# Copyright (C) 1998-2011 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
# as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
# of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301,
# USA.
"""Miscellaneous essential routines.
This includes actual message transmission routines, address checking and
message and address munging, a handy-dandy routine to map a function on all
the mailing lists, and whatever else doesn't belong elsewhere.
"""
from __future__ import nested_scopes
import os
import sys
import re
import cgi
import time
import errno
import base64
import random
import urlparse
import htmlentitydefs
import email.Header
import email.Iterators
from email.Errors import HeaderParseError
from types import UnicodeType
from string import whitespace, digits
try:
# Python 2.2
from string import ascii_letters
except ImportError:
# Older Pythons
_lower = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'
ascii_letters = _lower + _lower.upper()
from Mailman import mm_cfg
from Mailman import Errors
from Mailman import Site
from Mailman.SafeDict import SafeDict
from Mailman.Logging.Syslog import syslog
try:
import hashlib
md5_new = hashlib.md5
sha_new = hashlib.sha1
except ImportError:
import md5
import sha
md5_new = md5.new
sha_new = sha.new
try:
True, False
except NameError:
True = 1
False = 0
EMPTYSTRING = ''
UEMPTYSTRING = u''
NL = '\n'
DOT = '.'
IDENTCHARS = ascii_letters + digits + '_'
# Search for $(identifier)s strings, except that the trailing s is optional,
# since that's a common mistake
cre = re.compile(r'%\(([_a-z]\w*?)\)s?', re.IGNORECASE)
# Search for $$, $identifier, or ${identifier}
dre = re.compile(r'(\${2})|\$([_a-z]\w*)|\${([_a-z]\w*)}', re.IGNORECASE)
def list_exists(listname):
"""Return true iff list `listname' exists."""
# The existance of any of the following file proves the list exists
# <wink>: config.pck, config.pck.last, config.db, config.db.last
#
# The former two are for 2.1alpha3 and beyond, while the latter two are
# for all earlier versions.
basepath = Site.get_listpath(listname)
for ext in ('.pck', '.pck.last', '.db', '.db.last'):
dbfile = os.path.join(basepath, 'config' + ext)
if os.path.exists(dbfile):
return True
return False
def list_names():
"""Return the names of all lists in default list directory."""
# We don't currently support separate listings of virtual domains
return Site.get_listnames()
# a much more naive implementation than say, Emacs's fill-paragraph!
def wrap(text, column=70, honor_leading_ws=True):
"""Wrap and fill the text to the specified column.
Wrapping is always in effect, although if it is not possible to wrap a
line (because some word is longer than `column' characters) the line is
broken at the next available whitespace boundary. Paragraphs are also
always filled, unless honor_leading_ws is true and the line begins with
whitespace. This is the algorithm that the Python FAQ wizard uses, and
seems like a good compromise.
"""
wrapped = ''
# first split the text into paragraphs, defined as a blank line
paras = re.split('\n\n', text)
for para in paras:
# fill
lines = []
fillprev = False
for line in para.split(NL):
if not line:
lines.append(line)
continue
if honor_leading_ws and line[0] in whitespace:
fillthis = False
else:
fillthis = True
if fillprev and fillthis:
# if the previous line should be filled, then just append a
# single space, and the rest of the current line
lines[-1] = lines[-1].rstrip() + ' ' + line
else:
# no fill, i.e. retain newline
lines.append(line)
fillprev = fillthis
# wrap each line
for text in lines:
while text:
if len(text) <= column:
line = text
text = ''
else:
bol = column
# find the last whitespace character
while bol > 0 and text[bol] not in whitespace:
bol -= 1
# now find the last non-whitespace character
eol = bol
while eol > 0 and text[eol] in whitespace:
eol -= 1
# watch out for text that's longer than the column width
if eol == 0:
# break on whitespace after column
eol = column
while eol < len(text) and text[eol] not in whitespace:
eol += 1
bol = eol
while bol < len(text) and text[bol] in whitespace:
bol += 1
bol -= 1
line = text[:eol+1] + '\n'
# find the next non-whitespace character
bol += 1
while bol < len(text) and text[bol] in whitespace:
bol += 1
text = text[bol:]
wrapped += line
wrapped += '\n'
# end while text
wrapped += '\n'
# end for text in lines
# the last two newlines are bogus
return wrapped[:-2]
def QuotePeriods(text):
JOINER = '\n .\n'
SEP = '\n.\n'
return JOINER.join(text.split(SEP))
# This takes an email address, and returns a tuple containing (user,host)
def ParseEmail(email):
user = None
domain = None
email = email.lower()
at_sign = email.find('@')
if at_sign < 1:
return email, None
user = email[:at_sign]
rest = email[at_sign+1:]
domain = rest.split('.')
