1# Copyright (C) 2001-2010 Python Software Foundation 2# Author: Barry Warsaw 3# Contact: email-sig@python.org 4 5"""Miscellaneous utilities.""" 6 7__all__ = [ 8 'collapse_rfc2231_value', 9 'decode_params', 10 'decode_rfc2231', 11 'encode_rfc2231', 12 'formataddr', 13 'formatdate', 14 'format_datetime', 15 'getaddresses', 16 'make_msgid', 17 'mktime_tz', 18 'parseaddr', 19 'parsedate', 20 'parsedate_tz', 21 'parsedate_to_datetime', 22 'unquote', 23 ] 24 25import os 26import re 27import time 28import random 29import socket 30import datetime 31import urllib.parse 32 33from email._parseaddr import quote 34from email._parseaddr import AddressList as _AddressList 35from email._parseaddr import mktime_tz 36 37from email._parseaddr import parsedate, parsedate_tz, _parsedate_tz 38 39# Intrapackage imports 40from email.charset import Charset 41 42COMMASPACE = ', ' 43EMPTYSTRING = '' 44UEMPTYSTRING = '' 45CRLF = '\r\n' 46TICK = "'" 47 48specialsre = re.compile(r'[][\\()<>@,:;".]') 49escapesre = re.compile(r'[\\"]') 50 51def _has_surrogates(s): 52 """Return True if s contains surrogate-escaped binary data.""" 53 # This check is based on the fact that unless there are surrogates, utf8 54 # (Python's default encoding) can encode any string. This is the fastest 55 # way to check for surrogates, see issue 11454 for timings. 56 try: 57 s.encode() 58 return False 59 except UnicodeEncodeError: 60 return True 61 62# How to deal with a string containing bytes before handing it to the 63# application through the 'normal' interface. 64def _sanitize(string): 65 # Turn any escaped bytes into unicode 'unknown' char. If the escaped 66 # bytes happen to be utf-8 they will instead get decoded, even if they 67 # were invalid in the charset the source was supposed to be in. This 68 # seems like it is not a bad thing; a defect was still registered. 69 original_bytes = string.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape') 70 return original_bytes.decode('utf-8', 'replace') 71 72 73 74# Helpers 75 76def formataddr(pair, charset='utf-8'): 77 """The inverse of parseaddr(), this takes a 2-tuple of the form 78 (realname, email_address) and returns the string value suitable 79 for an RFC 2822 From, To or Cc header. 80 81 If the first element of pair is false, then the second element is 82 returned unmodified. 83 84 Optional charset if given is the character set that is used to encode 85 realname in case realname is not ASCII safe. Can be an instance of str or 86 a Charset-like object which has a header_encode method. Default is 87 'utf-8'. 88 """ 89 name, address = pair 90 # The address MUST (per RFC) be ascii, so raise a UnicodeError if it isn't. 91 address.encode('ascii') 92 if name: 93 try: 94 name.encode('ascii') 95 except UnicodeEncodeError: 96 if isinstance(charset, str): 97 charset = Charset(charset) 98 encoded_name = charset.header_encode(name) 99 return "%s <%s>" % (encoded_name, address) 100 else: 101 quotes = '' 102 if specialsre.search(name): 103 quotes = '"' 104 name = escapesre.sub(r'\\\g<0>', name) 105 return '%s%s%s <%s>' % (quotes, name, quotes, address) 106 return address 107 108 109 110def getaddresses(fieldvalues): 111 """Return a list of (REALNAME, EMAIL) for each fieldvalue.""" 112 all = COMMASPACE.join(fieldvalues) 113 a = _AddressList(all) 114 return a.addresslist 115 116 117def _format_timetuple_and_zone(timetuple, zone): 118 return '%s, %02d %s %04d %02d:%02d:%02d %s' % ( 119 ['Mon', 'Tue', 'Wed', 'Thu', 'Fri', 'Sat', 'Sun'][timetuple[6]], 120 timetuple[2], 121 ['Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun', 122 'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'][timetuple[1] - 1], 123 timetuple[0], timetuple[3], timetuple[4], timetuple[5], 124 zone) 125 126def formatdate(timeval=None, localtime=False, usegmt=False): 127 """Returns a date string as specified by RFC 2822, e.g.: 128 129 Fri, 09 Nov 2001 01:08:47 -0000 130 131 Optional timeval if given is a floating point time value as accepted by 132 gmtime() and localtime(), otherwise the current time is used. 133 134 Optional localtime is a flag that when True, interprets timeval, and 135 returns a date relative to the local timezone instead of UTC, properly 136 taking daylight savings time into account. 137 138 Optional argument usegmt means that the timezone is written out as 139 an ascii string, not numeric one (so "GMT" instead of "+0000"). This 140 is needed for HTTP, and is only used when localtime==False. 