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@nielsdos nielsdos commented Jun 4, 2023

From the moment an ID is created, libxml2's behaviour is to cache that element, even if that element is not yet attached to the document. Similarly, only upon destruction of the element the ID is actually removed by libxml2. Since libxml2 has such behaviour deeply ingrained in the library, and uses the cache for various purposes, it seems like a bad idea and lost cause to fight it. Instead, we'll simply walk the tree upwards to check if the node is attached to the document.

There was a previous PR attempt for this here: #6936. The approach in this PR is different and does not increase the cost of element removal.

From the moment an ID is created, libxml2's behaviour is to cache that element,
even if that element is not yet attached to the document. Similarly, only upon
destruction of the element the ID is actually removed by libxml2.
Since libxml2 has such behaviour deeply ingrained in the library, and uses the
cache for various purposes, it seems like a bad idea and lost cause to fight it.
Instead, we'll simply walk the tree upwards to check if the node is attached to
the document.
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@Girgias Girgias left a comment

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LGTM

@nielsdos nielsdos closed this in 0e34ac8 Jun 4, 2023
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2 participants