python-3.6.zip added from Github

README.cosmo contains the necessary links.
This commit is contained in:
ahgamut 2021-08-08 09:38:33 +05:30 committed by Justine Tunney
parent 75fc601ff5
commit 0c4c56ff39
4219 changed files with 1968626 additions and 0 deletions

View file

View file

@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
# Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Keith Dart
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Class representing application/* type MIME documents."""
__all__ = ["MIMEApplication"]
from email import encoders
from email.mime.nonmultipart import MIMENonMultipart
class MIMEApplication(MIMENonMultipart):
"""Class for generating application/* MIME documents."""
def __init__(self, _data, _subtype='octet-stream',
_encoder=encoders.encode_base64, *, policy=None, **_params):
"""Create an application/* type MIME document.
_data is a string containing the raw application data.
_subtype is the MIME content type subtype, defaulting to
'octet-stream'.
_encoder is a function which will perform the actual encoding for
transport of the application data, defaulting to base64 encoding.
Any additional keyword arguments are passed to the base class
constructor, which turns them into parameters on the Content-Type
header.
"""
if _subtype is None:
raise TypeError('Invalid application MIME subtype')
MIMENonMultipart.__init__(self, 'application', _subtype, policy=policy,
**_params)
self.set_payload(_data)
_encoder(self)

View file

@ -0,0 +1,74 @@
# Copyright (C) 2001-2007 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Anthony Baxter
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Class representing audio/* type MIME documents."""
__all__ = ['MIMEAudio']
import sndhdr
from io import BytesIO
from email import encoders
from email.mime.nonmultipart import MIMENonMultipart
_sndhdr_MIMEmap = {'au' : 'basic',
'wav' :'x-wav',
'aiff':'x-aiff',
'aifc':'x-aiff',
}
# There are others in sndhdr that don't have MIME types. :(
# Additional ones to be added to sndhdr? midi, mp3, realaudio, wma??
def _whatsnd(data):
"""Try to identify a sound file type.
sndhdr.what() has a pretty cruddy interface, unfortunately. This is why
we re-do it here. It would be easier to reverse engineer the Unix 'file'
command and use the standard 'magic' file, as shipped with a modern Unix.
"""
hdr = data[:512]
fakefile = BytesIO(hdr)
for testfn in sndhdr.tests:
res = testfn(hdr, fakefile)
if res is not None:
return _sndhdr_MIMEmap.get(res[0])
return None
class MIMEAudio(MIMENonMultipart):
"""Class for generating audio/* MIME documents."""
def __init__(self, _audiodata, _subtype=None,
_encoder=encoders.encode_base64, *, policy=None, **_params):
"""Create an audio/* type MIME document.
_audiodata is a string containing the raw audio data. If this data
can be decoded by the standard Python `sndhdr' module, then the
subtype will be automatically included in the Content-Type header.
Otherwise, you can specify the specific audio subtype via the
_subtype parameter. If _subtype is not given, and no subtype can be
guessed, a TypeError is raised.
_encoder is a function which will perform the actual encoding for
transport of the image data. It takes one argument, which is this
Image instance. It should use get_payload() and set_payload() to
change the payload to the encoded form. It should also add any
Content-Transfer-Encoding or other headers to the message as
necessary. The default encoding is Base64.
Any additional keyword arguments are passed to the base class
constructor, which turns them into parameters on the Content-Type
header.
"""
if _subtype is None:
_subtype = _whatsnd(_audiodata)
if _subtype is None:
raise TypeError('Could not find audio MIME subtype')
MIMENonMultipart.__init__(self, 'audio', _subtype, policy=policy,
**_params)
self.set_payload(_audiodata)
_encoder(self)

View file

@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
# Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Barry Warsaw
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Base class for MIME specializations."""
__all__ = ['MIMEBase']
import email.policy
from email import message
class MIMEBase(message.Message):
"""Base class for MIME specializations."""
def __init__(self, _maintype, _subtype, *, policy=None, **_params):
"""This constructor adds a Content-Type: and a MIME-Version: header.
The Content-Type: header is taken from the _maintype and _subtype
arguments. Additional parameters for this header are taken from the
keyword arguments.
"""
if policy is None:
policy = email.policy.compat32
message.Message.__init__(self, policy=policy)
ctype = '%s/%s' % (_maintype, _subtype)
self.add_header('Content-Type', ctype, **_params)
self['MIME-Version'] = '1.0'

