package MIME::Decoder::QuotedPrint;
use strict;
use warnings;
=head1 NAME
MIME::Decoder::QuotedPrint - encode/decode a "quoted-printable" stream
=head1 SYNOPSIS
A generic decoder object; see L<MIME::Decoder> for usage.
=head1 DESCRIPTION
A MIME::Decoder subclass for the C<"quoted-printable"> encoding.
The name was chosen to jibe with the pre-existing MIME::QuotedPrint
utility package, which this class actually uses to translate each line.
=over 4
=item *
The B<decoder> does a line-by-line translation from input to output.
=item *
The B<encoder> does a line-by-line translation, breaking lines
so that they fall under the standard 76-character limit for this
encoding.
=back
B<Note:> just like MIME::QuotedPrint, we currently use the
native C<"\n"> for line breaks, and not C<CRLF>. This may
need to change in future versions.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<MIME::Decoder>
=head1 AUTHOR
Eryq (F<eryq@zeegee.com>), ZeeGee Software Inc (F<http://www.zeegee.com>).
All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
use vars qw(@ISA $VERSION);
use MIME::Decoder;
use MIME::QuotedPrint;
@ISA = qw(MIME::Decoder);
# The package version, both in 1.23 style *and* usable by MakeMaker:
$VERSION = "5.509";
#------------------------------
# If we have MIME::QuotedPrint 3.03 or later, use the three-argument
# version. If we have an earlier version of MIME::QuotedPrint, we
# may get the wrong results. However, on some systems (RH Linux,
# for example), MIME::QuotedPrint is part of the Perl package and
# upgrading it separately breaks their magic auto-update tools.
# We are supporting older versions of MIME::QuotedPrint even though
# they may give incorrect results simply because it's too painful
# for many people to upgrade.
# The following code is horrible. I know. Beat me up. --dfs
BEGIN {
if (!defined(&encode_qp_threearg)) {
if ($::MIME::QuotedPrint::VERSION >= 3.03) {
eval 'sub encode_qp_threearg ( $$$ ) { encode_qp(shift, shift, shift); }';
} else {
eval 'sub encode_qp_threearg ( $$$ ) { encode_qp(shift); }';
}
}
}
#------------------------------
#
# encode_qp_really STRING TEXTUAL_TYPE_FLAG
#
# Encode QP, and then follow guideline 8 from RFC 2049 (thanks to Denis
# N. Antonioli) whereby we make things a little safer for the transport
# and storage of messages. WARNING: we can only do this if the line won't
# grow beyond 76 characters!
#
sub encode_qp_really {
my $enc = encode_qp_threearg(shift, undef, not shift);
if (length($enc) < 74) {
$enc =~ s/^\.\n/=2E\n/g; # force encoding of /^\.$/
$enc =~ s/^From /=46rom /g; # force encoding of /^From /
}
$enc;
}
#------------------------------
#
# decode_it IN, OUT
#
sub decode_it {
my ($self, $in, $out) = @_;
my $init = 0;
my $badpdf = 0;
local $_;
while (defined($_ = $in->getline)) {
#
# Dirty hack to fix QP-Encoded PDFs from MS-Outlook.
#
# Check if we have a PDF file and if it has been encoded
# on Windows. Unix encoded files are fine. If we have
# one encoded CR after the PDF init string but are missing
# an encoded CR before the newline this means the PDF is broken.
#
if (!$init) {
$init = 1;
if ($_ =~ /^%PDF-[0-9\.]+=0D/ && $_ !~ /=0D\n$/) {
$badpdf = 1;
}
}
#
# Decode everything with decode_qp() except corrupted PDFs.
#
if ($badpdf) {
my $output = $_;
$output =~ s/[ \t]+?(\r?\n)/$1/g;
$output =~ s/=\r?\n//g;
$output =~ s/(^|[^\r])\n\Z/$1\r\n/;
$output =~ s/=([\da-fA-F]{2})/pack("C", hex($1))/ge;
$out->print($output);
} else {
$out->print(decode_qp($_));
}
}
1;
}
#------------------------------
#
# encode_it IN, OUT
#
sub encode_it {
my ($self, $in, $out, $textual_type) = @_;
local $_;
while (defined($_ = $in->getline)) {
$out->print(encode_qp_really($_, $textual_type));
}
1;
}
#------------------------------
1;