Use the links below to download &XercesCName; from one of our mirrors. You must verify the integrity of the downloaded files using signatures downloaded from our main distribution directory.

You can download the &XercesCName; distributions from the master distribution directory or, preferably, its mirror. Only current recommended releases are available on the main distribution site and its mirrors. Older releases are available from the archive download site.

The currently selected mirror is [preferred]. If you encounter a problem with this mirror, please select another mirror. If all mirrors are failing, there are backup mirrors (at the end of the mirrors list) that should be available.

Other mirrors:

You may also consult the complete list of mirrors.

The &XercesCName; &XercesCLatest; release is available in source code distributions only. If binaries are produced at a future point, this page will be updated.

xerces-c-3.1.2.zip [PGP] [MD5]
xerces-c-3.1.2.tar.gz [PGP] [MD5]
xerces-c-3.1.2.tar.bz2 [PGP] [MD5]
xerces-c-3.1.2.tar.xz [PGP] [MD5]

It is essential that you verify the integrity of the downloaded files using the PGP or MD5 signatures. Please read Verifying HTTP Server Releases for more information on why you should verify our releases.

The PGP signatures can be verified using PGP or GPG. First download the &XercesCName; KEYS as well as the .asc signature file for the particular distribution. Make sure you get these files from the main distribution directory, rather than from a mirror. Then verify the signatures using:

% pgpk -a KEYS % pgpv <distribution-name>.asc

or

% pgp -ka KEYS % pgp <distribution-name>.asc

or

% gpg --import KEYS % gpg --verify <distribution-name>.asc

Alternatively, you can verify the MD5 signature on the files. A command line program called md5 or md5sum is included in most UNXI distributions. It is also available as part of GNU Textutils. Windows users can get binary md5 programs from here, here, or here.