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MIME::Parser (3)
  • >> MIME::Parser (3) ( Разные man: Библиотечные вызовы )
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    NAME

    MIME::Parser - experimental class for parsing MIME streams
     
    

    SYNOPSIS

    Before reading further, you should see MIME::Tools to make sure that you understand where this module fits into the grand scheme of things. Go on, do it now. I'll wait.

    Ready? Ok...  

    Basic usage examples

        ### Create a new parser object:
        my $parser = new MIME::Parser;
    
    

        ### Tell it where to put things:
        $parser->output_under("/tmp");
    
    

        ### Parse an input filehandle:
        $entity = $parser->parse(\*STDIN);
    
    

        ### Congratulations: you now have a (possibly multipart) MIME entity!
        $entity->dump_skeleton;          # for debugging
    
    
     

    Examples of input

        ### Parse from filehandles:
        $entity = $parser->parse(\*STDIN);
        $entity = $parser->parse(IO::File->new("some command|");
    
    

        ### Parse from any object that supports getline() and read():
        $entity = $parser->parse($myHandle);
    
    

        ### Parse an in-core MIME message:
        $entity = $parser->parse_data($message);
    
    

        ### Parse an MIME message in a file:
        $entity = $parser->parse_open("/some/file.msg");
    
    

        ### Parse an MIME message out of a pipeline:
        $entity = $parser->parse_open("gunzip - < file.msg.gz |");
    
    

        ### Parse already-split input (as "deliver" would give it to you):
        $entity = $parser->parse_two("msg.head", "msg.body");
    
    
     

    Examples of output control

        ### Keep parsed message bodies in core (default outputs to disk):
        $parser->output_to_core(1);
    
    

        ### Output each message body to a one-per-message directory:
        $parser->output_under("/tmp");
    
    

        ### Output each message body to the same directory:
        $parser->output_dir("/tmp");
    
    

        ### Change how nameless message-component files are named:
        $parser->output_prefix("msg");
    
    
     

    Examples of error recovery

        ### Normal mechanism:
        eval { $entity = $parser->parse(\*STDIN) };
        if ($@) {
            $results  = $parser->results;
            $decapitated = $parser->last_head;  ### get last top-level head
        }
    
    

        ### Ultra-tolerant mechanism:
        $parser->ignore_errors(1);
        $entity = eval { $parser->parse(\*STDIN) };
        $error = ($@ || $parser->last_error);
    
    

        ### Cleanup all files created by the parse:
        eval { $entity = $parser->parse(\*STDIN) };
        ...
        $parser->filer->purge;
    
    
     

    Examples of parser options

        ### Parse contained "message/rfc822" objects as nested MIME streams?
        $parser->extract_nested_messages(0);    ### default is true
    
    

        ### Look for uuencode in "text" messages, and extract it?
        $parser->extract_uuencode(1);           ### default is false
    
    

        ### Should we forgive normally-fatal errors?
        $parser->ignore_errors(0);              ### default is true
    
    
     

    Miscellaneous examples

        ### Convert a Mail::Internet object to a MIME::Entity:
        @lines = (@{$mail->header}, "\n", @{$mail->body});
        $entity = $parser->parse_data(\@lines);
    
    
     

    DESCRIPTION

    You can inherit from this class to create your own subclasses that parse MIME streams into MIME::Entity objects.  

    PUBLIC INTERFACE

     

    Construction

    new ARGS...
    Class method. Create a new parser object. Once you do this, you can then set up various parameters before doing the actual parsing. For example:

        my $parser = new MIME::Parser;
        $parser->output_dir("/tmp");
        $parser->output_prefix("msg1");
        my $entity = $parser->parse(\*STDIN);
    
    

    Any arguments are passed into "init()". Don't override this in your subclasses; override init() instead.

    init ARGS...
    Instance method. Initiallize a new MIME::Parser object. This is automatically sent to a new object; you may want to override it. If you override this, you must invoke the inherited method.
    init_parse
    Instance method. Invoked automatically whenever one of the top-level parse() methods is called, to reset the parser to a ``ready'' state.

    Note: this method will clear the list of ``purgeable'' files/directories from the previous parse, so if you want to clean up as you go, you'd better purge() immediately after each parse().

     

    Altering how messages are parsed

    extract_encoded_messages OPTION
    Instance method. Some MIME messages will contain a part of type "message/*" or "multipart/*" which has been erroneously encoded (the RFCs state that the only valid Content-transfer-encodings for these types are 7bit, 8bit, and binary).

