================= Content filtering ================= Mailman can filter the content of messages posted to a mailing list by stripping MIME subparts, and possibly reorganizing the MIME structure of a message. >>> mlist = create_list('test@example.com') Several mailing list options control content filtering. First, the feature must be enabled, then there are two options that control which MIME types get filtered and which get passed. Finally, there is an option to control whether ``text/html`` parts will get converted to plain text. Let's set up some defaults for these variables, then we'll explain them in more detail below. >>> mlist.filter_content = True >>> mlist.filter_types = [] >>> mlist.pass_types = [] >>> mlist.convert_html_to_plaintext = False Filtering the outer content type ================================ A simple filtering setting will just search the content types of the messages parts, discarding all parts with a matching MIME type. If the message's outer content type matches the filter, the entire message will be discarded. However, if we turn off content filtering altogether, then the handler short-circuits. :: >>> from mailman.interfaces.mime import FilterAction >>> mlist.filter_types = ['image/jpeg'] >>> mlist.filter_action = FilterAction.discard >>> msg = message_from_string("""\ ... From: aperson@example.com ... Content-Type: image/jpeg ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... xxxxx ... """) >>> process = config.handlers['mime-delete'].process >>> mlist.filter_content = False >>> msgdata = {} >>> process(mlist, msg, msgdata) >>> print(msg.as_string()) From: aperson@example.com Content-Type: image/jpeg MIME-Version: 1.0 xxxxx >>> msgdata {} Similarly, no content filtering is performed on digest messages, which are crafted internally by Mailman. >>> mlist.filter_content = True >>> msgdata = {'isdigest': True} >>> process(mlist, msg, msgdata) >>> print(msg.as_string()) From: aperson@example.com Content-Type: image/jpeg MIME-Version: 1.0 xxxxx >>> dump_msgdata(msgdata) isdigest: True Simple multipart filtering ========================== If one of the subparts in a ``multipart`` message matches the filter type, then just that subpart will be stripped. :: >>> msg = message_from_string("""\ ... From: aperson@example.com ... Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=BOUNDARY ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... --BOUNDARY ... Content-Type: image/jpeg ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... xxx ... ... --BOUNDARY ... Content-Type: image/gif ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... yyy ... --BOUNDARY-- ... """) >>> process(mlist, msg, {}) >>> print(msg.as_string()) From: aperson@example.com Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=BOUNDARY MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel ... --BOUNDARY Content-Type: image/gif MIME-Version: 1.0 yyy --BOUNDARY-- Collapsing multipart/alternative messages ========================================= When content filtering encounters a ``multipart/alternative`` part, and the results of filtering leave only one of the subparts, then the ``multipart/alternative`` may be collapsed. For example, in the following message, the outer content type is a ``multipart/mixed``. Inside this part is just a single subpart that has a content type of ``multipart/alternative``. This inner multipart has two subparts, a jpeg and a gif. Content filtering will remove the jpeg part, leaving the ``multipart/alternative`` with only a single gif subpart. Because there's only one subpart left, the MIME structure of the message will be reorganized, removing the inner ``multipart/alternative`` so that the outer ``multipart/mixed`` has just a single gif subpart. >>> mlist.collapse_alternatives = True >>> msg = message_from_string("""\ ... From: aperson@example.com ... Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=BOUNDARY ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... --BOUNDARY ... Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=BOUND2 ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... --BOUND2 ... Content-Type: image/jpeg ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... xxx ... ... --BOUND2 ... Content-Type: image/gif ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... yyy ... --BOUND2-- ... ... --BOUNDARY-- ... """) >>> process(mlist, msg, {}) >>> print(msg.as_string()) From: aperson@example.com Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=BOUNDARY MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel ... --BOUNDARY Content-Type: image/gif MIME-Version: 1.0 yyy --BOUNDARY-- When the outer part is a ``multipart/alternative`` and filtering leaves this outer part with just one subpart, the entire message is converted to the left over part's content type. In other words, the left over inner part is promoted to being the outer part. :: >>> mlist.filter_types = ['image/jpeg', 'text/html'] >>> msg = message_from_string("""\ ... From: aperson@example.com ... Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=AAA ... ... --AAA ... Content-Type: text/html ... ... This is some html ... --AAA ... Content-Type: text/plain ... ... This is plain text ... --AAA-- ... """) >>> process(mlist, msg, {}) >>> print(msg.as_string()) From: aperson@example.com Content-Type: text/plain X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel ... This is plain text Clean up. >>> mlist.filter_types = ['image/jpeg'] Conversion to plain text ======================== Some mailing lists prohibit HTML email, and in fact, such email can be a phishing or spam vector. However, many mail readers will send HTML email by default because users think it looks pretty. One approach to handling this would be to filter out ``text/html`` parts and rely on ``multipart/alternative`` collapsing to leave just a plain text part. This works because many mail readers that send HTML email actually send a plain text part in the second subpart of such ``multipart/alternatives``. While this is a good suggestion for plain text-only mailing lists, often a mail reader will send only a ``text/html`` part with no plain text alternative. in this case, the site administer can enable ``text/html`` to ``text/plain`` conversion by defining a conversion command. A list administrator still needs to enable such conversion for their list though. >>> mlist.convert_html_to_plaintext = True By default, Mailman sends the message through lynx, but since this program is not guaranteed to exist, we'll craft a simple, but stupid script to simulate the conversion process. The script expects a single argument, which is the name of the file containing the message payload to filter. :: >>> msg = message_from_string("""\ ... From: aperson@example.com ... Content-Type: text/html ... MIME-Version: 1.0 ... ... ... ... """) >>> from mailman.handlers.tests.test_mimedel import dummy_script >>> with dummy_script(): ... process(mlist, msg, {}) >>> print(msg.as_string()) From: aperson@example.com MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel ... Converted text/html to text/plain Filename: ... Discarding empty parts ====================== Similarly, if after filtering a multipart section ends up empty, then the entire multipart is discarded. For example, here's a message where an inner ``multipart/mixed`` contains two jpeg subparts. Both jpegs are filtered out, so the entire inner ``multipart/mixed`` is discarded. :: >>> msg = message_from_string("""\ ... From: aperson@example.com ... Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=AAA ... ... --AAA ... Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=BBB ... ... --BBB ... Content-Type: image/jpeg ... ... xxx ... --BBB ... Content-Type: image/jpeg ... ... yyy ... --BBB--- ... --AAA ... Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=CCC ... ... --CCC ... Content-Type: text/html ... ...

This is a header

... ... --CCC ... Content-Type: text/plain ... ... A different message ... --CCC-- ... --AAA ... Content-Type: image/gif ... ... zzz ... --AAA ... Content-Type: image/gif ... ... aaa ... --AAA-- ... """) >>> with dummy_script(): ... process(mlist, msg, {}) >>> print(msg.as_string()) From: aperson@example.com Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=AAA X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel ... --AAA MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Converted text/html to text/plain Filename: ... --AAA Content-Type: image/gif zzz --AAA Content-Type: image/gif aaa --AAA-- Passing MIME types ================== XXX Describe the pass_mime_types setting and how it interacts with ``filter_mime_types``.