self->{Handlers}->{$type} = $handler;
    }

    return @ret;
    }

    sub parse_start {
    my $self = shift;
    my @expat_options = ();

    my ($key, $val);
    while (($key, $val) = each %{$self}) {
    push (@expat_options, $key, $val)
    unless exists $self->{Non_Expat_Options}->{$key};
    }

    my %handlers = %{$self->{Handlers}};
    my $init = delete $handlers{Init};
    my $final = delete $handlers{Final};

    my $expatnb = new XML::Parser::ExpatNB(@expat_options, @_);
    $expatnb->setHandlers(%handlers);

    &$init($expatnb)
    if defined($init);

    $expatnb->{_State_} = 1;

    $expatnb->{FinalHandler} = $final
    if defined($final);

    return $expatnb;
    }

    sub parse {
    my $self = shift;
    my $arg = shift;
    my @expat_options = ();
    my ($key, $val);
    while (($key, $val) = each %{$self}) {
    push(@expat_options, $key, $val)
    unless exists $self->{Non_Expat_Options}->{$key};
    }

    my $expat = new XML::Parser::Expat(@expat_options, @_);
    my %handlers = %{$self->{Handlers}};
    my $init = delete $handlers{Init};
    my $final = delete $handlers{Final};

    $expat->setHandlers(%handlers);

    if ($self->{Base}) {
    $expat->base($self->{Base});
    }

    &$init($expat)
    if defined($init);

    my @result = ();
    my $result;
    eval {
    $result = $expat->parse($arg);
    };
    my $err = $@;
    if ($err) {
    $expat->release;
    die $err;
    }

    if ($result and defined($final)) {
    if (wantarray) {
    @result = &$final($expat);
    }
    else {
    $result = &$final($expat);
    }
    }

    $expat->release;

    return unless defined wantarray;
    return wantarray ? @result : $result;
    }

    sub parsestring {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->parse(@_);
    }

    sub parsefile {
    my $self = shift;
    my $file = shift;
    local(*FILE);
    open(FILE, $file) or croak "Couldn't open $file:\n$!";
    binmode(FILE);
    my @ret;
    my $ret;

    $self->{Base} = $file;

    if (wantarray) {
    eval {
    @ret = $self->parse(*FILE, @_);
    };
    }
    else {
    eval {
    $ret = $self->parse(*FILE, @_);
    };
    }
    my $err = $@;
    close(FILE);
    die $err if $err;

    return unless defined wantarray;
    return wantarray ? @ret : $ret;
    }

    sub initial_ext_ent_handler {
    # This just bootstraps in the real lwp_ext_ent_handler which
    # also loads the URI and LWP modules.

    unless ($LWP_load_failed) {
    local($^W) = 0;

    my $stat =
    eval {
    require('XML/Parser/LWPExternEnt.pl');
    };

    if ($stat) {
    $_[0]->setHandlers(ExternEnt => \&lwp_ext_ent_handler,
    ExternEntFin => \&lwp_ext_ent_cleanup);

    goto &lwp_ext_ent_handler;
    }

    # Failed to load lwp handler, act as if NoLWP

    $LWP_load_failed = 1;

    my $cmsg = "Couldn't load LWP based external entity handler\n";
    $cmsg .= "Switching to file-based external entity handler\n";
    $cmsg .= " (To avoid this message, use NoLWP option to XML::Parser)\n";
    warn($cmsg);
    }

    $_[0]->setHandlers(ExternEnt => \&file_ext_ent_handler,
    ExternEntFin => \&file_ext_ent_cleanup);
    goto &file_ext_ent_handler;

    }

    sub file_ext_ent_handler {
    my ($xp, $base, $path) = @_;

    # Prepend base only for relative paths

    if (defined($base)
    and not ($path =~ m!^(?:[\\/]|\w+:)!))
    {
    my $newpath = $base;
    $newpath =~ s![^\\/:]*$!$path!;
    $path = $newpath;
    }

    if ($path =~ /^\s*[|>+]/
    or $path =~ /\|\s*$/) {
    $xp->{ErrorMessage}
    .= "System ID ($path) contains Perl IO control characters";
    return undef;
    }

    require IO::File;
    my $fh = new IO::File($path);
    unless (defined $fh) {
    $xp->{ErrorMessage}
    .= "Failed to open $path:\n$!";
    return undef;
    }

