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/** | |
* HTML API: WP_HTML_Decoder class | |
* | |
* Decodes spans of raw text found inside HTML content. | |
* | |
* @package WordPress | |
* @subpackage HTML-API | |
* @since 6.6.0 | |
*/ | |
class WP_HTML_Decoder { | |
/** | |
* Indicates if an attribute value starts with a given raw string value. | |
* | |
* Use this method to determine if an attribute value starts with a given string, regardless | |
* of how it might be encoded in HTML. For instance, `http:` could be represented as `http:` | |
* or as `http:` or as `http:` or as `http:`, or in many other ways. | |
* | |
* Example: | |
* | |
* $value = 'http://wordpress.org/'; | |
* true === WP_HTML_Decoder::attribute_starts_with( $value, 'http:', 'ascii-case-insensitive' ); | |
* false === WP_HTML_Decoder::attribute_starts_with( $value, 'https:', 'ascii-case-insensitive' ); | |
* | |
* @since 6.6.0 | |
* | |
* @param string $haystack String containing the raw non-decoded attribute value. | |
* @param string $search_text Does the attribute value start with this plain string. | |
* @param string $case_sensitivity Optional. Pass 'ascii-case-insensitive' to ignore ASCII case when matching. | |
* Default 'case-sensitive'. | |
* @return bool Whether the attribute value starts with the given string. | |
*/ | |
public static function attribute_starts_with( $haystack, $search_text, $case_sensitivity = 'case-sensitive' ) { | |
$search_length = strlen( $search_text ); | |
$loose_case = 'ascii-case-insensitive' === $case_sensitivity; | |
$haystack_end = strlen( $haystack ); | |
$search_at = 0; | |
$haystack_at = 0; | |
while ( $search_at < $search_length && $haystack_at < $haystack_end ) { | |
$chars_match = $loose_case | |
? strtolower( $haystack[ $haystack_at ] ) === strtolower( $search_text[ $search_at ] ) | |
: $haystack[ $haystack_at ] === $search_text[ $search_at ]; | |
$is_introducer = '&' === $haystack[ $haystack_at ]; | |
$next_chunk = $is_introducer | |
? self::read_character_reference( 'attribute', $haystack, $haystack_at, $token_length ) | |
: null; | |
// If there's no character reference and the characters don't match, the match fails. | |
if ( null === $next_chunk && ! $chars_match ) { | |
return false; | |
} | |
// If there's no character reference but the character do match, then it could still match. | |
if ( null === $next_chunk && $chars_match ) { | |
++$haystack_at; | |
++$search_at; | |
continue; | |
} | |
// If there is a character reference, then the decoded value must exactly match what follows in the search string. | |
if ( 0 !== substr_compare( $search_text, $next_chunk, $search_at, strlen( $next_chunk ), $loose_case ) ) { | |
return false; | |
} | |
// The character reference matched, so continue checking. | |
$haystack_at += $token_length; | |
$search_at += strlen( $next_chunk ); | |
} | |
return true; | |
} | |
/** | |
* Returns a string containing the decoded value of a given HTML text node. | |
* | |
* Text nodes appear in HTML DATA sections, which are the text segments inside | |
* and around tags, excepting SCRIPT and STYLE elements (and some others), | |
* whose inner text is not decoded. Use this function to read the decoded | |
* value of such a text span in an HTML document. | |
* | |
* Example: | |
* | |
* '“😄”' === WP_HTML_Decode::decode_text_node( '“😄”' ); | |
* | |
* @since 6.6.0 | |
* | |
* @param string $text Text containing raw and non-decoded text node to decode. | |
* @return string Decoded UTF-8 value of given text node. | |
*/ | |
public static function decode_text_node( $text ) { | |
return static::decode( 'data', $text ); | |
} | |
/** | |
* Returns a string containing the decoded value of a given HTML attribute. | |
* | |
* Text found inside an HTML attribute has different parsing rules than for | |
* text found inside other markup, or DATA segments. Use this function to | |
* read the decoded value of an HTML string inside a quoted attribute. | |
* | |
* Example: | |
* | |
* '“😄”' === WP_HTML_Decode::decode_attribute( '“😄”' ); | |
* | |
* @since 6.6.0 | |
* | |
* @param string $text Text containing raw and non-decoded attribute value to decode. | |
* @return string Decoded UTF-8 value of given attribute value. | |
*/ | |
