# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- from __future__ import absolute_import from django.http import HttpRequest, HttpResponse, HttpResponseForbidden, FileResponse, \ HttpResponseNotFound from django.shortcuts import redirect from django.utils.translation import ugettext as _ from zerver.decorator import authenticated_json_post_view from zerver.lib.request import has_request_variables, REQ from zerver.lib.response import json_success, json_error from zerver.lib.upload import upload_message_image_from_request, get_local_file_path, \ get_signed_upload_url, get_realm_for_filename from zerver.lib.validator import check_bool from zerver.models import UserProfile from django.conf import settings def serve_s3(request, user_profile, realm_id_str, filename): # type: (HttpRequest, UserProfile, str, str) -> HttpResponse url_path = "%s/%s" % (realm_id_str, filename) if realm_id_str == "unk": realm_id = get_realm_for_filename(url_path) if realm_id is None: # File does not exist return HttpResponseNotFound('

File not found

') else: realm_id = int(realm_id_str) # Internal users can access all uploads so we can receive attachments in cross-realm messages if user_profile.realm_id == realm_id or user_profile.realm.domain == 'zulip.com': uri = get_signed_upload_url(url_path) return redirect(uri) else: return HttpResponseForbidden() # TODO: Rewrite this once we have django-sendfile def serve_local(request, path_id): # type: (HttpRequest, str) -> HttpResponse import os import mimetypes local_path = get_local_file_path(path_id) if local_path is None: return HttpResponseNotFound('

File not found

') filename = os.path.basename(local_path) response = FileResponse(open(local_path, 'rb'), content_type = mimetypes.guess_type(filename)) return response @has_request_variables def serve_file_backend(request, user_profile, realm_id_str, filename): # type: (HttpRequest, UserProfile, str, str) -> HttpResponse path_id = "%s/%s" % (realm_id_str, filename) if settings.LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR is not None: return serve_local(request, path_id) return serve_s3(request, user_profile, realm_id_str, filename) @authenticated_json_post_view def json_upload_file(request, user_profile): # type: (HttpRequest, UserProfile) -> HttpResponse return upload_file_backend(request, user_profile) def upload_file_backend(request, user_profile): # type: (HttpRequest, UserProfile) -> HttpResponse if len(request.FILES) == 0: return json_error(_("You must specify a file to upload")) if len(request.FILES) != 1: return json_error(_("You may only upload one file at a time")) user_file = list(request.FILES.values())[0] if ((settings.MAX_FILE_UPLOAD_SIZE * 1024 * 1024) < user_file._get_size()): return json_error(_("Uploaded file is larger than the allowed limit of %s MB") % ( settings.MAX_FILE_UPLOAD_SIZE)) if not isinstance(user_file.name, str): # It seems that in Python 2 unicode strings containing bytes are # rendered differently than ascii strings containing same bytes. # # Example: # >>> print('\xd3\x92') # Ӓ # >>> print(u'\xd3\x92') # Ó # # This is the cause of the problem as user_file.name variable # is received as a unicode which is converted into unicode # strings containing bytes and is rendered incorrectly. # # Example: # >>> from six.moves import urllib # >>> name = u'%D0%97%D0%B4%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%B2%D0%B5%D0%B8%CC%86%D1%82%D0%B5.txt' # >>> print(urllib.parse.unquote(name)) # Здравейте # This is wrong # # >>> name = '%D0%97%D0%B4%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%B2%D0%B5%D0%B8%CC%86%D1%82%D0%B5.txt' # >>> print(urllib.parse.unquote(name)) # Здравейте.txt # This is correct user_file.name = user_file.name.encode('ascii') uri = upload_message_image_from_request(request, user_file, user_profile) return json_success({'uri': uri})