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MIME::Types(3pm)      User Contributed Perl Documentation     MIME::Types(3pm)

NAME
       MIME::Types - Definition of MIME types

INHERITANCE
        MIME::Types
          is an Exporter

SYNOPSIS
        use MIME::Types;
        my $mt    = MIME::Types->new(...);    # MIME::Types object
        my $type  = $mt->type('text/plain');  # MIME::Type  object
        my $type  = $mt->mimeTypeOf('gif');
        my $type  = $mt->mimeTypeOf('picture.jpg');
        my @types = $mt->httpAccept('text/html, application/json;q=0.1')

DESCRIPTION
       MIME types are used in many applications (for instance as part of
       e-mail and HTTP traffic) to indicate the type of content which is
       transmitted.  or expected.  See RFC2045 at
       https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2045.txt

       Sometimes detailed knowledge about a mime-type is need, however this
       module only knows about the file-name extensions which relate to some
       filetype.  It can also be used to produce the right format: types which
       are not registered at IANA need to use 'x-' prefixes.

       This object administers a huge list of known mime-types, combined from
       various sources.  For instance, it contains all IANA types and the
       knowledge of Apache.  Probably the most complete table on the net!

   MIME::Types and daemons (fork)
       If your program uses fork (usually for a daemon), then you want to have
       the type table initialized before you start forking. So, first call

          my $mt = MIME::Types->new;

       Later, each time you create this object (you may, of course, also reuse
       the object you create here) you will get access to the same global
       table of types.

METHODS
   Constructors
       MIME::Types->new(%options)
           Create  a  new "MIME::Types" object which manages the data.  In the
           current implementation, it does not matter whether you create  this
           object  often  within  your  program,  but  in  the future this may
           change.

            -Option         --Default
             db_file          <installed source>
             only_complete    <false>
             only_iana        <false>
             skip_extensions  <false>

           db_file => FILENAME
             The location of the database which contains the type information.
             Only the first  instantiation  of  this  object  will  have  this
             parameter obeyed.

             [2.10]   This   parameter  can  be  globally  overruled  via  the
             "PERL_MIME_TYPE_DB" environment variable, which may be needed  in
             case of PAR or other tricky installations.  For PAR, you probably
             set this environment variable to "inc/lib/MIME/types.db"

           only_complete => BOOLEAN
             Only  include  complete  MIME type definitions: requires at least
             one known extension.  This will  reduce  the  number  of  entries
             --and with that the amount of memory consumed-- considerably.

             In  your program you have to decide: the first time that you call
             the creator ("new") determines whether you get the  full  or  the
             partial information.

           only_iana => BOOLEAN
             Only load the types which are currently known by IANA.

           skip_extensions => BOOLEAN
             Do  not load the table to map extensions to types, which is quite
             large.

   Knowledge
       $obj->addType($type, ...)
           Add one or more TYPEs to the set of known types.  Each  TYPE  is  a
           "MIME::Type"  which  must  be experimental: either the main-type or
           the sub-type must start with "x-".

           Please inform the maintainer of this module when  registered  types
           are  missing.   Before  version MIME::Types version 1.14, a warning
           was produced when an unknown IANA type was added.   This  has  been
           removed,  because some people need that to get their application to
           work locally... broken applications...

       $obj->extensions()
           Returns a list of all defined extensions.

       $obj->listTypes()
           Returns a list of all defined mime-types by name only.   This  will
           not instantiate MIME::Type objects.  See types()

       $obj->mimeTypeOf($filename)
           Returns  the  "MIME::Type" object which belongs to the FILENAME (or
           simply its filename extension) or  "undef"  if  the  file  type  is
           unknown.  The extension is used and considered case-insensitive.

           In  some  cases, more than one type is known for a certain filename
           extension.  In that case,  the  preferred  one  is  taken  (for  an
           unclear definition of preference)

           example: use of mimeTypeOf()

            my $types = MIME::Types->new;
            my $mime = $types->mimeTypeOf('gif');

            my $mime = $types->mimeTypeOf('picture.jpg');
            print $mime->isBinary;

       $obj->type($string)
           Returns  the  "MIME::Type"  which  describes  the  type  related to
           STRING.  [2.00] Only one type will be returned.

