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MIME::Parser::Filer(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
MIME::Parser::Filer(3) |
MIME::Parser::Filer - manage file-output of the parser
Before reading further, you should see MIME::Parser 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... now read "DESCRIPTION" below, and
everything else should make sense.
### Create a "filer" of the desired class:
my $filer = MIME::Parser::FileInto->new($dir);
my $filer = MIME::Parser::FileUnder->new($basedir);
...
### Want added security? Don't let outsiders name your files:
$filer->ignore_filename(1);
### Prepare for the parsing of a new top-level message:
$filer->init_parse;
### Return the path where this message's data should be placed:
$path = $filer->output_path($head);
These methods might be overridden or ignored in some subclasses, so they don't
all make sense in all circumstances:
### Tweak the mapping from content-type to extension:
$emap = $filer->output_extension_map;
$emap->{"text/html"} = ".htm";
When a MIME::Parser decides that it wants to output a file to disk, it uses its
"Filer" object -- an instance of a MIME::Parser::Filer subclass --
to determine where to put the file.
Every parser has a single Filer object, which it uses for all
parsing. You can get the Filer for a given $parser
like this:
$filer = $parser->filer;
At the beginning of each
"parse()", the filer's internal state is
reset by the parser:
$parser->filer->init_parse;
The parser can then get a path for each entity in the message by
handing that entity's header (a MIME::Head) to the filer and having it do
the work, like this:
$new_file = $parser->filer->output_path($head);
Since it's nice to be able to clean up after a parse (especially a
failed parse), the parser tells the filer when it has actually used a
path:
$parser->filer->purgeable($new_file);
Then, if you want to clean up the files which were created for a
particular parse (and also any directories that the Filer created), you
would do this:
$parser->filer->purge;
There are two standard "Filer" subclasses (see below):
MIME::Parser::FileInto, which throws all files from all parses into the
same directory, and MIME::Parser::FileUnder (preferred), which creates
a subdirectory for each message. Hopefully, these will be sufficient for most
uses, but just in case...
The only method you have to override is output_path():
$filer->output_path($head);
This method is invoked by MIME::Parser when it wants to put a
decoded message body in an output file. The method should return a path to
the file to create. Failure is indicated by throwing an exception.
The path returned by
"output_path()" should be "ready for
open()": any necessary parent directories need to exist at that
point. These directories can be created by the Filer, if course, and they
should be marked as purgeable() if a purge should
delete them.
Actually, if your issue is more where the files go than
what they're named, you can use the default output_path() method and
just override one of its components:
$dir = $filer->output_dir($head);
$name = $filer->output_filename($head);
...
This is the abstract superclass of all "filer" objects.
- new INITARGS...
- Class method, constructor. Create a new outputter for the given
parser. Any subsequent arguments are given to init(), which
subclasses should override for their own use (the default init does
nothing).
- results RESULTS
- Instance method. Link this filer to a MIME::Parser::Results object
which will tally the messages. Notice that we avoid linking it to the
parser to avoid circular reference!
- init_parse
- Instance method. Prepare to start parsing a new message. Subclasses
should always be sure to invoke the inherited method.
- evil_filename FILENAME
- Instance method. Is this an evil filename; i.e., one which should
not be used in generating a disk file name? It is if any of these are
true:
* it is empty or entirely whitespace
* it contains leading or trailing whitespace
* it is a string of dots: ".", "..", etc.
* it contains characters not in the set: "A" - "Z", "a" - "z",
"0" - "9", "-", "_", "+", "=", ".", ",", "@", "#",
"$", and " ".
* it is too long
If you just want to change this behavior, you should override
this method in the subclass of MIME::Parser::Filer that you use.
Warning: at the time this method is invoked, the
FILENAME has already been unmime'd into the local character set. If
you're using any character set other than ASCII, ISO-8859-*, or UTF-8,
the interpretation of the "path" characters might be very
different, and you will probably need to override this method. See
"unmime" in MIME::WordDecoder for more details.
Note: subclasses of MIME::Parser::Filer which override
output_path() might not consult this method; note, however, that
the built-in subclasses do consult it.
Thanks to Andrew Pimlott for finding a real dumb bug in the
original version. Thanks to Nickolay Saukh for noting that evil
is in the eye of the beholder.
- exorcise_filename FILENAME
- Instance method. If a given filename is evil (see
"evil_filename") we try to rescue it by performing some basic
operations: shortening it, removing bad characters, etc., and checking
each against evil_filename().
Returns the exorcised filename (which is guaranteed to not be
evil), or undef if it could not be salvaged.
Warning: at the time this method is invoked, the
FILENAME has already been unmime'd into the local character set. If
you're using anything character set other than ASCII, ISO-8859-*, or
UTF-8, the interpretation of the "path" characters might be
very very different, and you will probably need to override this method.
See "unmime" in MIME::WordDecoder for more details.
- find_unused_path DIR, FILENAME
- Instance method, subclasses only. We have decided on an output
directory and tentative filename, but there is a chance that it might
already exist. Keep adding a numeric suffix "-1",
"-2", etc. to the filename until an unused path is found, and
then return that path.
The suffix is actually added before the first "." in
the filename is there is one; for example:
picture.gif archive.tar.gz readme
picture-1.gif archive-1.tar.gz readme-1
picture-2.gif archive-2.tar.gz readme-2
... ... ...
picture-10.gif
...
