Package com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.packaging.mime.internet

Source Code of com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.packaging.mime.internet.NullInputStream

/*
* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS HEADER.
*
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*
* The contents of this file are subject to the terms of either the GNU
* General Public License Version 2 only ("GPL") or the Common Development
* and Distribution License("CDDL") (collectively, the "License").  You
* may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain
* a copy of the License at https://glassfish.dev.java.net/public/CDDL+GPL.html
* or glassfish/bootstrap/legal/LICENSE.txt.  See the License for the specific
* language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
*
* When distributing the software, include this License Header Notice in each
* file and include the License file at glassfish/bootstrap/legal/LICENSE.txt.
* Sun designates this particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception
* as provided by Sun in the GPL Version 2 section of the License file that
* accompanied this code.  If applicable, add the following below the License
* Header, with the fields enclosed by brackets [] replaced by your own
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*
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*/
/*
* @(#)MimeUtility.java       1.45 03/03/10
*/



package com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.packaging.mime.internet;

import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;

import javax.activation.DataHandler;
import javax.activation.DataSource;

import com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.packaging.mime.MessagingException;
import com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.packaging.mime.util.*;

/**
* This is a utility class that provides various MIME related
* functionality. <p>
*
* There are a set of methods to encode and decode MIME headers as
* per RFC 2047. A brief description on handling such headers is
* given below: <p>
*
* RFC 822 mail headers <strong>must</strong> contain only US-ASCII
* characters. Headers that contain non US-ASCII characters must be
* encoded so that they contain only US-ASCII characters. Basically,
* this process involves using either BASE64 or QP to encode certain
* characters. RFC 2047 describes this in detail. <p>
*
* In Java, Strings contain (16 bit) Unicode characters. ASCII is a
* subset of Unicode (and occupies the range 0 - 127). A String
* that contains only ASCII characters is already mail-safe. If the
* String contains non US-ASCII characters, it must be encoded. An
* additional complexity in this step is that since Unicode is not
* yet a widely used charset, one might want to first charset-encode
* the String into another charset and then do the transfer-encoding.
* <p>
* Note that to get the actual bytes of a mail-safe String (say,
* for sending over SMTP), one must do
* <p><blockquote><pre>
*
*  byte[] bytes = string.getBytes("iso-8859-1"); 
*
* </pre></blockquote><p>
*
* The <code>setHeader</code> and <code>addHeader</code> methods
* on MimeMessage and MimeBodyPart assume that the given header values
* are Unicode strings that contain only US-ASCII characters. Hence
* the callers of those methods must insure that the values they pass
* do not contain non US-ASCII characters. The methods in this class
* help do this. <p>
*
* The <code>getHeader</code> family of methods on MimeMessage and
* MimeBodyPart return the raw header value. These might be encoded
* as per RFC 2047, and if so, must be decoded into Unicode Strings.
* The methods in this class help to do this. <p>
*
* Several System properties control strict conformance to the MIME
* spec.  Note that these are not session properties but must be set
* globally as System properties. <p>
*
* The <code>mail.mime.decodetext.strict</code> property controls
* decoding of MIME encoded words.  The MIME spec requires that encoded
* words start at the beginning of a whitespace separated word.  Some
* mailers incorrectly include encoded words in the middle of a word.
* If the <code>mail.mime.decodetext.strict</code> System property is
* set to <code>"false"</code>, an attempt will be made to decode these
* illegal encoded words. The default is true. <p>
*
* The <code>mail.mime.encodeeol.strict</code> property controls the
* choice of Content-Transfer-Encoding for MIME parts that are not of
* type "text".  Often such parts will contain textual data for which
* an encoding that allows normal end of line conventions is appropriate.
* In rare cases, such a part will appear to contain entirely textual
* data, but will require an encoding that preserves CR and LF characters
* without change.  If the <code>mail.mime.decodetext.strict</code>
* System property is set to <code>"true"</code>, such an encoding will
* be used when necessary.  The default is false. <p>
*
* In addition, the <code>mail.mime.charset</code> System property can
* be used to specify the default MIME charset to use for encoded words
* and text parts that don't otherwise specify a charset.  Normally, the
* default MIME charset is derived from the default Java charset, as
* specified in the <code>file.encoding</code> System property.  Most
* applications will have no need to explicitly set the default MIME
* charset.  In cases where the default MIME charset to be used for
* mail messages is different than the charset used for files stored on
* the system, this property should be set.
*
* @version 1.45, 03/03/10
* @author  John Mani
* @author  Bill Shannon
*/

public class MimeUtility {

    // This class cannot be instantiated
    private MimeUtility() { }

    public static final int ALL = -1;

    private static final int BUFFER_SIZE = 1024;
    private static boolean decodeStrict = true;
    private static boolean encodeEolStrict = false;
    private static boolean foldEncodedWords = false;
    private static boolean foldText = true;

    static {
  try {
      String s = System.getProperty("mail.mime.decodetext.strict");
      // default to true
      decodeStrict = s == null || !s.equalsIgnoreCase("false");
      s = System.getProperty("mail.mime.encodeeol.strict");
      // default to false
      encodeEolStrict = s != null && s.equalsIgnoreCase("true");
      s = System.getProperty("mail.mime.foldencodedwords");
      // default to false
      foldEncodedWords = s != null && s.equalsIgnoreCase("true");
      s = System.getProperty("mail.mime.foldtext");
      // default to true
      foldText = s == null || !s.equalsIgnoreCase("false");
  } catch (SecurityException sex) {
      // ignore it
  }
    }
   