    $xp->{_BaseStack} ||= [];
    $xp->{_FhStack} ||= [];

    push(@{$xp->{_BaseStack}}, $base);
    push(@{$xp->{_FhStack}}, $fh);

    $xp->base($path);

    return $fh;
    }

    sub file_ext_ent_cleanup {
    my ($xp) = @_;

    my $fh = pop(@{$xp->{_FhStack}});
    $fh->close;

    my $base = pop(@{$xp->{_BaseStack}});
    $xp->base($base);
    }

    1;

    __END__

    =head1 NAME

    XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents

    =head1 SYNOPSIS

    use XML::Parser;

    $p1 = new XML::Parser(Style => 'Debug');
    $p1->parsefile('REC-xml-19980210.xml');
    $p1->parse('<foo id="me">Hello World</foo>');

    # Alternative
    $p2 = new XML::Parser(Handlers => {Start => \&handle_start,
    End => \&handle_end,
    Char => \&handle_char});
    $p2->parse($socket);

    # Another alternative
    $p3 = new XML::Parser(ErrorContext => 2);

    $p3->setHandlers(Char => \&text,
    Default => \&other);

    open(FOO, 'xmlgenerator |');
    $p3->parse(*FOO, ProtocolEncoding => 'ISO-8859-1');
    close(FOO);

    $p3->parsefile('junk.xml', ErrorContext => 3);

    =begin man
    .ds PI PI

    =end man

    =head1 DESCRIPTION

    This module provides ways to parse XML documents. It is built on top of
    L<XML::Parser::Expat>, which is a lower level interface to James Clark's
    expat library. Each call to one of the parsing methods creates a new
    instance of XML::Parser::Expat which is then used to parse the document.
    Expat options may be provided when the XML::Parser object is created.
    These options are then passed on to the Expat object on each parse call.
    They can also be given as extra arguments to the parse methods, in which
    case they override options given at XML::Parser creation time.

    The behavior of the parser is controlled either by C<L</Style>> and/or
    C<L</Handlers>> options, or by L</setHandlers> method. These all provide
    mechanisms for XML::Parser to set the handlers needed by XML::Parser::Expat.
    If neither C<Style> nor C<Handlers> are specified, then parsing just
    checks the document for being well-formed.

    When underlying handlers get called, they receive as their first parameter
    the I<Expat> object, not the Parser object.

    =head1 METHODS

    =over 4

    =item new

    This is a class method, the constructor for XML::Parser. Options are passed
    as keyword value pairs. Recognized options are:

    =over 4

    =item * Style

    This option provides an easy way to create a given style of parser. The
    built in styles are: L<"Debug">, L<"Subs">, L<"Tree">, L<"Objects">,
    and L<"Stream">. These are all defined in separate packages under
    C<XML::Parser::Style::*>, and you can find further documentation for
    each style both below, and in those packages.

    Custom styles can be provided by giving a full package name containing
    at least one '::'. This package should then have subs defined for each
    handler it wishes to have installed. See L<"STYLES"> below
    for a discussion of each built in style.

    =item * Handlers

    When provided, this option should be an anonymous hash containing as
    keys the type of handler and as values a sub reference to handle that
    type of event. All the handlers get passed as their 1st parameter the
    instance of expat that is parsing the document. Further details on
    handlers can be found in L<"HANDLERS">. Any handler set here
    overrides the corresponding handler set with the Style option.

    =item * Pkg

    Some styles will refer to subs defined in this package. If not provided,
    it defaults to the package which called the constructor.

    =item * ErrorContext

    This is an Expat option. When this option is defined, errors are reported
    in context. The value should be the number of lines to show on either side
    of the line in which the error occurred.

