NAME
   Convert::UUlib - decode uu/xx/b64/mime/yenc/etc-encoded data from a
   massive number of files

SYNOPSIS
    use Convert::UUlib ':all';

    # read all the files named on the commandline and decode them
    # into the CURRENT directory. See below for a longer example.
    LoadFile $_ for @ARGV;

    for my $uu (GetFileList) {
       if ($uu->state & FILE_OK) {
         $uu->decode;
         print $uu->filename, "\n";
       }
    }

DESCRIPTION
   This module started as an interface to the uulib/uudeview library by
   Frank Pilhofer that can be used to decode all kinds of usenet (and
   other) binary messages.

   After upstream abondoned the project, th library was continuously
   bugfixed and improved in this module, with major focuses on security
   fixes, correctness and speed (that does not mean that this library is
   considered safe with untrusted data, but it surely is safer than the
   poriginal uudeview).

   Read the file doc/library.pdf from the distribution for in-depth
   information about the C-library used in this interface, and the rest of
   this document and especially the non-trivial decoder program at the end.

EXPORTED CONSTANTS
 Action code constants
     ACT_IDLE      we don't do anything
     ACT_SCANNING  scanning an input file
     ACT_DECODING  decoding into a temp file
     ACT_COPYING   copying temp to target
     ACT_ENCODING  encoding a file

 Message severity levels
     MSG_MESSAGE   just a message, nothing important
     MSG_NOTE      something that should be noticed
     MSG_WARNING   important msg, processing continues
     MSG_ERROR     processing has been terminated
     MSG_FATAL     decoder cannot process further requests
     MSG_PANIC     recovery impossible, app must terminate

 Options
     OPT_VERSION   version number MAJOR.MINORplPATCH (ro)
     OPT_FAST      assumes only one part per file
     OPT_DUMBNESS  switch off the program's intelligence
     OPT_BRACKPOL  give numbers in [] higher precendence
     OPT_VERBOSE   generate informative messages
     OPT_DESPERATE try to decode incomplete files
     OPT_IGNREPLY  ignore RE:plies (off by default)
     OPT_OVERWRITE whether it's OK to overwrite ex. files
     OPT_SAVEPATH  prefix to save-files on disk
     OPT_IGNMODE   ignore the original file mode
     OPT_DEBUG     print messages with FILE/LINE info
     OPT_ERRNO     get last error code for RET_IOERR (ro)
     OPT_PROGRESS  retrieve progress information
     OPT_USETEXT   handle text messages
     OPT_PREAMB    handle Mime preambles/epilogues
     OPT_TINYB64   detect short B64 outside of Mime
     OPT_ENCEXT    extension for single-part encoded files
     OPT_REMOVE    remove input files after decoding (dangerous)
     OPT_MOREMIME  strict MIME adherence
     OPT_DOTDOT    ".."-unescaping has not yet been done on input files
     OPT_RBUF      set default read I/O buffer size in bytes
     OPT_WBUF      set default write I/O buffer size in bytes
     OPT_AUTOCHECK automatically check file list after every loadfile

 Result/Error codes
     RET_OK        everything went fine
     RET_IOERR     I/O Error - examine errno
     RET_NOMEM     not enough memory
     RET_ILLVAL    illegal value for operation
     RET_NODATA    decoder didn't find any data
     RET_NOEND     encoded data wasn't ended properly
     RET_UNSUP     unsupported function (encoding)
     RET_EXISTS    file exists (decoding)
     RET_CONT      continue -- special from ScanPart
     RET_CANCEL    operation canceled

 File States
    This code is zero, i.e. "false":

     UUFILE_READ   Read in, but not further processed

    The following state codes are or'ed together:

     FILE_MISPART  Missing Part(s) detected
     FILE_NOBEGIN  No 'begin' found
     FILE_NOEND    No 'end' found
     FILE_NODATA   File does not contain valid uudata
     FILE_OK       All Parts found, ready to decode
     FILE_ERROR    Error while decoding
     FILE_DECODED  Successfully decoded
     FILE_TMPFILE  Temporary decoded file exists

 Encoding types
     UU_ENCODED    UUencoded data
     B64_ENCODED   Mime-Base64 data
     XX_ENCODED    XXencoded data
     BH_ENCODED    Binhex encoded
     PT_ENCODED    Plain-Text encoded (MIME)
     QP_ENCODED    Quoted-Printable (MIME)
     YENC_ENCODED  yEnc encoded (non-MIME)

EXPORTED FUNCTIONS
 Initializing and cleanup
   Initialize is automatically called when the module is loaded and
   allocates quite a small amount of memory for todays machines ;) CleanUp
   releases that again.

   On my machine, a fairly complete decode with DBI backend needs about
   10MB RSS to decode 20000 files.

   CleanUp
       Release memory, file items and clean up files. Should be called
       after a decoidng run, if you want to start a new one.

 Setting and querying options
   $option = GetOption OPT_xxx
   SetOption OPT_xxx, opt-value

   See the "OPT_xxx" constants above to see which options exist.

