MIME::Parser(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | MIME::Parser(3) |
MIME::Parser - experimental class for parsing MIME streams
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...
### 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
### 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");
### 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"); ### Put temporary files somewhere else $parser->tmp_dir("/var/tmp/mytmpdir");
### 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;
### Automatically attempt to RFC 2047-decode the MIME headers? $parser->decode_headers(1); ### default is false ### 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
### Convert a Mail::Internet object to a MIME::Entity: my $data = join('', (@{$mail->header}, "\n", @{$mail->body})); $entity = $parser->parse_data(\$data);
You can inherit from this class to create your own subclasses that parse MIME streams into MIME::Entity objects.
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.
Content-type: text/plain; filename="=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Hi=22Ho?="
into unparseable gobbledygook; in this case:
Content-type: text/plain; filename="Hi"Ho"
History. This method was once the only out-of-the-box way to deal with attachments whose filenames had non-ASCII characters. However, since MIME-tools 5.4xx this is no longer necessary.
Parameters. If YESNO is true, decoding is done. However, you will get a warning unless you use one of the special "true" values:
"I_NEED_TO_FIX_THIS" Just shut up and do it. Not recommended. Provided only for those who need to keep old scripts functioning. "I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING" Just shut up and do it. Not recommended. Provided for those who REALLY know what they are doing.
If YESNO is false (the default), no attempt at decoding will be done. With no argument, just returns the current setting. Remember: you can always decode the headers after the parsing has completed (see MIME::Head::decode()), or decode the words on demand (see MIME::Words).
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" or "message/partial" part is parsed by this parser, creating an entity object. What happens then is determined by the actual OPTION:
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.
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.
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.
To prevent double encoding on the output side MIME::Body->is_encoded is set, which tells MIME::Body not to encode the data again, if encoded data was requested. This is in particular useful, when it's important that the content must not be modified, e.g. if you want to calculate OpenPGP signatures from it.
WARNING: the semantics change significantly if you parse MIME messages with this option set, because MIME::Entity resp. MIME::Body *always* see encoded data now, while the default behaviour is working with *decoded* data (and encoding it only if you request it). You need to decode the data yourself, if you want to have it decoded.
So use this option only if you exactly know, what you're doing, and that you're sure, that you really need it.
You may supply the DATA in any of a number of ways...
A ref to an array of scalars. The array is internally concatenated into a temporary string, and a reference to the new string is used internally.
It is much more efficient to pass in a scalar reference, so please consider refactoring your code to use that interface instead. If you absolutely MUST pass an array, you may be better off using IO::ScalarArray in the calling code to generate a filehandle, and passing that filehandle to parse()
Returns the parsed MIME::Entity on success.
The INSTREAM can be given as 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. If the message contained too many parts (as set by max_parts), returns undef.
Returns the parsed MIME::Entity on success. Throws exception on failure.
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.
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.
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.
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.
$parser->filer->output_path(...args...);
We just delegate this to the underlying filer() object.
$parser->filer->output_prefix(...args...);
We just delegate this to the underlying filer() object.
$parser->filer->evil_filename(...args...);
We just delegate this to the underlying filer() object.
Normally, instances of this class parse a message to the bitter end. Messages with many MIME parts can cause excessive memory consumption. If you invoke this method, parsing will abort with a die() if a message contains more than NUM parts.
If NUM is set to -1 (the default), then no maximum limit is enforced.
With no argument, returns the current setting as an integer
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.
This method is a no-op to preserve the pre-5.421 API.
The tmp_recycling() feature was removed in 5.421 because it had never actually worked. Please update your code to stop using it.
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.
Instance method.
MIME::Parser no longer supports IO::InnerFile, but this method is retained for backwards compatibility. It does nothing.
The original reasoning for IO::InnerFile was that inner files were faster than "in-core" temp files. At the time, the "in-core" tempfile support was implemented with IO::Scalar from the IO-Stringy distribution, which used the tie() interface to wrap a scalar with the appropriate IO::Handle operations. The penalty for this was fairly hefty, and IO::InnerFile actually was faster.
Nowadays, MIME::Parser uses Perl's built in ability to open a filehandle on an in-memory scalar variable via PerlIO. Benchmarking shows that IO::InnerFile is slightly slower than using in-memory temporary files, and is slightly faster than on-disk temporary files. Both measurements are within a few percent of each other. Since there's no real benefit, and since the IO::InnerFile abuse was fairly hairy and evil ("writes" to it were faked by extending the size of the inner file with the assumption that the only data you'd ever ->print() to it would be the line from the "outer" file, for example) it's been removed.
If so, then this is the method that your subclass should invoke during init. Use it like this:
package MyParser; @ISA = qw(MIME::Parser); ... sub init { my $self = shift; $self->SUPER::init(@_); ### do my parent's init $self->interface(ENTITY_CLASS => 'MIME::MyEntity'); $self->interface(HEAD_CLASS => 'MIME::MyHead'); $self; ### return }
With no VALUE, returns the VALUE currently associated with that ROLE.
If you set the "output_to_core" option to false before parsing (the default), then we call "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.
If called without arguments, returns current value.
The default value is undef, which will cause new_tmpfile() to use the system default temporary directory.
The default uses MIME::Tools::tmpopen() to create a new temporary file, unless tmp_to_core() dictates otherwise, but you can override this. You shouldn't need to.
The location for temporary files can be changed on a per-parser basis with tmp_dir().
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.
### Parse an input stream: eval { $entity = $parser->parse(\*STDIN) }; if (!$entity) { ### parse failed! my $decapitated = $parser->last_head; ... }
Optimum input mechanisms:
parse() YES (if you give it a globref or a subclass of IO::File) parse_open() YES parse_data() NO (see below) parse_two() NO (see below)
Optimum settings:
decode_headers() *** (no real difference; 0 is slightly faster) extract_nested_messages() 0 (may be slightly faster, but in general you want it set to 1) output_to_core() 0 (will be MUCH faster) tmp_to_core() 0 (will be MUCH faster)
Native I/O is much faster than object-oriented I/O. It's much faster to use <$foo> than $foo->getline. For backwards compatibility, 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 |");
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:
decode_headers() *** (no real difference) extract_nested_messages() *** (no real difference) output_to_core() 0 (will use MUCH less memory) tmp_to_core is 1) tmp_to_core() 0 (will use MUCH less memory)
Optimum input mechanisms:
parse() *** (doesn't matter) parse_open() *** (doesn't matter) parse_data() *** (doesn't matter) parse_two() *** (doesn't matter)
Optimum settings:
decode_headers() 0 (sidesteps problem of bad hdr encodings) 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_to_core() *** (doesn't matter)
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:
decode_headers() *** (doesn't matter) extract_nested_messages() *** (doesn't matter) output_to_core() *** (doesn't matter) tmp_to_core() 1
You can veto tmpfiles entirely. 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.
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.
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 accommodating 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 convinced that the temp-file use adds significant overhead.
An attempt has been made to allow the parser to handle both CRLF and newline-terminated input.
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.
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 2046, 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 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.
MIME::Tools, MIME::Head, MIME::Body, MIME::Entity, MIME::Decoder
Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com), ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com). Dianne Skoll (dfs@roaringpenguin.com) http://www.roaringpenguin.com
All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2017-04-05 | perl v5.34.0 |