    /**
     * Get the content-transfer-encoding that should be applied
     * to the input stream of this datasource, to make it mailsafe. <p>
     *
     * The algorithm used here is: <br>
     * <ul>
     * <li>
     * If the primary type of this datasource is "text" and if all
     * the bytes in its input stream are US-ASCII, then the encoding
     * is "7bit". If more than half of the bytes are non-US-ASCII, then
     * the encoding is "base64". If less than half of the bytes are
     * non-US-ASCII, then the encoding is "quoted-printable".
     * <li>
     * If the primary type of this datasource is not "text", then if
     * all the bytes of its input stream are US-ASCII, the encoding
     * is "7bit". If there is even one non-US-ASCII character, the
     * encoding is "base64".
     * </ul>
     *
     * @param  ds  DataSource
     * @return    the encoding. This is either "7bit",
     *      "quoted-printable" or "base64"
     */
    public static String getEncoding(DataSource ds) {
  ContentType cType = null;
  InputStream is = null;
  String encoding = null;

  try {
      cType = new ContentType(ds.getContentType());
      is = ds.getInputStream();
  } catch (Exception ex) {
      return "base64"; // what else ?!
  }

  boolean isText = cType.match("text/*");
  // if not text, stop processing when we see non-ASCII
  int i = checkAscii(is, ALL, !isText);
  switch (i) {
  case ALL_ASCII:
      encoding = "7bit"; // all ascii
      break;
  case MOSTLY_ASCII:
      encoding = "quoted-printable"; // mostly ascii
      break;
  default:
      encoding = "base64"; // mostly binary
      break;
  }

  // Close the input stream
  try {
      is.close();
  } catch (IOException ioex) { }

  return encoding;
    }

    /**
     * Same as <code>getEncoding(DataSource)</code> except that instead
     * of reading the data from an <code>InputStream</code> it uses the
     * <code>writeTo</code> method to examine the data.  This is more
     * efficient in the common case of a <code>DataHandler</code>
     * created with an object and a MIME type (for example, a
     * "text/plain" String) because all the I/O is done in this
     * thread.  In the case requiring an <code>InputStream</code> the
     * <code>DataHandler</code> uses a thread, a pair of pipe streams,
     * and the <code>writeTo</code> method to produce the data. <p>
     *
     * @since  JavaMail 1.2
     */
    public static String getEncoding(DataHandler dh) {
  ContentType cType = null;
  String encoding = null;

  /*
   * Try to pick the most efficient means of determining the
   * encoding.  If this DataHandler was created using a DataSource,
   * the getEncoding(DataSource) method is typically faster.  If
   * the DataHandler was created with an object, this method is
   * much faster.  To distinguish the two cases, we use a heuristic.
   * A DataHandler created with an object will always have a null name.
   * A DataHandler created with a DataSource will usually have a
   * non-null name.
   *
   * XXX - This is actually quite a disgusting hack, but it makes
   *   a common case run over twice as fast.
   */
  if (dh.getName() != null)
      return getEncoding(dh.getDataSource());

  try {
      cType = new ContentType(dh.getContentType());
  } catch (Exception ex) {
      return "base64"; // what else ?!
  }

  if (cType.match("text/*")) {
      // Check all of the available bytes
      AsciiOutputStream aos = new AsciiOutputStream(false, false);
      try {
    dh.writeTo(aos);
      } catch (IOException ex) { }  // ignore it
      switch (aos.getAscii()) {
      case ALL_ASCII:
    encoding = "7bit"; // all ascii
    break;
      case MOSTLY_ASCII:
    encoding = "quoted-printable"; // mostly ascii
    break;
      default:
    encoding = "base64"; // mostly binary
    break;
      }
  } else { // not "text"
      // Check all of available bytes, break out if we find
      // at least one non-US-ASCII character
      AsciiOutputStream aos =
      new AsciiOutputStream(true, encodeEolStrict);
      try {
    dh.writeTo(aos);
      } catch (IOException ex) { }  // ignore it
      if (aos.getAscii() == ALL_ASCII) // all ascii
    encoding = "7bit";
      else // found atleast one non-ascii character, use b64
    encoding = "base64";
  }

  return encoding;
    }

    /**
     * Decode the given input stream. The Input stream returned is
     * the decoded input stream. All the encodings defined in RFC 2045
     * are supported here. They include "base64", "quoted-printable",
     * "7bit", "8bit", and "binary". In addition, "uuencode" is also
     * supported.
     *
     * @param  is    input stream
     * @param  encoding  the encoding of the stream.
     * @return      decoded input stream.
     */
    public static InputStream decode(InputStream is, String encoding)
    throws MessagingException {
  if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("base64"))
      return new BASE64DecoderStream(is);
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("quoted-printable"))
      return new QPDecoderStream(is);
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("uuencode") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("x-uuencode") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("x-uue"))
      return new UUDecoderStream(is);
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("binary") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("7bit") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("8bit"))
      return is;
  else
      throw new MessagingException("Unknown encoding: " + encoding);
    }

    /**
     * Wrap an encoder around the given output stream.
     * All the encodings defined in RFC 2045 are supported here.
     * They include "base64", "quoted-printable", "7bit", "8bit" and
     * "binary". In addition, "uuencode" is also supported.
     *
     * @param  os    output stream
     * @param  encoding  the encoding of the stream.
     * @return      output stream that applies the
     *        specified encoding.
     */
    public static OutputStream encode(OutputStream os, String encoding)
    throws MessagingException {
        if (encoding == null)
      return os;
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("base64"))
      return new BASE64EncoderStream(os);
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("quoted-printable"))
      return new QPEncoderStream(os);
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("uuencode") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("x-uuencode") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("x-uue"))
      return new UUEncoderStream(os);
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("binary") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("7bit") ||
     encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("8bit"))
      return os;
  else
      throw new MessagingException("Unknown encoding: " +encoding);
    }

    /**
     * Wrap an encoder around the given output stream.
     * All the encodings defined in RFC 2045 are supported here.
     * They include "base64", "quoted-printable", "7bit", "8bit" and
     * "binary". In addition, "uuencode" is also supported.
     * The <code>filename</code> parameter is used with the "uuencode"
     * encoding and is included in the encoded output.
     *
     * @param   os              output stream
     * @param   encoding        the encoding of the stream.
     * @param   filename        name for the file being encoded (only used
     *                          with uuencode)
     * @return                  output stream that applies the
     *                          specified encoding.
     * @since                   JavaMail 1.2
     */
    public static OutputStream encode(OutputStream os, String encoding,
                                      String filename)
                throws MessagingException {
        if (encoding == null)
            return os;
        else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("base64"))
            return new BASE64EncoderStream(os);
        else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("quoted-printable"))
            return new QPEncoderStream(os);
        else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("uuencode") ||
                 encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("x-uuencode") ||
                 encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("x-uue"))
            return new UUEncoderStream(os, filename);
        else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("binary") ||
                 encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("7bit") ||
                 encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("8bit"))
            return os;
        else
            throw new MessagingException("Unknown encoding: " +encoding);
    }

