1
1
mirror of https://github.com/Kozea/WeasyPrint.git synced 2024-10-05 00:21:15 +03:00
WeasyPrint/weasyprint/urls.py
2012-09-19 17:37:52 +02:00

260 lines
8.5 KiB
Python
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

# coding: utf8
"""
weasyprint.utils
----------------
Various utility functions and classes.
:copyright: Copyright 2011-2012 Simon Sapin and contributors, see AUTHORS.
:license: BSD, see LICENSE for details.
"""
from __future__ import division, unicode_literals
import re
import sys
import codecs
import os.path
import mimetypes
from . import VERSION_STRING
from .logger import LOGGER
from .compat import (
urljoin, urlsplit, quote, unquote, unquote_to_bytes, urlopen_contenttype,
Request, parse_email, pathname2url, unicode, base64_decode)
# Unlinke HTML, CSS and PNG, the SVG MIME type is not always builtin
# in some Python version and therefore not reliable.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
mimetypes.add_type('image/svg+xml', '.svg')
else:
# Native strings required.
mimetypes.add_type(b'image/svg+xml', b'.svg')
# getfilesystemencoding() on Linux is sometimes stupid...
FILESYSTEM_ENCODING = sys.getfilesystemencoding() or 'utf-8'
try:
if codecs.lookup(FILESYSTEM_ENCODING).name == 'ascii':
FILESYSTEM_ENCODING = 'utf-8'
except LookupError:
FILESYSTEM_ENCODING = 'utf-8'
# See http://stackoverflow.com/a/11687993/1162888
# Both are needed in Python 3 as the re module does not like to mix
UNICODE_SCHEME_RE = re.compile('^([a-z][a-z0-1.+-]+):', re.I)
BYTES_SCHEME_RE = re.compile(b'^([a-z][a-z0-1.+-]+):', re.I)
def iri_to_uri(url):
"""Turn an IRI that can contain any Unicode character into an ASII-only
URI that conforms to RFC 3986.
"""
# Use UTF-8 as per RFC 3987 (IRI), except for file://
url = url.encode(FILESYSTEM_ENCODING
if url.startswith('file:') else 'utf-8')
# This is a full URI, not just a component. Only %-encode characters
# that are not allowed at all in URIs. Everthing else is "safe":
# * Reserved characters: /:?#[]@!$&'()*+,;=
# * Unreserved characters: ASCII letters, digits and -._~
# Of these, only '~' is not in urllibs "always safe" list.
# * '%' to avoid double-encoding
return quote(url, safe=b"/:?#[]@!$&'()*+,;=~%")
def path2url(path):
"""Return file URL of `path`"""
path = os.path.abspath(path)
if os.path.isdir(path):
# Make sure directory names have a trailing slash.
# Otherwise relative URIs are resolved from the parent directory.
path += os.path.sep
if isinstance(path, unicode):
path = path.encode(FILESYSTEM_ENCODING)
path = pathname2url(path)
if path.startswith('///'):
# On Windows pathname2url(r'C:\foo') is apparently '///C:/foo'
# That enough slashes already.
return 'file:' + path
else:
return 'file://' + path
def url_is_absolute(url):
return bool(
(UNICODE_SCHEME_RE if isinstance(url, unicode) else BYTES_SCHEME_RE)
.match(url))
def get_url_attribute(element, attr_name):
"""Get the URI corresponding to the ``attr_name`` attribute.
Return ``None`` if:
* the attribute is empty or missing or,
* the value is a relative URI but the document has no base URI.
Otherwise, return an absolute URI.
"""
attr_value = element.get(attr_name, '').strip()
if attr_value:
if url_is_absolute(attr_value):
return attr_value
elif element.base_url:
return urljoin(element.base_url, attr_value)
else:
LOGGER.warn(
'Relative URI reference without a base URI: '
'<%s %s="%s"> at line %d',
element.tag, attr_name, attr_value, element.sourceline)
def get_link_attribute(element, attr_name):
"""Return ('external', absolute_uri) or
('internal', unquoted_fragment_id) or None.