public static function decode_attribute( $text ) { | |
return static::decode( 'attribute', $text ); | |
} | |
/** | |
* Decodes a span of HTML text, depending on the context in which it's found. | |
* | |
* This is a low-level method; prefer calling WP_HTML_Decoder::decode_attribute() or | |
* WP_HTML_Decoder::decode_text_node() instead. It's provided for cases where this | |
* may be difficult to do from calling code. | |
* | |
* Example: | |
* | |
* '©' = WP_HTML_Decoder::decode( 'data', '©' ); | |
* | |
* @since 6.6.0 | |
* | |
* @access private | |
* | |
* @param string $context `attribute` for decoding attribute values, `data` otherwise. | |
* @param string $text Text document containing span of text to decode. | |
* @return string Decoded UTF-8 string. | |
*/ | |
public static function decode( $context, $text ) { | |
$decoded = ''; | |
$end = strlen( $text ); | |
$at = 0; | |
$was_at = 0; | |
while ( $at < $end ) { | |
$next_character_reference_at = strpos( $text, '&', $at ); | |
if ( false === $next_character_reference_at || $next_character_reference_at >= $end ) { | |
break; | |
} | |
$character_reference = self::read_character_reference( $context, $text, $next_character_reference_at, $token_length ); | |
if ( isset( $character_reference ) ) { | |
$at = $next_character_reference_at; | |
$decoded .= substr( $text, $was_at, $at - $was_at ); | |
$decoded .= $character_reference; | |
$at += $token_length; | |
$was_at = $at; | |
continue; | |
} | |
++$at; | |
} | |
if ( 0 === $was_at ) { | |
return $text; | |
} | |
if ( $was_at < $end ) { | |
$decoded .= substr( $text, $was_at, $end - $was_at ); | |
} | |
return $decoded; | |
} | |
/** | |
* Attempt to read a character reference at the given location in a given string, | |
* depending on the context in which it's found. | |
* | |
* If a character reference is found, this function will return the translated value | |
* that the reference maps to. It will then set `$match_byte_length` the | |
* number of bytes of input it read while consuming the character reference. This | |
* gives calling code the opportunity to advance its cursor when traversing a string | |
* and decoding. | |
* | |
* Example: | |
* | |
* null === WP_HTML_Decoder::read_character_reference( 'attribute', 'Ships…', 0 ); | |
* '…' === WP_HTML_Decoder::read_character_reference( 'attribute', 'Ships…', 5, $token_length ); | |
* 8 === $token_length; // `…` | |
* | |
* null === WP_HTML_Decoder::read_character_reference( 'attribute', '¬in', 0 ); | |
* '∉' === WP_HTML_Decoder::read_character_reference( 'attribute', '∉', 0, $token_length ); | |
* 7 === $token_length; // `∉` | |
* | |
* '¬' === WP_HTML_Decoder::read_character_reference( 'data', '¬in', 0, $token_length ); | |
* 4 === $token_length; // `¬` | |
* '∉' === WP_HTML_Decoder::read_character_reference( 'data', '∉', 0, $token_length ); | |
* 7 === $token_length; // `∉` | |
* | |
* @since 6.6.0 | |
* | |
* @param string $context `attribute` for decoding attribute values, `data` otherwise. | |
* @param string $text Text document containing span of text to decode. | |
* @param int $at Optional. Byte offset into text where span begins, defaults to the beginning (0). | |
* @param int &$match_byte_length Optional. Set to byte-length of character reference if provided and if a match | |
* is found, otherwise not set. Default null. | |
* @return string|false Decoded character reference in UTF-8 if found, otherwise `false`. | |
*/ | |
public static function read_character_reference( $context, $text, $at = 0, &$match_byte_length = null ) { | |
/** | |
* Mappings for HTML5 named character references. | |
* | |
* @var WP_Token_Map $html5_named_character_references | |
*/ | |
global $html5_named_character_references; | |
$length = strlen( $text ); | |
if ( $at + 1 >= $length ) { | |
return null; | |
} | |
if ( '&' !== $text[ $at ] ) { | |
return null; | |
} | |
/* | |
* Numeric character references. | |
* | |
* When truncated, these will encode the code point found by parsing the | |
* digits that are available. For example, when `🅰` is truncated | |
* to `DZ` it will encode `DZ`. It does not: | |
* - know how to parse the original `🅰`. | |
* - fail to parse and return plaintext `DZ`. | |
* - fail to parse and return the replacement character `�` | |