    If you set this option true (the default is false), then the parser will re-parse encoded bodies after decoding them. For example:

        1. We encounter a base64-encoded multipart/mixed, so we...
           a. Decode the body as though it were an ordinary message part,
           b. Open a temporary handle on the decoded body,
           c. Parse the decoded body like an ordinary message,
        2. And finally, continue with the rest of the original message.
    
    

    This is an expensive operation, and you should really only use it if you need the maximum amount of tolerance or if you understand the risks:

    *
    With this option set true, the same data may be parsed multiple times. For example, a base64-encoded multipart may itself contain base64-encoded multiparts which need to be reparsed, and so on, so the same patch of data may be parsed and re-parsed many times.
    *
    The current implementation does a breadth-first parsing/decoding, which means that arbitrarily-nested messages don't consume arbitrary resources.
    extract_nested_messages OPTION
    Instance method. Some MIME messages will contain a part of type "message/rfc822": literally, the text of an embedded mail/news/whatever message. This option controls whether (and how) we parse that embedded message.

    If the OPTION is false, we treat such a message just as if it were a "text/plain" document, without attempting to decode its contents.

    If the OPTION is true (the default), the body of the "message/rfc822" part is parsed by this parser, creating an entity object. What happens then is determined by the actual OPTION:

    NEST or 1
    The default setting. The contained message becomes the sole ``part'' of the "message/rfc822" entity (as if the containing message were a special kind of ``multipart'' message). You can recover the sub-entity by invoking the parts() method on the "message/rfc822" entity.
    REPLACE
    The contained message replaces the "message/rfc822" entity, as though the "message/rfc822" ``container'' never existed.

    Warning: notice that, with this option, all the header information in the "message/rfc822" header is lost. This might seriously bother you if you're dealing with a top-level message, and you've just lost the sender's address and the subject line. ":-/".

    Thanks to Andreas Koenig for suggesting this method.

    extract_uuencode [YESNO]
    Instance method, convenience. Setting this true is equivalent to:

        $self->redoer('extract_uuencode', new MIME::Parser::UURedoer);
    
    

    If set true (which is the default as of 5.5x), then whenever we are confronted with a message whose effective content-type is ``text/plain'' and whose encoding is 7bit/8bit/binary, we scan the encoded body to see if it contains uuencoded data (generally given away by a ``begin XXX'' line).

    If it does, we explode the uuencoded message into a multipart, where the text before the first ``begin XXX'' becomes the first part, and all ``begin...end'' sections following become the subsequent parts. The filename (if given) is accessible through the normal means.

    ignore_errors [YESNO]
    Instance method. Controls whether the parser will attempt to ignore normally-fatal errors, treating them as warnings and continuing with the parse.

    If YESNO is true (the default), many syntax errors are tolerated. If YESNO is false, fatal errors throw exceptions. With no argument, just returns the current setting.

    redoer NAME, REDOER
    Instance method. Add/remove a ``redoer''. See MIME::Parser::Redoer. Also see extract_uuencode().

    A REDOER of undef removes it. Redoers are triggered in the order they are added.

     

    Parsing an input source

    parse_data DATA
    Instance method. Parse a MIME message that's already in core. You may supply the DATA in any of a number of ways...
    *
    A scalar which holds the message.
    *
    A ref to a scalar which holds the message. This is an efficiency hack.
    *
    A ref to an array of scalars. They are treated as a stream which (conceptually) consists of simply concatenating the scalars.

    Returns the parsed MIME::Entity on success. Throws exception on failure.

    parse INSTREAM
    Instance method. Takes a MIME-stream and splits it into its component entities.

    The INSTREAM can be given as a readable FileHandle, an IO::File, a globref filehandle (like "\*STDIN"), or as any blessed object conforming to the IO:: interface (which minimally implements getline() and read()).

    Returns the parsed MIME::Entity on success. Throws exception on failure.

    parse_open EXPR
    Instance method. Convenience front-end onto "parse()". Simply give this method any expression that may be sent as the second argument to open() to open a filehandle for reading.

    Returns the parsed MIME::Entity on success. Throws exception on failure.

    parse_two HEADFILE, BODYFILE
    Instance method. Convenience front-end onto "parse_open()", intended for programs running under mail-handlers like deliver, which splits the incoming mail message into a header file and a body file. Simply give this method the paths to the respective files.

    Warning: it is assumed that, once the files are cat'ed together, there will be a blank line separating the head part and the body part.

    Warning: new implementation slurps files into line array for portability, instead of using 'cat'. May be an issue if your messages are large.

    Returns the parsed MIME::Entity on success. Throws exception on failure.

