/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** All rights reserved. ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) ** ** This file is part of the QtNetwork module of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ ** No Commercial Usage ** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed. ** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions ** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying ** this package. ** ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser ** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the ** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. ** ** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional ** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception ** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. ** ** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact ** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ #include "qnetworkcookie.h" #include "qnetworkcookie_p.h" #include "qnetworkrequest.h" #include "qnetworkreply.h" #include "QtCore/qbytearray.h" #include "QtCore/qdebug.h" #include "QtCore/qlist.h" #include "QtCore/qlocale.h" #include "QtCore/qstring.h" #include "QtCore/qstringlist.h" #include "QtCore/qurl.h" #include "private/qobject_p.h" QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE /*! \class QNetworkCookie \since 4.4 \brief The QNetworkCookie class holds one network cookie. Cookies are small bits of information that stateless protocols like HTTP use to maintain some persistent information across requests. A cookie is set by a remote server when it replies to a request and it expects the same cookie to be sent back when further requests are sent. QNetworkCookie holds one such cookie as received from the network. A cookie has a name and a value, but those are opaque to the application (that is, the information stored in them has no meaning to the application). A cookie has an associated path name and domain, which indicate when the cookie should be sent again to the server. A cookie can also have an expiration date, indicating its validity. If the expiration date is not present, the cookie is considered a "session cookie" and should be discarded when the application exits (or when its concept of session is over). QNetworkCookie provides a way of parsing a cookie from the HTTP header format using the QNetworkCookie::parseCookies() function. However, when received in a QNetworkReply, the cookie is already parsed. This class implements cookies as described by the \l{Netscape Cookie Specification}{initial cookie specification by Netscape}, which is somewhat similar to the \l{RFC 2109} specification, plus the \l{Mitigating Cross-site Scripting With HTTP-only Cookies} {"HttpOnly" extension}. The more recent \l{RFC 2965} specification (which uses the Set-Cookie2 header) is not supported. \sa QNetworkCookieJar, QNetworkRequest, QNetworkReply */ /*! Create a new QNetworkCookie object, initializing the cookie name to \a name and its value to \a value. A cookie is only valid if it has a name. However, the value is opaque to the application and being empty may have significance to the remote server. */ QNetworkCookie::QNetworkCookie(const QByteArray &name, const QByteArray &value) : d(new QNetworkCookiePrivate) { qRegisterMetaType(); qRegisterMetaType >(); d->name = name; d->value = value; } /*! Creates a new QNetworkCookie object by copying the contents of \a other. */ QNetworkCookie::QNetworkCookie(const QNetworkCookie &other) : d(other.d) { } /*! Destroys this QNetworkCookie object. */ QNetworkCookie::~QNetworkCookie() { // QSharedDataPointer auto deletes d = 0; } /*! Copies the contents of the QNetworkCookie object \a other to this object. */ QNetworkCookie &QNetworkCookie::operator=(const QNetworkCookie &other) { d = other.d; return *this; } /*! \fn bool QNetworkCookie::operator!=(const QNetworkCookie &other) const Returns true if this cookie is not equal to \a other. \sa operator==() */ /*! Returns true if this cookie is equal to \a other. This function only returns true if all fields of the cookie are the same. However, in some contexts, two cookies of the same name could be considered equal. \sa operator!