*/ | |
if ( '#' === $text[ $at + 1 ] ) { | |
if ( $at + 2 >= $length ) { | |
return null; | |
} | |
/** Tracks inner parsing within the numeric character reference. */ | |
$digits_at = $at + 2; | |
if ( 'x' === $text[ $digits_at ] || 'X' === $text[ $digits_at ] ) { | |
$numeric_base = 16; | |
$numeric_digits = '0123456789abcdefABCDEF'; | |
$max_digits = 6; //  | |
++$digits_at; | |
} else { | |
$numeric_base = 10; | |
$numeric_digits = '0123456789'; | |
$max_digits = 7; //  | |
} | |
// Cannot encode invalid Unicode code points. Max is to U+10FFFF. | |
$zero_count = strspn( $text, '0', $digits_at ); | |
$digit_count = strspn( $text, $numeric_digits, $digits_at + $zero_count ); | |
$after_digits = $digits_at + $zero_count + $digit_count; | |
$has_semicolon = $after_digits < $length && ';' === $text[ $after_digits ]; | |
$end_of_span = $has_semicolon ? $after_digits + 1 : $after_digits; | |
// `&#` or `&#x` without digits returns into plaintext. | |
if ( 0 === $digit_count && 0 === $zero_count ) { | |
return null; | |
} | |
// Whereas `&#` and only zeros is invalid. | |
if ( 0 === $digit_count ) { | |
$match_byte_length = $end_of_span - $at; | |
return '�'; | |
} | |
// If there are too many digits then it's not worth parsing. It's invalid. | |
if ( $digit_count > $max_digits ) { | |
$match_byte_length = $end_of_span - $at; | |
return '�'; | |
} | |
$digits = substr( $text, $digits_at + $zero_count, $digit_count ); | |
$code_point = intval( $digits, $numeric_base ); | |
/* | |
* Noncharacters, 0x0D, and non-ASCII-whitespace control characters. | |
* | |
* > A noncharacter is a code point that is in the range U+FDD0 to U+FDEF, | |
* > inclusive, or U+FFFE, U+FFFF, U+1FFFE, U+1FFFF, U+2FFFE, U+2FFFF, | |
* > U+3FFFE, U+3FFFF, U+4FFFE, U+4FFFF, U+5FFFE, U+5FFFF, U+6FFFE, | |
* > U+6FFFF, U+7FFFE, U+7FFFF, U+8FFFE, U+8FFFF, U+9FFFE, U+9FFFF, | |
* > U+AFFFE, U+AFFFF, U+BFFFE, U+BFFFF, U+CFFFE, U+CFFFF, U+DFFFE, | |
* > U+DFFFF, U+EFFFE, U+EFFFF, U+FFFFE, U+FFFFF, U+10FFFE, or U+10FFFF. | |
* | |
* A C0 control is a code point that is in the range of U+00 to U+1F, | |
* but ASCII whitespace includes U+09, U+0A, U+0C, and U+0D. | |
* | |
* These characters are invalid but still decode as any valid character. | |
* This comment is here to note and explain why there's no check to | |
* remove these characters or replace them. | |
* | |
* @see https://infra.spec.whatwg.org/#noncharacter | |
*/ | |
/* | |
* Code points in the C1 controls area need to be remapped as if they | |
* were stored in Windows-1252. Note! This transformation only happens | |
* for numeric character references. The raw code points in the byte | |
* stream are not translated. | |
* | |
* > If the number is one of the numbers in the first column of | |
* > the following table, then find the row with that number in | |
* > the first column, and set the character reference code to | |
* > the number in the second column of that row. | |
*/ | |
if ( $code_point >= 0x80 && $code_point <= 0x9F ) { | |
$windows_1252_mapping = array( | |
0x20AC, // 0x80 -> EURO SIGN (€). | |
0x81, // 0x81 -> (no change). | |
0x201A, // 0x82 -> SINGLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK (‚). | |
0x0192, // 0x83 -> LATIN SMALL LETTER F WITH HOOK (ƒ). | |
0x201E, // 0x84 -> DOUBLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK („). | |
0x2026, // 0x85 -> HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS (…). | |
0x2020, // 0x86 -> DAGGER (†). | |
0x2021, // 0x87 -> DOUBLE DAGGER (‡). | |
0x02C6, // 0x88 -> MODIFIER LETTER CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT (ˆ). | |
0x2030, // 0x89 -> PER MILLE SIGN (‰). | |
0x0160, // 0x8A -> LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CARON (Š). | |
0x2039, // 0x8B -> SINGLE LEFT-POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK (‹). | |
0x0152, // 0x8C -> LATIN CAPITAL LIGATURE OE (Œ). | |
0x8D, // 0x8D -> (no change). | |
0x017D, // 0x8E -> LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH CARON (Ž). | |
0x8F, // 0x8F -> (no change). | |
0x90, // 0x90 -> (no change). | |
0x2018, // 0x91 -> LEFT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK (‘). | |
0x2019, // 0x92 -> RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK (’). | |
