1Convert::ASCII::Armour(U3s)er Contributed Perl DocumentatCioonnvert::ASCII::Armour(3)
2
3
4

NAME

6       Convert::ASCII::Armour - Convert binary octets into ASCII armoured
7       messages.
8

SYNOPSIS

10           my $converter = new Convert::ASCII::Armour;
11
12           my $message   = $converter->armour(
13                               Object   => "FOO RECORD",
14                               Headers  => {
15                                             Table   => "FooBar",
16                                             Version => "1.23",
17                                           },
18                               Content  => {
19                                             Key  => "0x8738FA7382",
20                                             Name => "Zoya Hall",
21                                             Pic  => "....",  # gif
22                                           },
23                               Compress => 1,
24                           );
25
26           print $message;
27
28
29           -----BEGIN COMPRESSED FOO RECORD-----
30           Version: 1.23
31           Table: FooBar
32
33           eJwzZzA0Z/BNLS5OTE8NycgsVgCiRIVciIAJg6EJg0tiSaqhsYJvYlFy...
34           XnpOZl5qYlJySmpaekZmVnZObl5+QWFRcUlpWXlFZRWXAk7g6OTs4urm...
35           Fh4VGaWAR5ehkbGJqZm5hSUeNXWKDsoGcWpaGpq68bba0dWxtTVmDOYM...
36           NzuZ
37           =MxpZvjkrv5XyhkVCuXmsBQ==
38           -----END COMPRESSED FOO RECORD-----
39
40
41           my $decoded   = $converter->unarmour( $message )
42                            || die $converter->errstr();
43

DESCRIPTION

45       This module converts hashes of binary octets into ASCII messages
46       suitable for transfer over 6-bit clean transport channels. The encoded
47       ASCII resembles PGP's armoured messages, but are in no way compatible
48       with PGP.
49

METHODS

51   new()
52       Constructor.
53
54   armour()
55       Converts a hash of binary octets into an ASCII encoded message. The
56       encoded message has 4 parts: head and tail strings that act as
57       identifiers and delimiters, a cluster of headers at top of the message,
58       Base64 encoded message body and a Base64 encoded MD5 digest of the
59       message body. armour() takes a hash as argument with following keys:
60
61       Object
62           An identification string embedded in head and tail strings.
63
64       Content
65           Content is a hashref that contains the binary octets to be encoded.
66           This hash is serialized, compressed (if specified) and encoded into
67           ASCII with MIME::Base64.  The result is the body of the encoded
68           message.
69
70       Headers
71           Headers is a hashref that contains ASCII headers that are placed at
72           top of the encoded message. Headers are encoded as RFC822 headers.
73
74       Compress
75           A boolean parameter that forces armour() to compress the message
76           body.
77
78   unarmour()
79       Decodes an armoured ASCII message into the hash provided as argument to
80       armour(). The hash contains Content, Object, and Headers.  unarmour()
81       performs several consistency checks and returns a non-true value on
82       failure.
83
84   errstr()
85       Returns the error message set by unarmour() on failure.
86

AUTHOR

88       Vipul Ved Prakash, <mail@vipul.net>
89

LICENSE

91       Copyright (c) 2001, Vipul Ved Prakash. All rights reserved. This code
92       is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
93       same terms as Perl itself.
94

SEE ALSO

96       MIME::Base64(3), Compress::Zlib(3), Digest::MD5(3)
97
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99
100perl v5.12.0                      2010-04-30         Convert::ASCII::Armour(3)
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