    /**
     * Encode a RFC 822 "text" token into mail-safe form as per
     * RFC 2047. <p>
     *
     * The given Unicode string is examined for non US-ASCII
     * characters. If the string contains only US-ASCII characters,
     * it is returned as-is.  If the string contains non US-ASCII
     * characters, it is first character-encoded using the platform's
     * default charset, then transfer-encoded using either the B or
     * Q encoding. The resulting bytes are then returned as a Unicode
     * string containing only ASCII  characters. <p>
     *
     * Note that this method should be used to encode only
     * "unstructured" RFC 822 headers. <p>
     *
     * Example of usage:
     * <p><blockquote><pre>
     *
     *  MimeBodyPart part = ...
     *  String rawvalue = "FooBar Mailer, Japanese version 1.1"
     *  try {
     *    // If we know for sure that rawvalue contains only US-ASCII
     *    // characters, we can skip the encoding part
     *    part.setHeader("X-mailer", MimeUtility.encodeText(rawvalue));
     *  } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
     *    // encoding failure
     *  } catch (MessagingException me) {
     *   // setHeader() failure
     *  }
     *
     * </pre></blockquote><p>
     *
     * @param  text  unicode string
     * @return  Unicode string containing only US-ASCII characters
     * @exception UnsupportedEncodingException if the encoding fails
     */
    public static String encodeText(String text)
      throws UnsupportedEncodingException {
  return encodeText(text, null, null);
    }

    /**
     * Encode a RFC 822 "text" token into mail-safe form as per
     * RFC 2047. <p>
     *
     * The given Unicode string is examined for non US-ASCII
     * characters. If the string contains only US-ASCII characters,
     * it is returned as-is.  If the string contains non US-ASCII
     * characters, it is first character-encoded using the specified
     * charset, then transfer-encoded using either the B or Q encoding.
     * The resulting bytes are then returned as a Unicode string
     * containing only ASCII characters. <p>
     *
     * Note that this method should be used to encode only
     * "unstructured" RFC 822 headers.
     *
     * @param  text  the header value
     * @param  charset  the charset. If this parameter is null, the
     *    platform's default chatset is used.
     * @param  encoding the encoding to be used. Currently supported
     *    values are "B" and "Q". If this parameter is null, then
     *    the "Q" encoding is used if most of characters to be
     *    encoded are in the ASCII charset, otherwise "B" encoding
     *    is used.
     * @return  Unicode string containing only US-ASCII characters
     */
    public static String encodeText(String text, String charset,
            String encoding)
      throws UnsupportedEncodingException {
  return encodeWord(text, charset, encoding, false);
    }

    /**
     * Decode "unstructured" headers, that is, headers that are defined
     * as '*text' as per RFC 822. <p>
     *
     * The string is decoded using the algorithm specified in
     * RFC 2047, Section 6.1.1. If the charset-conversion fails
     * for any sequence, an UnsupportedEncodingException is thrown.
     * If the String is not an RFC 2047 style encoded header, it is
     * returned as-is <p>
     *
     * Example of usage:
     * <p><blockquote><pre>
     *
     *  MimeBodyPart part = ...
     *  String rawvalue = null;
     *  String  value = null;
     *  try {
     *    if ((rawvalue = part.getHeader("X-mailer")[0]) != null)
     *      value = MimeUtility.decodeText(rawvalue);
     *  } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
     *      // Don't care
     *      value = rawvalue;
     *  } catch (MessagingException me) { }
     *
     *  return value;
     *
     * </pre></blockquote><p>
     *
     * @param  etext  the possibly encoded value
     * @exception       UnsupportedEncodingException if the charset
     *      conversion failed.
     */
    public static String decodeText(String etext)
    throws UnsupportedEncodingException {
  /*
   * We look for sequences separated by "linear-white-space".
   * (as per RFC 2047, Section 6.1.1)
   * RFC 822 defines "linear-white-space" as SPACE | HT | CR | NL.
   */
  String lwsp = " \t\n\r";
  StringTokenizer st;

  /*
   * First, lets do a quick run thru the string and check
   * whether the sequence "=?"  exists at all. If none exists,
   * we know there are no encoded-words in here and we can just
   * return the string as-is, without suffering thru the later
   * decoding logic.
   * This handles the most common case of unencoded headers
   * efficiently.
   */
  if (etext.indexOf("=?") == -1)
      return etext;

  // Encoded words found. Start decoding ...

  st = new StringTokenizer(etext, lwsp, true);
  StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer()// decode buffer
  StringBuffer wsb = new StringBuffer(); // white space buffer
  boolean prevWasEncoded = false;

  while (st.hasMoreTokens()) {
      char c;
      String s = st.nextToken();
      // If whitespace, append it to the whitespace buffer
      if (((c = s.charAt(0)) == ' ') || (c == '\t') ||
    (c == '\r') || (c == '\n'))
    wsb.append(c);
      else {
    // Check if token is an 'encoded-word' ..
    String word;
    try {
        word = decodeWord(s);
        // Yes, this IS an 'encoded-word'.
        if (!prevWasEncoded && wsb.length() > 0) {
      // if the previous word was also encoded, we
      // should ignore the collected whitespace. Else
      // we include the whitespace as well.
      sb.append(wsb);
        }
        prevWasEncoded = true;
    } catch (ParseException pex) {
        // This is NOT an 'encoded-word'.
        word = s;
        // possibly decode inner encoded words
        if (!decodeStrict)
      word = decodeInnerWords(word);
        // include colleced whitespace ..
        if (wsb.length() > 0)
      sb.append(wsb);
        prevWasEncoded = false;
    }
    sb.append(word); // append the actual word
    wsb.setLength(0); // reset wsb for reuse
      }
  }
  return sb.toString();
    }

