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package RT::EmailParser;


use base qw/RT::Base/;

use strict;
use Mail::Address;
use MIME::Entity;
use MIME::Head;
use MIME::Parser;
use File::Temp qw/tempdir/;

=head1 NAME

  RT::EmailParser - helper functions for parsing parts from incoming
  email messages

=head1 SYNOPSIS


=head1 DESCRIPTION


=begin testing

ok(require RT::EmailParser);

=end testing


=head1 METHODS

=head2 new

Returns a new RT::EmailParser object

=cut

sub new  {
  my $proto = shift;
  my $class = ref($proto) || $proto;
  my $self  = {};
  bless ($self, $class);
  return $self;
}


# {{{ sub SmartParseMIMEEntityFromScalar

=head2 SmartParseMIMEEntityFromScalar { Message => SCALAR_REF, Decode => BOOL }

Parse a message stored in a scalar from scalar_ref

=cut

sub SmartParseMIMEEntityFromScalar {
    my $self = shift;
    my %args = ( Message => undef, Decode => 1, @_ );

    my ( $fh, $temp_file );
    eval {

        for ( 1 .. 10 ) {

            # on NFS and NTFS, it is possible that tempfile() conflicts
            # with other processes, causing a race condition. we try to
            # accommodate this by pausing and retrying.
            last
              if ( $fh, $temp_file ) =
              eval { File::Temp::tempfile( undef, UNLINK => 0 ) };
            sleep 1;
        }
        if ($fh) {

            #thank you, windows                      
            binmode $fh;
            $fh->autoflush(1);
            print $fh $args{'Message'};
            close($fh);
            if ( -f $temp_file ) {

                # We have to trust the temp file's name -- untaint it
                $temp_file =~ /(.*)/;
                $self->ParseMIMEEntityFromFile( $1, $args{'Decode'} );
                unlink($1);
            }
        }
    };

    #If for some reason we weren't able to parse the message using a temp file
    # try it with a scalar
    if ( $@ || !$self->Entity ) {
        $self->ParseMIMEEntityFromScalar( $args{'Message'}, $args{'Decode'} );
    }

}

# }}}

# {{{ sub ParseMIMEEntityFromSTDIN

=head2 ParseMIMEEntityFromSTDIN

Parse a message from standard input

=cut

sub ParseMIMEEntityFromSTDIN {
    my $self = shift;
    my $postprocess = (@_ ? shift : 1);
    return $self->ParseMIMEEntityFromFileHandle(\*STDIN, $postprocess);
}

# }}}

# {{{ ParseMIMEEntityFromScalar

=head2 ParseMIMEEntityFromScalar  $message

Takes either a scalar or a reference to a scalr which contains a stringified MIME message.
Parses it.

Returns true if it wins.
Returns false if it loses.

=cut

sub ParseMIMEEntityFromScalar {
    my $self = shift;
    my $message = shift;
    my $postprocess = (@_ ? shift : 1);
    $self->_ParseMIMEEntity($message,'parse_data', $postprocess);
}

# }}}

# {{{ ParseMIMEEntityFromFilehandle *FH

=head2 ParseMIMEEntityFromFilehandle *FH

Parses a mime entity from a filehandle passed in as an argument

=cut

sub ParseMIMEEntityFromFileHandle {
    my $self = shift;
    my $filehandle = shift;
    my $postprocess = (@_ ? shift : 1);
    $self->_ParseMIMEEntity($filehandle,'parse', $postprocess);
}

# }}}

# {{{ ParseMIMEEntityFromFile

=head2 ParseMIMEEntityFromFile 

Parses a mime entity from a filename passed in as an argument

=cut

sub ParseMIMEEntityFromFile {
    my $self = shift;
    my $file = shift;
    my $postprocess = (@_ ? shift : 1);
    $self->_ParseMIMEEntity($file,'parse_open',$postprocess);
}

# }}}

# {{{ _ParseMIMEEntity
sub _ParseMIMEEntity {
    my $self = shift;
    my $message = shift;
    my $method = shift;
    my $postprocess = shift;
    # Create a new parser object:

    my $parser = MIME::Parser->new();
    $self->_SetupMIMEParser($parser);


    # TODO: XXX 3.0 we really need to wrap this in an eval { }
    unless ( $self->{'entity'} = $parser->$method($message) ) {
        $RT::Logger->crit("Couldn't parse MIME stream and extract the submessages");
        # Try again, this time without extracting nested messages
        $parser->extract_nested_messages(0);
        unless ( $self->{'entity'} = $parser->$method($message) ) {
            $RT::Logger->crit("couldn't parse MIME stream");
            return ( undef);
        }
    }
    if ($postprocess) {
    $self->_PostProcessNewEntity() ;
    }

}

# }}}

# {{{ _PostProcessNewEntity 

=head2 _PostProcessNewEntity

cleans up and postprocesses a newly parsed MIME Entity

=cut

sub _PostProcessNewEntity {
    my $self = shift;

    #Now we've got a parsed mime object. 

