| """This will be the home for the policy that hooks in the new |
| code that adds all the email6 features. |
| """ |
| |
| from email._policybase import Policy, Compat32, compat32, _extend_docstrings |
| from email.utils import _has_surrogates |
| from email.headerregistry import HeaderRegistry as HeaderRegistry |
| |
| __all__ = [ |
| 'Compat32', |
| 'compat32', |
| 'Policy', |
| 'EmailPolicy', |
| 'default', |
| 'strict', |
| 'SMTP', |
| 'HTTP', |
| ] |
| |
| @_extend_docstrings |
| class EmailPolicy(Policy): |
| |
| """+ |
| PROVISIONAL |
| |
| The API extensions enabled by this this policy are currently provisional. |
| Refer to the documentation for details. |
| |
| This policy adds new header parsing and folding algorithms. Instead of |
| simple strings, headers are custom objects with custom attributes |
| depending on the type of the field. The folding algorithm fully |
| implements RFCs 2047 and 5322. |
| |
| In addition to the settable attributes listed above that apply to |
| all Policies, this policy adds the following additional attributes: |
| |
| refold_source -- if the value for a header in the Message object |
| came from the parsing of some source, this attribute |
| indicates whether or not a generator should refold |
| that value when transforming the message back into |
| stream form. The possible values are: |
| |
| none -- all source values use original folding |
| long -- source values that have any line that is |
| longer than max_line_length will be |
| refolded |
| all -- all values are refolded. |
| |
| The default is 'long'. |
| |
| header_factory -- a callable that takes two arguments, 'name' and |
| 'value', where 'name' is a header field name and |
| 'value' is an unfolded header field value, and |
| returns a string-like object that represents that |
| header. A default header_factory is provided that |
| understands some of the RFC5322 header field types. |
| (Currently address fields and date fields have |
| special treatment, while all other fields are |
| treated as unstructured. This list will be |
| completed before the extension is marked stable.) |
| """ |
| |
| refold_source = 'long' |
| header_factory = HeaderRegistry() |
| |
| def __init__(self, **kw): |
| # Ensure that each new instance gets a unique header factory |
| # (as opposed to clones, which share the factory). |
| if 'header_factory' not in kw: |
| object.__setattr__(self, 'header_factory', HeaderRegistry()) |
| super().__init__(**kw) |
| |
| def header_max_count(self, name): |
| """+ |
| The implementation for this class returns the max_count attribute from |
| the specialized header class that would be used to construct a header |
| of type 'name'. |
| """ |
| return self.header_factory[name].max_count |
| |
| # The logic of the next three methods is chosen such that it is possible to |
| # switch a Message object between a Compat32 policy and a policy derived |
| # from this class and have the results stay consistent. This allows a |
| # Message object constructed with this policy to be passed to a library |
| # that only handles Compat32 objects, or to receive such an object and |
| # convert it to use the newer style by just changing its policy. It is |
| # also chosen because it postpones the relatively expensive full rfc5322 |
| # parse until as late as possible when parsing from source, since in many |
| # applications only a few headers will actually be inspected. |
| |
| def header_source_parse(self, sourcelines): |
| """+ |
| The name is parsed as everything up to the ':' and returned unmodified. |
| The value is determined by stripping leading whitespace off the |
| remainder of the first line, joining all subsequent lines together, and |
| stripping any trailing carriage return or linefeed characters. (This |
| is the same as Compat32). |
| |
| """ |
| name, value = sourcelines[0].split(':', 1) |
| value = value.lstrip(' \t') + ''.join(sourcelines[1:]) |
| return (name, value.rstrip('\r\n')) |
| |
| def header_store_parse(self, name, value): |
| """+ |
| The name is returned unchanged. If the input value has a 'name' |
| attribute and it matches the name ignoring case, the value is returned |
| unchanged. Otherwise the name and value are passed to header_factory |
| method, and the resulting custom header object is returned as the |
| value. In this case a ValueError is raised if the input value contains |
| CR or LF characters. |
| |
| """ |
| if hasattr(value, 'name') and value.name.lower() == name.lower(): |
| return (name, value) |
| if isinstance(value, str) and len(value.splitlines())>1: |
| raise ValueError("Header values may not contain linefeed " |
| "or carriage return characters") |
| return (name, self.header_factory(name, value)) |
| |
| def header_fetch_parse(self, name, value): |
| """+ |
| If the value has a 'name' attribute, it is returned to unmodified. |
| Otherwise the name and the value with any linesep characters removed |
| are passed to the header_factory method, and the resulting custom |
| header object is returned. Any surrogateescaped bytes get turned |
| into the unicode unknown-character glyph. |
| |
| """ |
| if hasattr(value, 'name'): |
| return value |
| return self.header_factory(name, ''.join(value.splitlines())) |
| |
| def fold(self, name, value): |
| """+ |
| Header folding is controlled by the refold_source policy setting. A |
| value is considered to be a 'source value' if and only if it does not |
| have a 'name' attribute (having a 'name' attribute means it is a header |
| object of some sort). If a source value needs to be refolded according |
| to the policy, it is converted into a custom header object by passing |
| the name and the value with any linesep characters removed to the |
| header_factory method. Folding of a custom header object is done by |
| calling its fold method with the current policy. |
| |
| Source values are split into lines using splitlines. If the value is |
| not to be refolded, the lines are rejoined using the linesep from the |
| policy and returned. The exception is lines containing non-ascii |
| binary data. In that case the value is refolded regardless of the |
| refold_source setting, which causes the binary data to be CTE encoded |
| using the unknown-8bit charset. |
| |
| """ |
| return self._fold(name, value, refold_binary=True) |
| |
| def fold_binary(self, name, value): |
| """+ |
| The same as fold if cte_type is 7bit, except that the returned value is |
| bytes. |
| |
| If cte_type is 8bit, non-ASCII binary data is converted back into |
| bytes. Headers with binary data are not refolded, regardless of the |
| refold_header setting, since there is no way to know whether the binary |
| data consists of single byte characters or multibyte characters. |
| |
| """ |
| folded = self._fold(name, value, refold_binary=self.cte_type=='7bit') |
| return folded.encode('ascii', 'surrogateescape') |
| |
| def _fold(self, name, value, refold_binary=False): |
| if hasattr(value, 'name'): |
| return value.fold(policy=self) |
| maxlen = self.max_line_length if self.max_line_length else float('inf') |
| lines = value.splitlines() |
| refold = (self.refold_source == 'all' or |
| self.refold_source == 'long' and |
| (len(lines[0])+len(name)+2 > maxlen or |
| any(len(x) > maxlen for x in lines[1:]))) |
| if refold or refold_binary and _has_surrogates(value): |
| return self.header_factory(name, ''.join(lines)).fold(policy=self) |
| return name + ': ' + self.linesep.join(lines) + self.linesep |
| |
| |
| default = EmailPolicy() |
| # Make the default policy use the class default header_factory |
| del default.header_factory |
| strict = default.clone(raise_on_defect=True) |
| SMTP = default.clone(linesep='\r\n') |
| HTTP = default.clone(linesep='\r\n', max_line_length=None) |