Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view detectors/emailauditor.py @ 7698:4e37a7833708
doc: add FTS5 requirement for sqlite backend.
Document the requirement for FTS5 if you are using the sqlite backend.
Tonu Mikk reported issues with using a SQLite that was missing FTS5
support (RedHat 7 sqlite with python 3.6). Even though FTS5 has been
in the sqlite amalgamation since 2015-10-14 (v3.9.0) RedHat chose to
not build their package with that. This leads to a traceback when
initializing the database.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 11 Nov 2023 19:39:57 -0500 |
| parents | 0942fe89e82e |
| children |
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def eml_to_mht(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues): '''This auditor fires whenever a new file entity is created. If the file is of type message/rfc822, we tack onthe extension .eml. The reason for this is that Microsoft Internet Explorer will not open things with a .eml attachment, as they deem it 'unsafe'. Worse yet, they'll just give you an incomprehensible error message. For more information, please see: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;825803 Their suggested work around is (excerpt): WORKAROUND To work around this behavior, rename the .EML file that the URL links to so that it has a .MHT file name extension, and then update the URL to reflect the change to the file name. To do this: 1. In Windows Explorer, locate and then select the .EML file that the URL links. 2. Right-click the .EML file, and then click Rename. 3. Change the file name so that the .EML file uses a .MHT file name extension, and then press ENTER. 4. Updated the URL that links to the file to reflect the new file name extension. So... we do that. :)''' if newvalues.get('type', '').lower() == "message/rfc822": if 'name' not in newvalues: newvalues['name'] = 'email.mht' return name = newvalues['name'] if name.endswith('.eml'): name = name[:-4] newvalues['name'] = name + '.mht' def init(db): db.file.audit('create', eml_to_mht)
