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NAMEMail::DKIM::Canonicalization::Base - base class for canonicalization methodsVERSIONversion 1.20200907SYNOPSIS# canonicalization results get output to STDOUT my $method = new Mail::DKIM::Canonicalization::relaxed( output_fh => *STDOUT, Signature => $dkim_signature); # add headers $method->add_header("Subject: this is the subject\015\012"); $method->finish_header(Headers => \@all_headers); # add body $method->add_body("This is the body.\015\012"); $method->add_body("Another two lines\015\012of the body.\015\012"); $method->finish_body; # this adds the signature to the end $method->finish_message; CONSTRUCTORUse the new() method of the desired canonicalization implementation class to construct a canonicalization object. E.g.my $method = new Mail::DKIM::Canonicalization::relaxed( output_fh => *STDOUT, Signature => $dkim_signature); The constructors accept these arguments:
If none of the output parameters are specified, then the canonicalized message is appended to an internal buffer. The contents of this buffer can be accessed using the result() method. METHODSadd_body() - feeds part of the body into the canonicalization$method->add_body("This is the body.\015\012"); $method->add_body("Another two lines\015\012of the body.\015\012"); The body should be fed one or more "lines" at a time. I.e. do not feed part of a line. finish_header() - called when the header has been completely parsed$method->finish_header(Headers => \@all_headers); Formerly the canonicalization object would only get the header data through successive invocations of add_header(). However, that required the canonicalization object to store a copy of the entire header so that it could choose the order in which headers were fed to the digest object. This is inefficient use of memory, since a message with many signatures may use many canonicalization objects and each canonicalization object has its own copy of the header. The headers array is an array of one element per header field, with the headers not processed/canonicalized in any way. result()my $result = $method->result; If you did not specify an object or handle to send the output to, the result of the canonicalization is stored in the canonicalization method itself, and can be accessed using this method. SEE ALSOMail::DKIMAUTHORS
THANKSWork on ensuring that this module passes the ARC test suite was generously sponsored by Valimail (https://www.valimail.com/)COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.6 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
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