 Setting various callbacks
   SetMsgCallback [callback-function]
   SetBusyCallback [callback-function]
   SetFileCallback [callback-function]
   SetFNameFilter [callback-function]

 Call the currently selected FNameFilter
   $file = FNameFilter $file

 Loading sourcefiles, optionally fuzzy merge and start decoding
   ($retval, $count) = LoadFile $fname, [$id, [$delflag, [$partno]]]
       Load the given file and scan it for encoded contents. Optionally tag
       it with the given id, and if $delflag is true, delete the file after
       it is no longer necessary. If you are certain of the part number,
       you can specify it as the last argument.

       A better (usually faster) way of doing this is using the
       "SetFNameFilter" functionality.

   $retval = Smerge $pass
       If you are desperate, try to call "Smerge" with increasing $pass
       values, beginning at 0, to try to merge parts that usually would not
       have been merged.

       Most probably this will result in garbled files, so never do this by
       default, except:

       If the "OPT_AUTOCHECK" option has been disabled (by default it is
       enabled) to speed up file loading, then you *have* to call "Smerge
       -1" after loading all files as an additional pre-pass (which is
       normally done by "LoadFile").

   $item = GetFileListItem $item_number
       Return the $item structure for the $item_number'th found file, or
       "undef" of no file with that number exists.

       The first file has number 0, and the series has no holes, so you can
       iterate over all files by starting with zero and incrementing until
       you hit "undef".

       This function has to walk the linear list of fils on each access, so
       if you want to iterate over all items, it is usually faster to use
       "GetFileList".

   @items = GetFileList
       Similar to "GetFileListItem", but returns all files in one go, which
       is very much faster for large number of items, and has no drawbacks
       when used for a small number of items.

 Decoding files
   $retval = $item->rename ($newname)
       Change the ondisk filename where the decoded file will be saved.

   $retval = $item->decode_temp
       Decode the file into a temporary location, use "$item->infile" to
       retrieve the temporary filename.

   $retval = $item->remove_temp
       Remove the temporarily decoded file again.

   $retval = $item->decode ([$target_path])
       Decode the file to its destination, or the given target path.

   $retval = $item->info (callback-function)

 Querying (and setting) item attributes
   $state = $item->state
   $mode = $item->mode ([newmode])
   $uudet = $item->uudet
   $size = $item->size
   $filename = $item->filename ([newfilename})
   $subfname = $item->subfname
   $mimeid = $item->mimeid
   $mimetype = $item->mimetype
   $binfile = $item->binfile

 Information about source parts
   $parts = $item->parts
       Return information about all parts (source files) used to decode the
       file as a list of hashrefs with the following structure:

        {
          partno   => <integer describing the part number, starting with 1>,
          # the following member sonly exist when they contain useful information
          sfname   => <local pathname of the file where this part is from>,
          filename => <the ondisk filename of the decoded file>,
          subfname => <used to cluster postings, possibly the posting filename>,
          subject  => <the subject of the posting/mail>,
          origin   => <the possible source (From) address>,
          mimetype => <the possible mimetype of the decoded file>,
          mimeid   => <the id part of the Content-Type>,
        }

       Usually you are interested mostly the "sfname" and possibly the
       "partno" and "filename" members.

 Functions below are not documented and not very well tested - feedback welcome
     QuickDecode
     EncodeMulti
     EncodePartial
     EncodeToStream
     EncodeToFile
     E_PrepSingle
     E_PrepPartial

 EXTENSION FUNCTIONS
   Functions found in this module but not documented in the uulib
   documentation:

   $msg = straction ACT_xxx
       Return a human readable string representing the given action code.

   $msg = strerror RET_xxx
       Return a human readable string representing the given error code.

   $str = strencoding xxx_ENCODED
       Return the name of the encoding type as a string.

   $str = strmsglevel MSG_xxx
       Returns the message level as a string.

   SetFileNameCallback $cb
       Sets (or queries) the FileNameCallback, which is called whenever the
       decoding library can't find a filename and wants to extract a
       filename from the subject line of a posting. The callback will be
       called with two arguments, the subject line and the current
       candidate for the filename. The latter argument can be "undef",
       which means that no filename could be found (and likely no one
       exists, so it is safe to also return "undef" in this case). If it
       doesn't return anything (not even "undef"!), then nothing happens,
       so this is a no-op callback:

          sub cb {
             return ();
          }

       If it returns "undef", then this indicates that no filename could be
       found. In all other cases, the return value is taken to be the
       filename.

       This is a slightly more useful callback:

         sub cb {
            return unless $_[1]; # skip "Re:"-plies et al.
            my ($subject, $filename) = @_;
            # if we find some *.rar, take it
            return $1 if $subject =~ /(\w+\.rar)/;
            # otherwise just pass what we have
            return ();
         }

LARGE EXAMPLE DECODER
   The general workflow for decoding is like this:

   1. Configure options with "SetOption" or "SetXXXCallback".
   2. Load all source files with "LoadFile".
   3. Optionally "Smerge".
   4. Iterate over all "GetFileList" items (i.e. result files).
   5. "CleanUp" to delete files and free items.

   What follows is the file "example-decoder" from the distribution that
   illustrates the above worklfow in a non-trivial example.

