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- # Copyright (C) 2001-2007 Python Software Foundation
- # Author: Ben Gertzfield, Barry Warsaw
- # Contact: email-sig@python.org
- __all__ = [
- 'Charset',
- 'add_alias',
- 'add_charset',
- 'add_codec',
- ]
- from functools import partial
- import email.base64mime
- import email.quoprimime
- from email import errors
- from email.encoders import encode_7or8bit
- # Flags for types of header encodings
- QP = 1 # Quoted-Printable
- BASE64 = 2 # Base64
- SHORTEST = 3 # the shorter of QP and base64, but only for headers
- # In "=?charset?q?hello_world?=", the =?, ?q?, and ?= add up to 7
- RFC2047_CHROME_LEN = 7
- DEFAULT_CHARSET = 'us-ascii'
- UNKNOWN8BIT = 'unknown-8bit'
- EMPTYSTRING = ''
- # Defaults
- CHARSETS = {
- # input header enc body enc output conv
- 'iso-8859-1': (QP, QP, None),
- 'iso-8859-2': (QP, QP, None),
- 'iso-8859-3': (QP, QP, None),
- 'iso-8859-4': (QP, QP, None),
- # iso-8859-5 is Cyrillic, and not especially used
- # iso-8859-6 is Arabic, also not particularly used
- # iso-8859-7 is Greek, QP will not make it readable
- # iso-8859-8 is Hebrew, QP will not make it readable
- 'iso-8859-9': (QP, QP, None),
- 'iso-8859-10': (QP, QP, None),
- # iso-8859-11 is Thai, QP will not make it readable
- 'iso-8859-13': (QP, QP, None),
- 'iso-8859-14': (QP, QP, None),
- 'iso-8859-15': (QP, QP, None),
- 'iso-8859-16': (QP, QP, None),
- 'windows-1252':(QP, QP, None),
- 'viscii': (QP, QP, None),
- 'us-ascii': (None, None, None),
- 'big5': (BASE64, BASE64, None),
- 'gb2312': (BASE64, BASE64, None),
- 'euc-jp': (BASE64, None, 'iso-2022-jp'),
- 'shift_jis': (BASE64, None, 'iso-2022-jp'),
- 'iso-2022-jp': (BASE64, None, None),
- 'koi8-r': (BASE64, BASE64, None),
- 'utf-8': (SHORTEST, BASE64, 'utf-8'),
- }
- # Aliases for other commonly-used names for character sets. Map
- # them to the real ones used in email.
- ALIASES = {
- 'latin_1': 'iso-8859-1',
- 'latin-1': 'iso-8859-1',
- 'latin_2': 'iso-8859-2',
- 'latin-2': 'iso-8859-2',
- 'latin_3': 'iso-8859-3',
- 'latin-3': 'iso-8859-3',
- 'latin_4': 'iso-8859-4',
- 'latin-4': 'iso-8859-4',
- 'latin_5': 'iso-8859-9',
- 'latin-5': 'iso-8859-9',
- 'latin_6': 'iso-8859-10',
- 'latin-6': 'iso-8859-10',
- 'latin_7': 'iso-8859-13',
- 'latin-7': 'iso-8859-13',
- 'latin_8': 'iso-8859-14',
- 'latin-8': 'iso-8859-14',
- 'latin_9': 'iso-8859-15',
- 'latin-9': 'iso-8859-15',
- 'latin_10':'iso-8859-16',
- 'latin-10':'iso-8859-16',
- 'cp949': 'ks_c_5601-1987',
- 'euc_jp': 'euc-jp',
- 'euc_kr': 'euc-kr',
- 'ascii': 'us-ascii',
- }
- # Map charsets to their Unicode codec strings.
- CODEC_MAP = {
- 'gb2312': 'eucgb2312_cn',
- 'big5': 'big5_tw',
- # Hack: We don't want *any* conversion for stuff marked us-ascii, as all
- # sorts of garbage might be sent to us in the guise of 7-bit us-ascii.
- # Let that stuff pass through without conversion to/from Unicode.
- 'us-ascii': None,
- }
- # Convenience functions for extending the above mappings
- def add_charset(charset, header_enc=None, body_enc=None, output_charset=None):
- """Add character set properties to the global registry.
- charset is the input character set, and must be the canonical name of a
- character set.
- Optional header_enc and body_enc is either charset.QP for
- quoted-printable, charset.BASE64 for base64 encoding, charset.SHORTEST for
- the shortest of qp or base64 encoding, or None for no encoding. SHORTEST
- is only valid for header_enc. It describes how message headers and
- message bodies in the input charset are to be encoded. Default is no
- encoding.
- Optional output_charset is the character set that the output should be
- in. Conversions will proceed from input charset, to Unicode, to the
- output charset when the method Charset.convert() is called. The default
- is to output in the same character set as the input.
- Both input_charset and output_charset must have Unicode codec entries in
- the module's charset-to-codec mapping; use add_codec(charset, codecname)
- to add codecs the module does not know about. See the codecs module's
- documentation for more information.