=() */ bool QNetworkCookie::operator==(const QNetworkCookie &other) const { if (d == other.d) return true; return d->name == other.d->name && d->value == other.d->value && d->expirationDate.toUTC() == other.d->expirationDate.toUTC() && d->domain == other.d->domain && d->path == other.d->path && d->secure == other.d->secure && d->comment == other.d->comment; } /*! Returns true if the "secure" option was specified in the cookie string, false otherwise. Secure cookies may contain private information and should not be resent over unencrypted connections. \sa setSecure() */ bool QNetworkCookie::isSecure() const { return d->secure; } /*! Sets the secure flag of this cookie to \a enable. Secure cookies may contain private information and should not be resent over unencrypted connections. \sa isSecure() */ void QNetworkCookie::setSecure(bool enable) { d->secure = enable; } /*! \since 4.5 Returns true if the "HttpOnly" flag is enabled for this cookie. A cookie that is "HttpOnly" is only set and retrieved by the network requests and replies; i.e., the HTTP protocol. It is not accessible from scripts running on browsers. \sa isSecure() */ bool QNetworkCookie::isHttpOnly() const { return d->httpOnly; } /*! \since 4.5 Sets this cookie's "HttpOnly" flag to \a enable. */ void QNetworkCookie::setHttpOnly(bool enable) { d->httpOnly = enable; } /*! Returns true if this cookie is a session cookie. A session cookie is a cookie which has no expiration date, which means it should be discarded when the application's concept of session is over (usually, when the application exits). \sa expirationDate(), setExpirationDate() */ bool QNetworkCookie::isSessionCookie() const { return !d->expirationDate.isValid(); } /*! Returns the expiration date for this cookie. If this cookie is a session cookie, the QDateTime returned will not be valid. If the date is in the past, this cookie has already expired and should not be sent again back to a remote server. The expiration date corresponds to the parameters of the "expires" entry in the cookie string. \sa isSessionCookie(), setExpirationDate() */ QDateTime QNetworkCookie::expirationDate() const { return d->expirationDate; } /*! Sets the expiration date of this cookie to \a date. Setting an invalid expiration date to this cookie will mean it's a session cookie. \sa isSessionCookie(), expirationDate() */ void QNetworkCookie::setExpirationDate(const QDateTime &date) { d->expirationDate = date; } /*! Returns the domain this cookie is associated with. This corresponds to the "domain" field of the cookie string. Note that the domain here may start with a dot, which is not a valid hostname. However, it means this cookie matches all hostnames ending with that domain name. \sa setDomain() */ QString QNetworkCookie::domain() const { return d->domain; } /*! Sets the domain associated with this cookie to be \a domain. \sa domain() */ void QNetworkCookie::setDomain(const QString &domain) { d->domain = domain; } /*! Returns the path associated with this cookie. This corresponds to the "path" field of the cookie string. \sa setPath() */ QString QNetworkCookie::path() const { return d->path; } /*! Sets the path associated with this cookie to be \a path. \sa path() */ void QNetworkCookie::setPath(const QString &path) { d->path = path; } /*! Returns the name of this cookie. The only mandatory field of a cookie is its name, without which it is not considered valid. \sa setName(), value() */ QByteArray QNetworkCookie::name() const { return d->name; } /*! Sets the name of this cookie to be \a cookieName. Note that setting a cookie name to an empty QByteArray will make this cookie invalid. \sa name(), value() */ void QNetworkCookie::setName(const QByteArray &cookieName) { d->name = cookieName; } /*! Returns this cookies value, as specified in the cookie string. Note that a cookie is still valid if its value is empty. Cookie name-value pairs are considered opaque to the application: that is, their values don't mean anything. \sa setValue(), name() */ QByteArray QNetworkCookie::value() const { return d->value; } /*! Sets the value of this cookie to be \a value. \sa value(), name() */ void QNetworkCookie::setValue(const