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package URI::data; # RFC 2397
use strict;
use warnings;
use parent 'URI';
our $VERSION = '1.73';
$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
use MIME::Base64 qw(encode_base64 decode_base64);
use URI::Escape qw(uri_unescape);
sub media_type
{
my $self = shift;
my $opaque = $self->opaque;
$opaque =~ /^([^,]*),?/ or die;
my $old = $1;
my $base64;
$base64 = $1 if $old =~ s/(;base64)$//i;
if (@_) {
my $new = shift;
$new = "" unless defined $new;
$new =~ s/%/%25/g;
$new =~ s/,/%2C/g;
$base64 = "" unless defined $base64;
$opaque =~ s/^[^,]*,?/$new$base64,/;
$self->opaque($opaque);
}
return uri_unescape($old) if $old; # media_type can't really be "0"
"text/plain;charset=US-ASCII"; # default type
}
sub data
{
my $self = shift;
my($enc, $data) = split(",", $self->opaque, 2);
unless (defined $data) {
$data = "";
$enc = "" unless defined $enc;
}
my $base64 = ($enc =~ /;base64$/i);
if (@_) {
$enc =~ s/;base64$//i if $base64;
my $new = shift;
$new = "" unless defined $new;
my $uric_count = _uric_count($new);
my $urienc_len = $uric_count + (length($new) - $uric_count) * 3;
my $base64_len = int((length($new)+2) / 3) * 4;
$base64_len += 7; # because of ";base64" marker
if ($base64_len < $urienc_len || $_[0]) {
$enc .= ";base64";
$new = encode_base64($new, "");
} else {
$new =~ s/%/%25/g;
}
$self->opaque("$enc,$new");
}
return unless defined wantarray;
$data = uri_unescape($data);
return $base64 ? decode_base64($data) : $data;
}
# I could not find a better way to interpolate the tr/// chars from
# a variable.
my $ENC = $URI::uric;
$ENC =~ s/%//;
eval <<EOT; die $@ if $@;
sub _uric_count
{
\$_[0] =~ tr/$ENC//;
}
EOT
1;
__END__
=head1 NAME
URI::data - URI that contains immediate data
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use URI;
$u = URI->new("data:");
$u->media_type("image/gif");
$u->data(scalar(`cat camel.gif`));
print "$u\n";
open(XV, "|xv -") and print XV $u->data;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The C<URI::data> class supports C<URI> objects belonging to the I<data>
URI scheme. The I<data> URI scheme is specified in RFC 2397. It
allows inclusion of small data items as "immediate" data, as if it had
been included externally. Examples:
data:,Perl%20is%20good
data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODdhIAAgAIAAAAAAAPj8+CwAAAAAI
AAgAAAClYyPqcu9AJyCjtIKc5w5xP14xgeO2tlY3nWcajmZZdeJcG
Kxrmimms1KMTa1Wg8UROx4MNUq1HrycMjHT9b6xKxaFLM6VRKzI+p
KS9XtXpcbdun6uWVxJXA8pNPkdkkxhxc21LZHFOgD2KMoQXa2KMWI
JtnE2KizVUkYJVZZ1nczBxXlFopZBtoJ2diXGdNUymmJdFMAADs=
C<URI> objects belonging to the data scheme support the common methods
(described in L<URI>) and the following two scheme-specific methods:
=over 4
=item $uri->media_type( [$new_media_type] )
Can be used to get or set the media type specified in the
URI. If no media type is specified, then the default
C<"text/plain;charset=US-ASCII"> is returned.
=item $uri->data( [$new_data] )
Can be used to get or set the data contained in the URI.
The data is passed unescaped (in binary form). The decision about
whether to base64 encode the data in the URI is taken automatically,
based on the encoding that produces the shorter URI string.
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<URI>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995-1998 Gisle Aas.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
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