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d5491da77f
- Use ElementDef->child to define a literal ChildDef object, rather than ElementDef->content_model. - Add notes on transforms, HTMLModule will be able to write those too - Fix some misc typos. git-svn-id: http://htmlpurifier.org/svnroot/htmlpurifier/trunk@729 48356398-32a2-884e-a903-53898d9a118a
187 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
187 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
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XHTML 1.1 and HTML Purifier
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Todo for XHTML 1.1 support <http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/changes.html>
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1. Scratch lang entirely in favor of xml:lang
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2. Scratch name entirely in favor of id (partially-done)
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3. Support Ruby <http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-ruby-20010531/>
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HTML Purifier uses the modularization of XHTML
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<http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-modularization/> to organize the internals
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of HTMLDefinition into a more manageable and extensible fashion. Rather
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than have one super-object, HTMLDefinition is split into HTMLModules,
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each of which are responsible for defining elements, their attributes,
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and other properties (for a more indepth coverage, see
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/library/HTMLPurifier/HTMLModule.php's docblock comments).
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The modules that W3C defines and we support are:
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* 5.1. Attribute Collections (technically not a module
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* 5.2. Core Modules
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o 5.2.2. Text Module
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o 5.2.3. Hypertext Module
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o 5.2.4. List Module
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* 5.4. Text Extension Modules
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o 5.4.1. Presentation Module
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o 5.4.2. Edit Module
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o 5.4.3. Bi-directional Text Module
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* 5.6. Table Modules
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o 5.6.2. Tables Module
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* 5.7. Image Module
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* 5.18. Style Attribute Module
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Modules that we don't support but coul support are:
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* 5.6. Table Modules
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o 5.6.1. Basic Tables Module [?]
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* 5.8. Client-side Image Map Module [?]
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* 5.9. Server-side Image Map Module [?]
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* 5.12. Target Module [?]
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* 5.21. Name Identification Module [deprecated]
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* 5.22. Legacy Module [deprecated]
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These modules will not be implemented due to their dangerousness or
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inapplicability as an XHTML fragment:
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* 5.2. Core Modules
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o 5.2.1. Structure Module
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* 5.3. Applet Module
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* 5.5. Forms Modules
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o 5.5.1. Basic Forms Module
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o 5.5.2. Forms Module
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* 5.10. Object Module
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* 5.11. Frames Module
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* 5.13. Iframe Module
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* 5.14. Intrinsic Events Module
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* 5.15. Metainformation Module
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* 5.16. Scripting Module
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* 5.17. Style Sheet Module
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* 5.19. Link Module
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* 5.20. Base Module
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We will not be using W3C's XML Schemas or DTDs directly due to the lack
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of robust tools for handling them (the main problem is that all the
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current parsers are usually PHP 5 only and solely-validating, not
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correcting).
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The abstraction of the HTMLDefinition creation process will also
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contribute to a need for a caching system. Cache invalidation would be
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difficult, but could be done by comparing the HTML and Attr config
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namespaces with a copy that was packaged along with the serialized
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HTMLDefinition object.
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== General Use-Case ==
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The outwards API of HTMLDefinition has been largely preserved, not
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only for backwards-compatibility but also by design. Instead,
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HTMLDefinition can be retrieved "raw", in which it loads a structure
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that closely resembles the modules of XHTML 1.1. This structure is very
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dynamic, making it easy to make cascading changes to global content
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sets or remove elements in bulk.
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However, once HTML Purifier needs the actual definition, it retrieves
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a finalized version of HTMLDefinition. The finalized definition involves
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processing the modules into a form that it is optimized for multiple
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calls. This final version is immutable and, even if editable, would
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be extremely hard to change.
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So, some code taking advantage of the XHTML modularization may look
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like this:
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<?php
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$config = HTMLPurifier_Config::createDefault();
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$def =& $config->getHTMLDefinition(true); // reference to raw
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unset($def->modules['Hypertext']); // rm ''a'' link
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$purifier = new HTMLPurifier($config);
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$purifier->purify($html); // now the definition is finalized
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?>
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== Inclusions ==
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One of the nice features of HTMLDefinition is that piggy-backing off
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of global attribute and content sets is extremely easy to do.
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=== Attributes ===
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HTMLModule->elements[$element]->attr stores attribute information for the
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specific attributes of $element. This is quite close to the final
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API that HTML Purifier interfaces with, but there's an important
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extra feature: attr may also contain a array with a member index zero.
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<?php
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HTMLModule->elements[$element]->attr[0] = array('AttrSet');
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?>
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Rather than map the attribute key 0 to an array (which should be
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an AttrDef), it defines a number of attribute collections that should
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be merged into this elements attribute array.
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Furthermore, the value of an attribute key, attribute value pair need
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not be a fully fledged AttrDef object. They can also be a string, which
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signifies a AttrDef that is looked up from a centralized registry
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AttrTypes. This allows more concise attribute definitions that look
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more like W3C's declarations, as well as offering a centralized point
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for modifying the behavior of one attribute type. And, of course, the
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old method of manually instantiating an AttrDef still works.
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=== Attribute Collections ===
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Attribute collections are stored and processed in the AttrCollections
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object, which is responsible for performing the inclusions signified
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by the 0 index. These attribute collections, too, are mutable, by
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using HTMLModule->attr_collections. You may add new attributes
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to a collection or define an entirely new collection for your module's
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use. Inclusions can also be cumulative.
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Attribute collections allow us to get rid of so called "global attributes"
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(which actually aren't so global).
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=== Content Models and ChildDef ===
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An implementation of the above-mentioned attributes and attribute
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collections was applied to the ChildDef system. HTML Purifier uses
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a proprietary system called ChildDef for performance and flexibility
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reasons, but this does not line up very well with W3C's notion of
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regexps for defining the allowed children of an element.
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HTMLPurifier->elements[$element]->content_model and
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HTMLPurifier->elements[$element]->content_model_type store information
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about the final ChildDef that will be stored in
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HTMLPurifier->elements[$element]->child (we use a different variable
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because the two forms are sufficiently different).
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$content_model is an abstract, string representation of the internal
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state of ChildDef, while $content_model_type is a string identifier
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of which ChildDef subclass to instantiate. $content_model is processed
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by substituting all content set identifiers (capitalized element names)
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with their contents. It is then parsed and passed into the appropriate
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ChildDef class, as defined by the ContentSets->getChildDef() or the
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custom fallback HTMLModule->getChildDef() for custom child definitions
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not in the core.
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You'll need to use these facilities if you plan on referencing a content
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set like "Inline" or "Block", and using them is recommended even if you're
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not due to their conciseness.
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A few notes on $content_model: it's structure can be as complicated
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as you want, but the pipe symbol (|) is reserved for defining possible
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choices, due to the content sets implementation. For example, a content
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model that looks like:
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"Inline -> Block -> a"
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...when the Inline content set is defined as "span | b" and the Block
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content set is defined as "div | blockquote", will expand into:
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"span | b -> div | blockquote -> a"
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The custom HTMLModule->getChildDef() function will need to be able to
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then feed this information to ChildDef in a usable manner.
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=== Content Sets ===
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Content sets can be altered using HTMLModule->content_sets, an associative
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array of content set names to content set contents. If the content set
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already exists, your values are appended on to it (great for, say,
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registering the font tag as an inline element), otherwise it is
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created. They are substituted into content_model. |