    =item * ProtocolEncoding

    This is an Expat option. This sets the protocol encoding name. It defaults
    to none. The built-in encodings are: C<UTF-8>, C<ISO-8859-1>, C<UTF-16>, and
    C<US-ASCII>. Other encodings may be used if they have encoding maps in one
    of the directories in the @Encoding_Path list. Check L<"ENCODINGS"> for
    more information on encoding maps. Setting the protocol encoding overrides
    any encoding in the XML declaration.

    =item * Namespaces

    This is an Expat option. If this is set to a true value, then namespace
    processing is done during the parse. See L<XML::Parser::Expat/"Namespaces">
    for further discussion of namespace processing.

    =item * NoExpand

    This is an Expat option. Normally, the parser will try to expand references
    to entities defined in the internal subset. If this option is set to a true
    value, and a default handler is also set, then the default handler will be
    called when an entity reference is seen in text. This has no effect if a
    default handler has not been registered, and it has no effect on the expansion
    of entity references inside attribute values.

    =item * Stream_Delimiter

    This is an Expat option. It takes a string value. When this string is found
    alone on a line while parsing from a stream, then the parse is ended as if it
    saw an end of file. The intended use is with a stream of xml documents in a
    MIME multipart format. The string should not contain a trailing newline.

    =item * ParseParamEnt

    This is an Expat option. Unless standalone is set to "yes" in the XML
    declaration, setting this to a true value allows the external DTD to be read,
    and parameter entities to be parsed and expanded.

    =item * NoLWP

    This option has no effect if the ExternEnt or ExternEntFin handlers are
    directly set. Otherwise, if true, it forces the use of a file based external
    entity handler.

    =item * Non-Expat-Options

    If provided, this should be an anonymous hash whose keys are options that
    shouldn't be passed to Expat. This should only be of concern to those
    subclassing XML::Parser.

    =back

    =item setHandlers(TYPE, HANDLER [, TYPE, HANDLER [...]])

    This method registers handlers for various parser events. It overrides any
    previous handlers registered through the Style or Handler options or through
    earlier calls to setHandlers. By providing a false or undefined value as
    the handler, the existing handler can be unset.

    This method returns a list of type, handler pairs corresponding to the
    input. The handlers returned are the ones that were in effect prior to
    the call.

    See a description of the handler types in L<"HANDLERS">.

    =item parse(SOURCE [, OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])

    The SOURCE parameter should either be a string containing the whole XML
    document, or it should be an open IO::Handle. Constructor options to
    XML::Parser::Expat given as keyword-value pairs may follow the SOURCE
    parameter. These override, for this call, any options or attributes passed
    through from the XML::Parser instance.

    A die call is thrown if a parse error occurs. Otherwise it will return 1
    or whatever is returned from the B<Final> handler, if one is installed.
    In other words, what parse may return depends on the style.

    =item parsestring

    This is just an alias for parse for backwards compatibility.

    =item parsefile(FILE [, OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])

    Open FILE for reading, then call parse with the open handle. The file
    is closed no matter how parse returns. Returns what parse returns.

    =item parse_start([ OPT => OPT_VALUE [...]])

    Create and return a new instance of XML::Parser::ExpatNB. Constructor
    options may be provided. If an init handler has been provided, it is
    called before returning the ExpatNB object. Documents are parsed by
    making incremental calls to the parse_more method of this object, which
    takes a string. A single call to the parse_done method of this object,
    which takes no arguments, indicates that the document is finished.

    If there is a final handler installed, it is executed by the parse_done
    method before returning and the parse_done method returns whatever is
    returned by the final handler.

    =back

    =head1 HANDLERS

    Expat is an event based parser. As the parser recognizes parts of the
    document (say the start or end tag for an XML element), then any handlers
    registered for that type of an event are called with suitable parameters.
    All handlers receive an instance of XML::Parser::Expat as their first
    argument. See L<XML::Parser::Expat/"METHODS"> for a discussion of the
    methods that can be called on this object.

    =head2 Init (Expat)

    This is called just before the parsing of the document starts.

    =head2 Final (Expat)

    This is called just after parsing has finished, but only if no errors
    occurred during the parse. Parse returns what this returns.

    =head2 Start (Expat, Element [, Attr, Val [,...]])

