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- # Copyright (C) 2002-2007 Python Software Foundation
- # Author: Ben Gertzfield, Barry Warsaw
- # Contact: email-sig@python.org
- """Header encoding and decoding functionality."""
- __all__ = [
- 'Header',
- 'decode_header',
- 'make_header',
- ]
- import re
- import binascii
- import email.quoprimime
- import email.base64mime
- from email.errors import HeaderParseError
- from email import charset as _charset
- Charset = _charset.Charset
- NL = '\n'
- SPACE = ' '
- BSPACE = b' '
- SPACE8 = ' ' * 8
- EMPTYSTRING = ''
- MAXLINELEN = 78
- FWS = ' \t'
- USASCII = Charset('us-ascii')
- UTF8 = Charset('utf-8')
- # Match encoded-word strings in the form =?charset?q?Hello_World?=
- ecre = re.compile(r'''
- =\? # literal =?
- (?P<charset>[^?]*?) # non-greedy up to the next ? is the charset
- \? # literal ?
- (?P<encoding>[qQbB]) # either a "q" or a "b", case insensitive
- \? # literal ?
- (?P<encoded>.*?) # non-greedy up to the next ?= is the encoded string
- \?= # literal ?=
- ''', re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE)
- # Field name regexp, including trailing colon, but not separating whitespace,
- # according to RFC 2822. Character range is from tilde to exclamation mark.
- # For use with .match()
- fcre = re.compile(r'[\041-\176]+:$')
- # Find a header embedded in a putative header value. Used to check for
- # header injection attack.
- _embedded_header = re.compile(r'\n[^ \t]+:')
- # Helpers
- _max_append = email.quoprimime._max_append
- def decode_header(header):
- """Decode a message header value without converting charset.
- Returns a list of (string, charset) pairs containing each of the decoded
- parts of the header. Charset is None for non-encoded parts of the header,
- otherwise a lower-case string containing the name of the character set
- specified in the encoded string.
- header may be a string that may or may not contain RFC2047 encoded words,
- or it may be a Header object.
- An email.errors.HeaderParseError may be raised when certain decoding error
- occurs (e.g. a base64 decoding exception).
- """
- # If it is a Header object, we can just return the encoded chunks.
- if hasattr(header, '_chunks'):
- return [(_charset._encode(string, str(charset)), str(charset))
- for string, charset in header._chunks]
- # If no encoding, just return the header with no charset.
- if not ecre.search(header):
- return [(header, None)]
- # First step is to parse all the encoded parts into triplets of the form
- # (encoded_string, encoding, charset). For unencoded strings, the last
- # two parts will be None.
- words = []
- for line in header.splitlines():
- parts = ecre.split(line)
- first = True
- while parts:
- unencoded = parts.pop(0)
- if first:
- unencoded = unencoded.lstrip()
- first = False
- if unencoded:
- words.append((unencoded, None, None))
- if parts:
- charset = parts.pop(0).lower()
- encoding = parts.pop(0).lower()
- encoded = parts.pop(0)
- words.append((encoded, encoding, charset))
- # Now loop over words and remove words that consist of whitespace
- # between two encoded strings.
- droplist = []
- for n, w in enumerate(words):
- if n>1 and w[1] and words[n-2][1] and words[n-1][0].isspace():
- droplist.append(n-1)
- for d in reversed(droplist):
- del words[d]
- # The next step is to decode each encoded word by applying the reverse
- # base64 or quopri transformation. decoded_words is now a list of the
- # form (decoded_word, charset).
- decoded_words = []
- for encoded_string, encoding, charset in words:
- if encoding is None:
- # This is an unencoded word.
