193 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
193 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 383
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Title: Non-decodable Bytes in System Character Interfaces
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Martin v. Löwis <martin@v.loewis.de>
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Status: Final
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 22-Apr-2009
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Python-Version: 3.1
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Post-History:
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Abstract
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========
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File names, environment variables, and command line arguments are
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defined as being character data in POSIX; the C APIs however allow
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passing arbitrary bytes - whether these conform to a certain encoding
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or not. This PEP proposes a means of dealing with such irregularities
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by embedding the bytes in character strings in such a way that allows
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recreation of the original byte string.
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Rationale
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=========
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The C char type is a data type that is commonly used to represent both
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character data and bytes. Certain POSIX interfaces are specified and
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widely understood as operating on character data, however, the system
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call interfaces make no assumption on the encoding of these data, and
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pass them on as-is. With Python 3, character strings use a
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Unicode-based internal representation, making it difficult to ignore
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the encoding of byte strings in the same way that the C interfaces can
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ignore the encoding.
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On the other hand, Microsoft Windows NT has corrected the original
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design limitation of Unix, and made it explicit in its system
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interfaces that these data (file names, environment variables, command
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line arguments) are indeed character data, by providing a
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Unicode-based API (keeping a C-char-based one for backwards
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compatibility).
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For Python 3, one proposed solution is to provide two sets of APIs: a
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byte-oriented one, and a character-oriented one, where the
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character-oriented one would be limited to not being able to represent
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all data accurately. Unfortunately, for Windows, the situation would
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be exactly the opposite: the byte-oriented interface cannot represent
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all data; only the character-oriented API can. As a consequence,
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libraries and applications that want to support all user data in a
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cross-platform manner have to accept mish-mash of bytes and characters
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exactly in the way that caused endless troubles for Python 2.x.
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With this PEP, a uniform treatment of these data as characters becomes
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possible. The uniformity is achieved by using specific encoding
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algorithms, meaning that the data can be converted back to bytes on
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POSIX systems only if the same encoding is used.
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Being able to treat such strings uniformly will allow application
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writers to abstract from details specific to the operating system, and
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reduces the risk of one API failing when the other API would have
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worked.
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Specification
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=============
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On Windows, Python uses the wide character APIs to access
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character-oriented APIs, allowing direct conversion of the
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environmental data to Python str objects ([1]).
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On POSIX systems, Python currently applies the locale's encoding to
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convert the byte data to Unicode, failing for characters that cannot
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be decoded. With this PEP, non-decodable bytes >= 128 will be
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represented as lone surrogate codes U+DC80..U+DCFF. Bytes below
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128 will produce exceptions; see the discussion below.
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To convert non-decodable bytes, a new error handler ([2])
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"surrogateescape" is introduced, which produces these surrogates. On
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encoding, the error handler converts the surrogate back to the
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corresponding byte. This error handler will be used in any API that
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receives or produces file names, command line arguments, or
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environment variables.
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The error handler interface is extended to allow the encode error
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handler to return byte strings immediately, in addition to returning
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Unicode strings which then get encoded again (also see the discussion
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below).
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Byte-orientied interfaces that already exist in Python 3.0 are not
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affected by this specification. They are neither enhanced nor
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deprecated.
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External libraries that operate on file names (such as GUI file
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chosers) should also encode them according to the PEP.
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Discussion
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==========
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While providing a uniform API to non-decodable bytes, this interface
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has the limitation that chosen representation only "works" if the data
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get converted back to bytes with the surrogateescape error handler
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also. Encoding the data with the locale's encoding and the (default)
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strict error handler will raise an exception, encoding them with UTF-8
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will produce non-sensical data.
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Data obtained from other sources may conflict with data produced
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by this PEP. Dealing with such conflicts is out of scope of the PEP.
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This PEP allows the possibility of "smuggling" bytes in character
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strings. This would be a security risk if the bytes are
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security-critical when interpreted as characters on a target system,
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such as path name separators. For this reason, the PEP rejects
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smuggling bytes below 128. If the target system uses EBCDIC, such
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smuggled bytes may still be a security risk, allowing smuggling of
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e.g. square brackets or the backslash. Python currently does not
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support EBCDIC, so this should not be a problem in practice. Anybody
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porting Python to an EBCDIC system might want to adjust the error
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handlers, or come up with other approaches to address the security
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risks.
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Encodings that are not compatible with ASCII are not supported by
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this specification; bytes in the ASCII range that fail to decode
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will cause an exception. It is widely agreed that such encodings
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should not be used as locale charsets.
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For most applications, we assume that they eventually pass data
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received from a system interface back into the same system
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interfaces. For example, an application invoking os.listdir() will
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likely pass the result strings back into APIs like os.stat() or
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open(), which then encodes them back into their original byte
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representation. Applications that need to process the original byte
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strings can obtain them by encoding the character strings with the
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file system encoding, passing "surrogateescape" as the error handler
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name. For example, a function that works like os.listdir, except for
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accepting and returning bytes, would be written as::
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def listdir_b(dirname):
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fse = sys.getfilesystemencoding()
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dirname = dirname.decode(fse, "surrogateescape")
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for fn in os.listdir(dirname):
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# fn is now a str object
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yield fn.encode(fse, "surrogateescape")
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The extension to the encode error handler interface proposed by this
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PEP is necessary to implement the 'surrogateescape' error handler,
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because there are required byte sequences which cannot be generated
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from replacement Unicode. However, the encode error handler interface
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presently requires replacement Unicode to be provided in lieu of the
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non-encodable Unicode from the source string. Then it promptly
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encodes that replacement Unicode. In some error handlers, such as the
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'surrogateescape' proposed here, it is also simpler and more efficient
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for the error handler to provide a pre-encoded replacement byte
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string, rather than forcing it to calculating Unicode from which the
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encoder would create the desired bytes.
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A few alternative approaches have been proposed:
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* create a new string subclass that supports embedded bytes
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* use different escape schemes, such as escaping with a NUL
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character, or mapping to infrequent characters.
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Of these proposals, the approach of escaping each byte XX
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with the sequence U+0000 U+00XX has the disadvantage that
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encoding to UTF-8 will introduce a NUL byte in the UTF-8
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sequence. As a consequence, C libraries may interpret this
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as a string termination, even though the string continues.
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In particular, the gtk libraries will truncate text in this
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case; other libraries may show similar problems.
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References
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==========
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[1] PEP 277
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"Unicode file name support for Windows NT"
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http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0277/
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[2] PEP 293
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"Codec Error Handling Callbacks"
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http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0293/
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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