Guido van Rossum | 9a22de1 | 1995-01-12 12:29:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | #!/usr/local/bin/python |
| 2 | # |
| 3 | # A class for wrapping the WWW Forms Common Gateway Interface (CGI) |
| 4 | # Michael McLay, NIST mclay@eeel.nist.gov 6/14/94 |
| 5 | # |
| 6 | # modified by Steve Majewski <sdm7g@Virginia.EDU> 12/5/94 |
| 7 | # |
| 8 | |
| 9 | # Several classes to parse the name/value pairs that are passed to |
| 10 | # a server's CGI by GET, POST or PUT methods by a WWW FORM. This |
| 11 | # module is based on Mike McLay's original cgi.py after discussing |
| 12 | # changes with him and others on the comp.lang.python newsgroup, and |
| 13 | # at the NIST Python workshop. |
| 14 | # |
| 15 | # The rationale for changes was: |
| 16 | # The original FormContent class was almost, but not quite like |
| 17 | # a dictionary object. Besides adding some extra access methods, |
| 18 | # it had a values() method with different arguments and semantics |
| 19 | # from the standard values() method of a mapping object. Also, |
| 20 | # it provided several different access methods that may be necessary |
| 21 | # or useful, but made it a little more confusing to figure out how |
| 22 | # to use. Also, we wanted to make the most typical cases the simplest |
| 23 | # and most convenient access methods. ( Most form fields just return |
| 24 | # a single value, and in practice, a lot of code was just assuming |
| 25 | # a single value and ignoring all others. On the other hand, the |
| 26 | # protocol allows multiple values to be returned. |
| 27 | # |
| 28 | # The new base class (FormContentDict) is just like a dictionary. |
| 29 | # In fact, if you just want a dictionary, all of the stuff that was |
| 30 | # in __init__ has been extracted into a cgi.parse() function that will |
| 31 | # return the "raw" dictionary, but having a class allows you to customize |
| 32 | # it further. |
| 33 | # Mike McLay's original FormContent class is reimplemented as a |
| 34 | # subclass of FormContentDict. |
| 35 | # There are two additional sub-classes, but I'm not yet too sure |
| 36 | # whether they are what I want. |
| 37 | # |
| 38 | |
| 39 | import string,regsub,sys,os,urllib |
| 40 | # since os.environ may often be used in cgi code, we name it in this module. |
| 41 | from os import environ |
| 42 | |
| 43 | |
| 44 | def parse(): |
| 45 | if environ['REQUEST_METHOD'] == 'POST': |
| 46 | qs = sys.stdin.read(string.atoi(environ['CONTENT_LENGTH'])) |
| 47 | environ['QUERY_STRING'] = qs |
| 48 | else: |
| 49 | qs = environ['QUERY_STRING'] |
| 50 | name_value_pairs = string.splitfields(qs, '&') |
| 51 | dict = {} |
| 52 | for name_value in name_value_pairs: |
| 53 | nv = string.splitfields(name_value, '=') |
| 54 | if len(nv) != 2: |
| 55 | continue |
| 56 | name = nv[0] |
| 57 | value = urllib.unquote(regsub.gsub('+',' ',nv[1])) |
| 58 | if len(value): |
| 59 | if dict.has_key (name): |
| 60 | dict[name].append(value) |
| 61 | else: |
| 62 | dict[name] = [value] |
| 63 | return dict |
| 64 | |
| 65 | |
| 66 | |
| 67 | # The FormContent constructor creates a dictionary from the name/value pairs |
| 68 | # passed through the CGI interface. |
| 69 | |
| 70 | |
| 71 | # |
| 72 | # form['key'] |
| 73 | # form.__getitem__('key') |
| 74 | # form.has_key('key') |
| 75 | # form.keys() |
| 76 | # form.values() |
| 77 | # form.items() |
| 78 | # form.dict |
| 79 | |
| 80 | class FormContentDict: |
| 81 | def __init__( self ): |
| 82 | self.dict = parse() |
| 83 | self.query_string = environ['QUERY_STRING'] |
| 84 | def __getitem__(self,key): |
| 85 | return self.dict[key] |
| 86 | def keys(self): |
| 87 | return self.dict.keys() |
| 88 | def has_key(self, key): |
| 89 | return self.dict.has_key(key) |
| 90 | def values(self): |
| 91 | return self.dict.values() |
| 92 | def items(self): |
| 93 | return self.dict.items() |
| 94 | def __len__( self ): |
| 95 | return len(self.dict) |
| 96 | |
| 97 | |