    # Unfold headers that are have embedded newlines
    #  Better do this before conversion or it will break
    #  with multiline encoded Subject (RFC2047) (fsck.com #5594)
    
    $self->Head->unfold;


    # try to convert text parts into utf-8 charset
    RT::I18N::SetMIMEEntityToEncoding($self->{'entity'}, 'utf-8');




}

# }}}

# {{{ sub ParseTicketId 

sub ParseTicketId {
    my $self = shift;
    $RT::Logger->warnings("RT::EmailParser->ParseTicketId deprecated. You should be using RT::Interface::Email at (". join(":",caller).")");

    require RT::Interface::Email;
    RT::Interface::Email::ParseTicketId(@_);
}

# }}}



# {{{ ParseCcAddressesFromHead 

=head2 ParseCcAddressesFromHead HASHREF

Takes a hashref object containing QueueObj, Head and CurrentUser objects.
Returns a list of all email addresses in the To and Cc 
headers b<except> the current Queue\'s email addresses, the CurrentUser\'s 
email address  and anything that the $RTAddressRegexp matches.

=cut

sub ParseCcAddressesFromHead {

    my $self = shift;

    my %args = (
        QueueObj    => undef,
        CurrentUser => undef,
        @_
    );

    my (@Addresses);

    my @ToObjs = Mail::Address->parse( $self->Head->get('To') );
    my @CcObjs = Mail::Address->parse( $self->Head->get('Cc') );

    foreach my $AddrObj ( @ToObjs, @CcObjs ) {
        my $Address = $AddrObj->address;
        my $user = RT::User->new($RT::SystemUser);
        $Address = $user->CanonicalizeEmailAddress($Address);
        next if ( lc $args{'CurrentUser'}->EmailAddress   eq lc $Address );
        next if ( lc $args{'QueueObj'}->CorrespondAddress eq lc $Address );
        next if ( lc $args{'QueueObj'}->CommentAddress    eq lc $Address );
        next if ( $self->IsRTAddress($Address) );

        push ( @Addresses, $Address );
    }
    return (@Addresses);
}

# }}}

# {{{ ParseSenderAdddressFromHead

=head2 ParseSenderAddressFromHead

Takes a MIME::Header object. Returns a tuple: (user@host, friendly name) 
of the From (evaluated in order of Reply-To:, From:, Sender)

=cut

sub ParseSenderAddressFromHead {
    my $self = shift;

    #Figure out who's sending this message.
    my $From = $self->Head->get('Reply-To')
      || $self->Head->get('From')
      || $self->Head->get('Sender');
    return ( $self->ParseAddressFromHeader($From) );
}

# }}}

# {{{ ParseErrorsToAdddressFromHead

=head2 ParseErrorsToAddressFromHead

Takes a MIME::Header object. Return a single value : user@host
of the From (evaluated in order of Errors-To:,Reply-To:, From:, Sender)

=cut

sub ParseErrorsToAddressFromHead {
    my $self = shift;

    #Figure out who's sending this message.

    foreach my $header ( 'Errors-To', 'Reply-To', 'From', 'Sender' ) {

        # If there's a header of that name
        my $headerobj = $self->Head->get($header);
        if ($headerobj) {
            my ( $addr, $name ) = $self->ParseAddressFromHeader($headerobj);

            # If it's got actual useful content...
            return ($addr) if ($addr);
        }
    }
}

# }}}

# {{{ ParseAddressFromHeader

=head2 ParseAddressFromHeader ADDRESS

Takes an address from $self->Head->get('Line') and returns a tuple: user@host, friendly name

=cut

sub ParseAddressFromHeader {
    my $self = shift;
    my $Addr = shift;

    # Perl 5.8.0 breaks when doing regex matches on utf8
    Encode::_utf8_off($Addr) if $] == 5.008;
    my @Addresses = Mail::Address->parse($Addr);

    my $AddrObj = $Addresses[0];

    unless ( ref($AddrObj) ) {
        return ( undef, undef );
    }

    my $Name = ( $AddrObj->phrase || $AddrObj->comment || $AddrObj->address );

    #Lets take the from and load a user object.
    my $Address = $AddrObj->address;

    return ( $Address, $Name );
}

# }}}

# {{{ IsRTAddress

=head2 IsRTaddress ADDRESS

Takes a single parameter, an email address. 
Returns true if that address matches the $RTAddressRegexp.  
Returns false, otherwise.

=begin testing

is(RT::EmailParser::IsRTAddress("","rt\@example.com"),1, "Regexp matched rt address" );
is(RT::EmailParser::IsRTAddress("","frt\@example.com"),undef, "Regexp didn't match non-rt address" );

=end testing

=cut

sub IsRTAddress {
    my $self = shift;
    my $address = shift;

    # Example: the following rule would tell RT not to Cc 
    #   "tickets@noc.example.com"
    if ( defined($RT::RTAddressRegexp) &&
                       $address =~ /$RT::RTAddressRegexp/i ) {
        return(1);
    } else {
        return (undef);
    }
}

# }}}


# {{{ CullRTAddresses

=head2 CullRTAddresses ARRAY

Takes a single argument, an array of email addresses.
Returns the same array with any IsRTAddress()es weeded out.