    /**
     * Encode a RFC 822 "word" token into mail-safe form as per
     * RFC 2047. <p>
     *
     * The given Unicode string is examined for non US-ASCII
     * characters. If the string contains only US-ASCII characters,
     * it is returned as-is.  If the string contains non US-ASCII
     * characters, it is first character-encoded using the platform's
     * default charset, then transfer-encoded using either the B or
     * Q encoding. The resulting bytes are then returned as a Unicode
     * string containing only ASCII  characters. <p>
     *
     * This method is meant to be used when creating RFC 822 "phrases".
     * The InternetAddress class, for example, uses this to encode
     * it's 'phrase' component.
     *
     * @param  text  unicode string
     * @return  Array of Unicode strings containing only US-ASCII
     *    characters.
     * @exception UnsupportedEncodingException if the encoding fails
     */
    public static String encodeWord(String word)
      throws UnsupportedEncodingException {
  return encodeWord(word, null, null);
    }

    /**
     * Encode a RFC 822 "word" token into mail-safe form as per
     * RFC 2047. <p>
     *
     * The given Unicode string is examined for non US-ASCII
     * characters. If the string contains only US-ASCII characters,
     * it is returned as-is.  If the string contains non US-ASCII
     * characters, it is first character-encoded using the specified
     * charset, then transfer-encoded using either the B or Q encoding.
     * The resulting bytes are then returned as a Unicode string
     * containing only ASCII characters. <p>
     *
     * @param  text  unicode string
     * @param  charset  the MIME charset
     * @param  encoding the encoding to be used. Currently supported
     *    values are "B" and "Q". If this parameter is null, then
     *    the "Q" encoding is used if most of characters to be
     *    encoded are in the ASCII charset, otherwise "B" encoding
     *    is used.
     * @return  Unicode string containing only US-ASCII characters
     * @exception UnsupportedEncodingException if the encoding fails
     */
    public static String encodeWord(String word, String charset,
            String encoding)
          throws UnsupportedEncodingException {
  return encodeWord(word, charset, encoding, true);
    }

    /*
     * Encode the given string. The parameter 'encodingWord' should
     * be true if a RFC 822 "word" token is being encoded and false if a
     * RFC 822 "text" token is being encoded. This is because the
     * "Q" encoding defined in RFC 2047 has more restrictions when
     * encoding "word" tokens. (Sigh)
     */
    private static String encodeWord(String string, String charset,
             String encoding, boolean encodingWord)
      throws UnsupportedEncodingException {

  // If 'string' contains only US-ASCII characters, just
  // return it.
  int ascii = checkAscii(string);
  if (ascii == ALL_ASCII)
      return string;

  // Else, apply the specified charset conversion.
  String jcharset;
  if (charset == null) { // use default charset
      jcharset = getDefaultJavaCharset(); // the java charset
      charset = getDefaultMIMECharset(); // the MIME equivalent
  } else // MIME charset -> java charset
      jcharset = javaCharset(charset);

  // If no transfer-encoding is specified, figure one out.
  if (encoding == null) {
      if (ascii != MOSTLY_NONASCII)
    encoding = "Q";
      else
    encoding = "B";
  }

  boolean b64;
  if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("B"))
      b64 = true;
  else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("Q"))
      b64 = false;
  else
      throw new UnsupportedEncodingException(
      "Unknown transfer encoding: " + encoding);

  StringBuffer outb = new StringBuffer(); // the output buffer
  doEncode(string, b64, jcharset,
     // As per RFC 2047, size of an encoded string should not
     // exceed 75 bytes.
     // 7 = size of "=?", '?', 'B'/'Q', '?', "?="
     75 - 7 - charset.length(), // the available space
     "=?" + charset + "?" + encoding + "?", // prefix
     true, encodingWord, outb);

  return outb.toString();
    }

    private static void doEncode(String string, boolean b64,
    String jcharset, int avail, String prefix,
    boolean first, boolean encodingWord, StringBuffer buf)
      throws UnsupportedEncodingException {

  // First find out what the length of the encoded version of
  // 'string' would be.
  byte[] bytes = string.getBytes(jcharset);
  int len;
  if (b64) // "B" encoding
      len = BEncoderStream.encodedLength(bytes);
  else // "Q"
      len = QEncoderStream.encodedLength(bytes, encodingWord);
 
  int size;
  if ((len > avail) && ((size = string.length()) > 1)) {
      // If the length is greater than 'avail', split 'string'
      // into two and recurse.
      doEncode(string.substring(0, size/2), b64, jcharset,
         avail, prefix, first, encodingWord, buf);
      doEncode(string.substring(size/2, size), b64, jcharset,
         avail, prefix, false, encodingWord, buf);
  } else {
      // length <= than 'avail'. Encode the given string
      ByteArrayOutputStream os = new ByteArrayOutputStream(BUFFER_SIZE);
      OutputStream eos; // the encoder
      if (b64) // "B" encoding
    eos = new BEncoderStream(os);
      else // "Q" encoding
    eos = new QEncoderStream(os, encodingWord);
     
      try { // do the encoding
    eos.write(bytes);
    eos.close();
      } catch (IOException ioex) { }

      byte[] encodedBytes = os.toByteArray(); // the encoded stuff
      // Now write out the encoded (all ASCII) bytes into our
      // StringBuffer
      if (!first) // not the first line of this sequence
    if (foldEncodedWords)
        buf.append("\r\n "); // start a continuation line
    else
        buf.append(" "); // line will be folded later

      buf.append(prefix);
      for (int i = 0; i < encodedBytes.length; i++)
    buf.append((char)encodedBytes[i]);
      buf.append("?="); // terminate the current sequence
  }
    }

    /**
     * The string is parsed using the rules in RFC 2047 for parsing
     * an "encoded-word". If the parse fails, a ParseException is
     * thrown. Otherwise, it is transfer-decoded, and then
     * charset-converted into Unicode. If the charset-conversion
     * fails, an UnsupportedEncodingException is thrown.<p>
     *
     * @param  eword  the possibly encoded value
     * @exception       ParseException if the string is not an
     *      encoded-word as per RFC 2047.
     * @exception       UnsupportedEncodingException if the charset
     *      conversion failed.
     */
    public static String decodeWord(String eword)
    throws ParseException, UnsupportedEncodingException {

  if (!eword.startsWith("=?")) // not an encoded word
      throw new ParseException();
 