| 98 | # This is the "strict" single-value expecting version. |
| 99 | # IF you only expect a single value for each field, then form[key] |
| 100 | # will return that single value ( the [0]-th ), and raise an |
| 101 | # IndexError if that expectation is not true. |
| 102 | # IF you expect a field to have possible multiple values, than you |
| 103 | # can use form.getlist( key ) to get all of the values. |
| 104 | # values() and items() are a compromise: they return single strings |
| 105 | # where there is a single value, and lists of strings otherwise. |
| 106 | |
| 107 | class SvFormContentDict(FormContentDict): |
| 108 | def __getitem__( self, key ): |
| 109 | if len( self.dict[key] ) > 1 : |
| 110 | raise IndexError, 'expecting a single value' |
| 111 | return self.dict[key][0] |
| 112 | def getlist( self, key ): |
| 113 | return self.dict[key] |
| 114 | def values( self ): |
| 115 | lis = [] |
| 116 | for each in self.dict.values() : |
| 117 | if len( each ) == 1 : |
| 118 | lis.append( each[0] ) |
| 119 | else: lis.append( each ) |
| 120 | return lis |
| 121 | def items( self ): |
| 122 | lis = [] |
| 123 | for key,value in self.dict.items(): |
| 124 | if len(value) == 1 : |
| 125 | lis.append( (key,value[0]) ) |
| 126 | else: lis.append( (key,value) ) |
| 127 | return lis |
| 128 | |
| 129 | |
| 130 | # And this sub-class is similar to the above, but it will attempt to |
| 131 | # interpret numerical values. This is here as mostly as an example, |
| 132 | # but I think the real way to handle typed-data from a form may be |
| 133 | # to make an additional table driver parsing stage that has a table |
| 134 | # of allowed input patterns and the output conversion types - it |
| 135 | # would signal type-errors on parse, not on access. |
| 136 | class InterpFormContentDict(SvFormContentDict): |
| 137 | def __getitem__( self, key ): |
| 138 | v = SvFormContentDict.__getitem__( self, key ) |
| 139 | if v[0] in string.digits+'+-.' : |
| 140 | try: return string.atoi( v ) |
| 141 | except ValueError: |
| 142 | try: return string.atof( v ) |
| 143 | except ValueError: pass |
| 144 | return string.strip(v) |
| 145 | def values( self ): |
| 146 | lis = [] |
| 147 | for key in self.keys(): |
| 148 | try: |
| 149 | lis.append( self[key] ) |
| 150 | except IndexError: |
| 151 | lis.append( self.dict[key] ) |
| 152 | return lis |
| 153 | def items( self ): |
| 154 | lis = [] |
| 155 | for key in self.keys(): |
| 156 | try: |
| 157 | lis.append( (key, self[key]) ) |
| 158 | except IndexError: |
| 159 | lis.append( (key, self.dict[key]) ) |
| 160 | return lis |
| 161 | |
| 162 | |
| 163 | # class FormContent parses the name/value pairs that are passed to a |
| 164 | # server's CGI by GET, POST, or PUT methods by a WWW FORM. several |
| 165 | # specialized FormContent dictionary access methods have been added |
| 166 | # for convenience. |
| 167 | |
| 168 | # function return value |
| 169 | # |
| 170 | # form.keys() all keys in dictionary |
| 171 | # form.has_key('key') test keys existance |
| 172 | # form[key] returns list associated with key |
| 173 | # form.values('key') key's list (same as form.[key]) |
| 174 | # form.indexed_value('key' index) nth element in key's value list |
| 175 | # form.value(key) key's unstripped value |
| 176 | # form.length(key) number of elements in key's list |
| 177 | # form.stripped(key) key's value with whitespace stripped |
| 178 | # form.pars() full dictionary |
| 179 | |
| 180 | |
| 181 | |
| 182 | class FormContent(FormContentDict): |
| 183 | # This is the original FormContent semantics of values, |
| 184 | # not the dictionary like semantics. |
| 185 | def values(self,key): |
| 186 | if self.dict.has_key(key):return self.dict[key] |
| 187 | else: return None |
| 188 | def indexed_value(self,key, location): |
| 189 | if self.dict.has_key(key): |
| 190 | if len (self.dict[key]) > location: |
| 191 | return self.dict[key][location] |
| 192 | else: return None |
| 193 | else: return None |