     

    Specifying output destination

    Warning: in 5.212 and before, this was done by methods of MIME::Parser. However, since many users have requested fine-tuned control over how this is done, the logic has been split off from the parser into its own class, MIME::Parser::Filer Every MIME::Parser maintains an instance of a MIME::Parser::Filer subclass to manage disk output (see MIME::Parser::Filer for details.)

    The benefit to this is that the MIME::Parser code won't be confounded with a lot of garbage related to disk output. The drawback is that the way you override the default behavior will change.

    For now, all the normal public-interface methods are still provided, but many are only stubs which create or delegate to the underlying MIME::Parser::Filer object.

    filer [FILER]
    Instance method. Get/set the FILER object used to manage the output of files to disk. This will be some subclass of MIME::Parser::Filer.
    output_dir DIRECTORY...
    Instance method. Causes messages to be filed directly into the given DIRECTORY. It does this by setting the underlying filer() to a new instance of MIME::Parser::FlatFiler, and passing the arguments into that class' new() method.

    Note: Since this method replaces the underlying filer, you must invoke it before doing changing any attributes of the filer, like the output prefix; otherwise those changes will be lost.

    output_under BASEDIR...
    Instance method. Causes messages to be filed directly into subdirectories of the given BASEDIR, one subdirectory per message. It does this by setting the underlying filer() to a new instance of MIME::Parser::TreeFiler, and passing the arguments into that class' new() method.

    Note: Since this method replaces the underlying filer, you must invoke it before doing changing any attributes of the filer, like the output prefix; otherwise those changes will be lost.

    output_to_core YESNO
    Instance method. Normally, instances of this class output all their decoded body data to disk files (via MIME::Body::File). However, you can change this behaviour by invoking this method before parsing:

    If YESNO is false (the default), then all body data goes to disk files.

    If YESNO is true, then all body data goes to in-core data structures This is a little risky (what if someone emails you an MPEG or a tar file, hmmm?) but people seem to want this bit of noose-shaped rope, so I'm providing it. Note that setting this attribute true does not mean that parser-internal temporary files are avoided! Use tmp_to_core() for that.

    With no argument, returns the current setting as a boolean.

    tmp_recycling [YESNO]
    Instance method. Normally, tmpfiles are created when needed during parsing, and destroyed automatically when they go out of scope. But for efficiency, you might prefer for your parser to attempt to rewind and reuse the same file until the parser itself is destroyed.

    If YESNO is true (the default), we allow recycling; tmpfiles persist until the parser itself is destroyed. If YESNO is false, we do not allow recycling; tmpfiles persist only as long as they are needed during the parse. With no argument, just returns the current setting.

    tmp_to_core [YESNO]
    Instance method. Should new_tmpfile() create real temp files, or use fake in-core ones? Normally we allow the creation of temporary disk files, since this allows us to handle huge attachments even when core is limited.

    If YESNO is true, we implement new_tmpfile() via in-core handles. If YESNO is false (the default), we use real tmpfiles. With no argument, just returns the current setting.

    use_inner_files [YESNO]
    Instance method. If you are parsing from a handle which supports seek() and tell(), then we can avoid tmpfiles completely by using IO::InnerFile, if so desired: basically, we simulate a temporary file via pointers to virtual start- and end-positions in the input stream.

    If YESNO is false (the default), then we will not use IO::InnerFile. If YESNO is true, we use IO::InnerFile if we can. With no argument, just returns the current setting.

    Note: inner files are slower than real tmpfiles, but possibly faster than in-core tmpfiles... so your choice for this option will probably depend on your choice for tmp_to_core() and the kind of input streams you are parsing.

     

    Factory methods

    new_body_for HEAD
    Instance method, factory. Based on the HEAD of a part we are parsing, return a new body object (any desirable subclass of MIME::Body) for receiving that part's data.

    If you set the "output_to_core" option to false before parsing (the default), then we call our filer's "output_path()" and create a new MIME::Body::File on that filename.

    If you set the "output_to_core" option to true before parsing, then you get a MIME::Body::InCore instead.

    If you want the parser to do something else entirely, you can override this method in a subclass.

    new_entity
    Instance method, factory. Return a new MIME::Entity subclass to hold an entity we will parse. The default returns a new MIME::Entity.
    new_head
    Instance method, factory. Return a new MIME::Head subclass to hold a header we will parse. The default returns a new MIME::Head.
    new_tmpfile [RECYCLE]
    Instance method, factory. Return an IO handle to be used to hold temporary data during a parse. The default uses the standard IO::File->new_tmpfile() method unless tmp_to_core() dictates otherwise, but you can override this. You shouldn't need to.