"""
attr_value = element.get(attr_name, '').strip()
if attr_value.startswith('#'):
# Do not require a base_url when the value is just a fragment.
return 'internal', unquote(attr_value[1:])
else:
uri = get_url_attribute(element, attr_name)
if uri and element.base_url:
parsed = urlsplit(uri)
# Compare with fragments removed
if parsed[:-1] == urlsplit(element.base_url)[:-1]:
return 'internal', unquote(parsed.fragment)
else:
return 'external', uri
def ensure_url(string):
"""Get a ``scheme://path`` URL from ``string``.
If ``string`` looks like an URL, return it unchanged. Otherwise assume a
filename and convert it to a ``file://`` URL.
"""
return string if url_is_absolute(string) else path2url(string)
def safe_base64_decode(data):
"""Decode base64, padding being optional.
"From a theoretical point of view, the padding character is not needed,
since the number of missing bytes can be calculated from the number
of Base64 digits."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base64#Padding
:param data: Base64 data as an ASCII byte string
:returns: The decoded byte string.
"""
missing_padding = 4 - len(data) % 4
if missing_padding:
data += b'='* missing_padding
return base64_decode(data)
def open_data_url(url):
"""Decode URLs with the 'data' scheme. urllib can handle them
in Python 2, but that is broken in Python 3.
Inspired from Python 2.7.2s urllib.py.
"""
# syntax of data URLs:
# dataurl := "data:" [ mediatype ] [ ";base64" ] "," data
# mediatype := [ type "/" subtype ] *( ";" parameter )
# data := *urlchar
# parameter := attribute "=" value
try:
header, data = url.split(',', 1)
except ValueError:
raise IOError('bad data URL')
header = header[5:] # len('data:') == 5
if header:
semi = header.rfind(';')
if semi >= 0 and '=' not in header[semi:]:
content_type = header[:semi]
encoding = header[semi+1:]
else:
content_type = header
encoding = ''
message = parse_email('Content-type: ' + content_type)
mime_type = message.get_content_type()
charset = message.get_content_charset()
else:
mime_type = 'text/plain'
charset = 'US-ASCII'
encoding = ''
data = unquote_to_bytes(data)
if encoding == 'base64':
data = safe_base64_decode(data)
return dict(string=data, mime_type=mime_type, encoding=charset,
redirected_url=url)
def default_url_fetcher(url):
"""Fetch an external resource such as an image or stylesheet.
:param url: The URL of the resource to fetch
:raises: any exception to indicate failure. Failures are logged
as warnings, with the string representation of the exception
in the message.
:returns: In case of success, a dict with the following keys:
* One of ``string`` (a byte string) or ``file_obj`` (a file-like object)
* Optionally: ``mime_type``, a MIME type extracted eg. from a
*Content-Type* header. If not provided, the type is guessed from the
file extension in the URL.
* Optionally: ``encoding``, a character encoding extracted eg. from a
*charset* parameter in a *Content-Type* header
* Optionally: ``redirected_url``, the actual URL of the ressource in case
there were eg. HTTP redirects.
If a ``file_obj`` key is given, it is the callers responsability to call
``file_obj.close()``.
"""
if url.startswith('data:'):
return open_data_url(url)
elif UNICODE_SCHEME_RE.match(url):
url = iri_to_uri(url)
result, mime_type, charset = urlopen_contenttype(Request(
url, headers={'User-Agent': VERSION_STRING}))
return dict(file_obj=result, redirected_url=result.geturl(),
mime_type=mime_type, encoding=charset)
else:
raise ValueError('Not an absolute URI: %r' % url)
def wrap_url_fetcher(url_fetcher):
"""Decorate an url_fetcher to fill in optional data.
url_fetcher itself can be None, in which case the default fetcher is used.
In a result dict, redirected_url defaults to the original URL. If not
provided, mime_type is guessed from the path extension in the URL.
"""
if url_fetcher is None:
return default_url_fetcher
def wrapped_fetcher(url):
result = url_fetcher(url)
result.setdefault('redirected_url', url)
if 'mime_type' not in result:
path = urlsplit(result['redirected_url']).path
mime_type, _ = mimetypes.guess_type(path)
result['mime_type'] = mime_type or 'application/octet-stream'
return result
return wrapped_fetcher