#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# $File: msooxml,v 1.19 2023/03/14 19:46:15 christos Exp $
# msooxml:  file(1) magic for Microsoft Office XML
# From: Ralf Brown <[email protected]>

# .docx, .pptx, and .xlsx are XML plus other files inside a ZIP
#   archive.  The first member file is normally "[Content_Types].xml".
#   but some libreoffice generated files put this later. Perhaps skip
#   the "[Content_Types].xml" test?
# Since MSOOXML doesn't have anything like the uncompressed "mimetype"
#   file of ePub or OpenDocument, we'll have to scan for a filename
#   which can distinguish between the three types

0               name            msooxml
>0              string          word/           Microsoft Word 2007+
!:mime application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
!:ext   docx
>0              string          ppt/            Microsoft PowerPoint 2007+
!:mime application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation
!:ext   pptx
>0              string          xl/             Microsoft Excel 2007+
!:mime application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet
!:ext   xlsx
>0              string          visio/          Microsoft Visio 2013+
!:mime application/vnd.ms-visio.drawing.main+xml
>0              string          AppManifest.xaml        Microsoft Silverlight Application
!:mime application/x-silverlight-app

# start by checking for ZIP local file header signature
0               string          PK\003\004
!:strength +10
# make sure the first file is correct
>0x1E           use             msooxml
>0x1E           default         x
>>0x1E          regex           \\[Content_Types\\]\\.xml|_rels/\\.rels|docProps|customXml
# skip to the second local file header
# since some documents include a 520-byte extra field following the file
# header, we need to scan for the next header
>>>(18.l+49)    search/6000     PK\003\004
# now skip to the *third* local file header; again, we need to scan due to a
# 520-byte extra field following the file header
>>>>&26         search/6000     PK\003\004
# and check the subdirectory name to determine which type of OOXML
# file we have.  Correct the mimetype with the registered ones:
# https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc179224.aspx
>>>>>&26                use             msooxml
>>>>>&26                default         x
# OpenOffice/Libreoffice orders ZIP entry differently, so check the 4th file
>>>>>>&26       search/6000     PK\003\004
>>>>>>>&26      use             msooxml
# Some OOXML generators add an extra customXml directory. Check another file.
>>>>>>>&26      default         x
>>>>>>>>&26     search/6000     PK\003\004
>>>>>>>>>&26    use             msooxml
>>>>>>>>>&26    default         x               Microsoft OOXML
>>>>>>>&26      default         x               Microsoft OOXML
>>>>>&26        default         x               Microsoft OOXML
>>0x1E          regex           \\[trash\\]
>>>&26          search/6000     PK\003\004
>>>>&26         search/6000     PK\003\004
>>>>>&26        use             msooxml
>>>>>&26        default         x
>>>>>>&26       search/6000     PK\003\004
>>>>>>>&26      use             msooxml
>>>>>>>&26      default         x               Microsoft OOXML
>>>>>>&26       default         x               Microsoft OOXML
>>>>>&26        default         x               Microsoft OOXML