View file

@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
# Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Barry Warsaw
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Class representing image/* type MIME documents."""
__all__ = ['MIMEImage']
import imghdr
from email import encoders
from email.mime.nonmultipart import MIMENonMultipart
class MIMEImage(MIMENonMultipart):
"""Class for generating image/* type MIME documents."""
def __init__(self, _imagedata, _subtype=None,
_encoder=encoders.encode_base64, *, policy=None, **_params):
"""Create an image/* type MIME document.
_imagedata is a string containing the raw image data. If this data
can be decoded by the standard Python `imghdr' module, then the
subtype will be automatically included in the Content-Type header.
Otherwise, you can specify the specific image subtype via the _subtype
parameter.
_encoder is a function which will perform the actual encoding for
transport of the image data. It takes one argument, which is this
Image instance. It should use get_payload() and set_payload() to
change the payload to the encoded form. It should also add any
Content-Transfer-Encoding or other headers to the message as
necessary. The default encoding is Base64.
Any additional keyword arguments are passed to the base class
constructor, which turns them into parameters on the Content-Type
header.
"""
if _subtype is None:
_subtype = imghdr.what(None, _imagedata)
if _subtype is None:
raise TypeError('Could not guess image MIME subtype')
MIMENonMultipart.__init__(self, 'image', _subtype, policy=policy,
**_params)
self.set_payload(_imagedata)
_encoder(self)

View file

@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
# Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Barry Warsaw
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Class representing message/* MIME documents."""
__all__ = ['MIMEMessage']
from email import message
from email.mime.nonmultipart import MIMENonMultipart
class MIMEMessage(MIMENonMultipart):
"""Class representing message/* MIME documents."""
def __init__(self, _msg, _subtype='rfc822', *, policy=None):
"""Create a message/* type MIME document.
_msg is a message object and must be an instance of Message, or a
derived class of Message, otherwise a TypeError is raised.
Optional _subtype defines the subtype of the contained message. The
default is "rfc822" (this is defined by the MIME standard, even though
the term "rfc822" is technically outdated by RFC 2822).
"""
MIMENonMultipart.__init__(self, 'message', _subtype, policy=policy)
if not isinstance(_msg, message.Message):
raise TypeError('Argument is not an instance of Message')
# It's convenient to use this base class method. We need to do it
# this way or we'll get an exception
message.Message.attach(self, _msg)
# And be sure our default type is set correctly
self.set_default_type('message/rfc822')

View file

@ -0,0 +1,48 @@
# Copyright (C) 2002-2006 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Barry Warsaw
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Base class for MIME multipart/* type messages."""
__all__ = ['MIMEMultipart']
from email.mime.base import MIMEBase
class MIMEMultipart(MIMEBase):
"""Base class for MIME multipart/* type messages."""
def __init__(self, _subtype='mixed', boundary=None, _subparts=None,
*, policy=None,
**_params):
"""Creates a multipart/* type message.
By default, creates a multipart/mixed message, with proper
Content-Type and MIME-Version headers.
_subtype is the subtype of the multipart content type, defaulting to
`mixed'.
boundary is the multipart boundary string. By default it is
calculated as needed.
_subparts is a sequence of initial subparts for the payload. It
must be an iterable object, such as a list. You can always
attach new subparts to the message by using the attach() method.
Additional parameters for the Content-Type header are taken from the
keyword arguments (or passed into the _params argument).
"""
MIMEBase.__init__(self, 'multipart', _subtype, policy=policy, **_params)
# Initialise _payload to an empty list as the Message superclass's
# implementation of is_multipart assumes that _payload is a list for
# multipart messages.
self._payload = []
if _subparts:
for p in _subparts:
self.attach(p)
if boundary:
self.set_boundary(boundary)

View file

@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
# Copyright (C) 2002-2006 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Barry Warsaw
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Base class for MIME type messages that are not multipart."""
__all__ = ['MIMENonMultipart']
from email import errors
from email.mime.base import MIMEBase
class MIMENonMultipart(MIMEBase):
"""Base class for MIME non-multipart type messages."""
def attach(self, payload):
# The public API prohibits attaching multiple subparts to MIMEBase
# derived subtypes since none of them are, by definition, of content
# type multipart/*
raise errors.MultipartConversionError(
'Cannot attach additional subparts to non-multipart/*')

View file

@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
# Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Python Software Foundation
# Author: Barry Warsaw
# Contact: email-sig@python.org
"""Class representing text/* type MIME documents."""
__all__ = ['MIMEText']
from email.charset import Charset
from email.mime.nonmultipart import MIMENonMultipart
class MIMEText(MIMENonMultipart):
"""Class for generating text/* type MIME documents."""
def __init__(self, _text, _subtype='plain', _charset=None, *, policy=None):
"""Create a text/* type MIME document.
_text is the string for this message object.
_subtype is the MIME sub content type, defaulting to "plain".
_charset is the character set parameter added to the Content-Type
header. This defaults to "us-ascii". Note that as a side-effect, the
Content-Transfer-Encoding header will also be set.
"""
# If no _charset was specified, check to see if there are non-ascii
# characters present. If not, use 'us-ascii', otherwise use utf-8.
# XXX: This can be removed once #7304 is fixed.
if _charset is None:
try:
_text.encode('us-ascii')
_charset = 'us-ascii'
except UnicodeEncodeError:
_charset = 'utf-8'
MIMENonMultipart.__init__(self, 'text', _subtype, policy=policy,
**{'charset': str(_charset)})
self.set_payload(_text, _charset)