    If you do override this, make certain that the object you return is set for binmode(), and is able to handle the following methods:

        read(BUF, NBYTES)
        getline()
        getlines()
        print(@ARGS)
        flush()
        seek(0, 0)
    
    

    Fatal exception if the stream could not be established.

    If RECYCLE is given, it is an object returned by a previous invocation of this method; to recycle it, this method must effectively rewind and truncate it, and return the same object. If you don't want to support recycling, just ignore it and always return a new object.

     

    Parser results

    results
    Instance method. Return an object containing lots of info from the last entity parsed. This will be an instance of class MIME::Parser::Results.
     

    OPTIMIZING YOUR PARSER

     

    Maximizing speed

    Optimum input mechanisms:

        parse()                    YES (if you give it a globref or a
                                        subclass of IO::File)
        parse_open()               YES
        parse_data()               NO  (see below)
        parse_two()                NO  (see below)
    
    

    Optimum settings:

        extract_nested_messages()  0   (may be slightly faster, but in
                                        general you want it set to 1)
        output_to_core()           0   (will be MUCH faster)
        tmp_recycling()            1?  (probably, but should be investigated)
        tmp_to_core()              0   (will be MUCH faster)
        use_inner_files()          0   (if tmp_to_core() is 0;
                                        use 1 otherwise)
    
    

    File I/O is much faster than in-core I/O. Although it seems like slurping a message into core and processing it in-core should be faster... it isn't. Reason: Perl's filehandle-based I/O translates directly into native operating-system calls, whereas the in-core I/O is implemented in Perl.

    Inner files are slower than real tmpfiles, but faster than in-core ones. If speed is your concern, that's why you should set use_inner_files(true) if you set tmp_to_core(true): so that we can bypass the slow in-core tmpfiles if the input stream permits.

    Native I/O is much faster than object-oriented I/O. It's much faster to use <$foo> than $foo->getline. For backwards compatibilty, this module must continue to use object-oriented I/O in most places, but if you use parse() with a ``real'' filehandle (string, globref, or subclass of IO::File) then MIME::Parser is able to perform some crucial optimizations.

    The parse_two() call is very inefficient. Currently this is just a front-end onto parse_data(). If your OS supports it, you're far better off doing something like:

        $parser->parse_open("/bin/cat msg.head msg.body |");
    
    
     

    Minimizing memory

    Optimum input mechanisms:

        parse()                    YES
        parse_open()               YES
        parse_data()               NO  (in-core I/O will burn core)
        parse_two()                NO  (in-core I/O will burn core)
    
    

    Optimum settings:

        extract_nested_messages()  *** (no real difference)
        output_to_core()           0   (will use MUCH less memory)
        tmp_recycling()            0?  (promotes faster GC if
                                        tmp_to_core is 1)
        tmp_to_core()              0   (will use MUCH less memory)
        use_inner_files()          *** (no real difference, but set it to 1
                                        if you *must* have tmp_to_core set to 1,
                                        so that you avoid in-core tmpfiles)
    
    
     

    Maximizing tolerance of bad MIME

    Optimum input mechanisms:

        parse()                    *** (doesn't matter)
        parse_open()               *** (doesn't matter)
        parse_data()               *** (doesn't matter)
        parse_two()                *** (doesn't matter)
    
    

    Optimum settings:

        extract_nested_messages()  0   (sidesteps problems of bad nested messages,
                                        but often you want it set to 1 anyway).
        output_to_core()           *** (doesn't matter)
        tmp_recycling()            *** (doesn't matter)
        tmp_to_core()              *** (doesn't matter)
        use_inner_files()          *** (doesn't matter)
    
    
     

    Avoiding disk-based temporary files

    Optimum input mechanisms:

        parse()                    YES (if you give it a seekable handle)
        parse_open()               YES (becomes a seekable handle)
        parse_data()               NO  (unless you set tmp_to_core(1))
        parse_two()                NO  (unless you set tmp_to_core(1))
    
    

    Optimum settings:

        extract_nested_messages()  *** (doesn't matter)
        output_to_core()           *** (doesn't matter)
        tmp_recycling              1   (restricts created files to 1 per parser)
        tmp_to_core()              1
        use_inner_files()          1
    
    

    If we can use them, inner files avoid most tmpfiles. If you parse from a seekable-and-tellable filehandle, then the internal process_to_bound() doesn't need to extract each part into a temporary buffer; it can use IO::InnerFile (warning: this will slow down the parsing of messages with large attachments).

    You can veto tmpfiles entirely. If you might not be parsing from a seekable-and-tellable filehandle, you can set tmp_to_core() true: this will always use in-core I/O for the buffering (warning: this will slow down the parsing of messages with large attachments).