  // get charset
  int start = 2; int pos;
  if ((pos = eword.indexOf('?', start)) == -1)
      throw new ParseException();
  String charset = javaCharset(eword.substring(start, pos));

  // get encoding
  start = pos+1;
  if ((pos = eword.indexOf('?', start)) == -1)
      throw new ParseException();
  String encoding = eword.substring(start, pos);

  // get encoded-sequence
  start = pos+1;
  if ((pos = eword.indexOf("?=", start)) == -1)
      throw new ParseException();
  String word = eword.substring(start, pos);

  try {
      // Extract the bytes from word
      ByteArrayInputStream bis =
    new ByteArrayInputStream(ASCIIUtility.getBytes(word));

      // Get the appropriate decoder
      InputStream is;
      if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("B"))
    is = new BASE64DecoderStream(bis);
      else if (encoding.equalsIgnoreCase("Q"))
    is = new QDecoderStream(bis);
      else
    throw new UnsupportedEncodingException(
        "unknown encoding: " + encoding);

      // For b64 & q, size of decoded word <= size of word. So
      // the decoded bytes must fit into the 'bytes' array. This
      // is certainly more efficient than writing bytes into a
      // ByteArrayOutputStream and then pulling out the byte[]
      // from it.
      int count = bis.available();
      byte[] bytes = new byte[count];
      // count is set to the actual number of decoded bytes
      count = is.read(bytes, 0, count);

      // Finally, convert the decoded bytes into a String using
      // the specified charset
      String s = new String(bytes, 0, count, charset);
      if (pos + 2 < eword.length()) {
    // there's still more text in the string
    String rest = eword.substring(pos + 2);
    if (!decodeStrict)
        rest = decodeInnerWords(rest);
    s += rest;
      }
      return s;
  } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException uex) {
      // explicitly catch and rethrow this exception, otherwise
      // the below IOException catch will swallow this up!
      throw uex;
  } catch (IOException ioex) {
      // Shouldn't happen.
      throw new ParseException();
  } catch (IllegalArgumentException iex) {
      /* An unknown charset of the form ISO-XXX-XXX, will cause
       * the JDK to throw an IllegalArgumentException ... Since the
       * JDK will attempt to create a classname using this string,
       * but valid classnames must not contain the character '-',
       * and this results in an IllegalArgumentException, rather than
       * the expected UnsupportedEncodingException. Yikes
       */
      throw new UnsupportedEncodingException();
  }
    }

    /**
     * Look for encoded words within a word.  The MIME spec doesn't
     * allow this, but many broken mailers, especially Japanese mailers,
     * produce such incorrect encodings.
     */
    private static String decodeInnerWords(String word)
        throws UnsupportedEncodingException {
  int start = 0, i;
  StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer();
  while ((i = word.indexOf("=?", start)) >= 0) {
      buf.append(word.substring(start, i));
      int end = word.indexOf("?=", i);
      if (end < 0)
    break;
      String s = word.substring(i, end + 2);
      try {
    s = decodeWord(s);
      } catch (ParseException pex) {
    // ignore it, just use the original string
      }
      buf.append(s);
      start = end + 2;
  }
  if (start == 0)
      return word;
  if (start < word.length())
      buf.append(word.substring(start));
  return buf.toString();
    }

    /**
     * A utility method to quote a word, if the word contains any
     * characters from the specified 'specials' list.<p>
     *
     * The <code>HeaderTokenizer</code> class defines two special
     * sets of delimiters - MIME and RFC 822. <p>
     *
     * This method is typically used during the generation of
     * RFC 822 and MIME header fields.
     *
     * @param  word  word to be quoted
     * @param  specials the set of special characters
     * @return    the possibly quoted word
     * @see  javax.mail.internet.HeaderTokenizer#MIME
     * @see  javax.mail.internet.HeaderTokenizer#RFC822
     */
    public static String quote(String word, String specials) {
  int len = word.length();

  /*
   * Look for any "bad" characters, Escape and
   *  quote the entire string if necessary.
   */
  boolean needQuoting = false;
  for (int i = 0; i < len; i++) {
      char c = word.charAt(i);
      if (c == '"' || c == '\\' || c == '\r' || c == '\n') {
    // need to escape them and then quote the whole string
    StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer(len + 3);
    sb.append('"');
    sb.append(word.substring(0, i));
    int lastc = 0;
    for (int j = i; j < len; j++) {
        char cc = word.charAt(j);
        if ((cc == '"') || (cc == '\\') ||
      (cc == '\r') || (cc == '\n'))
      if (cc == '\n' && lastc == '\r')
          // do nothing, CR was already escaped
      else
          sb.append('\\')// Escape the character
        sb.append(cc);
        lastc = cc;
    }
    sb.append('"');
    return sb.toString();
      } else if (c < 040 || c >= 0177 || specials.indexOf(c) >= 0)
    // These characters cause the string to be quoted
    needQuoting = true;
  }

  if (needQuoting) {
      StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer(len + 2);
      sb.append('"').append(word).append('"');
      return sb.toString();
  } else
      return word;
    }

    /**
     * Fold a string at linear whitespace so that each line is no longer
     * than 76 characters, if possible.  If there are more than 76
     * non-whitespace characters consecutively, the string is folded at
     * the first whitespace after that sequence.  The parameter
     * <code>used</code> indicates how many characters have been used in
     * the current line; it is usually the length of the header name. <p>
     *
     * Note that line breaks in the string aren't escaped; they probably
     * should be.
     *
     * @param  used  characters used in line so far
     * @param  s  the string to fold
     * @return    the folded string
     */
    /*public*/ static String fold(int used, String s) {
  if (!foldText)
      return s;

  int end;
  char c;
  // Strip trailing spaces
  for (end = s.length() - 1; end >= 0; end--) {
      c = s.charAt(end);
      if (c != ' ' && c != '\t')
    break;
  }
  if (end != s.length() - 1)
      s = s.substring(0, end + 1);

  // if the string fits now, just return it
  if (used + s.length() <= 76)
      return s;