- decoded_words.append((encoded_string, charset))
- elif encoding == 'q':
- word = email.quoprimime.header_decode(encoded_string)
- decoded_words.append((word, charset))
- elif encoding == 'b':
- paderr = len(encoded_string) % 4 # Postel's law: add missing padding
- if paderr:
- encoded_string += '==='[:4 - paderr]
- try:
- word = email.base64mime.decode(encoded_string)
- except binascii.Error:
- raise HeaderParseError('Base64 decoding error')
- else:
- decoded_words.append((word, charset))
- else:
- raise AssertionError('Unexpected encoding: ' + encoding)
- # Now convert all words to bytes and collapse consecutive runs of
- # similarly encoded words.
- collapsed = []
- last_word = last_charset = None
- for word, charset in decoded_words:
- if isinstance(word, str):
- word = bytes(word, 'raw-unicode-escape')
- if last_word is None:
- last_word = word
- last_charset = charset
- elif charset != last_charset:
- collapsed.append((last_word, last_charset))
- last_word = word
- last_charset = charset
- elif last_charset is None:
- last_word += BSPACE + word
- else:
- last_word += word
- collapsed.append((last_word, last_charset))
- return collapsed
- def make_header(decoded_seq, maxlinelen=None, header_name=None,
- continuation_ws=' '):
- """Create a Header from a sequence of pairs as returned by decode_header()
- decode_header() takes a header value string and returns a sequence of
- pairs of the format (decoded_string, charset) where charset is the string
- name of the character set.
- This function takes one of those sequence of pairs and returns a Header
- instance. Optional maxlinelen, header_name, and continuation_ws are as in
- the Header constructor.
- """
- h = Header(maxlinelen=maxlinelen, header_name=header_name,
- continuation_ws=continuation_ws)
- for s, charset in decoded_seq:
- # None means us-ascii but we can simply pass it on to h.append()
- if charset is not None and not isinstance(charset, Charset):
- charset = Charset(charset)
- h.append(s, charset)
- return h
- class Header:
- def __init__(self, s=None, charset=None,
- maxlinelen=None, header_name=None,
- continuation_ws=' ', errors='strict'):
- """Create a MIME-compliant header that can contain many character sets.
- Optional s is the initial header value. If None, the initial header
- value is not set. You can later append to the header with .append()
- method calls. s may be a byte string or a Unicode string, but see the
- .append() documentation for semantics.
- Optional charset serves two purposes: it has the same meaning as the
- charset argument to the .append() method. It also sets the default
- character set for all subsequent .append() calls that omit the charset
- argument. If charset is not provided in the constructor, the us-ascii
- charset is used both as s's initial charset and as the default for
- subsequent .append() calls.
- The maximum line length can be specified explicitly via maxlinelen. For
- splitting the first line to a shorter value (to account for the field
- header which isn't included in s, e.g. `Subject') pass in the name of
- the field in header_name. The default maxlinelen is 78 as recommended
- by RFC 2822.
- continuation_ws must be RFC 2822 compliant folding whitespace (usually
- either a space or a hard tab) which will be prepended to continuation
- lines.
- errors is passed through to the .append() call.
- """
- if charset is None:
- charset = USASCII
- elif not isinstance(charset, Charset):
- charset = Charset(charset)
- self._charset = charset
- self._continuation_ws = continuation_ws
- self._chunks = []
- if s is not None:
- self.append(s, charset, errors)
- if maxlinelen is None:
- maxlinelen = MAXLINELEN
- self._maxlinelen = maxlinelen
- if header_name is None:
- self._headerlen = 0
- else:
- # Take the separating colon and space into account.
- self._headerlen = len(header_name) + 2
- def __str__(self):
- """Return the string value of the header."""
- self._normalize()
- uchunks = []
- lastcs = None
- lastspace = None
- for string, charset in self._chunks:
- # We must preserve spaces between encoded and non-encoded word
- # boundaries, which means for us we need to add a space when we go
- # from a charset to None/us-ascii, or from None/us-ascii to a
- # charset. Only do this for the second and subsequent chunks.
