Plist is a library to manipulate Property List files, also known as plists. It can parse plist files into native Ruby data structures as well as generating new plist files from your Ruby objects.
By default, Plist.parse_xml uses Marshal.load for <data/> attributes. If the <data/> attribute contains malicious data, an attacker can gain code execution.
You should never use the default Plist.parse_xml with untrusted plists!
To disable the Marshal.load behavior, use marshal: false
. This will return the raw binary <data> contents as an IO object instead of attempting to unmarshal it.
result = Plist.parse_xml('path/to/example.plist') # or result = Plist.parse_xml('path/to/example.plist', marshal: false) result.class => Hash "#{result['FirstName']} #{result['LastName']}" => "John Public" result['ZipPostal'] => "12345"
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd"> <plist version="1.0"> <dict> <key>FirstName</key> <string>John</string> <key>LastName</key> <string>Public</string> <key>StreetAddr1</key> <string>123 Anywhere St.</string> <key>StateProv</key> <string>CA</string> <key>City</key> <string>Some Town</string> <key>CountryName</key> <string>United States</string> <key>AreaCode</key> <string>555</string> <key>LocalPhoneNumber</key> <string>5551212</string> <key>ZipPostal</key> <string>12345</string> </dict> </plist>
plist also provides the ability to generate plists from Ruby objects. The following Ruby classes are converted into native plist types:
Array, Bignum, Date, DateTime, Fixnum, Float, Hash, Integer, String, Symbol, Time, true, false
-
Array
andHash
are both recursive; their elements will be converted into plist nodes inside the <array> and <dict> containers (respectively). -
IO
(and its descendants) andStringIO
objects are read from and their contents placed in a <data> element. -
User classes may implement
to_plist_node
to dictate how they should be serialized; otherwise the object will be passed toMarshal.dump
and the result placed in a <data> element. See below for more details.
There are two ways to generate complete plists. Given an object:
obj = [1, :two, {'c' => 0xd}]
If you’ve mixed in Plist::Emit
(which is already done for Array
and Hash
), you can simply call to_plist
:
obj.to_plist
This is equivalent to calling Plist::Emit.dump(obj)
. Either one will yield:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd"> <plist version="1.0"> <array> <integer>1</integer> <string>two</string> <dict> <key>c</key> <integer>13</integer> </dict> </array> </plist>
You can also dump plist fragments by passing false
as the second parameter:
Plist::Emit.dump('holy cow!', false) => "<string>holy cow!</string>"
If your class can be safely coerced into a native plist datatype, you can implement to_plist_node
. Upon encountering an object of a class it doesn’t recognize, the plist library will check to see if it responds to to_plist_node
, and if so, insert the result of that call into the plist output.
An example:
class MyFancyString ... def to_plist_node return "<string>#{self.defancify}</string>" end end
When you attempt to serialize a MyFancyString
object, the to_plist_node
method will be called and the object’s contents will be defancified and placed in the plist.
If for whatever reason you can’t add this method, your object will be serialized with Marshal.dump
instead.
You can customize the default indent foramt (default format is tab) or specify the indent format on each serialization. For example, if you want to reduce size of plist output, you can set the indent to nil
.
An example to change default indent format:
Plist::Emit::DEFAULT_INDENT = nil
An example to specify indent format on dump:
Plist::Emit.dump({:foo => :bar}, false) => "<dict>\n\t<key>foo</key>\n\t<string>bar</string>\n</dict>\n" Plist::Emit.dump({:foo => :bar}, false, :indent => nil) => "<dict>\n<key>foo</key>\n<string>bar</string>\n</dict>\n"
- Rubygems
- GitHub
- RDoc
plist was authored by Ben Bleything <[email protected]> and Patrick May <[email protected]>. Patrick wrote most of the code; Ben contributed his plist generation library. The project is currently maintained by @mattbrictson.
Other folks who have helped along the way:
- Martin Dittus
-
who pointed out that
Time
wasn’t enough for plistDates
, especially those in~/Library/Cookies/Cookies.plist
- Chuck Remes
-
who pushed Patrick towards implementing
#to_plist
- Mat Schaffer
-
who supplied code and test cases for
<data>
elements - Michael Granger
-
for encouragement and help
- Carsten Bormann, Chris Hoffman, Dana Contreras, Hongli Lai, Johan Sørensen
-
for contributing Ruby 1.9.x compatibility fixes
And thank you to all of the other GitHub contributors not mentioned here!
plist is released under the MIT License.
Portions of the code (notably the Rakefile) contain code pulled and/or adapted from other projects. These files contain a comment at the top describing what was used.
Copyright © 2006-2010, Ben Bleything <[email protected]> and Patrick May <[email protected]>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.