/usr/share/perl5/String/Random.pm is in libstring-random-perl 1:0.29-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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# Copyright (C) 1999-2006 Steven Pritchard <steve@silug.org>
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it
# and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
#
# $Id: Random.pm,v 1.4 2006/09/21 17:34:07 steve Exp $
package String::Random;
require 5.006_001;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Carp;
use parent qw(Exporter);
our %EXPORT_TAGS = (
'all' => [
qw(
&random_string
&random_regex
)
]
);
our @EXPORT_OK = ( @{ $EXPORT_TAGS{'all'} } );
our $VERSION = '0.29';
# These are the various character sets.
my @upper = ( 'A' .. 'Z' );
my @lower = ( 'a' .. 'z' );
my @digit = ( '0' .. '9' );
my @punct = map {chr} ( 33 .. 47, 58 .. 64, 91 .. 96, 123 .. 126 );
my @any = ( @upper, @lower, @digit, @punct );
my @salt = ( @upper, @lower, @digit, '.', '/' );
my @binary = map {chr} ( 0 .. 255 );
# What's important is how they relate to the pattern characters.
# These are the old patterns for randpattern/random_string.
my %old_patterns = (
'C' => [@upper],
'c' => [@lower],
'n' => [@digit],
'!' => [@punct],
'.' => [@any],
's' => [@salt],
'b' => [@binary],
);
# These are the regex-based patterns.
my %patterns = (
# These are the regex-equivalents.
'.' => [@any],
'\d' => [@digit],
'\D' => [ @upper, @lower, @punct ],
'\w' => [ @upper, @lower, @digit, '_' ],
'\W' => [ grep { $_ ne '_' } @punct ],
'\s' => [ q{ }, "\t" ], # Would anything else make sense?
'\S' => [ @upper, @lower, @digit, @punct ],
# These are translated to their double quoted equivalents.
'\t' => ["\t"],
'\n' => ["\n"],
'\r' => ["\r"],
'\f' => ["\f"],
'\a' => ["\a"],
'\e' => ["\e"],
);
# This is used for cache of parsed range patterns in %regch
my %parsed_range_patterns = ();
# These characters are treated specially in randregex().
my %regch = (
'\\' => sub {
my ( $self, $ch, $chars, $string ) = @_;
if ( @{$chars} ) {
my $tmp = shift( @{$chars} );
if ( $tmp eq 'x' ) {
# This is supposed to be a number in hex, so
# there had better be at least 2 characters left.
$tmp = shift( @{$chars} ) . shift( @{$chars} );
push( @{$string}, [ chr( hex($tmp) ) ] );
}
elsif ( $tmp =~ /[0-7]/ ) {
carp 'octal parsing not implemented. treating literally.';
push( @{$string}, [$tmp] );
}
elsif ( defined( $patterns{"\\$tmp"} ) ) {
$ch .= $tmp;
push( @{$string}, $patterns{$ch} );
}
else {
if ( $tmp =~ /\w/ ) {
carp "'\\$tmp' being treated as literal '$tmp'";
}
push( @{$string}, [$tmp] );
}
}
else {
croak 'regex not terminated';
}
},
'.' => sub {
my ( $self, $ch, $chars, $string ) = @_;
push( @{$string}, $patterns{$ch} );
},
'[' => sub {
my ( $self, $ch, $chars, $string ) = @_;
my @tmp;
while ( defined( $ch = shift( @{$chars} ) ) && ( $ch ne ']' ) ) {
if ( ( $ch eq '-' ) && @{$chars} && @tmp ) {
my $begin_ch = $tmp[-1];
$ch = shift( @{$chars} );
my $key = "$begin_ch-$ch";
if ( defined( $parsed_range_patterns{$key} ) ) {
push( @tmp, @{ $parsed_range_patterns{$key} } );
}
else {
my @chs;
for my $n ( ( ord($begin_ch) + 1 ) .. ord($ch) ) {
push @chs, chr($n);
}
$parsed_range_patterns{$key} = \@chs;
push @tmp, @chs;
}
}
else {
carp "'$ch' will be treated literally inside []"
if ( $ch =~ /\W/ );
push( @tmp, $ch );
}
}
croak 'unmatched []' if ( $ch ne ']' );
push( @{$string}, \@tmp );
},
'*' => sub {
my ( $self, $ch, $chars, $string ) = @_;
unshift( @{$chars}, split( //, '{0,}' ) );
},
'+' => sub {
my ( $self, $ch, $chars, $string ) = @_;
unshift( @{$chars}, split( //, '{1,}' ) );
},
'?' => sub {
my ( $self, $ch, $chars, $string ) = @_;
unshift( @{$chars}, split( //, '{0,1}' ) );
},
'{' => sub {
my ( $self, $ch, $chars, $string ) = @_;
my $closed;
CLOSED:
for my $c ( @{$chars} ) {
if ( $c eq '}' ) {
$closed = 1;