This can be a costly operation, and risky if you don't want
files renamed, so it is in your best interest to minimize situations
where these kinds of collisions occur. Unfortunately, if a multipart
message gives all of its parts the same recommended filename, and you
are placing them all in the same directory, this method might be
unavoidable.
- ignore_filename [YESNO]
- Instance method. Return true if we should always ignore recommended
filenames in messages, choosing instead to always generate our own
filenames. With argument, sets this value.
Note: subclasses of MIME::Parser::Filer which override
output_path() might not honor this setting; note, however, that
the built-in subclasses honor it.
- output_dir HEAD
- Instance method. Return the output directory for the given header.
The default method returns ".".
- output_filename HEAD
- Instance method, subclasses only. A given recommended filename was
either not given, or it was judged to be evil. Return a fake name,
possibly using information in the message HEADer. Note that this is just
the filename, not the full path.
Used by output_path(). If you're using the default
"output_path()", you probably don't
need to worry about avoiding collisions with existing files; we take
care of that in find_unused_path().
- output_prefix [PREFIX]
- Instance method. Get the short string that all filenames for
extracted body-parts will begin with (assuming that there is no better
"recommended filename"). The default is "msg".
If PREFIX is not given, the current output prefix is
returned. If PREFIX is given, the output prefix is set to the new
value, and the previous value is returned.
Used by output_filename().
Note: subclasses of MIME::Parser::Filer which override
output_path() or output_filename() might not honor this
setting; note, however, that the built-in subclasses honor it.
- output_type_ext
- Instance method. Return a reference to the hash used by the default
output_filename() for mapping from content-types to extensions when
there is no default extension to use.
$emap = $filer->output_typemap;
$emap->{'text/plain'} = '.txt';
$emap->{'text/html'} = '.html';
$emap->{'text/*'} = '.txt';
$emap->{'*/*'} = '.dat';
Note: subclasses of MIME::Parser::Filer which override
output_path() or output_filename() might not consult this
hash; note, however, that the built-in subclasses consult it.
- output_path HEAD
- Instance method, subclasses only. Given a MIME head for a file to
be extracted, come up with a good output pathname for the extracted file.
This is the only method you need to worry about if you are building a
custom filer.
The default implementation does a lot of work; subclass
implementers really should try to just override its components
instead of the whole thing. It works basically as follows:
$directory = $self->output_dir($head);
$filename = $head->recommended_filename();
if (!$filename or
$self->ignore_filename() or
$self->evil_filename($filename)) {
$filename = $self->output_filename($head);
}
return $self->find_unused_path($directory, $filename);
Note: There are many, many, many ways you might want to
control the naming of files, based on your application. If you don't
like the behavior of this function, you can easily define your own
subclass of MIME::Parser::Filer and override it there.
Note: Nickolay Saukh pointed out that, given the
subjective nature of what is "evil", this function really
shouldn't warn about an evil filename, but maybe just issue a
debug message. I considered that, but then I thought: if
debugging were off, people wouldn't know why (or even if) a given
filename had been ignored. In mail robots that depend on
externally-provided filenames, this could cause hard-to-diagnose
problems. So, the message is still a warning.
Thanks to Laurent Amon for pointing out problems with the
original implementation, and for making some good suggestions.
Thanks also to Achim Bohnet for pointing out that there should be
a hookless, OO way of overriding the output path.
- purge
- Instance method, final. Purge all files/directories created by the
last parse. This method simply goes through the purgeable list in reverse
order (see "purgeable") and removes all existing
files/directories in it. You should not need to override this method.
- purgeable [FILE]
- Instance method, final. Add FILE to the list of
"purgeable" files/directories (those which will be removed if
you do a "purge()"). You should not need
to override this method.
If FILE is not given, the "purgeable" list is
returned. This may be used for more-sophisticated purging.
As a special case, invoking this method with a FILE that is an
arrayref will replace the purgeable list with a copy of the array's
contents, so [] may be used to clear the list.
Note that the "purgeable" list is cleared when a
parser begins a new parse; therefore, if you want to use purge()
to do cleanup, you must do so before starting a new
parse!
This concrete subclass of MIME::Parser::Filer supports filing into a given
directory.
- init DIRECTORY
- Instance method, initiallizer. Set the directory where all files
will go.
This concrete subclass of MIME::Parser::Filer supports filing under a given
directory, using one subdirectory per message, but with all message parts in
the same directory.
- init BASEDIR, OPTSHASH...
- Instance method, initiallizer. Set the base directory which will
contain the message directories. If used, then each parse of begins by
creating a new subdirectory of BASEDIR where the actual parts of the
message are placed. OPTSHASH can contain the following:
- DirName
- Explicitly set the name of the subdirectory which is created. The default
is to use the time, process id, and a sequence number, but you might want
a predictable directory.
- Purge
- Automatically purge the contents of the directory (including all
subdirectories) before each parse. This is really only needed if using an
explicit DirName, and is provided as a convenience only. Currently we use
the 1-arg form of File::Path::rmtree; you should familiarize yourself with
the caveats therein.
The output_dir() will return the path to this
message-specific directory until the next parse is begun, so you can do
this:
use File::Path;
$parser->output_under("/tmp");
$ent = eval { $parser->parse_open($msg); }; ### parse
if (!$ent) { ### parse failed
rmtree($parser->output_dir);
die "parse failed: $@";
}
else { ### parse succeeded
...do stuff...
}
MIME::Tools, MIME::Parser
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.
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