- # Don't add a space if the None/us-ascii string already has
- # a space (trailing or leading depending on transition)
- nextcs = charset
- if nextcs == _charset.UNKNOWN8BIT:
- original_bytes = string.encode('ascii', 'surrogateescape')
- string = original_bytes.decode('ascii', 'replace')
- if uchunks:
- hasspace = string and self._nonctext(string[0])
- if lastcs not in (None, 'us-ascii'):
- if nextcs in (None, 'us-ascii') and not hasspace:
- uchunks.append(SPACE)
- nextcs = None
- elif nextcs not in (None, 'us-ascii') and not lastspace:
- uchunks.append(SPACE)
- lastspace = string and self._nonctext(string[-1])
- lastcs = nextcs
- uchunks.append(string)
- return EMPTYSTRING.join(uchunks)
- # Rich comparison operators for equality only. BAW: does it make sense to
- # have or explicitly disable <, <=, >, >= operators?
- def __eq__(self, other):
- # other may be a Header or a string. Both are fine so coerce
- # ourselves to a unicode (of the unencoded header value), swap the
- # args and do another comparison.
- return other == str(self)
- def append(self, s, charset=None, errors='strict'):
- """Append a string to the MIME header.
- Optional charset, if given, should be a Charset instance or the name
- of a character set (which will be converted to a Charset instance). A
- value of None (the default) means that the charset given in the
- constructor is used.
- s may be a byte string or a Unicode string. If it is a byte string
- (i.e. isinstance(s, str) is false), then charset is the encoding of
- that byte string, and a UnicodeError will be raised if the string
- cannot be decoded with that charset. If s is a Unicode string, then
- charset is a hint specifying the character set of the characters in
- the string. In either case, when producing an RFC 2822 compliant
- header using RFC 2047 rules, the string will be encoded using the
- output codec of the charset. If the string cannot be encoded to the
- output codec, a UnicodeError will be raised.
- Optional `errors' is passed as the errors argument to the decode
- call if s is a byte string.
- """
- if charset is None:
- charset = self._charset
- elif not isinstance(charset, Charset):
- charset = Charset(charset)
- if not isinstance(s, str):
- input_charset = charset.input_codec or 'us-ascii'
- if input_charset == _charset.UNKNOWN8BIT:
- s = s.decode('us-ascii', 'surrogateescape')
- else:
- s = s.decode(input_charset, errors)
- # Ensure that the bytes we're storing can be decoded to the output
- # character set, otherwise an early error is raised.
- output_charset = charset.output_codec or 'us-ascii'
- if output_charset != _charset.UNKNOWN8BIT:
- try:
- s.encode(output_charset, errors)
- except UnicodeEncodeError:
- if output_charset!='us-ascii':
- raise
- charset = UTF8
- self._chunks.append((s, charset))
- def _nonctext(self, s):
- """True if string s is not a ctext character of RFC822.
- """
- return s.isspace() or s in ('(', ')', '\\')
- def encode(self, splitchars=';, \t', maxlinelen=None, linesep='\n'):
- r"""Encode a message header into an RFC-compliant format.
- There are many issues involved in converting a given string for use in
- an email header. Only certain character sets are readable in most
- email clients, and as header strings can only contain a subset of
- 7-bit ASCII, care must be taken to properly convert and encode (with
- Base64 or quoted-printable) header strings. In addition, there is a
- 75-character length limit on any given encoded header field, so
- line-wrapping must be performed, even with double-byte character sets.
- Optional maxlinelen specifies the maximum length of each generated
- line, exclusive of the linesep string. Individual lines may be longer
- than maxlinelen if a folding point cannot be found. The first line
- will be shorter by the length of the header name plus ": " if a header
- name was specified at Header construction time. The default value for
- maxlinelen is determined at header construction time.
- Optional splitchars is a string containing characters which should be
- given extra weight by the splitting algorithm during normal header
- wrapping. This is in very rough support of RFC 2822's `higher level
- syntactic breaks': split points preceded by a splitchar are preferred
- during line splitting, with the characters preferred in the order in
- which they appear in the string. Space and tab may be included in the
- string to indicate whether preference should be given to one over the
- other as a split point when other split chars do not appear in the line
- being split. Splitchars does not affect RFC 2047 encoded lines.