last CLOSED;
}
}
if ($closed) {
my $tmp;
while ( defined( $ch = shift( @{$chars} ) ) && ( $ch ne '}' ) ) {
croak "'$ch' inside {} not supported" if ( $ch !~ /[\d,]/ );
$tmp .= $ch;
}
if ( $tmp =~ /,/ ) {
if ( my ( $min, $max ) = $tmp =~ /^(\d*),(\d*)$/ ) {
if ( !length($min) ) { $min = 0 }
if ( !length($max) ) { $max = $self->{'_max'} }
croak "bad range {$tmp}" if ( $min > $max );
if ( $min == $max ) {
$tmp = $min;
}
else {
$tmp = $min + $self->{'_rand'}( $max - $min + 1 );
}
}
else {
croak "malformed range {$tmp}";
}
}
if ($tmp) {
my $prev_ch = $string->[-1];
push @{$string}, ( ($prev_ch) x ( $tmp - 1 ) );
}
else {
pop( @{$string} );
}
}
else {
# { isn't closed, so treat it literally.
push( @{$string}, [$ch] );
}
},
);
# Default rand function
sub _rand {
my ($max) = @_;
return int rand $max;
}
sub new {
my ( $proto, @args ) = @_;
my $class = ref($proto) || $proto;
my $self;
$self = {%old_patterns}; # makes $self refer to a copy of %old_patterns
my %args = ();
if (@args) { %args = @args }
if ( defined( $args{'max'} ) ) {
$self->{'_max'} = $args{'max'};
}
else {
$self->{'_max'} = 10;
}
if ( defined( $args{'rand_gen'} ) ) {
$self->{'_rand'} = $args{'rand_gen'};
}
else {
$self->{'_rand'} = \&_rand;
}
return bless( $self, $class );
}
# Returns a random string for each regular expression given as an
# argument, or the strings concatenated when used in a scalar context.
sub randregex {
my $self = shift;
croak 'called without a reference' if ( !ref($self) );
my @strings = ();
while ( defined( my $pattern = shift ) ) {
my $ch;
my @string = ();
my $string = q{};
# Split the characters in the pattern
# up into a list for easier parsing.
my @chars = split( //, $pattern );
while ( defined( $ch = shift(@chars) ) ) {
if ( defined( $regch{$ch} ) ) {
$regch{$ch}->( $self, $ch, \@chars, \@string );
}
elsif ( $ch =~ /[\$\^\*\(\)\+\{\}\]\|\?]/ ) {
# At least some of these probably should have special meaning.
carp "'$ch' not implemented. treating literally.";
push( @string, [$ch] );
}
else {
push( @string, [$ch] );
}
}
foreach my $ch (@string) {
$string .= $ch->[ $self->{'_rand'}( scalar( @{$ch} ) ) ];
}
push( @strings, $string );
}
return wantarray ? @strings : join( q{}, @strings );
}
# For compatibility with an ancient version, please ignore...
sub from_pattern {
my ( $self, @args ) = @_;
croak 'called without a reference' if ( !ref($self) );
return $self->randpattern(@args);
}
sub randpattern {
my $self = shift;
croak 'called without a reference' if ( !ref($self) );
my @strings = ();
while ( defined( my $pattern = shift ) ) {
my $string = q{};
for my $ch ( split( //, $pattern ) ) {
if ( defined( $self->{$ch} ) ) {
$string .= $self->{$ch}
->[ $self->{'_rand'}( scalar( @{ $self->{$ch} } ) ) ];
}
else {
croak qq(Unknown pattern character "$ch"!);
}
}
push( @strings, $string );
}
return wantarray ? @strings : join( q{}, @strings );
}
sub random_regex {
my (@args) = @_;
my $foo = String::Random->new;
return $foo->randregex(@args);
}
sub random_string {
my ( $pattern, @list ) = @_;
my $foo = String::Random->new;
for my $n ( 0 .. $#list ) {
$foo->{$n} = [ @{ $list[$n] } ];
}
return $foo->randpattern($pattern);
}
1;
__END__
=encoding utf8
=head1 NAME
String::Random - Perl module to generate random strings based on a pattern
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use String::Random;
my $string_gen = String::Random->new;
print $string_gen->randregex('\d\d\d'); # Prints 3 random digits
# Prints 3 random printable characters
print $string_gen->randpattern("...");
I<or>
use String::Random qw(random_regex random_string);
print random_regex('\d\d\d'); # Also prints 3 random digits
print random_string("..."); # Also prints 3 random printable characters
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module makes it trivial to generate random strings.