return user, domain
def LCDomain(addr):
"returns the address with the domain part lowercased"
atind = addr.find('@')
if atind == -1: # no domain part
return addr
return addr[:atind] + '@' + addr[atind+1:].lower()
# TBD: what other characters should be disallowed?
_badchars = re.compile(r'[][()<>|:;^,\\"\000-\037\177-\377]')
# Strictly speaking, some of the above are allowed in quoted local parts, but
# this can open the door to certain web exploits so we don't allow them.
# Only characters allowed in domain parts.
_valid_domain = re.compile('[-a-z0-9]', re.IGNORECASE)
def ValidateEmail(s):
"""Verify that an email address isn't grossly evil."""
# Pretty minimal, cheesy check. We could do better...
if not s or s.count(' ') > 0:
raise Errors.MMBadEmailError
if _badchars.search(s) or s[0] == '-':
raise Errors.MMHostileAddress, s
user, domain_parts = ParseEmail(s)
# This means local, unqualified addresses, are not allowed
if not domain_parts:
raise Errors.MMBadEmailError, s
if len(domain_parts) < 2:
raise Errors.MMBadEmailError, s
# domain parts may only contain ascii letters, digits and hyphen
for p in domain_parts:
if len(_valid_domain.sub('', p)) > 0:
raise Errors.MMHostileAddress, s
# Patterns which may be used to form malicious path to inject a new
# line in the mailman error log. (TK: advisory by Moritz Naumann)
CRNLpat = re.compile(r'[^\x21-\x7e]')
def GetPathPieces(envar='PATH_INFO'):
path = os.environ.get(envar)
if path:
if CRNLpat.search(path):
path = CRNLpat.split(path)[0]
syslog('error', 'Warning: Possible malformed path attack.')
return [p for p in path.split('/') if p]
return None
def ScriptURL(target, web_page_url=None, absolute=False):
"""target - scriptname only, nothing extra
web_page_url - the list's configvar of the same name
absolute - a flag which if set, generates an absolute url
"""
if web_page_url is None:
web_page_url = mm_cfg.DEFAULT_URL_PATTERN % get_domain()
if web_page_url[-1] <> '/':
web_page_url = web_page_url + '/'
fullpath = os.environ.get('REQUEST_URI')
if fullpath is None:
fullpath = os.environ.get('SCRIPT_NAME', '') + \
os.environ.get('PATH_INFO', '')
baseurl = urlparse.urlparse(web_page_url)[2]
if not absolute and fullpath.startswith(baseurl):
# Use relative addressing
fullpath = fullpath[len(baseurl):]
i = fullpath.find('?')
if i > 0:
count = fullpath.count('/', 0, i)
else:
count = fullpath.count('/')
path = ('../' * count) + target
else:
path = web_page_url + target
return path + mm_cfg.CGIEXT
def GetPossibleMatchingAddrs(name):
"""returns a sorted list of addresses that could possibly match
a given name.
