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The code herein contains LPeg [1] routines for parsing some common data
formats.  The current formats are:

abnf

	The core ruleset from RFC-5234.  These rules are used often in RFCs.

ascii
ascii.char
ascii.control
ascii.ctrl

	Match a single ASCII character.  The top level module will match
	both graphical charaters and control characters.  The "ascii.char"
	module only matches the graphical characters; the "ascii.control"
	module only matches the control codes.  The "ascii.ctrl" will return
	the name of a control character, or nil if not a control character.

iso
iso.char
iso.control
iso.ctrl

	Match a single ISO character.  The top level module will match both
	graphical, control characters and control sequences.  The "iso.char"
	only matches the ISO graphical characters; the iso.control" module
	mathces only control characters (for example, <ESC>E or \133).  The
	"iso.ctrl" will return the name of the control character, plus any
	associated data as appropriate.  For example:

		<ESC>[32;40m

	will return a name of "SGR" and a two element array containing 32
	and 40.

	NOTE:  These modules only deal with the ISO defined characters, and
	will NOT match those defined by ASCII.  To match a graphical character
	that matches both ASCII and ISO:

		char = require "org.conman.parsers.ascii.char
		     + require "org.conman.parsers.iso.char


email

	Parses email headers as defined in:

		RFC-0822	Internet Message Format
		RFC-1036	Standard for Interchange of USENET Messages
		RFC-2045	Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions I
		RFC-2046	Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions II
		RFC-2047	Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions III
		RFC-2048	Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions IV
		RFC-2369	The Use of URLs as Meta-Syntax for Core Mail 
				List Commands and their Transport through 
				Message Header Fields
		RFC-2822	Internet Message Format	
		RFC-2919	A Structured Field and Namespace for the Identification of Mailing Lists
		RFC-5064	The Archived-At Message Header Field
		RFC-5322	Internet Message Format

	Headers are returned in a Lua table.  For example, the following
	headers:

		Return-Path: <[email protected]>
		Received: from brevard.conman.org (brevard.conman.org 
			[66.252.224.242])
			by mail.example.com (Postfix) 
			with ESMTP id 538562EA5D07
			for <[email protected]>; 
			Fri, 28 Dec 2012 21:40:11 -0500
		From: Sean Conner <[email protected]>
		To: Sherlock Holmes <[email protected]>,
			the-scooby-gang: Fred <[email protected]>,
				Daphne <[email protected]>,
				Velma <[email protected]>,
				Shaggy <[email protected]>,
				Scobby-Doo <[email protected]>;,
			The Batman <[email protected]>
		Subject: I know who did it!
		Date: Fri, 28 Dec 2012 21:40:11 -0500
		Message-ID: <[email protected]>

	Will return the following Lua table:

		{
		  received =
		  {
		    [1] =
		    {
		      with = "ESMTP",
		      from = "brevard.conman.org",
		      id = "538562EA5D07",
		      when =
		      {
		        min = 0.000000,
		        zone = -18000.000000,
		        day = 28.000000,
		        month = 12.000000,
		        year = 2012.000000,
		        sec = 1.000000,
		        hour = 1.000000,
		        weekday = "Fri",
		      },
		      for =
		      {
		        address = "[email protected]",
		      },
		      by = "mail.example.com",
		    },
		  },
		  to =
		  {
		    [1] =
		    {
		      name = "Sherlock Holmes",
		      address = "[email protected]",
		    },
		    [2] =
		    {
		      ['the-scooby-gang'] =
		      {
		        [1] =
		        {
		          name = "Fred",
		          address = "[email protected]",
		        },
		        [2] =
		        {
		          name = "Daphne",
		          address = "[email protected]",
		        },
		        [3] =
		        {
		          name = "Velma",
		          address = "[email protected]",
		        },
		        [4] =
		        {
		          name = "Shaggy",
		          address = "[email protected]",
		        },
		        [5] =
		        {
		          name = "Scobby-Doo",
		          address = "[email protected]",
		        },
		      },
		    },
		    [3] =
		    {
		      name = "The Batman",
		      address = "[email protected]",
		    },
		  },
		  from =
		  {
		    [1] =
		    {
		      name = "Sean Conner",
		      address = "[email protected]",
		    },
		  },
		  date =
		  {
		    min = 0.000000,
		    zone = -18000.000000,
		    day = 28.000000,
		    month = 12.000000,
		    year = 2012.000000,
		    sec = 1.000000,
		    hour = 1.000000,
		    weekday = "Fri",
		  },
		  return_path =
		  {
		    [1] =
		    {
		      address = "[email protected]",
		    },
		  },
		  message_id = "[email protected]",
		  subject = "I know who did it!",
		}

	The only fields not supported are the Resent-* fields; they are
	rarely used and the semantics are particularly hard to support via
	parsing only.  These fields, as well as any other fields not
	otherwise understood or parsable will end up on a field called
	'generic' with the key being the raw header name.

json

	Implements a JSON parser.  It requires some additional modules [2]
	to run.  This will parse a JSON file into a Lua table.  The full
	grammar is supported, but it expects the input to be valid UTF-8.

