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365 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
365 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. py:module:: PIL.OleFileIO
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.. py:currentmodule:: PIL.OleFileIO
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:py:mod:`OleFileIO` Module
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===========================
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The :py:mod:`OleFileIO` module reads Microsoft OLE2 files (also called
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Structured Storage or Microsoft Compound Document File Format), such
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as Microsoft Office documents, Image Composer and FlashPix files, and
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Outlook messages.
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This module is the `OleFileIO\_PL`_ project by Philippe Lagadec, v0.30,
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merged back into Pillow.
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.. _OleFileIO\_PL: http://www.decalage.info/python/olefileio
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How to use this module
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----------------------
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For more information, see also the file **PIL/OleFileIO.py**, sample
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code at the end of the module itself, and docstrings within the code.
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About the structure of OLE files
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An OLE file can be seen as a mini file system or a Zip archive: It
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contains **streams** of data that look like files embedded within the
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OLE file. Each stream has a name. For example, the main stream of a MS
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Word document containing its text is named "WordDocument".
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An OLE file can also contain **storages**. A storage is a folder that
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contains streams or other storages. For example, a MS Word document with
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VBA macros has a storage called "Macros".
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Special streams can contain **properties**. A property is a specific
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value that can be used to store information such as the metadata of a
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document (title, author, creation date, etc). Property stream names
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usually start with the character '05'.
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For example, a typical MS Word document may look like this:
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::
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\x05DocumentSummaryInformation (stream)
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\x05SummaryInformation (stream)
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WordDocument (stream)
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Macros (storage)
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PROJECT (stream)
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PROJECTwm (stream)
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VBA (storage)
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Module1 (stream)
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ThisDocument (stream)
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_VBA_PROJECT (stream)
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dir (stream)
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ObjectPool (storage)
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Test if a file is an OLE container
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Use isOleFile to check if the first bytes of the file contain the Magic
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for OLE files, before opening it. isOleFile returns True if it is an OLE
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file, False otherwise.
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.. code-block:: python
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assert OleFileIO.isOleFile('myfile.doc')
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Open an OLE file from disk
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Create an OleFileIO object with the file path as parameter:
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.. code-block:: python
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ole = OleFileIO.OleFileIO('myfile.doc')
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Open an OLE file from a file-like object
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This is useful if the file is not on disk, e.g. already stored in a
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string or as a file-like object.
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.. code-block:: python
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ole = OleFileIO.OleFileIO(f)
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For example the code below reads a file into a string, then uses BytesIO
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to turn it into a file-like object.
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.. code-block:: python
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data = open('myfile.doc', 'rb').read()
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f = io.BytesIO(data) # or StringIO.StringIO for Python 2.x
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ole = OleFileIO.OleFileIO(f)
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How to handle malformed OLE files
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By default, the parser is configured to be as robust and permissive as
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possible, allowing to parse most malformed OLE files. Only fatal errors
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will raise an exception. It is possible to tell the parser to be more
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strict in order to raise exceptions for files that do not fully conform
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to the OLE specifications, using the raise\_defect option:
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.. code-block:: python
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ole = OleFileIO.OleFileIO('myfile.doc', raise_defects=DEFECT_INCORRECT)
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When the parsing is done, the list of non-fatal issues detected is
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available as a list in the parsing\_issues attribute of the OleFileIO
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object:
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.. code-block:: python
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print('Non-fatal issues raised during parsing:')
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if ole.parsing_issues:
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for exctype, msg in ole.parsing_issues:
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print('- %s: %s' % (exctype.__name__, msg))
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else:
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print('None')
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Syntax for stream and storage path
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Two different syntaxes are allowed for methods that need or return the
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path of streams and storages:
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1) Either a **list of strings** including all the storages from the root
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up to the stream/storage name. For example a stream called
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"WordDocument" at the root will have ['WordDocument'] as full path. A
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stream called "ThisDocument" located in the storage "Macros/VBA" will
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be ['Macros', 'VBA', 'ThisDocument']. This is the original syntax
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from PIL. While hard to read and not very convenient, this syntax
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works in all cases.
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2) Or a **single string with slashes** to separate storage and stream
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names (similar to the Unix path syntax). The previous examples would
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be 'WordDocument' and 'Macros/VBA/ThisDocument'. This syntax is
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easier, but may fail if a stream or storage name contains a slash.
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Both are case-insensitive.
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Switching between the two is easy:
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.. code-block:: python
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slash_path = '/'.join(list_path)
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list_path = slash_path.split('/')
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Get the list of streams
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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listdir() returns a list of all the streams contained in the OLE file,
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including those stored in storages. Each stream is listed itself as a
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list, as described above.
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.. code-block:: python
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print(ole.listdir())
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Sample result:
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.. code-block:: python
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[['\x01CompObj'], ['\x05DocumentSummaryInformation'], ['\x05SummaryInformation']
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, ['1Table'], ['Macros', 'PROJECT'], ['Macros', 'PROJECTwm'], ['Macros', 'VBA',
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'Module1'], ['Macros', 'VBA', 'ThisDocument'], ['Macros', 'VBA', '_VBA_PROJECT']
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, ['Macros', 'VBA', 'dir'], ['ObjectPool'], ['WordDocument']]
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As an option it is possible to choose if storages should also be listed,
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with or without streams:
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.. code-block:: python
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ole.listdir (streams=False, storages=True)
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Test if known streams/storages exist:
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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exists(path) checks if a given stream or storage exists in the OLE file.