For Example, given scott@pobox.com, return ['scott@pobox.com'],
given scott@blackbox.pobox.com return ['scott@blackbox.pobox.com',
'scott@pobox.com']"""
name = name.lower()
user, domain = ParseEmail(name)
res = [name]
if domain:
domain = domain[1:]
while len(domain) >= 2:
res.append("%s@%s" % (user, DOT.join(domain)))
domain = domain[1:]
return res
def List2Dict(L, foldcase=False):
"""Return a dict keyed by the entries in the list passed to it."""
d = {}
if foldcase:
for i in L:
d[i.lower()] = True
else:
for i in L:
d[i] = True
return d
_vowels = ('a', 'e', 'i', 'o', 'u')
_consonants = ('b', 'c', 'd', 'f', 'g', 'h', 'k', 'm', 'n',
'p', 'r', 's', 't', 'v', 'w', 'x', 'z')
_syllables = []
for v in _vowels:
for c in _consonants:
_syllables.append(c+v)
_syllables.append(v+c)
del c, v
def UserFriendly_MakeRandomPassword(length):
syls = []
while len(syls) * 2 < length:
syls.append(random.choice(_syllables))
return EMPTYSTRING.join(syls)[:length]
def Secure_MakeRandomPassword(length):
bytesread = 0
bytes = []
fd = None
try:
while bytesread < length:
try:
# Python 2.4 has this on available systems.
newbytes = os.urandom(length - bytesread)
except (AttributeError, NotImplementedError):
if fd is None:
try:
fd = os.open('/dev/urandom', os.O_RDONLY)
except OSError, e:
if e.errno <> errno.ENOENT:
raise
# We have no available source of cryptographically
# secure random characters. Log an error and fallback
# to the user friendly passwords.
syslog('error',
'urandom not available, passwords not secure')
return UserFriendly_MakeRandomPassword(length)
newbytes = os.read(fd, length - bytesread)
bytes.append(newbytes)
bytesread += len(newbytes)
s = base64.encodestring(EMPTYSTRING.join(bytes))
# base64 will expand the string by 4/3rds
return s.replace('\n', '')[:length]
finally:
if fd is not None:
os.close(fd)
def MakeRandomPassword(length=mm_cfg.MEMBER_PASSWORD_LENGTH):
if mm_cfg.USER_FRIENDLY_PASSWORDS:
return UserFriendly_MakeRandomPassword(length)
return Secure_MakeRandomPassword(length)
def GetRandomSeed():
chr1 = int(random.random() * 52)
chr2 = int(random.random() * 52)
def mkletter(c):
if 0 <= c < 26:
c += 65
if 26 <= c < 52:
#c = c - 26 + 97
c += 71
return c
return "%c%c" % tuple(map(mkletter, (chr1, chr2)))
def set_global_password(pw, siteadmin=True):
if siteadmin:
filename = mm_cfg.SITE_PW_FILE
else:
filename = mm_cfg.LISTCREATOR_PW_FILE
# rw-r-----
omask = os.umask(026)
try:
fp = open(filename, 'w')
fp.write(sha_new(pw).hexdigest() + '\n')
fp.close()
finally:
os.umask(omask)
def get_global_password(siteadmin=True):
if siteadmin:
filename = mm_cfg.SITE_PW_FILE
else:
filename = mm_cfg.LISTCREATOR_PW_FILE
try:
fp = open(filename)
challenge = fp.read()[:-1] # strip off trailing nl
fp.close()
except IOError, e:
if e.errno <> errno.ENOENT: raise
# It's okay not to have a site admin password, just return false
return None
return challenge
def check_global_password(response, siteadmin=True):
challenge = get_global_password(siteadmin)
if challenge is None:
return None
return challenge == sha_new(response).hexdigest()
_ampre = re.compile('&((?:#[0-9]+|[a-z]+);)', re.IGNORECASE)
def websafe(s):
if mm_cfg.BROKEN_BROWSER_WORKAROUND:
# Archiver can pass unicode here. Just skip them as the
# archiver escapes non-ascii anyway.
if isinstance(s, str):
for k in mm_cfg.BROKEN_BROWSER_REPLACEMENTS:
s = s.replace(k, mm_cfg.BROKEN_BROWSER_REPLACEMENTS[k])
# Don't double escape html entities
return _ampre.sub(r'&\1', cgi.escape(s, quote=True))
def nntpsplit(s):
parts = s.split(':', 1)
if len(parts) == 2:
try:
return parts[0], int(parts[1])
except ValueError:
pass
# Use the defaults
return s, 119
# Just changing these two functions should be enough to control the way
# that email address obscuring is handled.
def ObscureEmail(addr, for_text=False):
"""Make email address unrecognizable to web spiders, but invertable.