QByteArray &value) { d->value = value; } // ### move this to qnetworkcookie_p.h and share with qnetworkaccesshttpbackend static QPair nextField(const QByteArray &text, int &position) { // format is one of: // (1) token // (2) token = token // (3) token = quoted-string int i; const int length = text.length(); position = nextNonWhitespace(text, position); // parse the first part, before the equal sign for (i = position; i < length; ++i) { register char c = text.at(i); if (c == ';' || c == ',' || c == '=') break; } QByteArray first = text.mid(position, i - position).trimmed(); position = i; if (first.isEmpty()) return qMakePair(QByteArray(), QByteArray()); if (i == length || text.at(i) != '=') // no equal sign, we found format (1) return qMakePair(first, QByteArray()); QByteArray second; second.reserve(32); // arbitrary but works for most cases i = nextNonWhitespace(text, position + 1); if (i < length && text.at(i) == '"') { // a quote, we found format (3), where: // quoted-string = ( <"> *(qdtext | quoted-pair ) <"> ) // qdtext = > // quoted-pair = "\" CHAR ++i; while (i < length) { register char c = text.at(i); if (c == '"') { // end of quoted text break; } else if (c == '\\') { ++i; if (i >= length) // broken line return qMakePair(QByteArray(), QByteArray()); c = text.at(i); } second += c; ++i; } for ( ; i < length; ++i) { register char c = text.at(i); if (c == ',' || c == ';') break; } position = i; } else { // no quote, we found format (2) position = i; for ( ; i < length; ++i) { register char c = text.at(i); if (c == ',' || c == ';' || isLWS(c)) break; } second = text.mid(position, i - position).trimmed(); position = i; } if (second.isNull()) second.resize(0); // turns into empty-but-not-null return qMakePair(first, second); } /*! \enum QNetworkCookie::RawForm This enum is used with the toRawForm() function to declare which form of a cookie shall be returned. \value NameAndValueOnly makes toRawForm() return only the "NAME=VALUE" part of the cookie, as suitable for sending back to a server in a client request's "Cookie:" header. Multiple cookies are separated by a semi-colon in the "Cookie:" header field. \value Full makes toRawForm() return the full cookie contents, as suitable for sending to a client in a server's "Set-Cookie:" header. Multiple cookies are separated by commas in a "Set-Cookie:" header. Note that only the Full form of the cookie can be parsed back into its original contents. \sa toRawForm(), parseCookies() */ /*! Returns the raw form of this QNetworkCookie. The QByteArray returned by this function is suitable for an HTTP header, either in a server response (the Set-Cookie header) or the client request (the Cookie header). You can choose from one of two formats, using \a form. \sa parseCookies() */ QByteArray QNetworkCookie::toRawForm(RawForm form) const { QByteArray result; if (d->name.isEmpty()) return result; // not a valid cookie result = d->name; result += '='; if (d->value.contains(';') || d->value.contains(',') || d->value.contains(' ') || d->value.contains('"')) { result += '"'; QByteArray value = d->value; value.replace('"', "\\\""); result += value; result += '"'; } else { result += d->value; } if (form == Full) { // same as above, but encoding everything back if (isSecure()) result += "; secure"; if (isHttpOnly()) result += "; HttpOnly"; if (!isSessionCookie()) { result += "; expires="; result += QLocale::c().toString(d->expirationDate.toUTC(), QLatin1String("ddd, dd-MMM-yyyy hh:mm:ss 'GMT")).toLatin1(); } if (!d->domain.isEmpty()) { result += "; domain="; QString domainNoDot = d->domain; if (domainNoDot.startsWith(QLatin1Char('.'))) { result += '.'; domainNoDot = domainNoDot.mid(1); } result += QUrl::toAce(domainNoDot); } if (!d->path.isEmpty()) { result += "; path="; result += QUrl::toPercentEncoding(d->path, "/"); } } return result; } static const char zones[] = "pst\0" // -8 "pdt\0" "mst\0" // -7 "mdt\0" "cst\0" // -6 "cdt\0" "est\0" // -5 "edt\0" "ast\0" // -4 "nst\0" // -3 "gmt\0" // 0 "utc\0" "bst\0" "met\0" // 1 "eet\0" // 2 "jst\0" // 9 "\0"; static int zoneOffsets[] = {-8, -8, -7, -7, -6, -6, -5, -5, -4, -3, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 9 }; static