Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view roundup/anypy/email_.py @ 7340:7b9bddda9d2d
Add support for demo mode in docker.
roundup/demo.py
Make changes to allow exposed port in docker to be specified
separately from the port that demo mode binds to. Also permit
bind address specification as well.
roundup/scripts/roundup_demo.py:
Update required by changes in demo.py. Also move away from
positional arguments to prefer flag arguments. Required for
passing port and host specification. Flake8 fixes.
share/man/man1/roundup-demo.1
Document use of option flags rather than positional
params. Other cleanups.
doc/installation.txt:
Document new docker modes: demo, shell and admin.
Update docs:
overview section - reorg, added template info
for the impatient section - added docker demo mode reference,
more docs on top level demo.py use.
new section on docker demo mode
removed getting roundup section. folded into installing roundup.
also prior for the impatient section describes how to download.
install via pip in venv recommended supported method
document all provided templates. not just minimal and classic.
added index references.
move sections around, decreased sectin depth, reformatting
scripts/Docker/roundup_healthcheck:
When running roundup-demo, there is no tracker spec. So default to
demo if no tracker=directory args found. Prevent's docker from
reporting an unhealthy container when running demo.
scripts/Docker/roundup_start:
implement demo, shell, admin docker modes.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sun, 14 May 2023 09:43:53 -0400 |
| parents | f21ec1414591 |
| children | 609c5fd638e8 |
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import re import binascii import email from email import quoprimime, base64mime from email import charset as _charset if str == bytes: message_from_bytes = email.message_from_string message_from_binary_file = email.message_from_file else: message_from_bytes = email.message_from_bytes message_from_binary_file = email.message_from_binary_file ## please import this file if you are using the email module # Match encoded-word strings in the form =?charset?q?Hello_World?= ecre = re.compile(r''' =\? # literal =? (?P<charset>[^?]*?) # non-greedy up to the next ? is the charset \? # literal ? (?P<encoding>[qb]) # either a "q" or a "b", case insensitive \? # literal ? (?P<encoded>.*?) # non-greedy up to the next ?= is the encoded string \?= # literal ?= ''', re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE | re.MULTILINE) # Fixed header parser, see my proposed patch and discussions: # http://bugs.python.org/issue1079 "decode_header does not follow RFC 2047" # http://bugs.python.org/issue1467619 "Header.decode_header eats up spaces" # This implements the decode_header specific parts of my proposed patch # backported to python2.X def decode_header(header): """Decode a message header value without converting charset. Returns a list of (string, charset) pairs containing each of the decoded parts of the header. Charset is None for non-encoded parts of the header, otherwise a lower-case string containing the name of the character set specified in the encoded string. header may be a string that may or may not contain RFC2047 encoded words, or it may be a Header object. An email.errors.HeaderParseError may be raised when certain decoding error occurs (e.g. a base64 decoding exception). """ # If it is a Header object, we can just return the encoded chunks. if hasattr(header, '_chunks'): return [(_charset._encode(string, str(charset)), str(charset)) for string, charset in header._chunks] # If no encoding, just return the header with no charset. if not ecre.search(header): return [(header, None)] # First step is to parse all the encoded parts into triplets of the form # (encoded_string, encoding, charset). For unencoded strings, the last # two parts will be None. words = [] for line in header.splitlines(): parts = ecre.split(line) first = True while parts: unencoded = parts.pop(0) if first: unencoded = unencoded.lstrip() first = False if unencoded: words.append((unencoded, None, None)) if parts: charset = parts.pop(0).lower() encoding = parts.pop(0).lower() encoded = parts.pop(0) words.append((encoded, encoding, charset)) # Now loop over words and remove words that consist of whitespace # between two encoded strings. droplist = [] for n, w in enumerate(words): if n > 1 and w[1] and words[n-2][1] and words[n-1][0].isspace(): droplist.append(n-1) for d in reversed(droplist): del words[d] # The next step is to decode each encoded word by applying the reverse # base64 or quopri transformation. decoded_words is now a list of the # form (decoded_word, charset). decoded_words = [] for encoded_string, encoding, charset in words: if encoding is None: # This is an unencoded word. decoded_words.append((encoded_string, charset)) elif encoding == 'q': word = quoprimime.header_decode(encoded_string) decoded_words.append((word, charset)) elif encoding == 'b': # Postel's law: add missing padding paderr = len(encoded_string) % 4 if paderr: encoded_string += '==='[:4 - paderr] try: word = base64mime.decode(encoded_string) except binascii.Error: raise email.errors.HeaderParseError('Base64 decoding error') else: decoded_words.append((word, charset)) else: raise AssertionError('Unexpected encoding: ' + encoding) # Now convert all words to bytes and collapse consecutive runs of # similarly encoded words. collapsed = [] last_word = last_charset = None for word, charset in decoded_words: if isinstance(word, str) and bytes != str: word = bytes(word, 'raw-unicode-escape') if last_word is None: last_word = word last_charset = charset elif charset != last_charset: collapsed.append((last_word, last_charset)) last_word = word last_charset = charset elif last_charset is None: BSPACE = b' ' last_word += BSPACE + word else: last_word += word collapsed.append((last_word, last_charset)) return collapsed