When for_text option is set (not default), make a sentence fragment
instead of a token."""
if for_text:
return addr.replace('@', ' at ')
else:
return addr.replace('@', '--at--')
def UnobscureEmail(addr):
"""Invert ObscureEmail() conversion."""
# Contrived to act as an identity operation on already-unobscured
# emails, so routines expecting obscured ones will accept both.
return addr.replace('--at--', '@')
class OuterExit(Exception):
pass
def findtext(templatefile, dict=None, raw=False, lang=None, mlist=None):
# Make some text from a template file. The order of searches depends on
# whether mlist and lang are provided. Once the templatefile is found,
# string substitution is performed by interpolation in `dict'. If `raw'
# is false, the resulting text is wrapped/filled by calling wrap().
#
# When looking for a template in a specific language, there are 4 places
# that are searched, in this order:
#
# 1. the list-specific language directory
# lists/<listname>/<language>
#
# 2. the domain-specific language directory
# templates/<list.host_name>/<language>
#
# 3. the site-wide language directory
# templates/site/<language>
#
# 4. the global default language directory
# templates/<language>
#
# The first match found stops the search. In this way, you can specialize
# templates at the desired level, or, if you use only the default
# templates, you don't need to change anything. You should never modify
# files in the templates/<language> subdirectory, since Mailman will
# overwrite these when you upgrade. That's what the templates/site
# language directories are for.
#
# A further complication is that the language to search for is determined
# by both the `lang' and `mlist' arguments. The search order there is
# that if lang is given, then the 4 locations above are searched,
# substituting lang for <language>. If no match is found, and mlist is
# given, then the 4 locations are searched using the list's preferred
# language. After that, the server default language is used for
# <language>. If that still doesn't yield a template, then the standard
# distribution's English language template is used as an ultimate
# fallback. If that's missing you've got big problems. ;)
#
# A word on backwards compatibility: Mailman versions prior to 2.1 stored
# templates in templates/*.{html,txt} and lists/<listname>/*.{html,txt}.
# Those directories are no longer searched so if you've got customizations
# in those files, you should move them to the appropriate directory based
# on the above description. Mailman's upgrade script cannot do this for
# you.
#
# The function has been revised and renamed as it now returns both the
# template text and the path from which it retrieved the template. The
# original function is now a wrapper which just returns the template text
# as before, by calling this renamed function and discarding the second
# item returned.
#
# Calculate the languages to scan
languages = []
if lang is not None:
languages.append(lang)
if mlist is not None:
languages.append(mlist.preferred_language)
languages.append(mm_cfg.DEFAULT_SERVER_LANGUAGE)
# Calculate the locations to scan
searchdirs = []
if mlist is not None:
searchdirs.append(mlist.fullpath())
searchdirs.append(os.path.join(mm_cfg.TEMPLATE_DIR, mlist.host_name))
searchdirs.append(os.path.join(mm_cfg.TEMPLATE_DIR, 'site'))
searchdirs.append(mm_cfg.TEMPLATE_DIR)
# Start scanning
fp = None
try:
for lang in languages:
for dir in searchdirs:
filename = os.path.join(dir, lang, templatefile)
try:
fp = open(filename)
raise OuterExit
except IOError, e:
if e.errno <> errno.ENOENT: raise
# Okay, it doesn't exist, keep looping
fp = None
except OuterExit:
pass
if fp is None:
# Try one last time with the distro English template, which, unless
# you've got a really broken installation, must be there.
try:
filename = os.path.join(mm_cfg.TEMPLATE_DIR, 'en', templatefile)
fp = open(filename)
except IOError, e:
if e.errno <> errno.ENOENT: raise
# We never found the template. BAD!
raise IOError(errno.ENOENT, 'No template file found', templatefile)
template = fp.read()
fp.close()
text = template
if dict is not None:
try:
sdict = SafeDict(dict)
try:
text = sdict.interpolate(template)
except UnicodeError:
# Try again after coercing the template to unicode
utemplate = unicode(template, GetCharSet(lang), 'replace')
text = sdict.interpolate(utemplate)
except (TypeError, ValueError), e:
# The template is really screwed up
syslog('error', 'broken template: %s\n%s', filename, e)
pass
if raw:
return text, filename
return wrap(text), filename
def maketext(templatefile, dict=None, raw=False, lang=None, mlist=None):
return findtext(templatefile, dict, raw, lang, mlist)[0]
ADMINDATA = {
# admin keyword: (minimum #args, maximum #args)
'confirm': (1, 1),
'help': (0, 0),
'info': (0, 0),
'lists': (0, 0),
'options': (0, 0),
'password': (2, 2),
'remove': (0, 0),
'set': (3, 3),
'subscribe': (0, 3),
'unsubscribe': (0, 1),
'who': (0, 1),
}
# Given a Message.Message object, test for administrivia (eg subscribe,
# unsubscribe, etc). The test must be a good guess -- messages that return
# true get sent to the list admin instead of the entire list.
def is_administrivia(msg):
linecnt = 0
lines = []
for line in email.Iterators.body_line_iterator(msg):
# Strip out any signatures
if line == '-- ':
break
if line.strip():
linecnt += 1
if linecnt > mm_cfg.DEFAULT_MAIL_COMMANDS_MAX_LINES:
return False
lines.append(line)
bodytext = NL.join(lines)
# See if the body text has only one word, and that word is administrivia
if ADMINDATA.has_key(bodytext.strip().lower()):
return True
# Look at the first N lines and see if there is any administrivia on the
# line. BAW: N is currently hardcoded to 5. str-ify the Subject: header
# because it may be an email.Header.Header instance rather than a string.
bodylines = lines[:5]
subject = str(msg.get('subject', ''))
bodylines.append(subject)
for line in bodylines:
if not line.strip():
continue
words = [word.lower() for word in line.split()]
minargs, maxargs = ADMINDATA.get(words[0], (None, None))
if minargs is None and maxargs is None:
continue
if minargs <= len(words[1:]) <= maxargs:
# Special case the `set' keyword. BAW: I don't know why this is
# here.
if words[0] == 'set' and words[2] not in ('on', 'off'):
continue
return True
return False
def GetRequestURI(fallback=None, escape=True):
"""Return the full virtual path this CGI script was invoked with.
Newer web servers seems to supply this info in the REQUEST_URI
environment variable -- which isn't part of the CGI/1.1 spec.
Thus, if REQUEST_URI isn't available, we concatenate SCRIPT_NAME
and PATH_INFO, both of which are part of CGI/1.1.
Optional argument `fallback' (default `None') is returned if both of
the above methods fail.
The url will be cgi escaped to prevent cross-site scripting attacks,
unless `escape' is set to 0.
"""
url = fallback
if os.environ.has_key('REQUEST_URI'):
url = os.environ['REQUEST_URI']
elif os.environ.has_key('SCRIPT_NAME') and os.environ.has_key('PATH_INFO'):
url = os.environ['SCRIPT_NAME'] + os.environ['PATH_INFO']
if escape:
return websafe(url)
return url
# Wait on a dictionary of child pids
def reap(kids, func=None, once=False):
while kids:
if func:
func()
try:
pid, status = os.waitpid(-1, os.WNOHANG)
except OSError, e:
# If the child procs had a bug we might have no children
if e.errno <> errno.ECHILD:
raise
kids.clear()
break
if pid <> 0:
try:
del kids[pid]
except KeyError:
# Huh? How can this happen?
pass
if once:
break
def GetLanguageDescr(lang):
return mm_cfg.LC_DESCRIPTIONS[lang][0]
def GetCharSet(lang):
return mm_cfg.LC_DESCRIPTIONS[lang][1]
def GetDirection(lang):
return mm_cfg.LC_DESCRIPTIONS[lang][2]
def IsLanguage(lang):
return mm_cfg.LC_DESCRIPTIONS.has_key(lang)
def get_domain():
host = os.environ.get('HTTP_HOST', os.environ.get('SERVER_NAME'))
port = os.environ.get('SERVER_PORT')
# Strip off the port if there is one
if port and host.endswith(':' + port):
host = host[:-len(port)-1]
if mm_cfg.VIRTUAL_HOST_OVERVIEW and host:
return host.lower()
else:
# See the note in Defaults.py concerning DEFAULT_URL
# vs. DEFAULT_URL_HOST.
hostname = ((mm_cfg.DEFAULT_URL
and urlparse.urlparse(mm_cfg.DEFAULT_URL)[1])
or mm_cfg.DEFAULT_URL_HOST)
return hostname.lower()
def get_site_email(hostname=None, extra=None):
if hostname is None:
hostname = mm_cfg.VIRTUAL_HOSTS.get(get_domain(), get_domain())
if extra is None:
return '%s@%s' % (mm_cfg.MAILMAN_SITE_LIST, hostname)
return '%s-%s@%s' % (mm_cfg.MAILMAN_SITE_LIST, extra, hostname)
# This algorithm crafts a guaranteed unique message-id. The theory here is
# that pid+listname+host will distinguish the message-id for every process on
# the system, except when process ids wrap around. To further distinguish
# message-ids, we prepend the integral time in seconds since the epoch. It's
# still possible that we'll vend out more than one such message-id per second,
# so we prepend a monotonically incrementing serial number. It's highly
# unlikely that within a single second, there'll be a pid wraparound.
_serial = 0
def unique_message_id(mlist):
global _serial
msgid = '<mailman.%d.%d.%d.%s@%s>' % (
_serial, time.time(), os.getpid(),
mlist.internal_name(), mlist.host_name)
_serial += 1
return msgid
# Figure out epoch seconds of midnight at the start of today (or the given
# 3-tuple date of (year, month, day).
def midnight(date=None):
if date is None:
date = time.localtime()[:3]
# -1 for dst flag tells the library to figure it out
return time.mktime(date + (0,)*5 + (-1,))
# Utilities to convert from simplified $identifier substitutions to/from
# standard Python $(identifier)s substititions. The "Guido rules" for the
# former are:
# $$ -> $
# $identifier -> $(identifier)s
# ${identifier} -> $(identifier)s
def to_dollar(s):
"""Convert from %-strings to $-strings."""
s = s.replace('$', '$$').replace('%%', '%')
parts = cre.split(s)
for i in range(1, len(parts), 2):
if parts[i+1] and parts[i+1][0] in IDENTCHARS:
parts[i] = '${' + parts[i] + '}'
else:
parts[i] = '$' + parts[i]
return EMPTYSTRING.join(parts)
def to_percent(s):
"""Convert from $-strings to %-strings."""
s = s.replace('%', '%%').replace('$$', '$')
parts = dre.split(s)
for i in range(1, len(parts), 4):
if parts[i] is not None:
parts[i] = '$'
elif parts[i+1] is not None:
parts[i+1] = '%(' + parts[i+1] + ')s'
else:
parts[i+2] = '%(' + parts[i+2] + ')s'
return EMPTYSTRING.join(filter(None, parts))
def dollar_identifiers(s):
"""Return the set (dictionary) of identifiers found in a $-string."""
d = {}
for name in filter(None, [b or c or None for a, b, c in dre.findall(s)]):
d[name] = True
return d
def percent_identifiers(s):
"""Return the set (dictionary) of identifiers found in a %-string."""
