/usr/share/perl5/Mail/SpamAssassin/Locales.pm is in spamassassin 3.4.1-3.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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# Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
# contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
# this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
# The ASF licenses this file to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0
# (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
# the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at:
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
# </@LICENSE>
package Mail::SpamAssassin::Locales;
use strict;
use warnings;
use bytes;
use re 'taint';
use vars qw{
%charsets_for_locale
};
###########################################################################
# A mapping of known country codes to frequent charsets used therein.
# note that the ISO and CP charsets will already have been permitted,
# so only "unusual" charsets should be listed here.
#
# Country codes should be lowercase, charsets uppercase.
#
# A good listing is in /usr/share/config/charsets from KDE 2.2.1
#
%charsets_for_locale = (
# Japanese: Peter Evans writes: iso-2022-jp = rfc approved, rfc 1468, created
# by Jun Murai in 1993 back when he didnt have white hair! rfc approved.
# (rfc 2237) <-- by M$.
'ja' => 'EUCJP JISX020119760 JISX020819830 JISX020819900 JISX020819970 '.
'JISX021219900 JISX021320001 JISX021320002 SHIFT_JIS SHIFTJIS '.
'ISO2022JP SJIS JIS7 JISX0201 JISX0208 JISX0212',
# Korea
'ko' => 'EUCKR KSC56011987',
# Cyrillic: Andrew Vasilyev notes CP866 is common (bug 2278)
'ru' => 'KOI8R KOI8U KOI8T ISOIR111 CP1251 GEORGIANPS CP1251 PT154 CP866',
'ka' => 'KOI8R KOI8U KOI8T ISOIR111 CP1251 GEORGIANPS CP1251 PT154 CP866',
'tg' => 'KOI8R KOI8U KOI8T ISOIR111 CP1251 GEORGIANPS CP1251 PT154 CP866',
'be' => 'KOI8R KOI8U KOI8T ISOIR111 CP1251 GEORGIANPS CP1251 PT154 CP866',
'uk' => 'KOI8R KOI8U KOI8T ISOIR111 CP1251 GEORGIANPS CP1251 PT154 CP866',
'bg' => 'KOI8R KOI8U KOI8T ISOIR111 CP1251 GEORGIANPS CP1251 PT154 CP866',
# Thai
'th' => 'TIS620',
# Chinese (simplified and traditional). Peter Evans writes: new government
# mandated chinese encoding = gb18030, chinese mail is supposed to be
# iso-2022-cn (rfc 1922?)
'zh' => 'GB1988 GB2312 GB231219800 GB18030 GBK BIG5HKSCS BIG5 EUCTW ISO2022CN',
# Chinese Traditional charsets only
'zh.big5' => 'BIG5HKSCS BIG5 EUCTW',
# Chinese Simplified charsets only
'zh.gb2312' => 'GB1988 GB2312 GB231219800 GB18030 GBK ISO2022CN',
);
###########################################################################
sub is_charset_ok_for_locales {
my ($cs, @locales) = @_;
$cs = uc $cs; $cs =~ s/[^A-Z0-9]//g;
$cs =~ s/^3D//gs; # broken by quoted-printable
$cs =~ s/:.*$//gs; # trim off multiple charsets, just use 1st
study $cs; # study is a no-op since perl 5.16.0, eliminating related bugs
#warn "JMD $cs";
# always OK (the net speaks mostly roman charsets)
return 1 if ($cs eq 'USASCII');
return 1 if ($cs =~ /^ISO8859/);
return 1 if ($cs =~ /^ISO10646/);
return 1 if ($cs =~ /^UTF/);
return 1 if ($cs =~ /^UCS/);
return 1 if ($cs =~ /^CP125/);
return 1 if ($cs =~ /^WINDOWS/); # argh, Windows
return 1 if ($cs eq 'IBM852');
return 1 if ($cs =~ /^UNICODE11UTF[78]/); # wtf? never heard of it
return 1 if ($cs eq 'XUNKNOWN'); # added by sendmail when converting to 8bit
return 1 if ($cs eq 'ISO'); # Magellan, sending as 'charset=iso 8859-15'. grr
foreach my $locale (@locales) {
if (!defined($locale) || $locale eq 'C') { $locale = 'en'; }
$locale =~ s/^([a-z][a-z]).*$/$1/; # zh_TW... => zh
my $ok_for_loc = $charsets_for_locale{$locale};
next if (!defined $ok_for_loc);
if ($ok_for_loc =~ /(?:^| )\Q${cs}\E(?:$| )/) {
return 1;
}
}
return 0;
}
1;
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