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.. code-block:: python
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if ole.exists('worddocument'):
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print("This is a Word document.")
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if ole.exists('macros/vba'):
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print("This document seems to contain VBA macros.")
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Read data from a stream
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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openstream(path) opens a stream as a file-like object.
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The following example extracts the "Pictures" stream from a PPT file:
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.. code-block:: python
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pics = ole.openstream('Pictures')
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data = pics.read()
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Get information about a stream/storage
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Several methods can provide the size, type and timestamps of a given
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stream/storage:
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get\_size(path) returns the size of a stream in bytes:
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.. code-block:: python
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s = ole.get_size('WordDocument')
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get\_type(path) returns the type of a stream/storage, as one of the
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following constants: STGTY\_STREAM for a stream, STGTY\_STORAGE for a
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storage, STGTY\_ROOT for the root entry, and False for a non existing
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path.
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.. code-block:: python
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t = ole.get_type('WordDocument')
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get\_ctime(path) and get\_mtime(path) return the creation and
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modification timestamps of a stream/storage, as a Python datetime object
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with UTC timezone. Please note that these timestamps are only present if
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the application that created the OLE file explicitly stored them, which
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is rarely the case. When not present, these methods return None.
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.. code-block:: python
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c = ole.get_ctime('WordDocument')
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m = ole.get_mtime('WordDocument')
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The root storage is a special case: You can get its creation and
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modification timestamps using the OleFileIO.root attribute:
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.. code-block:: python
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c = ole.root.getctime()
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m = ole.root.getmtime()
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Extract metadata
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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get\_metadata() will check if standard property streams exist, parse all
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the properties they contain, and return an OleMetadata object with the
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found properties as attributes.
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.. code-block:: python
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meta = ole.get_metadata()
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print('Author:', meta.author)
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print('Title:', meta.title)
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print('Creation date:', meta.create_time)
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# print all metadata:
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meta.dump()
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Available attributes include:
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::
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codepage, title, subject, author, keywords, comments, template,
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last_saved_by, revision_number, total_edit_time, last_printed, create_time,
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last_saved_time, num_pages, num_words, num_chars, thumbnail,
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creating_application, security, codepage_doc, category, presentation_target,
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bytes, lines, paragraphs, slides, notes, hidden_slides, mm_clips,
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scale_crop, heading_pairs, titles_of_parts, manager, company, links_dirty,
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chars_with_spaces, unused, shared_doc, link_base, hlinks, hlinks_changed,
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version, dig_sig, content_type, content_status, language, doc_version
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See the source code of the OleMetadata class for more information.
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Parse a property stream
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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get\_properties(path) can be used to parse any property stream that is
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not handled by get\_metadata. It returns a dictionary indexed by
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integers. Each integer is the index of the property, pointing to its
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value. For example in the standard property stream
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'05SummaryInformation', the document title is property #2, and the
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subject is #3.
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.. code-block:: python
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p = ole.getproperties('specialprops')
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By default as in the original PIL version, timestamp properties are
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converted into a number of seconds since Jan 1,1601. With the option
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convert\_time, you can obtain more convenient Python datetime objects
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(UTC timezone). If some time properties should not be converted (such as
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total editing time in '05SummaryInformation'), the list of indexes can
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be passed as no\_conversion:
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.. code-block:: python
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p = ole.getproperties('specialprops', convert_time=True, no_conversion=[10])
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Close the OLE file
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Unless your application is a simple script that terminates after
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processing an OLE file, do not forget to close each OleFileIO object
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after parsing to close the file on disk.
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.. code-block:: python
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ole.close()
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Use OleFileIO as a script
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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OleFileIO can also be used as a script from the command-line to
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display the structure of an OLE file and its metadata, for example:
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::
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PIL/OleFileIO.py myfile.doc
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You can use the option -c to check that all streams can be read fully,
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and -d to generate very verbose debugging information.
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How to contribute
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-----------------
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The code is available in `a Mercurial repository on
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bitbucket <https://bitbucket.org/decalage/olefileio_pl>`_. You may use
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it to submit enhancements or to report any issue.
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If you would like to help us improve this module, or simply provide
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feedback, please `contact me <http://decalage.info/contact>`_. You can
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help in many ways:
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- test this module on different platforms / Python versions
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- find and report bugs
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- improve documentation, code samples, docstrings
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- write unittest test cases
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- provide tricky malformed files
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How to report bugs
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------------------
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To report a bug, for example a normal file which is not parsed
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correctly, please use the `issue reporting
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page <https://bitbucket.org/decalage/olefileio_pl/issues?status=new&status=open>`_,
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or if you prefer to do it privately, use this `contact
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form <http://decalage.info/contact>`_. Please provide all the
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information about the context and how to reproduce the bug.
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If possible please join the debugging output of OleFileIO. For this,
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launch the following command :
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::
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PIL/OleFileIO.py -d -c file >debug.txt
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Classes and Methods
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-------------------
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.. automodule:: PIL.OleFileIO
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:members:
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:undoc-members:
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:show-inheritance:
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:noindex:
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