d = {}
for name in cre.findall(s):
d[name] = True
return d
# Utilities to canonicalize a string, which means un-HTML-ifying the string to
# produce a Unicode string or an 8-bit string if all the characters are ASCII.
def canonstr(s, lang=None):
newparts = []
parts = re.split(r'&(?P<ref>[^;]+);', s)
def appchr(i):
# do everything in unicode
newparts.append(unichr(i))
def tounicode(s):
# We want the default fallback to be iso-8859-1 even if the language
# is English (us-ascii). This seems like a practical compromise so
# that non-ASCII characters in names can be used in English lists w/o
# having to change the global charset for English from us-ascii (which
# I superstitiously think may have unintended consequences).
if isinstance(s, unicode):
return s
if lang is None:
charset = 'iso-8859-1'
else:
charset = GetCharSet(lang)
if charset == 'us-ascii':
charset = 'iso-8859-1'
return unicode(s, charset, 'replace')
while True:
newparts.append(tounicode(parts.pop(0)))
if not parts:
break
ref = parts.pop(0)
if ref.startswith('#'):
try:
appchr(int(ref[1:]))
except ValueError:
# Non-convertable, stick with what we got
newparts.append(tounicode('&'+ref+';'))
else:
c = htmlentitydefs.entitydefs.get(ref, '?')
if c.startswith('#') and c.endswith(';'):
appchr(int(ref[1:-1]))
else:
newparts.append(tounicode(c))
newstr = EMPTYSTRING.join(newparts)
# newstr is unicode
return newstr
# The opposite of canonstr() -- sorta. I.e. it attempts to encode s in the
# charset of the given language, which is the character set that the page will
# be rendered in, and failing that, replaces non-ASCII characters with their
# html references. It always returns a byte string.
def uncanonstr(s, lang=None):
if s is None:
s = u''
if lang is None:
charset = 'us-ascii'
else:
charset = GetCharSet(lang)
# See if the string contains characters only in the desired character
# set. If so, return it unchanged, except for coercing it to a byte
# string.
try:
if isinstance(s, UnicodeType):
return s.encode(charset)
else:
u = unicode(s, charset)
return s
except UnicodeError:
# Nope, it contains funny characters, so html-ref it
return uquote(s)
def uquote(s):
a = []
for c in s:
o = ord(c)
if o > 127:
a.append('&#%3d;' % o)
else:
a.append(c)
# Join characters together and coerce to byte string
return str(EMPTYSTRING.join(a))
def oneline(s, cset):
# Decode header string in one line and convert into specified charset
try:
h = email.Header.make_header(email.Header.decode_header(s))
ustr = h.__unicode__()
line = UEMPTYSTRING.join(ustr.splitlines())
return line.encode(cset, 'replace')
except (LookupError, UnicodeError, ValueError, HeaderParseError):
# possibly charset problem. return with undecoded string in one line.
return EMPTYSTRING.join(s.splitlines())