    This event is generated when an XML start tag is recognized. Element is the
    name of the XML element type that is opened with the start tag. The Attr &
    Val pairs are generated for each attribute in the start tag.

    =head2 End (Expat, Element)

    This event is generated when an XML end tag is recognized. Note that
    an XML empty tag (<foo/>) generates both a start and an end event.

    =head2 Char (Expat, String)

    This event is generated when non-markup is recognized. The non-markup
    sequence of characters is in String. A single non-markup sequence of
    characters may generate multiple calls to this handler. Whatever the
    encoding of the string in the original document, this is given to the
    handler in UTF-8.

    =head2 Proc (Expat, Target, Data)

    This event is generated when a processing instruction is recognized.

    =head2 Comment (Expat, Data)

    This event is generated when a comment is recognized.

    =head2 CdataStart (Expat)

    This is called at the start of a CDATA section.

    =head2 CdataEnd (Expat)

    This is called at the end of a CDATA section.

    =head2 Default (Expat, String)

    This is called for any characters that don't have a registered handler.
    This includes both characters that are part of markup for which no
    events are generated (markup declarations) and characters that
    could generate events, but for which no handler has been registered.

    Whatever the encoding in the original document, the string is returned to
    the handler in UTF-8.

    =head2 Unparsed (Expat, Entity, Base, Sysid, Pubid, Notation)

    This is called for a declaration of an unparsed entity. Entity is the name
    of the entity. Base is the base to be used for resolving a relative URI.
    Sysid is the system id. Pubid is the public id. Notation is the notation
    name. Base and Pubid may be undefined.

    =head2 Notation (Expat, Notation, Base, Sysid, Pubid)

    This is called for a declaration of notation. Notation is the notation name.
    Base is the base to be used for resolving a relative URI. Sysid is the system
    id. Pubid is the public id. Base, Sysid, and Pubid may all be undefined.

    =head2 ExternEnt (Expat, Base, Sysid, Pubid)

    This is called when an external entity is referenced. Base is the base to be
    used for resolving a relative URI. Sysid is the system id. Pubid is the public
    id. Base, and Pubid may be undefined.

    This handler should either return a string, which represents the contents of
    the external entity, or return an open filehandle that can be read to obtain
    the contents of the external entity, or return undef, which indicates the
    external entity couldn't be found and will generate a parse error.

    If an open filehandle is returned, it must be returned as either a glob
    (*FOO) or as a reference to a glob (e.g. an instance of IO::Handle).

    A default handler is installed for this event. The default handler is
    XML::Parser::lwp_ext_ent_handler unless the NoLWP option was provided with
    a true value, otherwise XML::Parser::file_ext_ent_handler is the default
    handler for external entities. Even without the NoLWP option, if the
    URI or LWP modules are missing, the file based handler ends up being used
    after giving a warning on the first external entity reference.

    The LWP external entity handler will use proxies defined in the environment
    (http_proxy, ftp_proxy, etc.).

    Please note that the LWP external entity handler reads the entire
    entity into a string and returns it, where as the file handler opens a
    filehandle.

    Also note that the file external entity handler will likely choke on
    absolute URIs or file names that don't fit the conventions of the local
    operating system.

    The expat base method can be used to set a basename for
    relative pathnames. If no basename is given, or if the basename is itself
    a relative name, then it is relative to the current working directory.

    =head2 ExternEntFin (Expat)

    This is called after parsing an external entity. It's not called unless
    an ExternEnt handler is also set. There is a default handler installed
    that pairs with the default ExternEnt handler.

    If you're going to install your own ExternEnt handler, then you should
    set (or unset) this handler too.

    =head2 Entity (Expat, Name, Val, Sysid, Pubid, Ndata, IsParam)

    This is called when an entity is declared. For internal entities, the Val
    parameter will contain the value and the remaining three parameters will be
    undefined. For external entities, the Val parameter will be undefined, the
    Sysid parameter will have the system id, the Pubid parameter will have the
    public id if it was provided (it will be undefined otherwise), the Ndata
    parameter will contain the notation for unparsed entities. If this is a
    parameter entity declaration, then the IsParam parameter is true.