=begin testing

@before = ("rt\@example.com", "frt\@example.com");
@after = ("frt\@example.com");
ok(eq_array(RT::EmailParser::CullRTAddresses("",@before),@after), "CullRTAddresses only culls RT addresses");

=end testing

=cut

sub CullRTAddresses {
    my $self = shift;
    my @addresses= (@_);
    my @addrlist;

    foreach my $addr( @addresses ) {
                                 # We use the class instead of the instance
                                 # because sloppy code calls this method
                                 # without a $self
      push (@addrlist, $addr)    unless RT::EmailParser->IsRTAddress($addr);
    }
    return (@addrlist);
}

# }}}


# {{{ LookupExternalUserInfo


# LookupExternalUserInfo is a site-definable method for synchronizing
# incoming users with an external data source. 
#
# This routine takes a tuple of EmailAddress and FriendlyName
#   EmailAddress is the user's email address, ususally taken from
#       an email message's From: header.
#   FriendlyName is a freeform string, ususally taken from the "comment" 
#       portion of an email message's From: header.
#
# If you define an AutoRejectRequest template, RT will use this   
# template for the rejection message.


=head2 LookupExternalUserInfo

 LookupExternalUserInfo is a site-definable method for synchronizing
 incoming users with an external data source. 

 This routine takes a tuple of EmailAddress and FriendlyName
    EmailAddress is the user's email address, ususally taken from
        an email message's From: header.
    FriendlyName is a freeform string, ususally taken from the "comment" 
        portion of an email message's From: header.

 It returns (FoundInExternalDatabase, ParamHash);

   FoundInExternalDatabase must  be set to 1 before return if the user 
   was found in the external database.

   ParamHash is a Perl parameter hash which can contain at least the 
   following fields. These fields are used to populate RT's users 
   database when the user is created.

    EmailAddress is the email address that RT should use for this user.  
    Name is the 'Name' attribute RT should use for this user. 
         'Name' is used for things like access control and user lookups.
    RealName is what RT should display as the user's name when displaying 
         'friendly' names

=cut

sub LookupExternalUserInfo {
  my $self = shift;
  my $EmailAddress = shift;
  my $RealName = shift;

  my $FoundInExternalDatabase = 1;
  my %params;

  #Name is the RT username you want to use for this user.
  $params{'Name'} = $EmailAddress;
  $params{'EmailAddress'} = $EmailAddress;
  $params{'RealName'} = $RealName;

  # See RT's contributed code for examples.
  # http://www.fsck.com/pub/rt/contrib/
  return ($FoundInExternalDatabase, %params);
}

# }}}

# {{{ Accessor methods for parsed email messages

=head2 Head

Return the parsed head from this message

=cut

sub Head {
    my $self = shift;
    return $self->Entity->head;
}

=head2 Entity 

Return the parsed Entity from this message

=cut

sub Entity {
    my $self = shift;
    return $self->{'entity'};
}

# }}}

# {{{ _SetupMIMEParser 

=head2 _SetupMIMEParser $parser

A private instance method which sets up a mime parser to do its job

=cut


    ## TODO: Does it make sense storing to disk at all?  After all, we
    ## need to put each msg as an in-core scalar before saving it to
    ## the database, don't we?

    ## At the same time, we should make sure that we nuke attachments 
    ## Over max size and return them

sub _SetupMIMEParser {
    my $self   = shift;
    my $parser = shift;
    
    # Set up output directory for files:

    my $tmpdir = File::Temp::tempdir( TMPDIR => 1, CLEANUP => 1 );
    push ( @{ $self->{'AttachmentDirs'} }, $tmpdir );
    $parser->output_dir($tmpdir);
    $parser->filer->ignore_filename(1);

    #If someone includes a message, extract it
    $parser->extract_nested_messages(1);

    $parser->extract_uuencode(1);    ### default is false

    # Set up the prefix for files with auto-generated names:
    $parser->output_prefix("part");

    # do _not_ store each msg as in-core scalar;

    $parser->output_to_core(0);

    # From the MIME::Parser docs:
    # "Normally, tmpfiles are created when needed during parsing, and destroyed automatically when they go out of scope"
    # Turns out that the default is to recycle tempfiles
    # Temp files should never be recycled, especially when running under perl taint checking
    
    $parser->tmp_recycling(0) if $parser->can('tmp_recycling');

}

# }}}

sub DESTROY {
    my $self = shift;
    File::Path::rmtree([@{$self->{'AttachmentDirs'}}],0,1);
}



eval "require RT::EmailParser_Vendor";
die $@ if ($@ && $@ !~ qr{^Can't locate RT/EmailParser_Vendor.pm});
eval "require RT::EmailParser_Local";
die $@ if ($@ && $@ !~ qr{^Can't locate RT/EmailParser_Local.pm});

1;