const char months[] = "jan\0" "feb\0" "mar\0" "apr\0" "may\0" "jun\0" "jul\0" "aug\0" "sep\0" "oct\0" "nov\0" "dec\0" "\0"; static inline bool isNumber(char s) { return s >= '0' && s <= '9'; } static inline bool isTerminator(char c) { return c == '\n' || c == '\r'; } static inline bool isValueSeparator(char c) { return isTerminator(c) || c == ';'; } static inline bool isWhitespace(char c) { return c == ' ' || c == '\t'; } static bool checkStaticArray(int &val, const QByteArray &dateString, int at, const char *array, int size) { if (dateString[at] < 'a' || dateString[at] > 'z') return false; if (val == -1 && dateString.length() >= at + 3) { int j = 0; int i = 0; while (i <= size) { const char *str = array + i; if (str[0] == dateString[at] && str[1] == dateString[at + 1] && str[2] == dateString[at + 2]) { val = j; return true; } i += strlen(str) + 1; ++j; } } return false; } //#define PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG #define ADAY 1 #define AMONTH 2 #define AYEAR 4 /* Parse all the date formats that Firefox can. The official format is: expires=ddd(d)?, dd-MMM-yyyy hh:mm:ss GMT But browsers have been supporting a very wide range of date strings. To work on many sites we need to support more then just the official date format. For reference see Firefox's PR_ParseTimeStringToExplodedTime in prtime.c. The Firefox date parser is coded in a very complex way and is slightly over ~700 lines long. While this implementation will be slightly slower for the non standard dates it is smaller, more readable, and maintainable. Or in their own words: "} // else what the hell is this." */ static QDateTime parseDateString(const QByteArray &dateString) { QTime time; // placeholders for values when we are not sure it is a year, month or day int unknown[3] = {-1, -1, -1}; int month = -1; int day = -1; int year = -1; int zoneOffset = -1; // hour:minute:second.ms pm QRegExp timeRx(QLatin1String("(\\d{1,2}):(\\d{1,2})(:(\\d{1,2})|)(\\.(\\d{1,3})|)((\\s{0,}(am|pm))|)")); int at = 0; while (at < dateString.length()) { #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << dateString.mid(at); #endif bool isNum = isNumber(dateString[at]); // Month if (!isNum && checkStaticArray(month, dateString, at, months, sizeof(months)- 1)) { ++month; #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Month:" << month; #endif at += 3; continue; } // Zone if (!isNum && zoneOffset == -1 && checkStaticArray(zoneOffset, dateString, at, zones, sizeof(zones)- 1)) { int sign = (at >= 0 && dateString[at - 1] == '-') ? -1 : 1; zoneOffset = sign * zoneOffsets[zoneOffset] * 60 * 60; #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Zone:" << month; #endif at += 3; continue; } // Zone offset if (!isNum && (zoneOffset == -1 || zoneOffset == 0) // Can only go after gmt && (dateString[at] == '+' || dateString[at] == '-') && (at == 0 || isWhitespace(dateString[at - 1]) || dateString[at - 1] == ',' || (at >= 3 && (dateString[at - 3] == 'g') && (dateString[at - 2] == 'm') && (dateString[at - 1] == 't')))) { int end = 1; while (end < 5 && dateString.length() > at+end && dateString[at + end] >= '0' && dateString[at + end] <= '9') ++end; int minutes = 0; int hours = 0; switch (end - 1) { case 4: minutes = atoi(dateString.mid(at + 3, 2).constData()); // fall through case 2: hours = atoi(dateString.mid(at + 1, 2).constData()); break; case 1: hours = atoi(dateString.mid(at + 1, 1).constData()); break; default: at += end; continue; } if (end != 1) { int sign = dateString[at] == '-' ? -1 : 1; zoneOffset = sign * ((minutes * 60) + (hours * 60 * 60)); #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Zone offset:" << zoneOffset << hours << minutes; #endif at += end; continue; } } // Time if (isNum && time.isNull() && dateString.length() >= at + 3 && (dateString[at + 2] == ':' || dateString[at + 1] == ':')) { // While the date can be found all over the string the format // for the time is set and a nice regexp can be used. int pos = timeRx.indexIn(QLatin1String(dateString), at); if (pos != -1) { QStringList list = timeRx.capturedTexts(); int h = atoi(list.at(1).toLatin1().constData()); int m = atoi(list.at(2).toLatin1().constData()); int s = atoi(list.at(4).toLatin1().constData()); int ms = atoi(list.at(6).toLatin1().constData()); if (h < 12 && !list.at(9).isEmpty()) if (list.at(9) == QLatin1String("pm")) h += 12; time = QTime(h, m, s, ms); #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Time:" << list << timeRx.matchedLength(); #endif at += timeRx.matchedLength(); continue; } } // 4 digit Year if (isNum && year == -1 && dateString.length() >= at + 3) { if (isNumber(dateString[at + 1]) && isNumber(dateString[at + 2]) && isNumber(dateString[at + 3])) { year = atoi(dateString.mid(at, 4).constData()); at += 4; #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Year:" << year; #endif continue; } } // a one or two digit number // Could be month, day or year if (isNum) { int length = 1; if (dateString.length() > at + 1 && isNumber(dateString[at + 1])) ++length; int x = atoi(dateString.mid(at, length).constData()); if (year == -1 && (x > 31 || x == 0)) { year = x; } else { if (unknown[0] == -1) unknown[0] = x; else if (unknown[1] == -1) unknown[1] = x; else if (unknown[2] == -1) unknown[2] = x; } at += length; #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Saving" << x; #endif continue; } // Unknown character, typically a weekday such as 'Mon' ++at; } // Once we are done parsing the string take the digits in unknown // and determine which is the unknown year/month/day int couldBe[3] = { 0, 0, 0 }; int unknownCount = 3; for (int i = 0; i < unknownCount; ++i) { if (unknown[i] == -1) { couldBe[i] = ADAY | AYEAR | AMONTH; unknownCount = i; continue; } if (unknown[i] >= 1) couldBe[i] = ADAY; if (month == -1 && unknown[i] >= 1 && unknown[i] <= 12) couldBe[i] |= AMONTH; if (year == -1) couldBe[i] |= AYEAR; } // For any possible day make sure one of the values that could be a month // can contain that day. // For any possible month make sure one of the values that can be a // day that month can have. // Example: 31 11 06 // 31 can't be a day because 11 and 6 don't have 31 days for (int i = 0; i < unknownCount; ++i) { int currentValue = unknown[i]; bool findMatchingMonth = couldBe[i] & ADAY && currentValue >= 29; bool findMatchingDay = couldBe[i] & AMONTH; if (!findMatchingMonth || !findMatchingDay) continue; for (int j = 0; j < 3; ++j) { if (j == i) continue; for (int k = 0; k < 2; ++k) { if (k == 0 && !(findMatchingMonth && (couldBe[j] & AMONTH))) continue; else if (k == 1 && !(findMatchingDay && (couldBe[j] & ADAY))) continue; int m = currentValue; int d = unknown[j]; if (k == 0) qSwap(m, d); if (m == -1) m = month; bool found = true; switch(m) { case 2: // When we get 29 and the year ends up having only 28 // See date.isValid below // Example: 29 23 Feb if (d <= 29) found = false; break; case 4: case 6: case 9: case 11: if (d <= 30) found = false; break; default: if (d > 0 && d <= 31) found = false; } if (k == 0) findMatchingMonth = found; else if (k == 1) findMatchingDay = found; } } if (findMatchingMonth) couldBe[i] &= ~ADAY; if (findMatchingDay) couldBe[i] &= ~AMONTH; } // First set the year/month/day that have been deduced // and reduce the set as we go along to deduce more for (int i = 0; i < unknownCount; ++i) { int unset = 0; for (int j = 0; j < 3; ++j) { if (couldBe[j] == ADAY && day == -1) { day = unknown[j]; unset |= ADAY; } else if (couldBe[j] == AMONTH && month == -1) { month = unknown[j]; unset |= AMONTH; } else if (couldBe[j] == AYEAR && year == -1) { year = unknown[j]; unset |= AYEAR; } else { // common case break; } couldBe[j] &= ~unset; } } // Now fallback to a standardized order to fill in the rest with for (int i = 0; i < unknownCount; ++i) { if (couldBe[i] & AMONTH && month == -1) month = unknown[i]; else if (couldBe[i] & ADAY && day == -1) day = unknown[i]; else if (couldBe[i] & AYEAR && year == -1) year = unknown[i]; } #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Final set" << year << month << day; #endif if (year == -1 || month == -1 || day == -1) { #ifdef PARSEDATESTRINGDEBUG qDebug() << "Parser failure" << year << month << day; #endif return QDateTime(); } // Y2k behavior int y2k = 0; if (year < 70) y2k = 2000; else if (year < 100) y2k = 1900; QDate date(year + y2k, month, day); // When we were given a bad cookie that when parsed // set the day to 29 and the year to one that doesn't // have the 29th of Feb rather then adding the extra // complicated checking earlier just swap here. // Example: 29 23 Feb if (!date.isValid()) date = QDate(day + y2k, month, year); QDateTime dateTime(date, time, Qt::UTC); if (zoneOffset != -1) { dateTime = dateTime.addSecs(zoneOffset); } if (!dateTime.isValid()) return QDateTime(); return dateTime; } /*! Parses the cookie string \a cookieString as received from a server response in the "Set-Cookie:" header. If there's a parsing error, this function returns an empty list. Since the HTTP header can set more than one cookie at the same time, this function returns a QList, one for each cookie that is parsed. \sa toRawForm() */ QList QNetworkCookie::parseCookies(const QByteArray &cookieString) { // cookieString can be a number of set-cookie header strings joined together // by \n, parse each line separately. QList cookies; QList list = cookieString.split('\n'); for (int a = 0; a < list.size(); a++) cookies += QNetworkCookiePrivate::parseSetCookieHeaderLine(list.at(a)); return cookies; } QList QNetworkCookiePrivate::parseSetCookieHeaderLine(const QByteArray &cookieString) { // According to http://wp.netscape.com/newsref/std/cookie_spec.html,< // the Set-Cookie response header is of the format: // // Set-Cookie: NAME=VALUE; expires=DATE; path=PATH; domain=DOMAIN_NAME; secure // // where only the NAME=VALUE part is mandatory // // We do not support RFC 2965 Set-Cookie2-style cookies QList result; QDateTime now = QDateTime::currentDateTime().toUTC(); int position = 0; const int length = cookieString.length(); while (position < length) { QNetworkCookie cookie; // The first part is always the "NAME=VALUE" part QPair field = nextField(cookieString, position); if (field.first.isEmpty() || field.second.isNull()) // parsing error break; cookie.setName(field.first); cookie.setValue(field.second); position = nextNonWhitespace(cookieString, position); bool endOfCookie = false; while (!endOfCookie && position < length) { switch (cookieString.at(position++)) { case ',': // end of the cookie endOfCookie = true; break; case ';': // new field in the cookie field = nextField(cookieString, position); field.first = field.first.toLower(); // everything but the NAME=VALUE is case-insensitive if (field.first == "expires") { position -= field.second.length(); int end; for (end = position; end < length; ++end) if (isValueSeparator(cookieString.at(end))) break; QByteArray dateString = cookieString.mid(position, end - position).trimmed(); position = end; QDateTime dt = parseDateString(dateString.toLower()); if (!dt.isValid()) { return result; } cookie.setExpirationDate(dt); } else if (field.first == "domain") { QByteArray rawDomain = field.second; if (rawDomain.startsWith('.')) { rawDomain = rawDomain.mid(1); } QString normalizedDomain = QUrl::fromAce(QUrl::toAce(QString::fromUtf8(rawDomain))); // always add the dot, there are some servers that forget the // leading dot. This is actually forbidden according to RFC 2109, // but all browsers accept it anyway so we do that as well cookie.setDomain(QLatin1Char('.') + normalizedDomain); } else if (field.first == "max-age") { bool ok = false; int secs = field.second.toInt(&ok); if (!ok) return result; cookie.setExpirationDate(now.addSecs(secs)); } else if (field.first == "path") { QString path = QUrl::fromPercentEncoding(field.second); cookie.setPath(path); } else if (field.first == "secure") { cookie.setSecure(true); } else if (field.first == "httponly") { cookie.setHttpOnly(true); } else if (field.first == "comment") { //cookie.setComment(QString::fromUtf8(field.second)); } else if (field.first == "version") { if (field.second != "1") { // oops, we don't know how to handle this cookie return result; } } else { // got an unknown field in the cookie // what do we do? } position = nextNonWhitespace(cookieString, position); } } if (!cookie.name().isEmpty()) result += cookie; } return result; } #ifndef QT_NO_DEBUG_STREAM QDebug operator<<(QDebug s, const QNetworkCookie &cookie) { s.nospace() << "QNetworkCookie(" << cookie.toRawForm(QNetworkCookie::Full) << ')'; return s.space(); } #endif QT_END_NAMESPACE