#
# $Id: QuotedPrint.pm,v 2.19 2004/01/08 14:07:26 gisle Exp $
package MIME::QuotedPrint;
=head1 NAME
MIME::QuotedPrint - Encoding and decoding of quoted-printable strings
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use MIME::QuotedPrint;
$encoded = encode_qp($decoded);
$decoded = decode_qp($encoded);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module provides functions to encode and decode strings into and from the
quoted-printable encoding specified in RFC 2045 - I<MIME (Multipurpose
Internet Mail Extensions)>. The quoted-printable encoding is intended
to represent data that largely consists of bytes that correspond to
printable characters in the ASCII character set. Each non-printable
character (as defined by English Americans) is represented by a
triplet consisting of the character "=" followed by two hexadecimal
digits.
The following functions are provided:
=over 4
=item encode_qp($str)
=item encode_qp($str, $eol)
This function returns an encoded version of the string given as
argument.
The second argument is the line-ending sequence to use. It is
optional and defaults to "\n". Every occurrence of "\n" is
replaced with this string, and it is also used for additional
"soft line breaks" to ensure that no line is longer than 76
characters. You might want to pass it as "\015\012" to produce data
suitable for external consumption. The string "\r\n" produces the
same result on many platforms, but not all.
An $eol of "" (the empty string) is special. In this case, no "soft line breaks" are introduced
and any literal "\n" in the original data is encoded as well.
=item decode_qp($str);
This function returns the plain text version of the string given
as argument. The lines of the result are "\n" terminated, even if
the $str argument contains "\r\n" terminated lines.
=back
If you prefer not to import these routines into your namespace, you can
call them as:
use MIME::QuotedPrint ();
$encoded = MIME::QuotedPrint::encode($decoded);
$decoded = MIME::QuotedPrint::decode($encoded);
Perl v5.6 and better allow extended Unicode characters in strings.
Such strings cannot be encoded directly, as the quoted-printable
encoding is only defined for single-byte characters. The solution is to use the Encode
module to select the byte encoding you want. For example:
use MIME::QuotedPrint qw(encode_qp);
use Encode qw(encode);
$encoded = encode_qp(encode("UTF-8", "\x{FFFF}\n"));
print $encoded;
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995-1997,2002-2004 Gisle Aas.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<MIME::Base64>
=cut
use strict;
use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT $VERSION);
if (ord('A') == 193) { # on EBCDIC machines we need translation help
require Encode;
}
require Exporter;
@ISA = qw(Exporter);
@EXPORT = qw(encode_qp decode_qp);
$VERSION = "2.21";
use MIME::Base64; # try to load XS version of encode_qp
unless (defined &encode_qp) {
*encode_qp = \&old_encode_qp;
*decode_qp = \&old_decode_qp;
}
sub old_encode_qp ($;$)
{
my $res = shift;
if ($] >= 5.006) {
require bytes;
if (bytes::length($res) > length($res) ||
($] >= 5.008 && $res =~ /[^\0-\xFF]/))
{
require Carp;
Carp::croak("The Quoted-Printable encoding is only defined for bytes");
}
}
my $eol = shift;
$eol = "\n" unless defined $eol;
# Do not mention ranges such as $res =~ s/([^ \t\n!-<>-~])/sprintf("=%02X", ord($1))/eg;
# since that will not even compile on an EBCDIC machine (where ord('!') > ord('<')).
if (ord('A') == 193) { # EBCDIC style machine
if (ord('[') == 173) {
$res =~ s/([^ \t\n!"#\$%&'()*+,\-.\/0-9:;<>?\@A-Z[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~])/sprintf("=%02X", ord(Encode::encode('iso-8859-1',Encode::decode('cp1047',$1))))/eg; # rule #2,#3
$res =~ s/([ \t]+)$/
join('', map { sprintf("=%02X", ord(Encode::encode('iso-8859-1',Encode::decode('cp1047',$_)))) }
split('', $1)
)/egm; # rule #3 (encode whitespace at eol)
}
elsif (ord('[') == 187) {
$res =~ s/([^ \t\n!"#\$%&'()*+,\-.\/0-9:;<>?\@A-Z[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~])/sprintf("=%02X", ord(Encode::encode('iso-8859-1',Encode::decode('posix-bc',$1))))/eg; # rule #2,#3
$res =~ s/([ \t]+)$/
join('', map { sprintf("=%02X", ord(Encode::encode('iso-8859-1',Encode::decode('posix-bc',$_)))) }
split('', $1)
)/egm; # rule #3 (encode whitespace at eol)
}
elsif (ord('[') == 186) {
$res =~ s/([^ \t\n!"#\$%&'()*+,\-.\/0-9:;<>?\@A-Z[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~])/sprintf("=%02X", ord(Encode::encode('iso-8859-1',Encode::decode('cp37',$1))))/eg; # rule #2,#3
$res =~ s/([ \t]+)$/
join('', map { sprintf("=%02X", ord(Encode::encode('iso-8859-1',Encode::decode('cp37',$_)))) }
split('', $1)
)/egm; # rule #3 (encode whitespace at eol)
}
}
else { # ASCII style machine
$res =~ s/([^ \t\n!"#\$%&'()*+,\-.\/0-9:;<>?\@A-Z[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~])/sprintf("=%02X", ord($1))/eg; # rule #2,#3
$res =~ s/\n/=0A/g unless length($eol);
$res =~ s/([ \t]+)$/
join('', map { sprintf("=%02X", ord($_)) }
split('', $1)
)/egm; # rule #3 (encode whitespace at eol)
}
return $res unless length($eol);
# rule #5 (lines must be shorter than 76 chars, but we are not allowed
# to break =XX escapes. This makes things complicated :-( )
my $brokenlines = "";
$brokenlines .= "$1=$eol"
while $res =~ s/(.*?^[^\n]{73} (?:
[^=\n]{2} (?! [^=\n]{0,1} $) # 75 not followed by .?\n
|[^=\n] (?! [^=\n]{0,2} $) # 74 not followed by .?.?\n
| (?! [^=\n]{0,3} $) # 73 not followed by .?.?.?\n
))//xsm;
$res =~ s/\n\z/$eol/;
"$brokenlines$res";
}
sub old_decode_qp ($)
{
my $res = shift;
$res =~ s/\r\n/\n/g; # normalize newlines
$res =~ s/[ \t]+\n/\n/g; # rule #3 (trailing space must be deleted)
$res =~ s/=\n//g; # rule #5 (soft line breaks)
if (ord('A') == 193) { # EBCDIC style machine
if (ord('[') == 173) {
$res =~ s/=([\da-fA-F]{2})/Encode::encode('cp1047',Encode::decode('iso-8859-1',pack("C", hex($1))))/ge;
}
elsif (ord('[') == 187) {
$res =~ s/=([\da-fA-F]{2})/Encode::encode('posix-bc',Encode::decode('iso-8859-1',pack("C", hex($1))))/ge;
}
elsif (ord('[') == 186) {
$res =~ s/=([\da-fA-F]{2})/Encode::encode('cp37',Encode::decode('iso-8859-1',pack("C", hex($1))))/ge;
}
}
else { # ASCII style machine
$res =~ s/=([\da-fA-F]{2})/pack("C", hex($1))/ge;
}
$res;
}
# Set up aliases so that these functions also can be called as
#
# MIME::QuotedPrint::encode();
# MIME::QuotedPrint::decode();
*encode = \&encode_qp;
*decode = \&decode_qp;
1;