  // have to actually fold the string
  StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer(s.length() + 4);
  char lastc = 0;
  while (used + s.length() > 76) {
      int lastspace = -1;
      for (int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++) {
    if (lastspace != -1 && used + i > 76)
        break;
    c = s.charAt(i);
    if (c == ' ' || c == '\t')
        if (!(lastc == ' ' || lastc == '\t'))
      lastspace = i;
    lastc = c;
      }
      if (lastspace == -1) {
    // no space, use the whole thing
    sb.append(s);
    s = "";
    used = 0;
    break;
      }
      sb.append(s.substring(0, lastspace));
      sb.append("\r\n");
      lastc = s.charAt(lastspace);
      sb.append(lastc);
      s = s.substring(lastspace + 1);
      used = 1;
  }
  sb.append(s);
  return sb.toString();
    }

    /**
     * Unfold a folded header.  Any line breaks that aren't escaped and
     * are followed by whitespace are removed.
     *
     * @param  s  the string to unfold
     * @return    the unfolded string
     */
    /*public*/ static String unfold(String s) {
  if (!foldText)
      return s;

  StringBuffer sb = null;
  int i;
  while ((i = indexOfAny(s, "\r\n")) >= 0) {
      int start = i;
      int l = s.length();
      i++;    // skip CR or NL
      if (i < l && s.charAt(i - 1) == '\r' && s.charAt(i) == '\n')
    i++;  // skip LF
      if (start == 0 || s.charAt(start - 1) != '\\') {
    char c;
    // if next line starts with whitespace, skip all of it
    // XXX - always has to be true?
    if (i < l && ((c = s.charAt(i)) == ' ' || c == '\t')) {
        i++;  // skip whitespace
        while (i < l && ((c = s.charAt(i)) == ' ' || c == '\t'))
      i++;
        if (sb == null)
      sb = new StringBuffer(s.length());
        if (start != 0) {
      sb.append(s.substring(0, start));
      sb.append(' ');
        }
        s = s.substring(i);
        continue;
    }
    // it's not a continuation line, just leave it in
    if (sb == null)
        sb = new StringBuffer(s.length());
    sb.append(s.substring(0, i));
    s = s.substring(i);
      } else {
    // there's a backslash at "start - 1"
    // strip it out, but leave in the line break
    if (sb == null)
        sb = new StringBuffer(s.length());
    sb.append(s.substring(0, start - 1));
    sb.append(s.substring(start, i));
    s = s.substring(i);
      }
  }
  if (sb != null) {
      sb.append(s);
      return sb.toString();
  } else
      return s;
    }

    /**
     * Return the first index of any of the characters in "any" in "s",
     * or -1 if none are found.
     *
     * This should be a method on String.
     */
    private static int indexOfAny(String s, String any) {
  return indexOfAny(s, any, 0);
    }

    private static int indexOfAny(String s, String any, int start) {
  try {
      int len = s.length();
      for (int i = start; i < len; i++) {
    if (any.indexOf(s.charAt(i)) >= 0)
        return i;
      }
      return -1;
  } catch (StringIndexOutOfBoundsException e) {
      return -1;
  }
    }

    /**
     * Convert a MIME charset name into a valid Java charset name. <p>
     *
     * @param charset  the MIME charset name
     * @return  the Java charset equivalent. If a suitable mapping is
     *    not available, the passed in charset is itself returned.
     */
    public static String javaCharset(String charset) {
  if (mime2java == null || charset == null)
      // no mapping table, or charset parameter is null
      return charset;

  String alias = (String)mime2java.get(charset.toLowerCase());
  return alias == null ? charset : alias;
    }

    /**
     * Convert a java charset into its MIME charset name. <p>
     *
     * Note that a future version of JDK (post 1.2) might provide
     * this functionality, in which case, we may deprecate this
     * method then.
     *
     * @param   charset    the JDK charset
     * @return        the MIME/IANA equivalent. If a mapping
     *      is not possible, the passed in charset itself
     *      is returned.
     * @since    JavaMail 1.1
     */
    public static String mimeCharset(String charset) {
  if (java2mime == null || charset == null)
      // no mapping table or charset param is null
      return charset;

  String alias = (String)java2mime.get(charset.toLowerCase());
  return alias == null ? charset : alias;
    }

    private static String defaultJavaCharset;
    private static String defaultMIMECharset;

    /**
     * Get the default charset corresponding to the system's current
     * default locale.  If the System property <code>mail.mime.charset</code>
     * is set, a system charset corresponding to this MIME charset will be
     * returned. <p>
     *
     * @return  the default charset of the system's default locale,
     *     as a Java charset. (NOT a MIME charset)
     * @since  JavaMail 1.1
     */
    public static String getDefaultJavaCharset() {
  if (defaultJavaCharset == null) {
      /*
       * If mail.mime.charset is set, it controls the default
       * Java charset as well.
       */
      String mimecs = null;
      try {
    mimecs = System.getProperty("mail.mime.charset");
      } catch (SecurityException ex) { }  // ignore it
      if (mimecs != null && mimecs.length() > 0) {
    defaultJavaCharset = javaCharset(mimecs);
    return defaultJavaCharset;
      }

      try {
    defaultJavaCharset = System.getProperty("file.encoding",
              "8859_1");
      } catch (SecurityException sex) {
   
    class NullInputStream extends InputStream {
        public int read() {
      return 0;
        }
    }
    InputStreamReader reader =
      new InputStreamReader(new NullInputStream());
    defaultJavaCharset = reader.getEncoding();
    if (defaultJavaCharset == null)
        defaultJavaCharset = "8859_1";
      }
  }

  return defaultJavaCharset;
    }

    /*
     * Get the default MIME charset for this locale.
     */
    static String getDefaultMIMECharset() {
  if (defaultMIMECharset == null) {
      try {
    defaultMIMECharset = System.getProperty("mail.mime.charset");
      } catch (SecurityException ex) { }  // ignore it
  }
  if (defaultMIMECharset == null)
      defaultMIMECharset = mimeCharset(getDefaultJavaCharset());
  return defaultMIMECharset;
    }