- Optional linesep is a string to be used to separate the lines of
- the value. The default value is the most useful for typical
- Python applications, but it can be set to \r\n to produce RFC-compliant
- line separators when needed.
- """
- self._normalize()
- if maxlinelen is None:
- maxlinelen = self._maxlinelen
- # A maxlinelen of 0 means don't wrap. For all practical purposes,
- # choosing a huge number here accomplishes that and makes the
- # _ValueFormatter algorithm much simpler.
- if maxlinelen == 0:
- maxlinelen = 1000000
- formatter = _ValueFormatter(self._headerlen, maxlinelen,
- self._continuation_ws, splitchars)
- lastcs = None
- hasspace = lastspace = None
- for string, charset in self._chunks:
- if hasspace is not None:
- hasspace = string and self._nonctext(string[0])
- if lastcs not in (None, 'us-ascii'):
- if not hasspace or charset not in (None, 'us-ascii'):
- formatter.add_transition()
- elif charset not in (None, 'us-ascii') and not lastspace:
- formatter.add_transition()
- lastspace = string and self._nonctext(string[-1])
- lastcs = charset
- hasspace = False
- lines = string.splitlines()
- if lines:
- formatter.feed('', lines[0], charset)
- else:
- formatter.feed('', '', charset)
- for line in lines[1:]:
- formatter.newline()
- if charset.header_encoding is not None:
- formatter.feed(self._continuation_ws, ' ' + line.lstrip(),
- charset)
- else:
- sline = line.lstrip()
- fws = line[:len(line)-len(sline)]
- formatter.feed(fws, sline, charset)
- if len(lines) > 1:
- formatter.newline()
- if self._chunks:
- formatter.add_transition()
- value = formatter._str(linesep)
- if _embedded_header.search(value):
- raise HeaderParseError("header value appears to contain "
- "an embedded header: {!r}".format(value))
- return value
- def _normalize(self):
- # Step 1: Normalize the chunks so that all runs of identical charsets
- # get collapsed into a single unicode string.
- chunks = []
- last_charset = None
- last_chunk = []
- for string, charset in self._chunks:
- if charset == last_charset:
- last_chunk.append(string)
- else:
- if last_charset is not None:
- chunks.append((SPACE.join(last_chunk), last_charset))
- last_chunk = [string]
- last_charset = charset
- if last_chunk:
- chunks.append((SPACE.join(last_chunk), last_charset))
- self._chunks = chunks
- class _ValueFormatter:
- def __init__(self, headerlen, maxlen, continuation_ws, splitchars):
- self._maxlen = maxlen
- self._continuation_ws = continuation_ws
- self._continuation_ws_len = len(continuation_ws)
- self._splitchars = splitchars
- self._lines = []
- self._current_line = _Accumulator(headerlen)
- def _str(self, linesep):
- self.newline()
- return linesep.join(self._lines)
- def __str__(self):
- return self._str(NL)
- def newline(self):
- end_of_line = self._current_line.pop()
- if end_of_line != (' ', ''):
- self._current_line.push(*end_of_line)
- if len(self._current_line) > 0:
- if self._current_line.is_onlyws() and self._lines:
- self._lines[-1] += str(self._current_line)
- else:
- self._lines.append(str(self._current_line))
- self._current_line.reset()
- def add_transition(self):
- self._current_line.push(' ', '')
- def feed(self, fws, string, charset):
- # If the charset has no header encoding (i.e. it is an ASCII encoding)
- # then we must split the header at the "highest level syntactic break"
- # possible. Note that we don't have a lot of smarts about field
- # syntax; we just try to break on semi-colons, then commas, then
- # whitespace. Eventually, this should be pluggable.
- if charset.header_encoding is None:
- self._ascii_split(fws, string, self._splitchars)
- return
- # Otherwise, we're doing either a Base64 or a quoted-printable
- # encoding which means we don't need to split the line on syntactic
- # breaks. We can basically just find enough characters to fit on the
- # current line, minus the RFC 2047 chrome. What makes this trickier
- # though is that we have to split at octet boundaries, not character
- # boundaries but it's only safe to split at character boundaries so at
- # best we can only get close.
