1MIME::Decoder::NBit(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentationMIME::Decoder::NBit(3)
2
3
4
6 MIME::Decoder::NBit - encode/decode a "7bit" or "8bit" stream
7
9 A generic decoder object; see MIME::Decoder for usage.
10
12 This is a MIME::Decoder subclass for the "7bit" and "8bit" content
13 transfer encodings. These are not "encodings" per se: rather, they are
14 simply assertions of the content of the message. From RFC-2045 Section
15 6.2.:
16
17 Three transformations are currently defined: identity, the "quoted-
18 printable" encoding, and the "base64" encoding. The domains are
19 "binary", "8bit" and "7bit".
20
21 The Content-Transfer-Encoding values "7bit", "8bit", and "binary" all
22 mean that the identity (i.e. NO) encoding transformation has been
23 performed. As such, they serve simply as indicators of the domain of
24 the body data, and provide useful information about the sort of
25 encoding that might be needed for transmission in a given transport
26 system.
27
28 In keeping with this: as of MIME-tools 4.x, this class does no
29 modification of its input when encoding; all it does is attempt to
30 detect violations of the 7bit/8bit assertion, and issue a warning (one
31 per message) if any are found.
32
33 Legal 7bit data
34 RFC-2045 Section 2.7 defines legal "7bit" data:
35
36 "7bit data" refers to data that is all represented as relatively
37 short lines with 998 octets or less between CRLF line separation
38 sequences [RFC-821]. No octets with decimal values greater than 127
39 are allowed and neither are NULs (octets with decimal value 0). CR
40 (decimal value 13) and LF (decimal value 10) octets only occur as
41 part of CRLF line separation sequences.
42
43 Legal 8bit data
44 RFC-2045 Section 2.8 defines legal "8bit" data:
45
46 "8bit data" refers to data that is all represented as relatively
47 short lines with 998 octets or less between CRLF line separation
48 sequences [RFC-821]), but octets with decimal values greater than 127
49 may be used. As with "7bit data" CR and LF octets only occur as part
50 of CRLF line separation sequences and no NULs are allowed.
51
52 How decoding is done
53 The decoder does a line-by-line pass-through from input to output,
54 leaving the data unchanged except that an end-of-line sequence of CRLF
55 is converted to a newline "\n". Given the line-oriented nature of 7bit
56 and 8bit, this seems relatively sensible.
57
58 How encoding is done
59 The encoder does a line-by-line pass-through from input to output, and
60 simply attempts to detect violations of the "7bit"/"8bit" domain. The
61 default action is to warn once per encoding if violations are detected;
62 the warnings may be silenced with the QUIET configuration of
63 MIME::Tools.
64
66 MIME::Decoder
67
69 Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com), ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com).
70
71 All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can
72 redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
73
74
75
76perl v5.30.0 2017-04-05 MIME::Decoder::NBit(3)