- """
- if body_enc == SHORTEST:
- raise ValueError('SHORTEST not allowed for body_enc')
- CHARSETS[charset] = (header_enc, body_enc, output_charset)
- def add_alias(alias, canonical):
- """Add a character set alias.
- alias is the alias name, e.g. latin-1
- canonical is the character set's canonical name, e.g. iso-8859-1
- """
- ALIASES[alias] = canonical
- def add_codec(charset, codecname):
- """Add a codec that map characters in the given charset to/from Unicode.
- charset is the canonical name of a character set. codecname is the name
- of a Python codec, as appropriate for the second argument to the unicode()
- built-in, or to the encode() method of a Unicode string.
- """
- CODEC_MAP[charset] = codecname
- # Convenience function for encoding strings, taking into account
- # that they might be unknown-8bit (ie: have surrogate-escaped bytes)
- def _encode(string, codec):
- if codec == UNKNOWN8BIT:
- return string.encode('ascii', 'surrogateescape')
- else:
- return string.encode(codec)
- class Charset:
- """Map character sets to their email properties.
- This class provides information about the requirements imposed on email
- for a specific character set. It also provides convenience routines for
- converting between character sets, given the availability of the
- applicable codecs. Given a character set, it will do its best to provide
- information on how to use that character set in an email in an
- RFC-compliant way.
- Certain character sets must be encoded with quoted-printable or base64
- when used in email headers or bodies. Certain character sets must be
- converted outright, and are not allowed in email. Instances of this
- module expose the following information about a character set:
- input_charset: The initial character set specified. Common aliases
- are converted to their `official' email names (e.g. latin_1
- is converted to iso-8859-1). Defaults to 7-bit us-ascii.
- header_encoding: If the character set must be encoded before it can be
- used in an email header, this attribute will be set to
- charset.QP (for quoted-printable), charset.BASE64 (for
- base64 encoding), or charset.SHORTEST for the shortest of
- QP or BASE64 encoding. Otherwise, it will be None.
- body_encoding: Same as header_encoding, but describes the encoding for the
- mail message's body, which indeed may be different than the
- header encoding. charset.SHORTEST is not allowed for
- body_encoding.
- output_charset: Some character sets must be converted before they can be
- used in email headers or bodies. If the input_charset is
- one of them, this attribute will contain the name of the
- charset output will be converted to. Otherwise, it will
- be None.
- input_codec: The name of the Python codec used to convert the
- input_charset to Unicode. If no conversion codec is
- necessary, this attribute will be None.
- output_codec: The name of the Python codec used to convert Unicode
- to the output_charset. If no conversion codec is necessary,
- this attribute will have the same value as the input_codec.
- """
- def __init__(self, input_charset=DEFAULT_CHARSET):
- # RFC 2046, $4.1.2 says charsets are not case sensitive. We coerce to
- # unicode because its .lower() is locale insensitive. If the argument
- # is already a unicode, we leave it at that, but ensure that the
- # charset is ASCII, as the standard (RFC XXX) requires.
- try:
- if isinstance(input_charset, str):
- input_charset.encode('ascii')
- else:
- input_charset = str(input_charset, 'ascii')
- except UnicodeError:
- raise errors.CharsetError(input_charset)
- input_charset = input_charset.lower()
- # Set the input charset after filtering through the aliases
- self.input_charset = ALIASES.get(input_charset, input_charset)
- # We can try to guess which encoding and conversion to use by the
- # charset_map dictionary. Try that first, but let the user override
- # it.
- henc, benc, conv = CHARSETS.get(self.input_charset,
- (SHORTEST, BASE64, None))
- if not conv:
- conv = self.input_charset
- # Set the attributes, allowing the arguments to override the default.
- self.header_encoding = henc
- self.body_encoding = benc
- self.output_charset = ALIASES.get(conv, conv)
- # Now set the codecs. If one isn't defined for input_charset,
- # guess and try a Unicode codec with the same name as input_codec.
- self.input_codec = CODEC_MAP.get(self.input_charset,
- self.input_charset)
- self.output_codec = CODEC_MAP.get(self.output_charset,
- self.output_charset)
- def __repr__(self):
- return self.input_charset.lower()
- def __eq__(self, other):
- return str(self) == str(other).lower()
- def get_body_encoding(self):
- """Return the content-transfer-encoding used for body encoding.
- This is either the string `quoted-printable' or `base64' depending on
- the encoding used, or it is a function in which case you should call
- the function with a single argument, the Message object being
- encoded. The function should then set the Content-Transfer-Encoding
- header itself to whatever is appropriate.
- Returns "quoted-printable" if self.body_encoding is QP.
- Returns "base64" if self.body_encoding is BASE64.
- Returns conversion function otherwise.
- """
- assert self.body_encoding != SHORTEST
- if self.body_encoding == QP:
- return 'quoted-printable'
- elif self.body_encoding == BASE64:
- return 'base64'
- else:
- return encode_7or8bit
- def get_output_charset(self):
- """Return the output character set.