As an example, let's say you are writing a script that needs to generate a
random password for a user. The relevant code might look something like
this:
use String::Random;
my $pass = String::Random->new;
print "Your password is ", $pass->randpattern("CCcc!ccn"), "\n";
This would output something like this:
Your password is UDwp$tj5
B<NOTE!!!>: currently, String::Random uses Perl's built-in predictable random
number generator so the passwords generated by it are insecure.
If you are more comfortable dealing with regular expressions, the following
code would have a similar result:
use String::Random;
my $pass = String::Random->new;
print "Your password is ",
$pass->randregex('[A-Z]{2}[a-z]{2}.[a-z]{2}\d'), "\n";
=head2 Patterns
The pre-defined patterns (for use with C<randpattern()> and C<random_pattern()>)
are as follows:
c Any Latin lowercase character [a-z]
C Any Latin uppercase character [A-Z]
n Any digit [0-9]
! A punctuation character [~`!@$%^&*()-_+={}[]|\:;"'.<>?/#,]
. Any of the above
s A "salt" character [A-Za-z0-9./]
b Any binary data
These can be modified, but if you need a different pattern it is better to
create another pattern, possibly using one of the pre-defined as a base.
For example, if you wanted a pattern C<A> that contained all upper and lower
case letters (C<[A-Za-z]>), the following would work:
my $gen = String::Random->new;
$gen->{'A'} = [ 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z' ];
I<or>
my $gen = String::Random->new;
$gen->{'A'} = [ @{$gen->{'C'}}, @{$gen->{'c'}} ];
The random_string function, described below, has an alternative interface
for adding patterns.
=head2 Methods
=over 8
=item new
=item new max =E<gt> I<number>
=item new rand_gen =E<gt> I<sub>
Create a new String::Random object.
Optionally a parameter C<max> can be included to specify the maximum number
of characters to return for C<*> and other regular expression patterns that
do not return a fixed number of characters.
Optionally a parameter C<rand_gen> can be included to specify a subroutine
coderef for generating the random numbers used in this module. The coderef
must accept one argument C<max> and return an integer between 0 and C<max - 1>.
The default rand_gen coderef is
sub {
my ($max) = @_;
return int rand $max;
}
=item randpattern LIST
The randpattern method returns a random string based on the concatenation
of all the pattern strings in the list.
It will return a list of random strings corresponding to the pattern
strings when used in list context.
=item randregex LIST
The randregex method returns a random string that will match the regular
expression passed in the list argument.
Please note that the arguments to randregex are not real regular
expressions. Only a small subset of regular expression syntax is actually
supported. So far, the following regular expression elements are
supported:
\w Alphanumeric + "_".
\d Digits.
\W Printable characters other than those in \w.
\D Printable characters other than those in \d.
. Printable characters.
[] Character classes.
{} Repetition.
* Same as {0,}.
? Same as {0,1}.
+ Same as {1,}.
Regular expression support is still somewhat incomplete. Currently special
characters inside [] are not supported (with the exception of "-" to denote
ranges of characters). The parser doesn't care for spaces in the "regular
expression" either.
=back
=head2 Functions
=over 8
=item random_string PATTERN,LIST
=item random_string PATTERN
When called with a single scalar argument, random_string returns a random
string using that scalar as a pattern. Optionally, references to lists
containing other patterns can be passed to the function. Those lists will
be used for 0 through 9 in the pattern (meaning the maximum number of lists
that can be passed is 10). For example, the following code:
print random_string("0101",
["a", "b", "c"],
["d", "e", "f"]), "\n";
would print something like this:
cebd
=back
=head1 BUGS
This is Bug Free™ code. (At least until somebody finds one…)
Please report bugs here:
L<https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=String-Random> .
=head1 AUTHOR
Original Author: Steven Pritchard C<< steve@silug.org >>
Now maintained by: Shlomi Fish ( L<http://www.shlomifish.org/> ).
=head1 LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
=head1 SEE ALSO
perl(1).
=cut
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