    Final resort. You can always override new_tmpfile() in a subclass.  

    WARNINGS

    Multipart messages are always read line-by-line
    Multipart document parts are read line-by-line, so that the encapsulation boundaries may easily be detected. However, bad MIME composition agents (for example, naive CGI scripts) might return multipart documents where the parts are, say, unencoded bitmap files... and, consequently, where such ``lines'' might be veeeeeeeeery long indeed.

    A better solution for this case would be to set up some form of state machine for input processing. This will be left for future versions.

    Multipart parts read into temp files before decoding
    In my original implementation, the MIME::Decoder classes had to be aware of encapsulation boundaries in multipart MIME documents. While this decode-while-parsing approach obviated the need for temporary files, it resulted in inflexible and complex decoder implementations.

    The revised implementation uses a temporary file (a la "tmpfile()") during parsing to hold the encoded portion of the current MIME document or part. This file is deleted automatically after the current part is decoded and the data is written to the ``body stream'' object; you'll never see it, and should never need to worry about it.

    Some folks have asked for the ability to bypass this temp-file mechanism, I suppose because they assume it would slow down their application. I considered accomodating this wish, but the temp-file approach solves a lot of thorny problems in parsing, and it also protects against hidden bugs in user applications (what if you've directed the encoded part into a scalar, and someone unexpectedly sends you a 6 MB tar file?). Finally, I'm just not conviced that the temp-file use adds significant overhead.

    Fuzzing of CRLF and newline on input
    RFC-1521 dictates that MIME streams have lines terminated by CRLF ("\r\n"). However, it is extremely likely that folks will want to parse MIME streams where each line ends in the local newline character "\n" instead.

    An attempt has been made to allow the parser to handle both CRLF and newline-terminated input.

    Fuzzing of CRLF and newline on output
    The "7bit" and "8bit" decoders will decode both a "\n" and a "\r\n" end-of-line sequence into a "\n".

    The "binary" decoder (default if no encoding specified) still outputs stuff verbatim... so a MIME message with CRLFs and no explicit encoding will be output as a text file that, on many systems, will have an annoying ^M at the end of each line... but this is as it should be.

    Inability to handle multipart boundaries that contain newlines
    First, let's get something straight: this is an evil, EVIL practice, and is incompatible with RFC-1521... hence, it's not valid MIME.

    If your mailer creates multipart boundary strings that contain newlines when they appear in the message body, give it two weeks notice and find another one. If your mail robot receives MIME mail like this, regard it as syntactically incorrect MIME, which it is.

    Why do I say that? Well, in RFC-1521, the syntax of a boundary is given quite clearly:

          boundary := 0*69<bchars> bcharsnospace
    
    

          bchars := bcharsnospace / " "
    
    

          bcharsnospace :=    DIGIT / ALPHA / "'" / "(" / ")" / "+" /"_"
                       / "," / "-" / "." / "/" / ":" / "=" / "?"
    
    

    All of which means that a valid boundary string cannot have newlines in it, and any newlines in such a string in the message header are expected to be solely the result of folding the string (i.e., inserting to-be-removed newlines for readability and line-shortening only).

    Yet, there is at least one brain-damaged (or malicious) user agent out there that composes mail like this:

          MIME-Version: 1.0
          Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="----ABC-
           123----"
          Subject: Hi... I'm a dork!
    
    

          This is a multipart MIME message (yeah, right...)
    
    

          ----ABC-
           123----
    
    

          Hi there!
    
    

    We have got to discourage practices like this (and the recent file upload idiocy where binary files that are part of a multipart MIME message aren't base64-encoded) if we want MIME to stay relatively simple, and MIME parsers to be relatively robust.

    Thanks to Andreas Koenig for bringing a baaaaaaaaad user agent to my attention.

     

    AUTHOR

    Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com), ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com).

    All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.  

    VERSION

    $Revision: 6.108 $ $Date: 2003/06/27 17:54:32 $


     

    Index

    NAME
    SYNOPSIS
    Basic usage examples
    Examples of input
    Examples of output control
    Examples of error recovery
    Examples of parser options
    Miscellaneous examples
    DESCRIPTION
    PUBLIC INTERFACE
    Construction
    Altering how messages are parsed
    Parsing an input source
    Specifying output destination
    Factory methods
    Parser results
    OPTIMIZING YOUR PARSER
    Maximizing speed
    Minimizing memory
    Maximizing tolerance of bad MIME
    Avoiding disk-based temporary files
    WARNINGS
    AUTHOR
    VERSION


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