141 """ 142 # Note: we cannot use strftime() because that honors the locale and RFC 143 # 2822 requires that day and month names be the English abbreviations. 144 if timeval is None: 145 timeval = time.time() 146 if localtime or usegmt: 147 dt = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(timeval, datetime.timezone.utc) 148 else: 149 dt = datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(timeval) 150 if localtime: 151 dt = dt.astimezone() 152 usegmt = False 153 return format_datetime(dt, usegmt) 154 155def format_datetime(dt, usegmt=False): 156 """Turn a datetime into a date string as specified in RFC 2822. 157 158 If usegmt is True, dt must be an aware datetime with an offset of zero. In 159 this case 'GMT' will be rendered instead of the normal +0000 required by 160 RFC2822. This is to support HTTP headers involving date stamps. 161 """ 162 now = dt.timetuple() 163 if usegmt: 164 if dt.tzinfo is None or dt.tzinfo != datetime.timezone.utc: 165 raise ValueError("usegmt option requires a UTC datetime") 166 zone = 'GMT' 167 elif dt.tzinfo is None: 168 zone = '-0000' 169 else: 170 zone = dt.strftime("%z") 171 return _format_timetuple_and_zone(now, zone) 172 173 174def make_msgid(idstring=None, domain=None): 175 """Returns a string suitable for RFC 2822 compliant Message-ID, e.g: 176 177 <142480216486.20800.16526388040877946887@nightshade.la.mastaler.com> 178 179 Optional idstring if given is a string used to strengthen the 180 uniqueness of the message id. Optional domain if given provides the 181 portion of the message id after the '@'. It defaults to the locally 182 defined hostname. 183 """ 184 timeval = int(time.time()*100) 185 pid = os.getpid() 186 randint = random.getrandbits(64) 187 if idstring is None: 188 idstring = '' 189 else: 190 idstring = '.' + idstring 191 if domain is None: 192 domain = socket.getfqdn() 193 msgid = '<%d.%d.%d%s@%s>' % (timeval, pid, randint, idstring, domain) 194 return msgid 195 196 197def parsedate_to_datetime(data): 198 *dtuple, tz = _parsedate_tz(data) 199 if tz is None: 200 return datetime.datetime(*dtuple[:6]) 201 return datetime.datetime(*dtuple[:6], 202 tzinfo=datetime.timezone(datetime.timedelta(seconds=tz))) 203 204 205def parseaddr(addr): 206 """ 207 Parse addr into its constituent realname and email address parts. 208 209 Return a tuple of realname and email address, unless the parse fails, in 210 which case return a 2-tuple of ('', ''). 211 """ 212 addrs = _AddressList(addr).addresslist 213 if not addrs: 214 return '', '' 215 return addrs[0] 216 217 218# rfc822.unquote() doesn't properly de-backslash-ify in Python pre-2.3. 219def unquote(str): 220 """Remove quotes from a string.""" 221 if len(str) > 1: 222 if str.startswith('"') and str.endswith('"'): 223 return str[1:-1].replace('\\\\', '\\').replace('\\"', '"') 224 if str.startswith('<') and str.endswith('>'): 225 return str[1:-1] 226 return str 227 228 229 230# RFC2231-related functions - parameter encoding and decoding 231def decode_rfc2231(s): 232 """Decode string according to RFC 2231""" 233 parts = s.split(TICK, 2) 234 if len(parts) <= 2: 235 return None, None, s 236 return parts 237 238 239def encode_rfc2231(s, charset=None, language=None): 240 """Encode string according to RFC 2231. 241 242 If neither charset nor language is given, then s is returned as-is. If 243 charset is given but not language, the string is encoded using the empty 244 string for language. 245 """ 246 s = urllib.parse.quote(s, safe='', encoding=charset or 'ascii') 247 if charset is None and language is None: 248 return s 249 if language is None: 250 language = '' 251 return "%s'%s'%s" % (charset, language, s) 252 253 254rfc2231_continuation = re.compile(r'^(?P<name>\w+)\*((?P<num>[0-9]+)\*?)?$', 255 re.ASCII) 256 257def decode_params(params): 258 """Decode parameters list according to RFC 2231. 259 260 params is a sequence of 2-tuples containing (param name, string value). 261 """ 262 # Copy params so we don't mess with the original 263 params = params[:] 264 new_params = [] 265 # Map parameter's name to a list of continuations. The values are a 266 # 3-tuple of the continuation number, the string value, and a flag 267 # specifying whether a particular segment is %-encoded. 