# Copyright (C) 2001,2002 Python Software Foundation # Author: barry@zope.com (Barry Warsaw) """Classes to generate plain text from a message object tree. """ import time import re import random from types import ListType, StringType from cStringIO import StringIO from email.Header import Header EMPTYSTRING = '' SEMISPACE = '; ' BAR = '|' UNDERSCORE = '_' NL = '\n' NLTAB = '\n\t' SEMINLTAB = ';\n\t' SPACE8 = ' ' * 8 fcre = re.compile(r'^From ', re.MULTILINE) class Generator: """Generates output from a Message object tree. This basic generator writes the message to the given file object as plain text. """ # # Public interface # def __init__(self, outfp, mangle_from_=1, maxheaderlen=78): """Create the generator for message flattening. outfp is the output file-like object for writing the message to. It must have a write() method. Optional mangle_from_ is a flag that, when true, escapes From_ lines in the body of the message by putting a `>' in front of them. Optional maxheaderlen specifies the longest length for a non-continued header. When a header line is longer (in characters, with tabs expanded to 8 spaces), than maxheaderlen, the header will be broken on semicolons and continued as per RFC 2822. If no semicolon is found, then the header is left alone. Set to zero to disable wrapping headers. Default is 78, as recommended (but not required by RFC 2822. """ self._fp = outfp self._mangle_from_ = mangle_from_ self.__first = 1 self.__maxheaderlen = maxheaderlen def write(self, s): # Just delegate to the file object self._fp.write(s) def flatten(self, msg, unixfrom=0): """Print the message object tree rooted at msg to the output file specified when the Generator instance was created. unixfrom is a flag that forces the printing of a Unix From_ delimiter before the first object in the message tree. If the original message has no From_ delimiter, a `standard' one is crafted. By default, this is 0 to inhibit the printing of any From_ delimiter. Note that for subobjects, no From_ line is printed. """ if unixfrom: ufrom = msg.get_unixfrom() if not ufrom: ufrom = 'From nobody ' + time.ctime(time.time()) print >> self._fp, ufrom self._write(msg) # For backwards compatibility, but this is slower __call__ = flatten def clone(self, fp): """Clone this generator with the exact same options.""" return self.__class__(fp, self._mangle_from_, self.__maxheaderlen) # # Protected interface - undocumented ;/ # def _write(self, msg): # We can't write the headers yet because of the following scenario: # say a multipart message includes the boundary string somewhere in # its body. We'd have to calculate the new boundary /before/ we write # the headers so that we can write the correct Content-Type: # parameter. # # The way we do this, so as to make the _handle_*() methods simpler, # is to cache any subpart writes into a StringIO. The we write the # headers and the StringIO contents. That way, subpart handlers can # Do The Right Thing, and can still modify the Content-Type: header if # necessary. oldfp = self._fp try: self._fp = sfp = StringIO() self._dispatch(msg) finally: self._fp = oldfp # Write the headers. First we see if the message object wants to # handle that itself. If not, we'll do it generically. meth = getattr(msg, '_write_headers', None) if meth is None: self._write_headers(msg) else: meth(self) self._fp.write(sfp.getvalue()) def _dispatch(self, msg): # Get the Content-Type: for the message, then try to dispatch to # self._handle_maintype_subtype(). If there's no handler for the full # MIME type, then dispatch to self._handle_maintype(). If that's # missing too, then dispatch to self._writeBody(). ctype = msg.get_type() if ctype is None: # No Content-Type: header so use the default type, which must be # either text/plain or message/rfc822. ctype = msg.get_default_type() assert ctype in ('text/plain', 'message/rfc822') # We do have a Content-Type: header. main, sub = ctype.split('/') specific = UNDERSCORE.join((main, sub)).replace('-', '_') meth = getattr(self, '_handle_' + specific, None) if meth is None: generic = main.replace('-', '_') meth = getattr(self, '_handle_' + generic, None) if meth is None: meth = self._writeBody meth(msg) # # Default handlers # def _write_headers(self, msg): for h, v in msg.items(): # We only write the MIME-Version: header for the outermost # container message. Unfortunately, we can't use same technique # as for the Unix-From above because we don't know when # MIME-Version: will occur. if h.lower() == 'mime-version' and not self.__first: continue # RFC 2822 says that lines SHOULD be no more than maxheaderlen # characters wide, so we're well within our rights to split long # headers. text = '%s: %s' % (h, v) if self.__maxheaderlen > 0 and len(text) > self.__maxheaderlen: text = self._split_header(h, text) print >> self._fp, text # A blank line always separates headers from body print >> self._fp def _split_header(self, name, text): maxheaderlen = self.