I've seen 0x1b (\e) in at least one message and some other
possibly non-printable chars. In any case, make sure they're
valid XML with us-ascii encoding as far as xmlstarlet(1) thinks
so.
---
lib/PublicInbox/Hval.pm | 16 +++++++++++++++-
1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/lib/PublicInbox/Hval.pm b/lib/PublicInbox/Hval.pm
index 652aef3..f262073 100644
--- a/lib/PublicInbox/Hval.pm
+++ b/lib/PublicInbox/Hval.pm
@@ -52,10 +52,24 @@ my %xhtml_map = (
'>' => '>',
);
+$xhtml_map{chr($_)} = sprintf('\\x%02x', $_) for (0..31);
+# some of these overrides are standard C escapes so they're
+# easy-to-understand when rendered.
+$xhtml_map{"\x00"} = '\\0'; # NUL
+$xhtml_map{"\x07"} = '\\a'; # bell
+$xhtml_map{"\x08"} = '\\b'; # backspace
+$xhtml_map{"\x09"} = "\t"; # obvious to show as-is
+$xhtml_map{"\x0a"} = "\n"; # obvious to show as-is
+$xhtml_map{"\x0b"} = '\\v'; # vertical tab
+$xhtml_map{"\x0c"} = '\\f'; # form feed
+$xhtml_map{"\x0d"} = '\\r'; # carriage ret (not preceding \n)
+$xhtml_map{"\x1b"} = '^['; # ASCII escape (mutt seems to escape this way)
+$xhtml_map{"\x7f"} = '\\x7f'; # DEL
+
sub ascii_html {
my ($s) = @_;
$s =~ s/\r\n/\n/sg; # fixup bad line endings
- $s =~ s/([<>&'"])/$xhtml_map{$1}/ge;
+ $s =~ s/([<>&'"\x7f\x00-\x1f])/$xhtml_map{$1}/sge;
$enc_ascii->encode($s, Encode::HTMLCREF);
}
--
EW
--
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