- encoded_lines = charset.header_encode_lines(string, self._maxlengths())
- # The first element extends the current line, but if it's None then
- # nothing more fit on the current line so start a new line.
- try:
- first_line = encoded_lines.pop(0)
- except IndexError:
- # There are no encoded lines, so we're done.
- return
- if first_line is not None:
- self._append_chunk(fws, first_line)
- try:
- last_line = encoded_lines.pop()
- except IndexError:
- # There was only one line.
- return
- self.newline()
- self._current_line.push(self._continuation_ws, last_line)
- # Everything else are full lines in themselves.
- for line in encoded_lines:
- self._lines.append(self._continuation_ws + line)
- def _maxlengths(self):
- # The first line's length.
- yield self._maxlen - len(self._current_line)
- while True:
- yield self._maxlen - self._continuation_ws_len
- def _ascii_split(self, fws, string, splitchars):
- # The RFC 2822 header folding algorithm is simple in principle but
- # complex in practice. Lines may be folded any place where "folding
- # white space" appears by inserting a linesep character in front of the
- # FWS. The complication is that not all spaces or tabs qualify as FWS,
- # and we are also supposed to prefer to break at "higher level
- # syntactic breaks". We can't do either of these without intimate
- # knowledge of the structure of structured headers, which we don't have
- # here. So the best we can do here is prefer to break at the specified
- # splitchars, and hope that we don't choose any spaces or tabs that
- # aren't legal FWS. (This is at least better than the old algorithm,
- # where we would sometimes *introduce* FWS after a splitchar, or the
- # algorithm before that, where we would turn all white space runs into
- # single spaces or tabs.)
- parts = re.split("(["+FWS+"]+)", fws+string)
- if parts[0]:
- parts[:0] = ['']
- else:
- parts.pop(0)
- for fws, part in zip(*[iter(parts)]*2):
- self._append_chunk(fws, part)
- def _append_chunk(self, fws, string):
- self._current_line.push(fws, string)
- if len(self._current_line) > self._maxlen:
- # Find the best split point, working backward from the end.
- # There might be none, on a long first line.
- for ch in self._splitchars:
- for i in range(self._current_line.part_count()-1, 0, -1):
- if ch.isspace():
- fws = self._current_line[i][0]
- if fws and fws[0]==ch:
- break
- prevpart = self._current_line[i-1][1]
- if prevpart and prevpart[-1]==ch:
- break
- else:
- continue
- break
- else:
- fws, part = self._current_line.pop()
- if self._current_line._initial_size > 0:
- # There will be a header, so leave it on a line by itself.
- self.newline()
- if not fws:
- # We don't use continuation_ws here because the whitespace
- # after a header should always be a space.
- fws = ' '
- self._current_line.push(fws, part)
- return
- remainder = self._current_line.pop_from(i)
- self._lines.append(str(self._current_line))
- self._current_line.reset(remainder)
- class _Accumulator(list):
- def __init__(self, initial_size=0):
- self._initial_size = initial_size
- super().__init__()
- def push(self, fws, string):
- self.append((fws, string))
- def pop_from(self, i=0):
- popped = self[i:]
- self[i:] = []
- return popped
- def pop(self):
- if self.part_count()==0:
- return ('', '')
- return super().pop()
- def __len__(self):
- return sum((len(fws)+len(part) for fws, part in self),
- self._initial_size)
- def __str__(self):
- return EMPTYSTRING.join((EMPTYSTRING.join((fws, part))
- for fws, part in self))
- def reset(self, startval=None):
- if startval is None:
- startval = []
- self[:] = startval
- self._initial_size = 0
- def is_onlyws(self):
- return self._initial_size==0 and (not self or str(self).isspace())
- def part_count(self):
- return super().__len__()
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