__maxheaderlen # Find out whether any lines in the header are really longer than # maxheaderlen characters wide. There could be continuation lines # that actually shorten it. Also, replace hard tabs with 8 spaces. lines = [s.replace('\t', SPACE8) for s in text.splitlines()] for line in lines: if len(line) > maxheaderlen: break else: # No line was actually longer than maxheaderlen characters, so # just return the original unchanged. return text # The `text' argument already has the field name prepended, so don't # provide it here or the first line will get folded too short. h = Header(text, maxlinelen=maxheaderlen, # For backwards compatibility, we use a hard tab here continuation_ws='\t') return h.encode() # # Handlers for writing types and subtypes # def _handle_text(self, msg): payload = msg.get_payload() if payload is None: return cset = msg.get_charset() if cset is not None: payload = cset.body_encode(payload) if not isinstance(payload, StringType): raise TypeError, 'string payload expected: %s' % type(payload) if self._mangle_from_: payload = fcre.sub('>From ', payload) self._fp.write(payload) # Default body handler _writeBody = _handle_text def _handle_multipart(self, msg): # The trick here is to write out each part separately, merge them all # together, and then make sure that the boundary we've chosen isn't # present in the payload. msgtexts = [] subparts = msg.get_payload() if subparts is None: # Nothing has ever been attached boundary = msg.get_boundary(failobj=_make_boundary()) print >> self._fp, '--' + boundary print >> self._fp, '\n' print >> self._fp, '--' + boundary + '--' return elif not isinstance(subparts, ListType): # Scalar payload subparts = [subparts] for part in subparts: s = StringIO() g = self.clone(s) g.flatten(part, unixfrom=0) msgtexts.append(s.getvalue()) # Now make sure the boundary we've selected doesn't appear in any of # the message texts. alltext = NL.join(msgtexts) # BAW: What about boundaries that are wrapped in double-quotes? boundary = msg.get_boundary(failobj=_make_boundary(alltext)) # If we had to calculate a new boundary because the body text # contained that string, set the new boundary. We don't do it # unconditionally because, while set_boundary() preserves order, it # doesn't preserve newlines/continuations in headers. This is no big # deal in practice, but turns out to be inconvenient for the unittest # suite. if msg.get_boundary() <> boundary: msg.set_boundary(boundary) # Write out any preamble if msg.preamble is not None: self._fp.write(msg.preamble) # First boundary is a bit different; it doesn't have a leading extra # newline. print >> self._fp, '--' + boundary # Join and write the individual parts joiner = '\n--' + boundary + '\n' self._fp.write(joiner.join(msgtexts)) print >> self._fp, '\n--' + boundary + '--', # Write out any epilogue if msg.epilogue is not None: if not msg.epilogue.startswith('\n'): print >> self._fp self._fp.write(msg.epilogue) def _handle_message_delivery_status(self, msg): # We can't just write the headers directly to self's file object # because this will leave an extra newline between the last header # block and the boundary. Sigh. blocks = [] for part in msg.get_payload(): s = StringIO() g = self.clone(s) g.flatten(part, unixfrom=0) text = s.getvalue() lines = text.split('\n') # Strip off the unnecessary trailing empty line if lines and lines[-1] == '': blocks.append(NL.join(lines[:-1])) else: blocks.append(text) # Now join all the blocks with an empty line. This has the lovely # effect of separating each block with an empty line, but not adding # an extra one after the last one. self._fp.write(NL.join(blocks)) def _handle_message(self, msg): s = StringIO() g = self.clone(s) # The payload of a message/rfc822 part should be a multipart sequence # of length 1. The zeroth element of the list should be the Message # object for the subpart. Extract that object, stringify it, and # write it out. g.flatten(msg.get_payload(0), unixfrom=0) self._fp.write(s.getvalue()) class DecodedGenerator(Generator): """Generator a text representation of a message. Like the Generator base class, except that non-text parts are substituted with a format string representing the part. """ def __init__(self, outfp, mangle_from_=1, maxheaderlen=78, fmt=None): """Like Generator.__init__() except that an additional optional argument is allowed. Walks through all subparts of a message. If the subpart is of main type `text', then it prints the decoded payload of the subpart. Otherwise, fmt is a format string that is used instead of the message payload. fmt is expanded with the following keywords (in %(keyword)s format): type : Full MIME type of the non-text part maintype : Main MIME type of the non-text part subtype : Sub-MIME type of the non-text part filename : Filename of the non-text part description: Description associated with the non-text part encoding : Content transfer encoding of the non-text part The default value for fmt is None, meaning [Non-text (%(type)s) part of message omitted, filename %(filename)s] """ Generator.__init__(self, outfp, mangle_from_, maxheaderlen) if fmt is None: fmt = ('[Non-text (%(type)s) part of message omitted, ' 'filename %(filename)s]') self._fmt = fmt def _dispatch(self, msg): for part in msg.walk(): maintype = part.get_main_type('text') if maintype == 'text': print >> self, part.get_payload(decode=1) elif maintype == 'multipart': # Just skip this pass else: print >> self, self._fmt % { 'type' : part.get_type('[no MIME type]'), 'maintype' : part.get_main_type('[no main MIME type]'), 'subtype' : part.get_subtype('[no sub-MIME type]'), 'filename' : part.get_filename('[no filename]'), 'description': part.get('Content-Description', '[no description]'), 'encoding' : part.get('Content-Transfer-Encoding', '[no encoding]'), } # Helper def _make_boundary(text=None): # Craft a random boundary. If text is given, ensure that the chosen # boundary doesn't appear in the text. boundary = ('=' * 15) + repr(random.random()).split('.')[1] + '==' if text is None: return boundary b = boundary counter = 0 while 1: cre = re.compile('^--' + re.escape(b) + '(--)?$', re.MULTILINE) if not cre.search(text): break b = boundary + '.' + str(counter) counter += 1 return b