268 rfc2231_params = {} 269 name, value = params.pop(0) 270 new_params.append((name, value)) 271 while params: 272 name, value = params.pop(0) 273 if name.endswith('*'): 274 encoded = True 275 else: 276 encoded = False 277 value = unquote(value) 278 mo = rfc2231_continuation.match(name) 279 if mo: 280 name, num = mo.group('name', 'num') 281 if num is not None: 282 num = int(num) 283 rfc2231_params.setdefault(name, []).append((num, value, encoded)) 284 else: 285 new_params.append((name, '"%s"' % quote(value))) 286 if rfc2231_params: 287 for name, continuations in rfc2231_params.items(): 288 value = [] 289 extended = False 290 # Sort by number 291 continuations.sort() 292 # And now append all values in numerical order, converting 293 # %-encodings for the encoded segments. If any of the 294 # continuation names ends in a *, then the entire string, after 295 # decoding segments and concatenating, must have the charset and 296 # language specifiers at the beginning of the string. 297 for num, s, encoded in continuations: 298 if encoded: 299 # Decode as "latin-1", so the characters in s directly 300 # represent the percent-encoded octet values. 301 # collapse_rfc2231_value treats this as an octet sequence. 302 s = urllib.parse.unquote(s, encoding="latin-1") 303 extended = True 304 value.append(s) 305 value = quote(EMPTYSTRING.join(value)) 306 if extended: 307 charset, language, value = decode_rfc2231(value) 308 new_params.append((name, (charset, language, '"%s"' % value))) 309 else: 310 new_params.append((name, '"%s"' % value)) 311 return new_params 312 313def collapse_rfc2231_value(value, errors='replace', 314 fallback_charset='us-ascii'): 315 if not isinstance(value, tuple) or len(value) != 3: 316 return unquote(value) 317 # While value comes to us as a unicode string, we need it to be a bytes 318 # object. We do not want bytes() normal utf-8 decoder, we want a straight 319 # interpretation of the string as character bytes. 320 charset, language, text = value 321 if charset is None: 322 # Issue 17369: if charset/lang is None, decode_rfc2231 couldn't parse 323 # the value, so use the fallback_charset. 324 charset = fallback_charset 325 rawbytes = bytes(text, 'raw-unicode-escape') 326 try: 327 return str(rawbytes, charset, errors) 328 except LookupError: 329 # charset is not a known codec. 330 return unquote(text) 331 332 333# 334# datetime doesn't provide a localtime function yet, so provide one. Code 335# adapted from the patch in issue 9527. This may not be perfect, but it is 336# better than not having it. 337# 338 339def localtime(dt=None, isdst=-1): 340 """Return local time as an aware datetime object. 341 342 If called without arguments, return current time. Otherwise *dt* 343 argument should be a datetime instance, and it is converted to the 344 local time zone according to the system time zone database. If *dt* is 345 naive (that is, dt.tzinfo is None), it is assumed to be in local time. 346 In this case, a positive or zero value for *isdst* causes localtime to 347 presume initially that summer time (for example, Daylight Saving Time) 348 is or is not (respectively) in effect for the specified time. A 349 negative value for *isdst* causes the localtime() function to attempt 350 to divine whether summer time is in effect for the specified time. 351 352 """ 353 if dt is None: 354 return datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc).astimezone() 355 if dt.tzinfo is not None: 356 return dt.astimezone() 357 # We have a naive datetime. Convert to a (localtime) timetuple and pass to 358 # system mktime together with the isdst hint. System mktime will return 359 # seconds since epoch. 360 tm = dt.timetuple()[:-1] + (isdst,) 361 seconds = time.mktime(tm) 362 localtm = time.localtime(seconds) 363 try: 364 delta = datetime.timedelta(seconds=localtm.tm_gmtoff) 365 tz = datetime.timezone(delta, localtm.tm_zone) 366 except AttributeError: 367 # Compute UTC offset and compare with the value implied by tm_isdst. 368 # If the values match, use the zone name implied by tm_isdst. 369 delta = dt - datetime.datetime(*time.gmtime(seconds)[:6]) 370 dst = time.daylight and localtm.tm_isdst > 0 371 gmtoff = -(time.altzone if dst else time.timezone) 372 if delta == datetime.timedelta(seconds=gmtoff): 373 tz = datetime.timezone(delta, time.tzname[dst]) 374 else: 375 tz = datetime.timezone(delta) 376 return dt.replace(tzinfo=tz) 377