package legacyx509 import ( "bytes" "strings" ) // rfc2821Mailbox represents a “mailbox” (which is an email address to most // people) by breaking it into the “local” (i.e. before the '@') and “domain” // parts. type rfc2821Mailbox struct { local, domain string } // parseRFC2821Mailbox parses an email address into local and domain parts, // based on the ABNF for a “Mailbox” from RFC 2821. According to RFC 5280, // Section 4.2.1.6 that's correct for an rfc822Name from a certificate: “The // format of an rfc822Name is a "Mailbox" as defined in RFC 2821, Section 4.1.2”. func parseRFC2821Mailbox(in string) (mailbox rfc2821Mailbox, ok bool) { if len(in) == 0 { return mailbox, false } localPartBytes := make([]byte, 0, len(in)/2) if in[0] == '"' { // Quoted-string = DQUOTE *qcontent DQUOTE // non-whitespace-control = %d1-8 / %d11 / %d12 / %d14-31 / %d127 // qcontent = qtext / quoted-pair // qtext = non-whitespace-control / // %d33 / %d35-91 / %d93-126 // quoted-pair = ("\" text) / obs-qp // text = %d1-9 / %d11 / %d12 / %d14-127 / obs-text // // (Names beginning with “obs-” are the obsolete syntax from RFC 2822, // Section 4. Since it has been 16 years, we no longer accept that.) in = in[1:] QuotedString: for { if len(in) == 0 { return mailbox, false } c := in[0] in = in[1:] switch { case c == '"': break QuotedString case c == '\\': // quoted-pair if len(in) == 0 { return mailbox, false } if in[0] == 11 || in[0] == 12 || (1 <= in[0] && in[0] <= 9) || (14 <= in[0] && in[0] <= 127) { localPartBytes = append(localPartBytes, in[0]) in = in[1:] } else { return mailbox, false } case c == 11 || c == 12 || // Space (char 32) is not allowed based on the // BNF, but RFC 3696 gives an example that // assumes that it is. Several “verified” // errata continue to argue about this point. // We choose to accept it. c == 32 || c == 33 || c == 127 || (1 <= c && c <= 8) || (14 <= c && c <= 31) || (35 <= c && c <= 91) || (93 <= c && c <= 126): // qtext localPartBytes = append(localPartBytes, c) default: return mailbox, false } } } else { // Atom ("." Atom)* NextChar: for len(in) > 0 { // atext from RFC 2822, Section 3.2.4 c := in[0] switch { case c == '\\': // Examples given in RFC 3696 suggest that // escaped characters can appear outside of a // quoted string. Several “verified” errata // continue to argue the point. We choose to // accept it. in = in[1:] if len(in) == 0 { return mailbox, false } fallthrough case ('0' <= c && c <= '9') || ('a' <= c && c <= 'z') || ('A' <= c && c <= 'Z') || c == '!' || c == '#' || c == '$' || c == '%' || c == '&' || c == '\'' || c == '*' || c == '+' || c == '-' || c == '/' || c == '=' || c == '?' || c == '^' || c == '_' || c == '`' || c == '{' || c == '|' || c == '}' || c == '~' || c == '.': localPartBytes = append(localPartBytes, in[0]) in = in[1:] default: break NextChar } } if len(localPartBytes) == 0 { return mailbox, false } // From RFC 3696, Section 3: // “period (".") may also appear, but may not be used to start // or end the local part, nor may two or more consecutive // periods appear.” twoDots := []byte{'.', '.'} if localPartBytes[0] == '.' || localPartBytes[len(localPartBytes)-1] == '.' || bytes.Contains(localPartBytes, twoDots) { return mailbox, false } } if len(in) == 0 || in[0] != '@' { return mailbox, false } in = in[1:] // The RFC species a format for domains, but that's known to be // violated in practice so we accept that anything after an '@' is the // domain part. if _, ok := domainToReverseLabels(in); !ok { return mailbox, false } mailbox.local = string(localPartBytes) mailbox.domain = in return mailbox, true } // domainToReverseLabels converts a textual domain name like foo.example.com to // the list of labels in reverse order, e.g. ["com", "example", "foo"]. func domainToReverseLabels(domain string) (reverseLabels []string, ok bool) { for len(domain) > 0 { if i := strings.LastIndexByte(domain, '.'); i == -1 { reverseLabels = append(reverseLabels, domain) domain = "" } else { reverseLabels = append(reverseLabels, domain[i+1:]) domain = domain[:i] if i == 0 { // domain == "" // domain is prefixed with an empty label, append an empty // string to reverseLabels to indicate this. reverseLabels = append(reverseLabels, "") } } } if len(reverseLabels) > 0 && len(reverseLabels[0]) == 0 { // An empty label at the end indicates an absolute value. return nil, false } for _, label := range reverseLabels { if len(label) == 0 { // Empty labels are otherwise invalid. return nil, false } for _, c := range label { if c < 33 || c > 126 { // Invalid character. return nil, false } } } return reverseLabels, true }