From 302331a3b6544c28a7c4d420fab18f397c844e80 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Barry Warsaw Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1999 17:42:03 +0000 Subject: FieldStorage.__init__(): if there is no content-type header, use text/plain for inner parts, but application/x-www-form-urlencoded for outer parts. Honor any existing content-type header. Lower down, if the content-type header is something we don't understand (say because it there was a typo in the header coming from the client), default to text/plain for inner parts, but application/x-www-form-urlencoded for outer parts. --- Lib/cgi.py | 26 ++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 24 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'Lib/cgi.py') diff --git a/Lib/cgi.py b/Lib/cgi.py index 108310ebd58..ab6dda84360 100755 --- a/Lib/cgi.py +++ b/Lib/cgi.py @@ -828,9 +828,23 @@ class FieldStorage: self.filename = pdict['filename'] # Process content-type header - ctype, pdict = "text/plain", {} + # + # Honor any existing content-type header. But if there is no + # content-type header, use some sensible defaults. Assume + # outerboundary is "" at the outer level, but something non-false + # inside a multi-part. The default for an inner part is text/plain, + # but for an outer part it should be urlencoded. This should catch + # bogus clients which erroneously forget to include a content-type + # header. + # + # See below for what we do if there does exist a content-type header, + # but it happens to be something we don't understand. if self.headers.has_key('content-type'): ctype, pdict = parse_header(self.headers['content-type']) + elif self.outerboundary: + ctype, pdict = "text/plain", {} + else: + ctype, pdict = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded', {} self.type = ctype self.type_options = pdict self.innerboundary = "" @@ -853,8 +867,16 @@ class FieldStorage: self.read_urlencoded() elif ctype[:10] == 'multipart/': self.read_multi(environ, keep_blank_values, strict_parsing) - else: + elif self.outerboundary: + # we're in an inner part, but the content-type wasn't something we + # understood. default to read_single() because the resulting + # FieldStorage won't be a mapping (and doesn't need to be). self.read_single() + else: + # we're in an outer part, but the content-type wasn't something we + # understood. we still want the resulting FieldStorage to be a + # mapping, so parse it as if it were urlencoded + self.read_urlencoded() def __repr__(self): """Return a printable representation.""" -- cgit v1.2.3