    // Tables to map MIME charset names to Java names and vice versa.
    // XXX - Should eventually use J2SE 1.4 java.nio.charset.Charset
    private static Hashtable mime2java;
    private static Hashtable java2mime;

    static {
  java2mime = new Hashtable(40);
  mime2java = new Hashtable(10);

  try {
      // Use this class's classloader to load the mapping file
      // XXX - we should use SecuritySupport, but it's in another package
      InputStream is =
        com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.packaging.mime.internet.MimeUtility.class.getResourceAsStream(
        "/META-INF/javamail.charset.map");

      if (is != null) {
    is = new LineInputStream(is);

    // Load the JDK-to-MIME charset mapping table
    loadMappings((LineInputStream)is, java2mime);

    // Load the MIME-to-JDK charset mapping table
    loadMappings((LineInputStream)is, mime2java);
      }
  } catch (Exception ex) { }

  // If we didn't load the tables, e.g., because we didn't have
  // permission, load them manually.  The entries here should be
  // the same as the default javamail.charset.map.
  if (java2mime.isEmpty()) {
      java2mime.put("8859_1", "ISO-8859-1");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_1", "ISO-8859-1");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-1", "ISO-8859-1");

      java2mime.put("8859_2", "ISO-8859-2");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_2", "ISO-8859-2");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-2", "ISO-8859-2");

      java2mime.put("8859_3", "ISO-8859-3");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_3", "ISO-8859-3");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-3", "ISO-8859-3");

      java2mime.put("8859_4", "ISO-8859-4");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_4", "ISO-8859-4");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-4", "ISO-8859-4");

      java2mime.put("8859_5", "ISO-8859-5");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_5", "ISO-8859-5");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-5", "ISO-8859-5");

      java2mime.put("8859_6", "ISO-8859-6");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_6", "ISO-8859-6");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-6", "ISO-8859-6");

      java2mime.put("8859_7", "ISO-8859-7");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_7", "ISO-8859-7");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-7", "ISO-8859-7");

      java2mime.put("8859_8", "ISO-8859-8");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_8", "ISO-8859-8");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-8", "ISO-8859-8");

      java2mime.put("8859_9", "ISO-8859-9");
      java2mime.put("iso8859_9", "ISO-8859-9");
      java2mime.put("ISO8859-9", "ISO-8859-9");

      java2mime.put("SJIS", "Shift_JIS");
      java2mime.put("MS932", "Shift_JIS");
      java2mime.put("JIS", "ISO-2022-JP");
      java2mime.put("ISO2022JP", "ISO-2022-JP");
      java2mime.put("EUC_JP", "euc-jp");
      java2mime.put("KOI8_R", "koi8-r");
      java2mime.put("EUC_CN", "euc-cn");
      java2mime.put("EUC_TW", "euc-tw");
      java2mime.put("EUC_KR", "euc-kr");
  }
  if (mime2java.isEmpty()) {
      mime2java.put("iso-2022-cn", "ISO2022CN");
      mime2java.put("iso-2022-kr", "ISO2022KR");
      mime2java.put("utf-8", "UTF8");
      mime2java.put("utf8", "UTF8");
      mime2java.put("ja_jp.iso2022-7", "ISO2022JP");
      mime2java.put("ja_jp.eucjp", "EUCJIS");
      mime2java.put("euc-kr", "KSC5601");
      mime2java.put("euckr", "KSC5601");
      mime2java.put("us-ascii", "ISO-8859-1");
      mime2java.put("x-us-ascii", "ISO-8859-1");
  }
    }

    private static void loadMappings(LineInputStream is, Hashtable table) {
  String currLine;

  while (true) {
      try {
    currLine = is.readLine();
      } catch (IOException ioex) {
    break; // error in reading, stop
      }

      if (currLine == null) // end of file, stop
    break;
      if (currLine.startsWith("--") && currLine.endsWith("--"))
    // end of this table
    break

      // ignore empty lines and comments
      if (currLine.trim().length() == 0 || currLine.startsWith("#"))
    continue;
     
      // A valid entry is of the form <key><separator><value>
      // where, <separator> := SPACE | HT. Parse this
      StringTokenizer tk = new StringTokenizer(currLine, " \t");
      try {
    String key = tk.nextToken();
    String value = tk.nextToken();
    table.put(key.toLowerCase(), value);
      } catch (NoSuchElementException nex) { }
  }
    }

    static final int ALL_ASCII     = 1;
    static final int MOSTLY_ASCII   = 2;
    static final int MOSTLY_NONASCII   = 3;

    /**
     * Check if the given string contains non US-ASCII characters.
     * @param  s  string
     * @return    ALL_ASCII if all characters in the string
     *      belong to the US-ASCII charset. MOSTLY_ASCII
     *      if more than half of the available characters
     *      are US-ASCII characters. Else MOSTLY_NONASCII.
     */
    static int checkAscii(String s) {
  int ascii = 0, non_ascii = 0;
  int l = s.length();

  for (int i = 0; i < l; i++) {
      if (nonascii((int)s.charAt(i))) // non-ascii
    non_ascii++;
      else
    ascii++;
  }

  if (non_ascii == 0)
      return ALL_ASCII;
  if (ascii > non_ascii)
      return MOSTLY_ASCII;

  return MOSTLY_NONASCII;
    }

    /**
     * Check if the given byte array contains non US-ASCII characters.
     * @param  b  byte array
     * @return    ALL_ASCII if all characters in the string
     *      belong to the US-ASCII charset. MOSTLY_ASCII
     *      if more than half of the available characters
     *      are US-ASCII characters. Else MOSTLY_NONASCII.
     *
     * XXX - this method is no longer used
     */
    static int checkAscii(byte[] b) {
  int ascii = 0, non_ascii = 0;

  for (int i=0; i < b.length; i++) {
      // The '&' operator automatically causes b[i] to be promoted
      // to an int, and we mask out the higher bytes in the int
      // so that the resulting value is not a negative integer.
      if (nonascii(b[i] & 0xff)) // non-ascii
    non_ascii++;
      else
    ascii++;
  }
 
  if (non_ascii == 0)
      return ALL_ASCII;
  if (ascii > non_ascii)
      return MOSTLY_ASCII;
 
