# Handler for MIME types using associative arrays # zsh_mime_handlers and zsh_mime_flags set up by zsh-mime-setup. # # The only flags it handles are copiousoutput and needsterminal. # copiousoutput is assumed to imply needsterminal. Apart from # those, it tries to be a bit cunning about quoting, which # can be a nightmare in MIME handling. If it sees something like # netscape %s # and it only has one file to handle (the usual case then it will handle it # internally just by appending a file.) # # Anything else is handled by passing to sh -c, which is the only think # with a high probability of working. If it sees something with # quotes, e.g. # /usr/bin/links "%s" # it will assume someone else has tried to fix the quoting problem and not # do that. If it sees something with no quotes but other metacharacters, # e.g. # cat %s | handler # then it will do any quoting and pass the result to sh -c. # So for example if the argument is "My File", the command executed # is supposedly # sh -c 'cat My\ File | handler' # # This note is mostly here so you can work out what I tried to do when # it goes horribly wrong. emulate -L zsh setopt extendedglob cbases # We need zformat from zsh/zutil for %s replacement. zmodload -i zsh/zutil # Always called with a filename argument first. # There might be other arguments; don't really know what to do # with these, but if they came from e.g. `*.ps' then we might # just as well pass them all down. However, we just take the # suffix from the first since that's what invoked us via suffix -s. local suffix context local -a match mbegin mend [[ $1 = (#b)*.([^.]##) ]] || return 1 suffix=$match[1] context=":mime:.${suffix}:" local handler flags zstyle -s $context handler handler || handler="${zsh_mime_handlers[$suffix]}" zstyle -s $context flags flags || flags="${zsh_mime_flags[$suffix]}" local -a files local hasmeta stdin # See if the handler has shell metacharacters in. # Don't count whitespace since we can split that when it's unquoted. if [[ $handler = *[\\\;\*\?\|\"\'\`\$]* ]]; then hasmeta=1 fi local -a execargs if [[ $handler = *%s* ]]; then # We need to replace %s with the file(s). local command if [[ -n $hasmeta || $# -gt 1 ]]; then # The handler is complicated, either due to special # characters or multiple files. We are going to pass it # down to sh, since it's probably written for sh syntax. # # See if it's a good idea to quote the filename(s). # It isn't if there are already quotes in the handler, since # that means somebody already tried to take account of that. if [[ $handler = *[\'\"]* ]]; then # Probably we ought not even to handle multiple # arguments, but at least the error message ought # to make it obvious what's going on. zformat -f command $handler s:"$argv" else files=(${(q)argv}) zformat -f command $handler s:"$files" fi execargs=(sh -c $command) else # Simple command, one filename. # Split and add the file without extra quoting, # since later we will just execute the array as is. for command in ${=handler}; do zformat -f command $command s:"$1" execargs+=($command) done fi else # If there's no %s, the input is supposed to come from stdin. stdin=1 if [[ -n $hasmeta ]]; then execargs=(sh -c "$handler") else execargs=(${=handler}) fi fi # Now execute the command in the appropriate fashion. if [[ $flags = *copiousoutput* ]]; then # We need to page the output. # Careful in case PAGER is a set of commands and arguments. local -a pager zstyle -a $context pager pager || pager=(${=PAGER:-more}) if [[ -n $stdin ]]; then cat $argv | $execargs | $pager else $execargs | eval ${PAGER:-more} fi elif [[ $flags = *needsterminal* || -z $DISPLAY ]]; then # Needs a terminal, so run synchronously. # Obviously, if $DISPLAY is empty but the handler needs a # GUI we are in trouble anyway. However, it's possible for # the handler to be smart about this, like pick-web-browser, # and even if it just produces an error message it's better to # have it run synchronously. if [[ -n $stdin ]]; then cat $argv | $execargs else $execargs fi else # Doesn't need a terminal and we have a $DISPLAY, so run # it in the background. sh probably isn't smart enough to # exec the last command in the list, but it's not a big deal. # # The following Rococo construction is to try to make # the job output for the backgrounded command descriptive. # Otherwise it's equivalent to removing the eval and all the quotes, # including the (q) flags. if [[ -n $stdin ]]; then eval cat ${(q)argv} "|" ${(q)execargs} "&" else eval ${(q)execargs} "&" fi fi