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20076: improved function using always

This commit is contained in:
Peter Stephenson 2004-06-22 14:35:05 +00:00
parent d591334e9d
commit 08bd15e282

View file

@ -62,9 +62,8 @@ zstyle -a :mime: mime-types type_files ||
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() {
{
mime-setup-add-type() {
local type suffix
local -a array
@ -90,115 +89,117 @@ mime-setup-add-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
# 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
# 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=
# 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 $elt
fi
done
# Syntactically split line to preserve quoted words.
array=(${(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})
# 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
[[ -n $type ]] && mime-setup-add-type $type $array
else
# Simple.
mime-setup-add-type ${=line}
fi
done <$file
done
done
} always {
unfunction mime-setup-add-type >&/dev/null
}
# Loop through files to find handlers for types.
for file in $cap_files; do
[[ -r $file ]] || continue
[[ -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
# 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
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:
# 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
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