0x201C, // 0x93 -> LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK (“). | |
0x201D, // 0x94 -> RIGHT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK (”). | |
0x2022, // 0x95 -> BULLET (•). | |
0x2013, // 0x96 -> EN DASH (–). | |
0x2014, // 0x97 -> EM DASH (—). | |
0x02DC, // 0x98 -> SMALL TILDE (˜). | |
0x2122, // 0x99 -> TRADE MARK SIGN (™). | |
0x0161, // 0x9A -> LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH CARON (š). | |
0x203A, // 0x9B -> SINGLE RIGHT-POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK (›). | |
0x0153, // 0x9C -> LATIN SMALL LIGATURE OE (œ). | |
0x9D, // 0x9D -> (no change). | |
0x017E, // 0x9E -> LATIN SMALL LETTER Z WITH CARON (ž). | |
0x0178, // 0x9F -> LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y WITH DIAERESIS (Ÿ). | |
); | |
$code_point = $windows_1252_mapping[ $code_point - 0x80 ]; | |
} | |
$match_byte_length = $end_of_span - $at; | |
return self::code_point_to_utf8_bytes( $code_point ); | |
} | |
/** Tracks inner parsing within the named character reference. */ | |
$name_at = $at + 1; | |
// Minimum named character reference is two characters. E.g. `GT`. | |
if ( $name_at + 2 > $length ) { | |
return null; | |
} | |
$name_length = 0; | |
$replacement = $html5_named_character_references->read_token( $text, $name_at, $name_length ); | |
if ( false === $replacement ) { | |
return null; | |
} | |
$after_name = $name_at + $name_length; | |
// If the match ended with a semicolon then it should always be decoded. | |
if ( ';' === $text[ $name_at + $name_length - 1 ] ) { | |
$match_byte_length = $after_name - $at; | |
return $replacement; | |
} | |
/* | |
* At this point though there's a match for an entry in the named | |
* character reference table but the match doesn't end in `;`. | |
* It may be allowed if it's followed by something unambiguous. | |
*/ | |
$ambiguous_follower = ( | |
$after_name < $length && | |
$name_at < $length && | |
( | |
ctype_alnum( $text[ $after_name ] ) || | |
'=' === $text[ $after_name ] | |
) | |
); | |
// It's non-ambiguous, safe to leave it in. | |
if ( ! $ambiguous_follower ) { | |
$match_byte_length = $after_name - $at; | |
return $replacement; | |
} | |
// It's ambiguous, which isn't allowed inside attributes. | |
if ( 'attribute' === $context ) { | |
return null; | |
} | |
$match_byte_length = $after_name - $at; | |
return $replacement; | |
} | |
/** | |
* Encode a code point number into the UTF-8 encoding. | |
* | |
* This encoder implements the UTF-8 encoding algorithm for converting | |
* a code point into a byte sequence. If it receives an invalid code | |
* point it will return the Unicode Replacement Character U+FFFD `�`. | |
* | |
* Example: | |
* | |
* '🅰' === WP_HTML_Decoder::code_point_to_utf8_bytes( 0x1f170 ); | |
* | |
* // Half of a surrogate pair is an invalid code point. | |
* '�' === WP_HTML_Decoder::code_point_to_utf8_bytes( 0xd83c ); | |
* | |
* @since 6.6.0 | |
* | |
* @see https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3629 For the UTF-8 standard. | |
* | |
* @param int $code_point Which code point to convert. | |
* @return string Converted code point, or `�` if invalid. | |
*/ | |
public static function code_point_to_utf8_bytes( $code_point ) { | |
// Pre-check to ensure a valid code point. | |
if ( | |
$code_point <= 0 || | |
( $code_point >= 0xD800 && $code_point <= 0xDFFF ) || | |
$code_point > 0x10FFFF | |
) { | |
return '�'; | |
} | |
if ( $code_point <= 0x7F ) { | |
return chr( $code_point ); | |
} | |
if ( $code_point <= 0x7FF ) { | |
$byte1 = ( $code_point >> 6 ) | 0xC0; | |
$byte2 = $code_point & 0x3F | 0x80; | |
return pack( 'CC', $byte1, $byte2 ); | |
} | |
if ( $code_point <= 0xFFFF ) { | |
$byte1 = ( $code_point >> 12 ) | 0xE0; | |
$byte2 = ( $code_point >> 6 ) & 0x3F | 0x80; | |
$byte3 = $code_point & 0x3F | 0x80; | |
return pack( 'CCC', $byte1, $byte2, $byte3 ); | |
} | |
// Any values above U+10FFFF are eliminated above in the pre-check. | |
$byte1 = ( $code_point >> 18 ) | 0xF0; | |
$byte2 = ( $code_point >> 12 ) & 0x3F | 0x80; | |
$byte3 = ( $code_point >> 6 ) & 0x3F | 0x80; | |
$byte4 = $code_point & 0x3F | 0x80; | |
return pack( 'CCCC', $byte1, $byte2, $byte3, $byte4 ); | |
} | |
} | |