      #!/usr/bin/perl

      # decode all the files in the directory uusrc/ and copy
      # the resulting files to uudst/

      use Convert::UUlib ':all';

      sub namefilter {
         my ($path) = @_;

         $path=~s/^.*[\/\\]//;

         $path
      }

      sub busycb {
         my ($action, $curfile, $partno, $numparts, $percent, $fsize) = @_;
         $_[0]=straction($action);
         print "busy_callback(", (join ",",@_), ")\n";
         0
      }

      SetOption OPT_RBUF, 128*1024;
      SetOption OPT_WBUF, 1024*1024;
      SetOption OPT_IGNMODE, 1;
      SetOption OPT_IGNMODE, 1;
      SetOption OPT_VERBOSE, 1;
      SetOption OPT_AUTOCHK, 0;

      # show the three ways you can set callback functions. I normally
      # prefer the one with the sub inplace.
      SetFNameFilter \&namefilter;

      SetBusyCallback "busycb", 333;

      SetMsgCallback sub {
         my ($msg, $level) = @_;
         print uc strmsglevel $_[1], ": $msg\n";
      };

      # the following non-trivial FileNameCallback takes care
      # of some subject lines not detected properly by uulib:
      SetFileNameCallback sub {
         return unless $_[1]; # skip "Re:"-plies et al.
         local $_ = $_[0];

         # the following rules are rather effective on some newsgroups,
         # like alt.binaries.games.anime, where non-mime, uuencoded data
         # is very common

         # if we find some *.rar, take it as the filename
         return $1 if /(\S{3,}\.(?:[rstuvwxyz]\d\d|rar))\s/i;

         # one common subject format
         return $1 if /- "(.{2,}?\..+?)" (?:yenc )?\(\d+\/\d+\)/i;

         # - filename.par (04/55)
         return $1 if /- "?(\S{3,}\.\S+?)"? (?:yenc )?\(\d+\/\d+\)/i;

         # - (xxx) No. 1 sayuri81.jpg 756565 bytes
         # - (20 files) No.17 Roseanne.jpg [2/2]
         return $1 if /No\.[ 0-9]+ (\S+\....) (?:\d+ bytes )?\[/;

         # try to detect some common forms of filenames
         return $1 if /([a-z0-9_\-+.]{3,}\.[a-z]{3,4}(?:.\d+))/i;

         # otherwise just pass what we have
         ()
      };

      # now read all files in the directory uusrc/*
      for (<uusrc/*>) {
         my ($retval, $count) = LoadFile ($_, $_, 1);
         print "file($_), status(", strerror $retval, ") parts($count)\n";
      }

      Smerge -1;

      SetOption OPT_SAVEPATH, "uudst/";

      # now wade through all files and their source parts
      for my $uu (GetFileList) {
         print "file ", $uu->filename, "\n";
         print " state ", $uu->state, "\n";
         print " mode ", $uu->mode, "\n";
         print " uudet ", strencoding $uu->uudet, "\n";
         print " size ", $uu->size, "\n";
         print " subfname ", $uu->subfname, "\n";
         print " mimeid ", $uu->mimeid, "\n";
         print " mimetype ", $uu->mimetype, "\n";

         # print additional info about all parts
         print " parts";
         for ($uu->parts) {
            for my $k (sort keys %$_) {
               print " $k=$_->{$k}";
            }
            print "\n";
         }

         $uu->remove_temp;

         if (my $err = $uu->decode) {
            print " ERROR ", strerror $err, "\n";
         } else {
            print " successfully saved as uudst/", $uu->filename, "\n";
         }
      }

      print "cleanup...\n";

      CleanUp;

PERLMULTICORE SUPPORT
   This module supports the perlmulticore standard (see
   <http://perlmulticore.schmorp.de/> for more info) for the following
   functions - generally these are functions accessing the disk and/or
   using considerable CPU time:

      LoadFile
      $item->decode
      $item->decode_temp
      $item->remove_temp
      $item->info

   The perl interpreter will be reacquired/released on every callback
   invocation, so for performance reasons, callbacks should be avoided if
   that is costly.

   Future versions might enable multicore support for more functions.

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
   The original uulib library this module uses was written at a time where
   main memory of measured in megabytes and buffer overflows as a security
   thign didn't exist. While a lot of security fixes have been applied over
   the years (includign some defense in depth mechanism that can shield
   against a lot of as-of-yet undetected bugs), using this library for
   security purposes requires care.

   Likewise, file sizes when the uulib library was written were tiny
   compared to today, so do not expect this library to handle files larger
   than 2GB.

   Lastly, this module uses a very "C-like" interface, which means it
   doesn't protect you from invalid points as you might expect from "more
   perlish" modules - for example, accessing a file item object after
   callinbg "CleanUp" will likely result in crashes, memory corruption, or
   worse.

AUTHOR
   Marc Lehmann <[email protected]>, the original uulib library was
   written by Frank Pilhofer <[email protected]>, and later
   heavily bugfixed by Marc Lehmann.

SEE ALSO
   perl(1), uudeview homepage at <http://www.fpx.de/fp/Software/UUDeview/>.