           [before 2.00] One type may be described more than once.   Different
           extensions  may  be  in  use for this type, and different operating
           systems may cause more than one "MIME::Type" object to be  defined.
           In scalar context, only the first is returned.

       $obj->types()
           Returns a list of all defined mime-types.  For reasons of backwards
           compatibility, this will instantiate MIME::Type objects, which will
           be returned.  See listTypes().

   HTTP support
       $obj->httpAccept($header)
           [2.07] Decompose a typical HTTP-Accept header, and sort it based on
           the  included  priority  information.  Returned is a sorted list of
           type names, where the highest priority type is first.  The list may
           contain '*/*' (accept any) or a '*' as subtype.

           Ill-formated typenames are ignored.  On equal qualities, the  order
           is kept.  See RFC2616 section 14.1

           example:

             my @types = $types->httpAccept('text/html, application/json;q=0.9');

       $obj->httpAcceptBest($accept|\@types, @have)
           [2.07]  The  $accept  string is processed via httpAccept() to order
           the types on preference.  You may also provide a  list  of  ordered
           @types  which  may  have  been  the  result  of that method, called
           earlier.

           As second parameter, you pass a LIST of types you @have  to  offer.
           Those  need  to  be MIME::Type objects. The preferred type will get
           selected.  When none of these are accepted by the client, this will
           return "undef".  It should result in a 406 server response.

           example:

              my $accept = $req->header('Accept');
              my @have   = map $mt->type($_), qw[text/plain text/html];
              my @ext    = $mt->httpAcceptBest($accept, @have);

       $obj->httpAcceptSelect($accept|\@types, @filenames|\@filenames)
           [2.07] Like httpAcceptBest(), but now we do not return a pair  with
           mime-type  and filename, not just the type.  If $accept is "undef",
           the first filename is returned.

           example:

              use HTTP::Status ':constants';
              use File::Glob   'bsd_glob';    # understands blanks in filename

              my @filenames   = bsd_glob "$imagedir/$fnbase.*;
              my $accept      = $req->header('Accept');
              my ($fn, $mime) = $mt->httpAcceptSelect($accept, @filenames);
              my $code        = defined $mime ? HTTP_NOT_ACCEPTABLE : HTTP_OK;

FUNCTIONS
       The  next  functions  are  provided  for  backward  compatibility  with
       MIME::Types  versions [0.06] and below.  This code originates from Jeff
       Okamoto okamoto@corp.hp.com and others.

       by_mediatype(TYPE)
           This function takes a media type and returns a  list  or  anonymous
           array  of  anonymous three-element arrays whose values are the file
           name suffix used to identify it, the  media  type,  and  a  content
           encoding.

           TYPE  can be a full type name (contains '/', and will be matched in
           full), a partial type (which is used as regular  expression)  or  a
           real regular expression.

       by_suffix(FILENAME|SUFFIX)
           Like  "mimeTypeOf",  but does not return an "MIME::Type" object. If
           the file +type  is  unknown,  both  the  returned  media  type  and
           encoding are empty strings.

           example: use of function by_suffix()

            use MIME::Types 'by_suffix';
            my ($mediatype, $encoding) = by_suffix('image.gif');

            my $refdata = by_suffix('image.gif');
            my ($mediatype, $encoding) = @$refdata;

       import_mime_types()
           This  method  has  been  removed:  mime-types  are  only  useful if
           understood by many parties.   Therefore,  the  IANA  assigns  names
           which  can be used.  In the table kept by this "MIME::Types" module
           all these names, plus the most often used temporary names are kept.
           When names seem to be missing, please contact  the  maintainer  for
           inclusion.

SEE ALSO
       This  module  is part of MIME-Types distribution version 2.26, built on
       February 06, 2024. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/

LICENSE
       Copyrights 1999-2024 by [Mark Overmeer  <markov@cpan.org>].  For  other
       contributors see ChangeLog.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.  See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/

perl v5.38.2                      2024-02-09                  MIME::Types(3pm)

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