  return MOSTLY_NONASCII;
    }

    /**
     * Check if the given input stream contains non US-ASCII characters.
     * Upto <code>max</code> bytes are checked. If <code>max</code> is
     * set to <code>ALL</code>, then all the bytes available in this
     * input stream are checked. If <code>breakOnNonAscii</code> is true
     * the check terminates when the first non-US-ASCII character is
     * found and MOSTLY_NONASCII is returned. Else, the check continues
     * till <code>max</code> bytes or till the end of stream.
     *
     * @param  is  the input stream
     * @param  max  maximum bytes to check for. The special value
     *      ALL indicates that all the bytes in this input
     *      stream must be checked.
     * @param  breakOnNonAscii if <code>true</code>, then terminate the
     *      the check when the first non-US-ASCII character
     *      is found.
     * @return    ALL_ASCII if all characters in the string
     *      belong to the US-ASCII charset. MOSTLY_ASCII
     *      if more than half of the available characters
     *      are US-ASCII characters. Else MOSTLY_NONASCII.
     */
    static int checkAscii(InputStream is, int max, boolean breakOnNonAscii) {
  int ascii = 0, non_ascii = 0;
  int len;
  int block = 4096;
  int linelen = 0;
  boolean longLine = false, badEOL = false;
  boolean checkEOL = encodeEolStrict && breakOnNonAscii;
  byte buf[] = null;
  if (max != 0) {
      block = (max == ALL) ? 4096 : Math.min(max, 4096);
      buf = new byte[block];
  }
  while (max != 0) {
      try {
    if ((len = is.read(buf, 0, block)) == -1)
        break;
    int lastb = 0;
    for (int i = 0; i < len; i++) {
            // The '&' operator automatically causes b[i] to
        // be promoted to an int, and we mask out the higher
        // bytes in the int so that the resulting value is
        // not a negative integer.
        int b = buf[i] & 0xff;
        if (checkEOL &&
          ((lastb == '\r' && b != '\n') ||
          (lastb != '\r' && b == '\n')))
      badEOL = true;
        if (b == '\r' || b == '\n')
      linelen = 0;
        else {
      linelen++;
      if (linelen > 998// 1000 - CRLF
          longLine = true;
        }
        if (nonascii(b)) {  // non-ascii
            if (breakOnNonAscii) // we are done
          return MOSTLY_NONASCII;
            else
          non_ascii++;
        } else
            ascii++;
        lastb = b;
    }
      } catch (IOException ioex) {
    break;
      }
      if (max != ALL)
    max -= len;
  }

  if (max == 0 && breakOnNonAscii)
      // We have been told to break on the first non-ascii character.
      // We haven't got any non-ascii character yet, but then we
      // have not checked all of the available bytes either. So we
      // cannot say for sure that this input stream is ALL_ASCII,
      // and hence we must play safe and return MOSTLY_NONASCII

      return MOSTLY_NONASCII;

  if (non_ascii == 0) { // no non-us-ascii characters so far
      // If we're looking at non-text data, and we saw CR without LF
      // or vice versa, consider this mostly non-ASCII so that it
      // will be base64 encoded (since the quoted-printable encoder
      // doesn't encode this case properly).
      if (badEOL)
    return MOSTLY_NONASCII;
      // if we've seen a long line, we degrade to mostly ascii
      else if (longLine)
    return MOSTLY_ASCII;
      else
    return ALL_ASCII;
  }
  if (ascii > non_ascii) // mostly ascii
      return MOSTLY_ASCII;
  return MOSTLY_NONASCII;
    }

    static final boolean nonascii(int b) {
  return b >= 0177 || (b < 040 && b != '\r' && b != '\n' && b != '\t');
    }
}

/**
* An OutputStream that determines whether the data written to
* it is all ASCII, mostly ASCII, or mostly non-ASCII.
*/
class AsciiOutputStream extends OutputStream {
    private boolean breakOnNonAscii;
    private int ascii = 0, non_ascii = 0;
    private int linelen = 0;
    private boolean longLine = false;
    private boolean badEOL = false;
    private boolean checkEOL = false;
    private int lastb = 0;
    private int ret = 0;

    public AsciiOutputStream(boolean breakOnNonAscii, boolean encodeEolStrict) {
  this.breakOnNonAscii = breakOnNonAscii;
  checkEOL = encodeEolStrict && breakOnNonAscii;
    }

    public void write(int b) throws IOException {
  check(b);
    }

    public void write(byte b[]) throws IOException {
  write(b, 0, b.length);
    }

    public void write(byte b[], int off, int len) throws IOException {
  len += off;
  for (int i = off; i < len ; i++)
      check(b[i]);
    }

    private final void check(int b) throws IOException {
  b &= 0xff;
  if (checkEOL &&
    ((lastb == '\r' && b != '\n') || (lastb != '\r' && b == '\n')))
      badEOL = true;
  if (b == '\r' || b == '\n')
      linelen = 0;
  else {
      linelen++;
      if (linelen > 998// 1000 - CRLF
    longLine = true;
  }
  if (MimeUtility.nonascii(b)) { // non-ascii
      non_ascii++;
      if (breakOnNonAscii) {  // we are done
    ret = MimeUtility.MOSTLY_NONASCII;
    throw new EOFException();
      }
  } else
      ascii++;
  lastb = b;
    }

    /**
     * Return ASCII-ness of data stream.
     */
    public int getAscii() {
  if (ret != 0)
      return ret;
  // If we're looking at non-text data, and we saw CR without LF
  // or vice versa, consider this mostly non-ASCII so that it
  // will be base64 encoded (since the quoted-printable encoder
  // doesn't encode this case properly).
  if (badEOL)
      return MimeUtility.MOSTLY_NONASCII;
  else if (non_ascii == 0) { // no non-us-ascii characters so far
      // if we've seen a long line, we degrade to mostly ascii
      if (longLine)
    return MimeUtility.MOSTLY_ASCII;
      else
    return MimeUtility.ALL_ASCII;
  }
  if (ascii > non_ascii) // mostly ascii
      return MimeUtility.MOSTLY_ASCII;
  return MimeUtility.MOSTLY_NONASCII;
    }
}
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Related Classes of com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.packaging.mime.internet.NullInputStream

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