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-rw-r--r--Functions/MIME/zsh-mime-setup259
1 files changed, 259 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Functions/MIME/zsh-mime-setup b/Functions/MIME/zsh-mime-setup
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..5f9168341
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Functions/MIME/zsh-mime-setup
@@ -0,0 +1,259 @@
+emulate -L zsh
+setopt extendedglob cbases
+
+local opt o_verbose o_list
+
+autoload -U zsh-mime-handler
+
+while getopts "flv" opt; do
+ case $opt in
+ # List: show existing suffixes and their handlers then exit.
+ (l)
+ o_list=1
+ ;;
+
+ # Verbose; print diagnostics to stdout.
+ (v)
+ o_verbose=1
+ ;;
+
+ # Force; discard any existing settings before reading.
+ (f)
+ unset -m zsh_mime_\*
+ ;;
+
+ (*)
+ [[ $opt = \? ]] || print -r "Option $opt not handled, complain" >&2
+ return 1
+ ;;
+ esac
+done
+(( OPTIND > 1 )) && shift $(( OPTIND - 1 ))
+
+
+if [[ -n $o_list ]]; then
+ # List and return.
+ for suffix in ${(ko)zsh_mime_handlers}; do
+ print ${(r.10.)suffix}${zsh_mime_handlers[$suffix]}
+ if [[ -n ${zsh_mime_flags[$suffix]} ]]; then
+ print " flags: ${zsh_mime_flags[$suffix]}"
+ fi
+ done
+ return 0
+fi
+
+
+# Handler for each suffix.
+(( ${+zsh_mime_handlers} )) || typeset -gA zsh_mime_handlers
+# Corresponding flags, if any, for handler
+(( ${+zsh_mime_flags} )) || typeset -gA zsh_mime_flags
+
+# Internal maps read from MIME configuration files.
+# Note we don't remember the types, just the mappings from suffixes
+# to handlers and their flags.
+typeset -A suffix_type_map type_handler_map type_flags_map
+
+local -a type_files cap_files array match mbegin mend
+local file line type suffix exts elt flags line2
+
+# Customizable list of files to examine.
+zstyle -a :mime: mime-types type_files ||
+ type_files=(~/.mime.types /etc/mime.types)
+zstyle -a :mime: mailcap cap_files ||
+ cap_files=(~/.mailcap /etc/mailcap)
+
+TRAPEXIT() { unfunction mime-setup-add-type >&/dev/null; return 0; }
+
+mime-setup-add-type() {
+ local type suffix
+ local -a array
+
+ type=$1
+ shift
+
+ while (( $# )); do
+ # `.ps' instead of `ps' has been noted
+ suffix=${1##.}
+ shift
+
+ if [[ -z $suffix_type_map[$suffix] ]]; then
+ [[ -n $o_verbose ]] &&
+ print -r "Adding type $type for $suffix" >&2
+ suffix_type_map[$suffix]=$type
+ else
+ # Skip duplicates.
+ array=(${=suffix_type_map[$suffix]})
+ if [[ ${array[(I)$type]} -eq 0 ]]; then
+ [[ -n $o_verbose ]] &&
+ print -r "Appending type $type for already defined $suffix" >&2
+ suffix_type_map[$suffix]+=" $type"
+ fi
+ fi
+ done
+}
+
+# Loop through files to find suffixes for MIME types.
+# Earlier entries take precedence, so the files need to be listed
+# with the user's own first. This also means pre-existing
+# values in suffix_type_map are respected.
+for file in $type_files; do
+ [[ -r $file ]] || continue
+
+ # For once we rely on the fact that read handles continuation
+ # lines ending in backslashes, i.e. there's no -r.
+ while read line; do
+ # Skip blank or comment lines.
+ [[ $line = [[:space:]]#(\#*|) ]] && continue
+
+ # There are two types of line you find in MIME type files.
+ # The original simple sort contains the type name then suffixes
+ # separated by whitespace. However, Netscape insists
+ # on adding lines with backslash continuation with
+ # key="value" pairs. So we'd better handle both.
+ if [[ $line = *=* ]]; then
+ # Gory.
+ # This relies on the fact that a typical entry:
+ # type=video/x-mpeg2 desc="MPEG2 Video" exts="mpv2,mp2v"
+ # looks like a parameter assignment. However, we really
+ # don't want to be screwed up by future extensions,
+ # so we split the elements to an array and pick out the
+ # ones we're interested in.
+ type= exts=
+
+ # Syntactically split line to preserve quoted words.