    Note that this handler and the Unparsed handler above overlap. If both are
    set, then this handler will not be called for unparsed entities.

    =head2 Element (Expat, Name, Model)

    The element handler is called when an element declaration is found. Name
    is the element name, and Model is the content model as an XML::Parser::Content
    object. See L<XML::Parser::Expat/"XML::Parser::ContentModel Methods">
    for methods available for this class.

    =head2 Attlist (Expat, Elname, Attname, Type, Default, Fixed)

    This handler is called for each attribute in an ATTLIST declaration.
    So an ATTLIST declaration that has multiple attributes will generate multiple
    calls to this handler. The Elname parameter is the name of the element with
    which the attribute is being associated. The Attname parameter is the name
    of the attribute. Type is the attribute type, given as a string. Default is
    the default value, which will either be "#REQUIRED", "#IMPLIED" or a quoted
    string (i.e. the returned string will begin and end with a quote character).
    If Fixed is true, then this is a fixed attribute.

    =head2 Doctype (Expat, Name, Sysid, Pubid, Internal)

    This handler is called for DOCTYPE declarations. Name is the document type
    name. Sysid is the system id of the document type, if it was provided,
    otherwise it's undefined. Pubid is the public id of the document type,
    which will be undefined if no public id was given. Internal is the internal
    subset, given as a string. If there was no internal subset, it will be
    undefined. Internal will contain all whitespace, comments, processing
    instructions, and declarations seen in the internal subset. The declarations
    will be there whether or not they have been processed by another handler
    (except for unparsed entities processed by the Unparsed handler). However,
    comments and processing instructions will not appear if they've been processed
    by their respective handlers.

    =head2 * DoctypeFin (Parser)

    This handler is called after parsing of the DOCTYPE declaration has finished,
    including any internal or external DTD declarations.

    =head2 XMLDecl (Expat, Version, Encoding, Standalone)

    This handler is called for xml declarations. Version is a string containg
    the version. Encoding is either undefined or contains an encoding string.
    Standalone will be either true, false, or undefined if the standalone attribute
    is yes, no, or not made respectively.

    =head1 STYLES

    =head2 Debug

    This just prints out the document in outline form. Nothing special is
    returned by parse.

    =head2 Subs

    Each time an element starts, a sub by that name in the package specified
    by the Pkg option is called with the same parameters that the Start
    handler gets called with.

    Each time an element ends, a sub with that name appended with an underscore
    ("_"), is called with the same parameters that the End handler gets called
    with.

    Nothing special is returned by parse.

    =head2 Tree

    Parse will return a parse tree for the document. Each node in the tree
    takes the form of a tag, content pair. Text nodes are represented with
    a pseudo-tag of "0" and the string that is their content. For elements,
    the content is an array reference. The first item in the array is a
    (possibly empty) hash reference containing attributes. The remainder of
    the array is a sequence of tag-content pairs representing the content
    of the element.

    So for example the result of parsing:

    <foo><head id="a">Hello <em>there</em></head><bar>Howdy<ref/></bar>do</foo>

    would be:

    Tag Content
    ==================================================================
    [foo, [{}, head, [{id => "a"}, 0, "Hello ", em, [{}, 0, "there"]],
    bar, [ {}, 0, "Howdy", ref, [{}]],
    0, "do"
    ]
    ]

    The root document "foo", has 3 children: a "head" element, a "bar"
    element and the text "do". After the empty attribute hash, these are
    represented in it's contents by 3 tag-content pairs.

    =head2 Objects

    This is similar to the Tree style, except that a hash object is created for
    each element. The corresponding object will be in the class whose name
    is created by appending "::" and the element name to the package set with
    the Pkg option. Non-markup text will be in the ::Characters class. The
    contents of the corresponding object will be in an anonymous array that
    is the value of the Kids property for that object.

    =head2 Stream

    This style also uses the Pkg package. If none of the subs that this
    style looks for is there, then the effect of parsing with this style is
    to print a canonical copy of the document without comments or declarations.
    All the subs receive as their 1st parameter the Expat instance for the
    document they're parsing.

