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=encoding utf8 =head1 NAME MIME::Types - Definition of MIME types =head1 INHERITANCE MIME::Types is an Exporter =head1 SYNOPSIS use MIME::Types; my $mt = MIME::Types->new(...); # MIME::Types object my $type = $mt->type('text/plain'); # MIME::Type object my $type = $mt->mimeTypeOf('gif'); my $type = $mt->mimeTypeOf('picture.jpg'); my @types = $mt->httpAccept('text/html, application/json;q=0.1') =head1 DESCRIPTION MIME types are used in many applications (for instance as part of e-mail and HTTP traffic) to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. or expected. See RFC2045 at F<https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2045.txt> Sometimes detailed knowledge about a mime-type is need, however this module only knows about the file-name extensions which relate to some filetype. It can also be used to produce the right format: types which are not registered at IANA need to use 'x-' prefixes. This object administers a huge list of known mime-types, combined from various sources. For instance, it contains B<all IANA> types and the knowledge of Apache. Probably the most complete table on the net! =head2 MIME::Types and daemons (fork) If your program uses fork (usually for a daemon), then you want to have the type table initialized before you start forking. So, first call my $mt = MIME::Types->new; Later, each time you create this object (you may, of course, also reuse the object you create here) you will get access to B<the same global table> of types. =head1 METHODS =head2 Constructors =over 4 =item MIME::Types-E<gt>B<new>(%options) Create a new C<MIME::Types> object which manages the data. In the current implementation, it does not matter whether you create this object often within your program, but in the future this may change. -Option --Default db_file <installed source> only_complete <false> only_iana <false> skip_extensions <false> =over 2 =item db_file => FILENAME The location of the database which contains the type information. Only the first instantiation of this object will have this parameter obeyed. [2.10] This parameter can be globally overruled via the C<PERL_MIME_TYPE_DB> environment variable, which may be needed in case of PAR or other tricky installations. For PAR, you probably set this environment variable to "inc/lib/MIME/types.db" =item only_complete => BOOLEAN Only include complete MIME type definitions: requires at least one known extension. This will reduce the number of entries --and with that the amount of memory consumed-- considerably. In your program you have to decide: the first time that you call the creator (C<new>) determines whether you get the full or the partial information. =item only_iana => BOOLEAN Only load the types which are currently known by IANA. =item skip_extensions => BOOLEAN Do not load the table to map extensions to types, which is quite large. =back =back =head2 Knowledge =over 4 =item $obj-E<gt>B<addType>($type, ...) Add one or more TYPEs to the set of known types. Each TYPE is a C<MIME::Type> which must be experimental: either the main-type or the sub-type must start with C<x->. Please inform the maintainer of this module when registered types are missing. Before version MIME::Types version 1.14, a warning was produced when an unknown IANA type was added. This has been removed, because some people need that to get their application to work locally... broken applications... =item $obj-E<gt>B<extensions>() Returns a list of all defined extensions. =item $obj-E<gt>B<listTypes>() Returns a list of all defined mime-types by name only. This will B<not> instantiate L<MIME::Type|MIME::Type> objects. See L<types()|MIME::Types/"Knowledge"> =item $obj-E<gt>B<mimeTypeOf>($filename) Returns the C<MIME::Type> object which belongs to the FILENAME (or simply its filename extension) or C<undef> if the file type is unknown. The extension is used and considered case-insensitive. In some cases, more than one type is known for a certain filename extension. In that case, the preferred one is taken (for an unclear definition of preference) example: use of mimeTypeOf() my $types = MIME::Types->new; my $mime = $types->mimeTypeOf('gif'); my $mime = $types->mimeTypeOf('picture.jpg'); print $mime->isBinary; =item $obj-E<gt>B<type>($string) Returns the C<MIME::Type> which describes the type related to STRING. [2.00] Only one type will be returned. [before 2.00] One type may be described more than once. Different extensions may be in use for this type, and different operating systems may cause more than one C<MIME::Type> object to be defined. In scalar context, only the first is returned. =item $obj-E<gt>B<types>() Returns a list of all defined mime-types. For reasons of backwards compatibility, this will instantiate L<MIME::Type|MIME::Type> objects, which will be returned. See L<listTypes()|MIME::Types/"Knowledge">. =back =head2 HTTP support =over 4 =item $obj-E<gt>B<httpAccept>($header) [2.07] Decompose a typical HTTP-Accept header, and sort it based on the included priority information. Returned is a sorted list of type names, where the highest priority type is first. The list may contain '*/*' (accept any) or a '*' as subtype. Ill-formated typenames are ignored. On equal qualities, the order is kept. See RFC2616 section 14.1 example: my @types = $types->httpAccept('text/html, application/json;q=0.9'); =item $obj-E<gt>B<httpAcceptBest>($accept|\@types, @have) [2.07] The C<$accept> string is processed via L<httpAccept()|MIME::Types/"HTTP support"> to order the types on preference. You may also provide a list of ordered C<@types> which may have been the result of that method, called earlier. As second parameter, you pass a LIST of types you C<@have> to offer. Those need to be L<MIME::Type|MIME::Type> objects. The preferred type will get selected. When none of these are accepted by the client, this will return C<undef>. It should result in a 406 server response. example: my $accept = $req->header('Accept'); my @have = map $mt->type($_), qw[text/plain text/html]; my @ext = $mt->httpAcceptBest($accept, @have); =item $obj-E<gt>B<httpAcceptSelect>($accept|\@types, @filenames|\@filenames) [2.07] Like L<httpAcceptBest()|MIME::Types/"HTTP support">, but now we do not return a pair with mime-type and filename, not just the type. If $accept is C<undef>, the first filename is returned. example: use HTTP::Status ':constants'; use File::Glob 'bsd_glob'; # understands blanks in filename my @filenames = bsd_glob "$imagedir/$fnbase.*; my $accept = $req->header('Accept'); my ($fn, $mime) = $mt->httpAcceptSelect($accept, @filenames); my $code = defined $mime ? HTTP_NOT_ACCEPTABLE : HTTP_OK; =back =head1 FUNCTIONS The next functions are provided for backward compatibility with MIME::Types versions [0.06] and below. This code originates from Jeff Okamoto F<okamoto@corp.hp.com> and others. =over 4 =item B<by_mediatype>(TYPE) This function takes a media type and returns a list or anonymous array of anonymous three-element arrays whose values are the file name suffix used to identify it, the media type, and a content encoding. TYPE can be a full type name (contains '/', and will be matched in full), a partial type (which is used as regular expression) or a real regular expression. =item B<by_suffix>(FILENAME|SUFFIX) Like C<mimeTypeOf>, but does not return an C<MIME::Type> object. If the file +type is unknown, both the returned media type and encoding are empty strings. example: use of function by_suffix() use MIME::Types 'by_suffix'; my ($mediatype, $encoding) = by_suffix('image.gif'); my $refdata = by_suffix('image.gif'); my ($mediatype, $encoding) = @$refdata; =item B<import_mime_types>() This method has been removed: mime-types are only useful if understood by many parties. Therefore, the IANA assigns names which can be used. In the table kept by this C<MIME::Types> module all these names, plus the most often used temporary names are kept. When names seem to be missing, please contact the maintainer for inclusion. =back =head1 SEE ALSO This module is part of MIME-Types distribution version 2.24, built on December 28, 2022. Website: F<http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/> =head1 LICENSE Copyrights 1999-2022 by [Mark Overmeer <markov@cpan.org>]. For other contributors see ChangeLog. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See F<http://dev.perl.org/licenses/>