+ array=(${(z)line})
+ for elt in $array; do
+ if [[ $elt = (type|exts)=* ]]; then
+ eval $elt
+ fi
+ done
+
+ # Get extensions by splitting on comma
+ array=(${(s.,.)exts})
+
+ [[ -n $type ]] && mime-setup-add-type $type $array
+ else
+ # Simple.
+ mime-setup-add-type ${=line}
+ fi
+ done <$file
+done
+
+
+# Loop through files to find handlers for types.
+for file in $cap_files; do
+ [[ -r $file ]] || continue
+
+ # Oh, great. We need to preserve backslashes inside the line,
+ # but need to manage continuation lines.
+ while read -r line; do
+ # Skip blank or comment lines.
+ [[ $line = [[:space:]]#(\#*|) ]] && continue
+
+ while [[ $line = (#b)(*)\\ ]]; do
+ line=$match[1]
+ read -r line2 || break
+ line+=$line2
+ done
+
+ # Guess what, this file has a completely different format.
+ # See mailcap(4).
+ # The biggest unpleasantness here is that the fields are
+ # delimited by semicolons, but the command field, which
+ # is the one we want to extract, may itself contain backslashed
+ # semicolons.
+ if [[ $line = (#b)[[:space:]]#([^[:space:]\;]##)[[:space:]]#\;(*) ]]
+ then
+ # this is the only form we can handle, but there's no point
+ # issuing a warning for other forms.
+ type=$match[1]
+ line=$match[2]
+ # See if it has flags after the command.
+ if [[ $line = (#b)(([^\;\\]|\\\;|\\[^\;])#)\;(*) ]]; then
+ line=$match[1]
+ flags=$match[3]
+ else
+ flags=
+ fi
+ # Remove quotes from semicolons
+ line=${line//\\\;/\;}
+ # and remove any surrounding white space --- this might
+ # make the handler empty.
+ line=${${line##[[:space:]]#}%%[[:space:]]}
+ if [[ -z $type_handler_map[$type] ]]; then
+ if [[ -n $o_verbose ]]; then
+ print -r "Adding handler for type $type:
+ $line" >&2
+ fi
+ type_handler_map[$type]=$line
+ type_flags_map[$type]=$flags
+ if [[ -n $flags && -n $o_verbose ]]; then
+ print -r " with flags $flags" >&2
+ fi
+ elif [[ -n $o_verbose ]]; then
+ print -r "Skipping handler for already defined type $type:
+ $line" >&2
+ if [[ -n $flags ]]; then
+ print -r " with flags $flags" >&2
+ fi
+ fi
+ fi
+ done <$file
+done
+
+
+# Check for styles which override whatever is in the file.
+# We need to make sure there is a handler set up; for some
+# uses we may need to defer checking styles until zsh-mime-handler.
+# How much we need to do here is a moot point.
+zstyle -L | while read line; do
+ array=(${(Q)${(z)line}})
+ if [[ $array[3] = (handler|flags) && \
+ $array[2] = (#b):mime:.([^:]##):(*) ]]; then
+ suffix=$match[1]
+ # Make sure there is a suffix alias set up for this.
+ alias -s $suffix >&/dev/null || alias -s $suffix=zsh-mime-handler
+ fi
+done
+
+# Now associate the suffixes directly with handlers.
+# We just look for the first one with a handler.
+# If there is no handler, we don't bother registering an alias
+# for the suffix.
+
+for suffix line in ${(kv)suffix_type_map}; do
+ # Skip if we already have a handler.
+ [[ -n $zsh_mime_handlers[$suffix] ]] && continue
+
+ # Split the space-separated list of types.
+ array=(${=line})
+
+ # Find the first type with a handler.
+ line2=
+ for type in $array; do
+ line2=${type_handler_map[$type]}
+ [[ -n $line2 ]] && break
+ done
+
+ # See if there is a generic type/* handler.
+ # TODO: do we need to consider other forms of wildcard?
+ if [[ -z $line2 ]]; then
+ for type in $array; do
+ type="${type%%/*}/*"
+ line2=${type_handler_map[$type]}
+ [[ -n $line2 ]] && break
+ done
+ fi
+
+ if [[ -n $line2 ]]; then
+ # Found a type with a handler.
+ # Install the zsh handler as an alias, but never override
+ # existing suffix handling.
+ alias -s $suffix >&/dev/null || alias -s $suffix=zsh-mime-handler
+
+ zsh_mime_handlers[$suffix]=$line2
+ zsh_mime_flags[$suffix]=$type_flags_map[$type]
+ fi
+done
+
+true