package LWP::MediaTypes;
require Exporter;
@ISA = qw(Exporter);
@EXPORT = qw(guess_media_type media_suffix);
@EXPORT_OK = qw(add_type add_encoding read_media_types);
$VERSION = "6.02";
use strict;
# note: These hashes will also be filled with the entries found in
# the 'media.types' file.
my %suffixType = (
'txt' => 'text/plain',
'html' => 'text/html',
'gif' => 'image/gif',
'jpg' => 'image/jpeg',
'xml' => 'text/xml',
);
my %suffixExt = (
'text/plain' => 'txt',
'text/html' => 'html',
'image/gif' => 'gif',
'image/jpeg' => 'jpg',
'text/xml' => 'xml',
);
#XXX: there should be some way to define this in the media.types files.
my %suffixEncoding = (
'Z' => 'compress',
'gz' => 'gzip',
'hqx' => 'x-hqx',
'uu' => 'x-uuencode',
'z' => 'x-pack',
'bz2' => 'x-bzip2',
);
read_media_types();
sub guess_media_type
{
my($file, $header) = @_;
return undef unless defined $file;
my $fullname;
if (ref($file)) {
# assume URI object
$file = $file->path;
#XXX should handle non http:, file: or ftp: URIs differently
}
else {
$fullname = $file; # enable peek at actual file
}
my @encoding = ();
my $ct = undef;
for (file_exts($file)) {
# first check this dot part as encoding spec
if (exists $suffixEncoding{$_}) {
unshift(@encoding, $suffixEncoding{$_});
next;
}
if (exists $suffixEncoding{lc $_}) {
unshift(@encoding, $suffixEncoding{lc $_});
next;
}
# check content-type
if (exists $suffixType{$_}) {
$ct = $suffixType{$_};
last;
}
if (exists $suffixType{lc $_}) {
$ct = $suffixType{lc $_};
last;
}
# don't know nothing about this dot part, bail out
last;
}
unless (defined $ct) {
# Take a look at the file
if (defined $fullname) {
$ct = (-T $fullname) ? "text/plain" : "application/octet-stream";
}
else {
$ct = "application/octet-stream";
}
}
if ($header) {
$header->header('Content-Type' => $ct);
$header->header('Content-Encoding' => \@encoding) if @encoding;
}
wantarray ? ($ct, @encoding) : $ct;
}
sub media_suffix {
if (!wantarray && @_ == 1 && $_[0] !~ /\*/) {
return $suffixExt{lc $_[0]};
}
my(@type) = @_;
my(@suffix, $ext, $type);
foreach (@type) {
if (s/\*/.*/) {
while(($ext,$type) = each(%suffixType)) {
push(@suffix, $ext) if $type =~ /^$_$/i;
}
}
else {
my $ltype = lc $_;
while(($ext,$type) = each(%suffixType)) {
push(@suffix, $ext) if lc $type eq $ltype;
}
}
}
wantarray ? @suffix : $suffix[0];
}
sub file_exts
{
require File::Basename;
my @parts = reverse split(/\./, File::Basename::basename($_[0]));
pop(@parts); # never consider first part
@parts;
}
sub add_type
{
my($type, @exts) = @_;
for my $ext (@exts) {
$ext =~ s/^\.//;
$suffixType{$ext} = $type;
}
$suffixExt{lc $type} = $exts[0] if @exts;
}
sub add_encoding
{
my($type, @exts) = @_;
for my $ext (@exts) {
$ext =~ s/^\.//;
$suffixEncoding{$ext} = $type;
}
}
sub read_media_types
{
my(@files) = @_;
local($/, $_) = ("\n", undef); # ensure correct $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
my @priv_files = ();
push(@priv_files, "$ENV{HOME}/.media.types", "$ENV{HOME}/.mime.types")
if defined $ENV{HOME}; # Some doesn't have a home (for instance Win32)
# Try to locate "media.types" file, and initialize %suffixType from it
my $typefile;
unless (@files) {
@files = map {"$_/LWP/media.types"} @INC;
push @files, @priv_files;
}
for $typefile (@files) {
local(*TYPE);
open(TYPE, $typefile) || next;
while (<TYPE>) {
next if /^\s*#/; # comment line
next if /^\s*$/; # blank line
s/#.*//; # remove end-of-line comments
my($type, @exts) = split(' ', $_);
add_type($type, @exts);
}
close(TYPE);
}
}
1;
__END__
=head1 NAME
LWP::MediaTypes - guess media type for a file or a URL
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use LWP::MediaTypes qw(guess_media_type);
$type = guess_media_type("/tmp/foo.gif");
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module provides functions for handling media (also known as
MIME) types and encodings. The mapping from file extensions to media
types is defined by the F<media.types> file. If the F<~/.media.types>
file exists it is used instead.
For backwards compatibility we will also look for F<~/.mime.types>.
The following functions are exported by default:
=over 4
=item guess_media_type( $filename )
=item guess_media_type( $uri )
=item guess_media_type( $filename_or_uri, $header_to_modify )
This function tries to guess media type and encoding for a file or a URI.
It returns the content type, which is a string like C<"text/html">.
In array context it also returns any content encodings applied (in the
order used to encode the file). You can pass a URI object
reference, instead of the file name.
If the type can not be deduced from looking at the file name,
then guess_media_type() will let the C<-T> Perl operator take a look.
If this works (and C<-T> returns a TRUE value) then we return
I<text/plain> as the type, otherwise we return
I<application/octet-stream> as the type.
The optional second argument should be a reference to a HTTP::Headers
object or any object that implements the $obj->header method in a
similar way. When it is present the values of the
'Content-Type' and 'Content-Encoding' will be set for this header.
=item media_suffix( $type, ... )
This function will return all suffixes that can be used to denote the
specified media type(s). Wildcard types can be used. In a scalar
context it will return the first suffix found. Examples:
@suffixes = media_suffix('image/*', 'audio/basic');
$suffix = media_suffix('text/html');
=back
The following functions are only exported by explicit request:
=over 4
=item add_type( $type, @exts )
Associate a list of file extensions with the given media type.
Example:
add_type("x-world/x-vrml" => qw(wrl vrml));
=item add_encoding( $type, @ext )
Associate a list of file extensions with an encoding type.
Example:
add_encoding("x-gzip" => "gz");
=item read_media_types( @files )
Parse media types files and add the type mappings found there.
Example:
read_media_types("conf/mime.types");
=back
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995-1999 Gisle Aas.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Copyright 2K16 - 2K18 Indonesian Hacker Rulez