| 194 | def value(self,key): |
| 195 | if self.dict.has_key(key):return self.dict[key][0] |
| 196 | else: return None |
| 197 | def length(self,key): |
| 198 | return len (self.dict[key]) |
| 199 | def stripped(self,key): |
| 200 | if self.dict.has_key(key):return string.strip(self.dict[key][0]) |
| 201 | else: return None |
| 202 | def pars(self): |
| 203 | return self.dict |
| 204 | |
| 205 | |
| 206 | |
| 207 | |
| 208 | |
| 209 | |
| 210 | def print_environ_usage(): |
| 211 | print """ |
| 212 | <H3>These operating system environment variables could have been |
| 213 | set:</H3> <UL> |
| 214 | <LI>AUTH_TYPE |
| 215 | <LI>CONTENT_LENGTH |
| 216 | <LI>CONTENT_TYPE |
| 217 | <LI>DATE_GMT |
| 218 | <LI>DATE_LOCAL |
| 219 | <LI>DOCUMENT_NAME |
| 220 | <LI>DOCUMENT_ROOT |
| 221 | <LI>DOCUMENT_URI |
| 222 | <LI>GATEWAY_INTERFACE |
| 223 | <LI>LAST_MODIFIED |
| 224 | <LI>PATH |
| 225 | <LI>PATH_INFO |
| 226 | <LI>PATH_TRANSLATED |
| 227 | <LI>QUERY_STRING |
| 228 | <LI>REMOTE_ADDR |
| 229 | <LI>REMOTE_HOST |
| 230 | <LI>REMOTE_IDENT |
| 231 | <LI>REMOTE_USER |
| 232 | <LI>REQUEST_METHOD |
| 233 | <LI>SCRIPT_NAME |
| 234 | <LI>SERVER_NAME |
| 235 | <LI>SERVER_PORT |
| 236 | <LI>SERVER_PROTOCOL |
| 237 | <LI>SERVER_ROOT |
| 238 | <LI>SERVER_SOFTWARE |
| 239 | </UL> |
| 240 | """ |
| 241 | |
| 242 | def print_environ(): |
| 243 | skeys = environ.keys() |
| 244 | skeys.sort() |
Guido van Rossum | eb9e9d2 | 1995-02-27 13:16:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 245 | print '<h3> The following environment variables ' \ |
| 246 | 'were set by the CGI script: </h3>' |
Guido van Rossum | 9a22de1 | 1995-01-12 12:29:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 247 | print '<dl>' |
| 248 | for key in skeys: |
Guido van Rossum | eb9e9d2 | 1995-02-27 13:16:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 249 | print '<dt>', escape(key), '<dd>', escape(environ[key]) |
Guido van Rossum | 9a22de1 | 1995-01-12 12:29:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 250 | print '</dl>' |
| 251 | |
| 252 | def print_form( form ): |
Guido van Rossum | 9a22de1 | 1995-01-12 12:29:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 253 | skeys = form.keys() |
| 254 | skeys.sort() |
Guido van Rossum | eb9e9d2 | 1995-02-27 13:16:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 255 | print '<h3> The following name/value pairs ' \ |
| 256 | 'were entered in the form: </h3>' |
| 257 | print '<dl>' |
Guido van Rossum | 9a22de1 | 1995-01-12 12:29:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 258 | for key in skeys: |
Guido van Rossum | eb9e9d2 | 1995-02-27 13:16:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 259 | print '<dt>', escape(key), ':', |
| 260 | print '<i>', escape(`type(form[key])`), '</i>', |
| 261 | print '<dd>', escape(form[key]) |
Guido van Rossum | 9a22de1 | 1995-01-12 12:29:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 262 | print '</dl>' |
| 263 | |
| 264 | def escape( s ): |
Guido van Rossum | eb9e9d2 | 1995-02-27 13:16:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 265 | s = regsub.gsub('&', '&') # Must be done first |
| 266 | s = regsub.gsub('<', '<') |
| 267 | s = regsub.gsub('>', '>') |
| 268 | return s |
Guido van Rossum | 9a22de1 | 1995-01-12 12:29:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 269 | |
| 270 | def test( what ): |
| 271 | label = escape(str(what)) |
| 272 | print 'Content-type: text/html\n\n' |
| 273 | print '<HEADER>\n<TITLE>' + label + '</TITLE>\n</HEADER>\n' |
| 274 | print '<BODY>\n' |
| 275 | print "<H1>" + label +"</H1>\n" |
| 276 | form = what() |
| 277 | print_form( form ) |
| 278 | print_environ() |
| 279 | print_environ_usage() |
| 280 | print '</body>' |
| 281 | |
| 282 | if __name__ == '__main__' : |
| 283 | test_classes = ( FormContent, FormContentDict, SvFormContentDict, InterpFormContentDict ) |
| 284 | test( test_classes[0] ) # by default, test compatibility with |
| 285 | # old version, change index to test others. |