Detect email address parsing errors and return empty tuple to indicate the parsing error (old API). This fixes or at least ameliorates CVE-2023-27043.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Using `datetime.datetime.utcnow()` and `datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp()` will now raise a `DeprecationWarning`.
We also have removed our internal uses of these functions and documented the change.
* Clean up unused variables and imports in the email module
* Remove extra newline char
* Remove superflous dict+unpacking syntax
* Remove unused 'msg' var
* Clean up unused variables and imports in the email module
* Remove extra newline char
* Remove superflous dict+unpacking syntax
* Remove unused 'msg' var
---------
Co-authored-by: Barry Warsaw <barry@python.org>
It was raised if the charset itself contains characters not encodable
in UTF-8 (in particular \udcxx characters representing non-decodable
bytes in the source).
Similar to the rewrite of email/mime/image.py and associated test after the
deprecation of imghdr.py, thisrewrites email/mime/audio.py and associated
tests after the deprecation of sndhdr.py.
Closes#91885
Also inline necessary functionality from `sndhdr` into `email.mime.audio` for `MIMEAudio`.
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
* Rewrite imghdr inlining for clarity and completeness
* Move MIMEImage class back closer to the top of the file since it's the
important thing.
* Use a decorate to mark a given rule function and simplify the rule function
names for clarity.
* Copy over all the imghdr test data files into the email package's test data
directory. This way when imghdr is actually removed, it won't affect the
MIMEImage guessing tests.
* Rewrite and extend the MIMEImage tests to test for all supported
auto-detected MIME image subtypes.
* Remove the now redundant PyBanner048.gif data file.
* See https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/91461#discussion_r850313336
Co-authored-by: Oleg Iarygin <dralife@yandex.ru>
Co-authored-by: Oleg Iarygin <dralife@yandex.ru>
* Deprecate imghdr
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update Doc/whatsnew/3.11.rst
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
* Inline `imghdr` into `email.mime.image`
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Barry Warsaw <barry@python.org>
Copying and pickling instances of subclasses of builtin types
bytearray, set, frozenset, collections.OrderedDict, collections.deque,
weakref.WeakSet, and datetime.tzinfo now copies and pickles instance attributes
implemented as slots.
Various date parsing utilities in the email module, such as
email.utils.parsedate(), are supposed to gracefully handle invalid
input, typically by raising an appropriate exception or by returning
None.
The internal email._parseaddr._parsedate_tz() helper used by some of
these date parsing routines tries to be robust against malformed input,
but unfortunately it can still crash ungracefully when a non-empty but
whitespace-only input is passed. This manifests as an unexpected
IndexError.
In practice, this can happen when parsing an email with only a newline
inside a ‘Date:’ header, which unfortunately happens occasionally in the
real world.
Here's a minimal example:
$ python
Python 3.9.6 (default, Jun 30 2021, 10:22:16)
[GCC 11.1.0] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import email.utils
>>> email.utils.parsedate('foo')
>>> email.utils.parsedate(' ')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3.9/email/_parseaddr.py", line 176, in parsedate
t = parsedate_tz(data)
File "/usr/lib/python3.9/email/_parseaddr.py", line 50, in parsedate_tz
res = _parsedate_tz(data)
File "/usr/lib/python3.9/email/_parseaddr.py", line 72, in _parsedate_tz
if data[0].endswith(',') or data[0].lower() in _daynames:
IndexError: list index out of range
The fix is rather straight-forward: guard against empty lists, after
splitting on whitespace, but before accessing the first element.
I am re-submitting an older PR which was abandoned but is still relevant, #10783 by @timb07.
The issue being solved () is still relevant. The original PR #10783 was closed as
the final request changes were not applied and since abandoned.
In this new PR I have re-used the original patch plus applied both comments from the review, by @maxking and @pganssle.
For reference, here is the original PR description:
In email.utils.parsedate_to_datetime(), a failure to parse the date, or invalid date components (such as hour outside 0..23) raises an exception. Document this behaviour, and add tests to test_email/test_utils.py to confirm this behaviour.
In email.headerregistry.DateHeader.parse(), check when parsedate_to_datetime() raises an exception and add a new defect InvalidDateDefect; preserve the invalid value as the string value of the header, but set the datetime attribute to None.