# Patterns and functions to flag possible XSS attacks in HTML.
# This list is compiled from information at http://ha.ckers.org/xss.html,
# http://www.quirksmode.org/js/events_compinfo.html,
# http://www.htmlref.com/reference/appa/events1.htm,
# http://lxr.mozilla.org/mozilla/source/content/events/src/nsDOMEvent.cpp#59,
# http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Events/events.html and
# http://www.xulplanet.com/references/elemref/ref_EventHandlers.html
# Many thanks are due to Moritz Naumann for his assistance with this.
_badwords = [
'<i?frame',
# Kludge to allow the specific tag that's in the options.html template.
'<link(?! rel="SHORTCUT ICON" href="<mm-favicon>">)',
'<meta',
'<object',
'<script',
r'\bj(?:ava)?script\b',
r'\bvbs(?:cript)?\b',
r'\bdomactivate\b',
r'\bdomattrmodified\b',
r'\bdomcharacterdatamodified\b',
r'\bdomfocus(?:in|out)\b',
r'\bdommenuitem(?:in)?active\b',
r'\bdommousescroll\b',
r'\bdomnodeinserted(?:intodocument)?\b',
r'\bdomnoderemoved(?:fromdocument)?\b',
r'\bdomsubtreemodified\b',
r'\bfscommand\b',
r'\bonabort\b',
r'\bon(?:de)?activate\b',
r'\bon(?:after|before)print\b',
r'\bon(?:after|before)update\b',
r'\bonbefore(?:(?:de)?activate|copy|cut|editfocus|paste)\b',
r'\bonbeforeunload\b',
r'\bonbegin\b',
r'\bonblur\b',
r'\bonbounce\b',
r'\bonbroadcast\b',
r'\bon(?:cell)?change\b',
r'\boncheckboxstatechange\b',
r'\bon(?:dbl)?click\b',
r'\bonclose\b',
r'\boncommand(?:update)?\b',
r'\boncomposition(?:end|start)\b',
r'\boncontextmenu\b',
r'\boncontrolselect\b',
r'\boncopy\b',
r'\boncut\b',
r'\bondataavailable\b',
r'\bondataset(?:changed|complete)\b',
r'\bondrag(?:drop|end|enter|exit|gesture|leave|over)?\b',
r'\bondragstart\b',
r'\bondrop\b',
r'\bonend\b',
r'\bonerror(?:update)?\b',
r'\bonfilterchange\b',
r'\bonfinish\b',
r'\bonfocus(?:in|out)?\b',
r'\bonhelp\b',
r'\boninput\b',
r'\bonkey(?:up|down|press)\b',
r'\bonlayoutcomplete\b',
r'\bon(?:un)?load\b',
r'\bonlosecapture\b',
r'\bonmedia(?:complete|error)\b',
r'\bonmouse(?:down|enter|leave|move|out|over|up|wheel)\b',
r'\bonmove(?:end|start)?\b',
r'\bon(?:off|on)line\b',
r'\bonoutofsync\b',
r'\bonoverflow(?:changed)?\b',
r'\bonpage(?:hide|show)\b',
r'\bonpaint\b',
r'\bonpaste\b',
r'\bonpause\b',
r'\bonpopup(?:hidden|hiding|showing|shown)\b',
r'\bonprogress\b',
r'\bonpropertychange\b',
r'\bonradiostatechange\b',
r'\bonreadystatechange\b',
r'\bonrepeat\b',
r'\bonreset\b',
r'\bonresize(?:end|start)?\b',
r'\bonresume\b',
r'\bonreverse\b',
r'\bonrow(?:delete|enter|exit|inserted)\b',
r'\bonrows(?:delete|enter|inserted)\b',
r'\bonscroll\b',
r'\bonseek\b',
r'\bonselect(?:start)?\b',
r'\bonselectionchange\b',
r'\bonstart\b',
r'\bonstop\b',
r'\bonsubmit\b',
r'\bonsync(?:from|to)preference\b',
r'\bonsyncrestored\b',
r'\bontext\b',
r'\bontimeerror\b',
r'\bontrackchange\b',
r'\bonunderflow\b',
r'\bonurlflip\b',
r'\bseeksegmenttime\b',
r'\bsvgabort\b',
r'\bsvgerror\b',
r'\bsvgload\b',
r'\bsvgresize\b',
r'\bsvgscroll\b',
r'\bsvgunload\b',
r'\bsvgzoom\b',
]
# This is the actual re to look for the above patterns
_badhtml = re.compile('|'.join(_badwords), re.IGNORECASE)
# This is used to filter non-printable us-ascii characters, some of which
# can be used to break words to avoid recognition.
_filterchars = re.compile('[\000-\011\013\014\016-\037\177-\237]')
# This is used to recognize '&#' and '%xx' strings for _translate which
# translates them to characters
_encodedchars = re.compile('(&#[0-9]+;?)|(&#x[0-9a-f]+;?)|(%[0-9a-f]{2})',
re.IGNORECASE)
def _translate(mo):
"""Translate &#... and %xx encodings into the encoded character."""
match = mo.group().lower().strip('&#;')
try:
if match.startswith('x') or match.startswith('%'):
val = int(match[1:], 16)
else:
val = int(match, 10)
except ValueError:
return ''
if val < 256:
return chr(val)
else:
return ''
def suspiciousHTML(html):
"""Check HTML string for various tags, script language names and
'onxxx' actions that can be used in XSS attacks.
Currently, this a very simple minded test. It just looks for
patterns without analyzing context. Thus, it potentially flags lots
of benign stuff.
Returns True if anything suspicious found, False otherwise.
"""
if _badhtml.search(_filterchars.sub(
'', _encodedchars.sub(_translate, html))):
return True
else:
return False