use strict; use warnings; package Email::MIME::Encodings 1.317; # ABSTRACT: A unified interface to MIME encoding and decoding use MIME::Base64 3.05; use MIME::QuotedPrint 3.05; sub identity { $_[0] } for (qw(7bit 8bit binary)) { no strict 'refs'; *{"encode_$_"} = *{"decode_$_"} = \&identity; } sub codec { my ($which, $how, $what, $fb) = @_; $how = lc $how; $how = "qp" if $how eq "quotedprint" or $how eq "quoted-printable"; my $sub = __PACKAGE__->can("$which\_$how"); if (! $sub && $fb) { $fb = lc $fb; $fb = "qp" if $fb eq "quotedprint" or $fb eq "quoted-printable"; $sub = __PACKAGE__->can("$which\_$fb"); } unless ($sub) { require Carp; Carp::croak("Don't know how to $which $how"); } # RFC2822 requires all email lines to end in CRLF. The Quoted-Printable # RFC requires CRLF to not be encoded, when representing newlines. We will # assume, in this code, that QP is being used for plain text and not binary # data. This may, someday, be wrong -- but if you are using QP to encode # binary data, you are already doing something bizarre. # # The only way to achieve this with MIME::QuotedPrint is to replace all # CRLFs with just LF and then let MIME::QuotedPrint replace all LFs with # CRLF. Otherwise MIME::QuotedPrint (by default) encodes CR as =0D, which # is against RFCs and breaks MUAs (such as Thunderbird). # # We don't modify data before Base64 encoding it because that is usually # binary data and modifying it at all is a bad idea. We do however specify # that the encoder should end lines with CRLF (since that's the email # standard). # -- rjbs and mkanat, 2009-04-16 my $eol = "\x0d\x0a"; if ($which eq 'encode') { $what =~ s/$eol/\x0a/sg if $how eq 'qp'; return $sub->($what, $eol); } else { my $txt = $sub->($what); $txt =~ s/\x0a/$eol/sg if $how eq 'qp'; return $txt; } } sub decode { return codec("decode", @_) } sub encode { return codec("encode", @_) } 1; #pod =head1 SYNOPSIS #pod #pod use Email::MIME::Encodings; #pod my $encoded = Email::MIME::Encodings::encode(base64 => $body); #pod my $decoded = Email::MIME::Encodings::decode(base64 => $encoded); #pod #pod If a third argument is given, it is the encoding to which to fall back. If no #pod valid codec can be found (considering both the first and third arguments) then #pod an exception is raised. #pod #pod =head1 DESCRIPTION #pod #pod This module simply wraps C and C #pod so that you can throw the contents of a C #pod header at some text and have the right thing happen. #pod #pod C, C, C. __END__ =pod =encoding UTF-8 =head1 NAME Email::MIME::Encodings - A unified interface to MIME encoding and decoding =head1 VERSION version 1.317 =head1 SYNOPSIS use Email::MIME::Encodings; my $encoded = Email::MIME::Encodings::encode(base64 => $body); my $decoded = Email::MIME::Encodings::decode(base64 => $encoded); If a third argument is given, it is the encoding to which to fall back. If no valid codec can be found (considering both the first and third arguments) then an exception is raised. =head1 DESCRIPTION This module simply wraps C and C so that you can throw the contents of a C header at some text and have the right thing happen. C, C, C. =head1 PERL VERSION This library should run on perls released even a long time ago. It should work on any version of perl released in the last five years. Although it may work on older versions of perl, no guarantee is made that the minimum required version will not be increased. The version may be increased for any reason, and there is no promise that patches will be accepted to lower the minimum required perl. =head1 AUTHORS =over 4 =item * Simon Cozens =item * Casey West =item * Ricardo SIGNES =back =head1 CONTRIBUTORS =for stopwords David Steinbrunner Ricardo Signes =over 4 =item * David Steinbrunner =item * Ricardo Signes =back =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2004 by Simon Cozens and Casey West. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. =cut