Add tests to test_email/test_headerregistry.py to confirm this behaviour; also added test to test_email/test_inversion.py to confirm emails with such defective date headers round trip successfully.
This pull request incorporates feedback gratefully received from @bitdancer, @brettcannon, @Mariatta and @warsaw, and replaces the earlier PR #2254.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:warsaw
This PR replaces #1977. The reason for the replacement is two-fold.
The fix itself is different is that if the CTE header doesn't exist in the original message, it is inserted. This is important because the new CTE could be quoted-printable whereas the original is implicit 8bit.
Also the tests are different. The test_nonascii_as_string_without_cte test in #1977 doesn't actually test the issue in that it passes without the fix. The test_nonascii_as_string_without_content_type_and_cte test is improved here, and even though it doesn't fail without the fix, it is included for completeness.
Automerge-Triggered-By: @warsaw
For me as a non native English speaker, the sentence with its embedded clause was very hard to understand.
modified: Lib/email/utils.py
Automerge-Triggered-By: @csabella
* bpo-39040: Fix parsing of email headers with encoded-words inside a quoted string.
It is fairly common to find malformed mime headers (especially content-disposition
headers) where the parameter values, instead of being encoded to RFC
standards, are "encoded" by doing RFC 2047 "encoded word" encoding, and
then enclosing the whole thing in quotes. The processing of these malformed
headers was incorrectly leaving the spaces between encoded words in the decoded
text (whitespace between adjacent encoded words is supposed to be stripped on
decoding). This changeset fixes the encoded word processing inside quoted strings
(bare-quoted-string) to do correct RFC 2047 decoding by stripping that
whitespace.
raw_data_manager (default for EmailPolicy, EmailMessage)
does correct wrapping of 'text' parts as long as the message contains
characters outside of 7bit US-ASCII set: base64 or qp
Content-Transfer-Encoding is applied if the lines would be too long
without it. It did not, however, do this for ascii-only text,
which could result in lines that were longer than
policy.max_line_length or even the rfc 998 maximum.
This changeset fixes the heuristic so that if lines are longer than
policy.max_line_length, it will always apply a
content-transfer-encoding so that the lines are wrapped correctly.
parse_message_id() was improperly using a token defined inside an exception
handler, which was raising `UnboundLocalError` on parsing an invalid value.
https://bugs.python.org/issue38698
* Check intersection of two sets explicitly
Comparing ``len(a) > ``len(a - b)`` is essentially looking for an
intersection between the two sets. If set ``b`` does not intersect ``a``
then ``len(a - b)`` will be equal to ``len(a)``. This logic is more
clearly expressed as ``a & b``.
* Change while/pop to a for-loop
Copying the list, then repeatedly popping the first element was
unnecessarily slow. I also cleaned up a couple other inefficiencies.
There's no need to unpack a tuple, then re-pack and append it. The list
can be created with the first element instead of empty. Secondly, the
``endswith`` method returns a bool, so there's no need for an if-
statement to set ``encoding`` to True or False.
* Use set.intersection to check for intersections
``a.intersection(b)`` method is more clear of purpose than ``not
a.isdisjoint(b)`` and avoids an unnecessary set construction that ``a &
set(b)`` performs.
* Use not isdisjoint instead of intersection
While it reads slightly worse, the isdisjoint method will stop when it
finds a counterexample and returns a bool, rather than looping over the
entire iterable and constructing a new set.
Fixes a case in which email._header_value_parser.get_unstructured hangs the system for some invalid headers. This covers the cases in which the header contains either:
- a case without trailing whitespace
- an invalid encoded word
https://bugs.python.org/issue37764
This fix should also be backported to 3.7 and 3.8
https://bugs.python.org/issue37764
Special characters in email address header display names are normally
put within double quotes. However, encoded words (=?charset?x?...?=) are
not allowed withing double quotes. When the header contains a word with
special characters and another word that must be encoded, the first one
must also be encoded.
In the next example, the display name in the From header is quoted and
therefore the comma is allowed; in the To header, the comma is not
within quotes and not encoded, which is not allowed and therefore
rejected by some mail servers.
From: "Foo Bar, France" <foo@example.com>
To: Foo Bar, =?utf-8?q?Espa=C3=B1a?= <foo@example.com>
https://bugs.python.org/issue37482