multifile
--- Support for files containing distinct partsDeprecated since version 2.5: The email
package should be used in preference to the multifile
module. This module is present only to maintain backward compatibility.
The MultiFile
object enables you to treat sections of a text file as
file-like input objects, with ''
being returned by readline()
when a
given delimiter pattern is encountered. The defaults of this class are designed
to make it useful for parsing MIME multipart messages, but by subclassing it and
overriding methods it can be easily adapted for more general use.
class multifile.MultiFile(fp[, seekable])[source]
Create a multi-file. You must instantiate this class with an input object
argument for the MultiFile
instance to get lines from, such as a file
object returned by open()
.
MultiFile
only ever looks at the input object's readline()
,
seek()
and tell()
methods, and the latter two are only needed if you
want random access to the individual MIME parts. To use MultiFile
on a
non-seekable stream object, set the optional seekable argument to false; this
will prevent using the input object's seek()
and tell()
methods.
It will be useful to know that in MultiFile
's view of the world, text
is composed of three kinds of lines: data, section-dividers, and end-markers.
MultiFile is designed to support parsing of messages that may have multiple
nested message parts, each with its own pattern for section-divider and
end-marker lines.
A MultiFile
instance has the following methods:
MultiFile.readline(str)[source]
Read a line. If the line is data (not a section-divider or end-marker or real
EOF) return it. If the line matches the most-recently-stacked boundary, return
''
and set self.last
to 1 or 0 according as the match is or is not an
end-marker. If the line matches any other stacked boundary, raise an error. On
encountering end-of-file on the underlying stream object, the method raises
Error
unless all boundaries have been popped.
MultiFile.readlines(str)[source]
Return all lines remaining in this part as a list of strings.
MultiFile.read()[source]
Read all lines, up to the next section. Return them as a single (multiline) string. Note that this doesn't take a size argument!
MultiFile.seek(pos[, whence])[source]
Seek. Seek indices are relative to the start of the current section. The pos and whence arguments are interpreted as for a file seek.
MultiFile.tell()[source]
Return the file position relative to the start of the current section.
MultiFile.next()[source]
Skip lines to the next section (that is, read lines until a section-divider or end-marker has been consumed). Return true if there is such a section, false if an end-marker is seen. Re-enable the most-recently-pushed boundary.
MultiFile.is_data(str)[source]
Return true if str is data and false if it might be a section boundary. As
written, it tests for a prefix other than '-
-'
at start of line (which
all MIME boundaries have) but it is declared so it can be overridden in derived
classes.
Note that this test is used intended as a fast guard for the real boundary tests; if it always returns false it will merely slow processing, not cause it to fail.
MultiFile.push(str)[source]
Push a boundary string. When a decorated version of this boundary is found as
an input line, it will be interpreted as a section-divider or end-marker
(depending on the decoration, see RFC 2045). All subsequent reads will
return the empty string to indicate end-of-file, until a call to pop()
removes the boundary a or next()
call reenables it.
It is possible to push more than one boundary. Encountering the most-recently-pushed boundary will return EOF; encountering any other boundary will raise an error.
MultiFile.pop()[source]
Pop a section boundary. This boundary will no longer be interpreted as EOF.
MultiFile.section_divider(str)[source]
Turn a boundary into a section-divider line. By default, this method
prepends '--'
(which MIME section boundaries have) but it is declared so
it can be overridden in derived classes. This method need not append LF or
CR-LF, as comparison with the result ignores trailing whitespace.
MultiFile.end_marker(str)[source]
Turn a boundary string into an end-marker line. By default, this method
prepends '--'
and appends '--'
(like a MIME-multipart end-of-message
marker) but it is declared so it can be overridden in derived classes. This
method need not append LF or CR-LF, as comparison with the result ignores
trailing whitespace.
Finally, MultiFile
instances have two public instance variables:
MultiFile.level
Nesting depth of the current part.
MultiFile.last
True if the last end-of-file was for an end-of-message marker.
MultiFile
Exampleimport mimetools
import multifile
import StringIO
def extract_mime_part_matching(stream, mimetype):
"""Return the first element in a multipart MIME message on stream
matching mimetype."""
msg = mimetools.Message(stream)
msgtype = msg.gettype()
params = msg.getplist()
data = StringIO.StringIO()
if msgtype[:10] == "multipart/":
file = multifile.MultiFile(stream)
file.push(msg.getparam("boundary"))
while file.next():
submsg = mimetools.Message(file)
try:
data = StringIO.StringIO()
mimetools.decode(file, data, submsg.getencoding())
except ValueError:
continue
if submsg.gettype() == mimetype:
break
file.pop()
return data.getvalue()