From f5745008d2c78d3830e62cbd4e8f223fe69977c5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Guido van Rossum Date: Tue, 20 Oct 1998 14:43:02 +0000 Subject: Patch by Jim Fulton, who writes: """ The FieldStorage constructor calls the read_multi method. The read_multi method creates new FieldStorage objects, re-invoking the constructor (on the new objects). The problem is that the 'environ', 'keep_blank_values', and 'strict_parsing' arguments originally passed to the constructor are not propigated to the new object constructors. This causes os.environ to be used, leading to a miss-handling of the parts. I fixed this by passing these arguments to read_multi and then on to the constructor. See the context diff below. """ --- Lib/cgi.py | 10 ++++++---- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/Lib/cgi.py b/Lib/cgi.py index 3a4e235..aaaded5 100755 --- a/Lib/cgi.py +++ b/Lib/cgi.py @@ -852,7 +852,7 @@ class FieldStorage: if ctype == 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded': self.read_urlencoded() elif ctype[:10] == 'multipart/': - self.read_multi() + self.read_multi(environ, keep_blank_values, strict_parsing) else: self.read_single() @@ -919,14 +919,16 @@ class FieldStorage: self.list.append(MiniFieldStorage(key, value)) self.skip_lines() - def read_multi(self): + def read_multi(self, environ, keep_blank_values, strict_parsing): """Internal: read a part that is itself multipart.""" self.list = [] - part = self.__class__(self.fp, {}, self.innerboundary) + part = self.__class__(self.fp, {}, self.innerboundary, + environ, keep_blank_values, strict_parsing) # Throw first part away while not part.done: headers = rfc822.Message(self.fp) - part = self.__class__(self.fp, headers, self.innerboundary) + part = self.__class__(self.fp, headers, self.innerboundary, + environ, keep_blank_values, strict_parsing) self.list.append(part) self.skip_lines() -- cgit v0.12