    It looks for the following routines:

    =over 4

    =item * StartDocument

    Called at the start of the parse .

    =item * StartTag

    Called for every start tag with a second parameter of the element type. The $_
    variable will contain a copy of the tag and the %_ variable will contain
    attribute values supplied for that element.

    =item * EndTag

    Called for every end tag with a second parameter of the element type. The $_
    variable will contain a copy of the end tag.

    =item * Text

    Called just before start or end tags with accumulated non-markup text in
    the $_ variable.

    =item * PI

    Called for processing instructions. The $_ variable will contain a copy of
    the PI and the target and data are sent as 2nd and 3rd parameters
    respectively.

    =item * EndDocument

    Called at conclusion of the parse.

    =back

    =head1 ENCODINGS

    XML documents may be encoded in character sets other than Unicode as
    long as they may be mapped into the Unicode character set. Expat has
    further restrictions on encodings. Read the xmlparse.h header file in
    the expat distribution to see details on these restrictions.

    Expat has built-in encodings for: C<UTF-8>, C<ISO-8859-1>, C<UTF-16>, and
    C<US-ASCII>. Encodings are set either through the XML declaration
    encoding attribute or through the ProtocolEncoding option to XML::Parser
    or XML::Parser::Expat.

    For encodings other than the built-ins, expat calls the function
    load_encoding in the Expat package with the encoding name. This function
    looks for a file in the path list @XML::Parser::Expat::Encoding_Path, that
    matches the lower-cased name with a '.enc' extension. The first one it
    finds, it loads.

    If you wish to build your own encoding maps, check out the XML::Encoding
    module from CPAN.

    =head1 AUTHORS

    Larry Wall <F<***@***>> wrote version 1.0.

    Clark Cooper <F<***@***>> picked up support, changed the API
    for this version (2.x), provided documentation,
    and added some standard package features.

    Matt Sergeant <F<***@***>> is now maintaining XML::Parser

    =cut
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    1. [Dal] Messages postés 6122 Date d'inscription   Statut Contributeur Dernière intervention   1 108
       
      Si je connais Perl et que j'ai déjà utilisé Selenium à partir de programmes Java, je n'ai jamais utilisé Centreon... alors il me manque des informations de contexte sur pourquoi tu lances cette "commande" que tu n'identifies pas, ce qu'elle est sensée faire et à partir de quoi et pourquoi tu la lances.

      Peux-tu fournir d'avantage d'informations sur ces sujets, et peux tu déjà stp :
      • poster la "commande" complète et ce qu'elle affiche à l'écran jusqu'au message d'erreur
      • poster les premières lignes du fichier qui est supposé être traité (ou le fichier en entier s'il n'est pas trop long)
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  3. coloradoguys
     
    [root@centreon libexec]# ./check_centreon_waa -c 60 -w 50 -d /var/lib/centreon_waa -t test -r 192.168.1.119:4444

    not well-formed (invalid token) at line 2, column 6, byte 18 at /usr/lib64/perl5/XML/Parser.pm line 187
    [root@centreon libexec]#

    mon but est de se rendre a l'adresse de mon centreon, de s'authntifier puis se deconnecter. quand je le lance depuis selenium ca marche parfaitement mais la c'est compliquer car la commande m'envoi voir ailleurs si je ne lui donne pas un fichier HTML

    le forum ne me laisse pas publier mon code html
    0
    1. [Dal] Messages postés 6122 Date d'inscription   Statut Contributeur Dernière intervention   1 108
       
      Pour poster le code XML de ton fichier, tu devrais utiliser les balises de code du forum pour le langage html (en utilisant la flèche basse à droite du symbole code pour choisir le bon langage).

      Autrement, si ton problème est que ton XML est mal formé, tu peux le soumettre à un valideur de code XML pour repérer les erreurs et t'aider à le corriger.

      Par exemple : https://www.w3schools.com/xml/xml_validator.asp

      qui comporte aussi des indications pour créer des fichiers XML minimaux respectant les contraintes de base.
      0