- This is self.output_charset if that is not None, otherwise it is
- self.input_charset.
- """
- return self.output_charset or self.input_charset
- def header_encode(self, string):
- """Header-encode a string by converting it first to bytes.
- The type of encoding (base64 or quoted-printable) will be based on
- this charset's `header_encoding`.
- :param string: A unicode string for the header. It must be possible
- to encode this string to bytes using the character set's
- output codec.
- :return: The encoded string, with RFC 2047 chrome.
- """
- codec = self.output_codec or 'us-ascii'
- header_bytes = _encode(string, codec)
- # 7bit/8bit encodings return the string unchanged (modulo conversions)
- encoder_module = self._get_encoder(header_bytes)
- if encoder_module is None:
- return string
- return encoder_module.header_encode(header_bytes, codec)
- def header_encode_lines(self, string, maxlengths):
- """Header-encode a string by converting it first to bytes.
- This is similar to `header_encode()` except that the string is fit
- into maximum line lengths as given by the argument.
- :param string: A unicode string for the header. It must be possible
- to encode this string to bytes using the character set's
- output codec.
- :param maxlengths: Maximum line length iterator. Each element
- returned from this iterator will provide the next maximum line
- length. This parameter is used as an argument to built-in next()
- and should never be exhausted. The maximum line lengths should
- not count the RFC 2047 chrome. These line lengths are only a
- hint; the splitter does the best it can.
- :return: Lines of encoded strings, each with RFC 2047 chrome.
- """
- # See which encoding we should use.
- codec = self.output_codec or 'us-ascii'
- header_bytes = _encode(string, codec)
- encoder_module = self._get_encoder(header_bytes)
- encoder = partial(encoder_module.header_encode, charset=codec)
- # Calculate the number of characters that the RFC 2047 chrome will
- # contribute to each line.
- charset = self.get_output_charset()
- extra = len(charset) + RFC2047_CHROME_LEN
- # Now comes the hard part. We must encode bytes but we can't split on
- # bytes because some character sets are variable length and each
- # encoded word must stand on its own. So the problem is you have to
- # encode to bytes to figure out this word's length, but you must split
- # on characters. This causes two problems: first, we don't know how
- # many octets a specific substring of unicode characters will get
- # encoded to, and second, we don't know how many ASCII characters
- # those octets will get encoded to. Unless we try it. Which seems
- # inefficient. In the interest of being correct rather than fast (and
- # in the hope that there will be few encoded headers in any such
- # message), brute force it. :(
- lines = []
- current_line = []
- maxlen = next(maxlengths) - extra
- for character in string:
- current_line.append(character)
- this_line = EMPTYSTRING.join(current_line)
- length = encoder_module.header_length(_encode(this_line, charset))
- if length > maxlen:
- # This last character doesn't fit so pop it off.
- current_line.pop()
- # Does nothing fit on the first line?
- if not lines and not current_line:
- lines.append(None)
- else:
- joined_line = EMPTYSTRING.join(current_line)
- header_bytes = _encode(joined_line, codec)
- lines.append(encoder(header_bytes))
- current_line = [character]
- maxlen = next(maxlengths) - extra
- joined_line = EMPTYSTRING.join(current_line)
- header_bytes = _encode(joined_line, codec)
- lines.append(encoder(header_bytes))
- return lines
- def _get_encoder(self, header_bytes):
- if self.header_encoding == BASE64:
- return email.base64mime
- elif self.header_encoding == QP:
- return email.quoprimime
- elif self.header_encoding == SHORTEST:
- len64 = email.base64mime.header_length(header_bytes)
- lenqp = email.quoprimime.header_length(header_bytes)
- if len64 < lenqp:
- return email.base64mime
- else:
- return email.quoprimime
- else:
- return None
- def body_encode(self, string):
- """Body-encode a string by converting it first to bytes.
- The type of encoding (base64 or quoted-printable) will be based on
- self.body_encoding. If body_encoding is None, we assume the
- output charset is a 7bit encoding, so re-encoding the decoded
- string using the ascii codec produces the correct string version
- of the content.
- """
- if not string:
- return string
- if self.body_encoding is BASE64:
- if isinstance(string, str):
- string = string.encode(self.output_charset)
- return email.base64mime.body_encode(string)
- elif self.body_encoding is QP:
- # quopromime.body_encode takes a string, but operates on it as if
- # it were a list of byte codes. For a (minimal) history on why
- # this is so, see changeset 0cf700464177. To correctly encode a
- # character set, then, we must turn it into pseudo bytes via the
- # latin1 charset, which will encode any byte as a single code point
- # between 0 and 255, which is what body_encode is expecting.
- if isinstance(string, str):
- string = string.encode(self.output_charset)
- string = string.decode('latin1')
- return email.quoprimime.body_encode(string)
- else:
- if isinstance(string, str):
- string = string.encode(self.output_charset).decode('ascii')
- return string
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