	A JSON null value will be converted to nil.  If you won't want this
	behavior, define a global variable called "null" to be the value
	you want for a JSON null.

jsons

	Another implementation of a JSON parser.  This one "streams" the
	input, meaning it will handle large JSON files the other one won't,
	and is a drop in replacement.  You can also pass in a function that
	will return more data so you can actually "stream" data into the
	parser.

ip

	Provides two LPeg patterns, IPv4 and IPv6 which parse and convert
	said addresses directly into their network-order binary formats.

ip-text

	Provides two LPeg patterns, IPv4 and IPv6 which parse and return said
	addresses as text, unlike the ip module above.

ini

	Provides a INI file parser that returns a Lua table from a INI
	file.  A sample INI file such as:

		; we allow "default" values

		default = ok

		[section1]

		var1 = foo
		var2 = 12,23,34,54,44
		VAR3 = "var3=foo",33,44,55
		var2 = apple
		Var4 = 55

		[section2]
			# another comment
			; and so is this one
		
			var1 = foo bar baz ; this is a comment
			var2 = "foo bar baz ; this is not a comment"

		[section1]

			var4=this is a test
			var5= this is also a test
			var2 = pear
			var3 = 88,99


	will result in a Lua table of:

		{
		  section1 =
		  {
		    var1 = "foo",
		    var5 = "this is also a test",
		    var4 =
		    {
		      [1] = "55",
		      [2] = "this is a test",
		    },
		    var3 =
		    {
		      [1] = "var3=foo",
		      [2] = "33",
		      [3] = "44",
		      [4] = "55",
		      [5] = "88",
		      [6] = "99",
		    },
		    var2 =
		    {
		      [1] = "12",
		      [2] = "23",
		      [3] = "34",
		      [4] = "54",
		      [5] = "44",
		      [6] = "apple",
		      [7] = "pear",
		    },
		  },
		  default = "ok",
		  section2 =
		  {
		    var1 = "foo bar baz ",
		    var2 = "foo bar baz ; this is not a comment",
		  },
		}

strftime
	Parses the format string for strftime() (or os.date() for Lua) and
	returns an LPeg expression that can parse that format, with the
	exceptions of "%c", "%x" and "%X" (all system specific formats).
	For example, the format, "%A, %d %B %Y @ %H:%M:%S" will return the
	LPeg expression to parse this:

		Monday, 02 July 2018 @ 16:02:48

	into

		{
		  min = 2.000000,
		  wday = 2.000000,
		  day = 2.000000,
		  month = 7.000000,
		  sec = 48.000000,
		  hour = 16.000000,
		  year = 2018.000000,
		}

	This will even work with other locales, such as "se_NO.UTF-8",
	which will allow LPeg to parse:

		vuossárga, 02 suoidnemánu 2018 @ 16:02:48

	into

		{
		  min = 2,000000,
		  wday = 2,000000,
		  day = 2,000000,
		  month = 7,000000,
		  sec = 48,000000,
		  hour = 16,000000,
		  year = 2018,000000,
		}

url

	Parses URLs per RFC-3986.  By default, it will handle the following
	URL types:

		http:
		https:
		file:
		ftp:

	Given the following URL:

		http://www.conman.org/people/spc/index.cgi?one=1%3F&two=2&three=3#target1

	It will be broken down into a Lua table as follows:

		{
                  scheme   = "http",
		  host     = "www.conman.org",
                  port     = 80,
		  path     = "/people/spc/index.cgi",
		  query    = "one=1%3F&two=2&three=3",
		  fragment = "target1",
		}

	Other URLs can be parsed, but a URL like:

		mailto:[email protected][email protected],[email protected]&subject=Current%20Mystery

	will be broken down as:

		{
		  scheme = "mailto",
		  path   = "[email protected]",
	          query  = "[email protected],[email protected]&subject=Current%20Mystery",
                }

	which may require more parsing than provided here.

url.gopher

	Parses "gopher:" URLs per RFC-4266.  Given this URL:

		gopher://gopher.conman.org/0foobar%09search%20String%09plus

	it will be broken down as:

		{
                  scheme   = "gopher",
		  host     = "gopher.conman.org",
                  port     = 70.000000,
		  type     = "file",
                  selector = "foobar",
		  search   = "search String",
		  plus     = "plus",
		}

	If you need to parse other URLs in addition to "gopher:" types,
	you can do:

		gopher = require "org.conman.parsers.url.gopher"
		url    = require "org.conman.parsers.url"
		
		url  = gopher + url
		info = url:match(my_url)	

url.siptel

	Parses "sip:" and "sips:" URIs per RFC-3261.  
	Parses "tel:" URIs per RFC-3966.

	Examples:

		sip = require "org.conman.parsers.url.sip"
		u = sip:match [[sip:[email protected];play=file://fs.example.net//clips/my-intro.dvi;content-type=video/mpeg%3bencode%d3314M-25/625-50]]

	results in:

		{
		  host       = "example.com",
		  port       = 5060.000000,
		  user       = "annc",
		  scheme     = "sip",
		  parameters =
		  {
		    play             = "file://fs.example.net//clips/my-intro.dvi",
		    ["content-type"] = "video/mpeg%3bencode%d3314M-25/625-50",
		  },
		}
	
	and 

		u = sip:match [[sip:+1-(555)-555-1212;[email protected];user=phone]]

	results in:

		{
		  host = "example.net",
		  port = 5060.000000,
		  user =
		  {
		    number     = "15555551212",
		    global     = true,
		    parameters =
		    {
		      ext = "1234",
		    },
		  },
		  scheme     = "sip",
		  parameters =
		  {
		    user = "phone",
		  },
		}

	and

		tel = require "org.conman.parsers.url.tel"
		u = tel:match "tel:+1-(555)-555-1212;ext=1234"

	results in:

		{
		  scheme = "tel",
		  number = "15555551212",
		  global = true,
		  parameters =
		  {
		    ext = "1234",
		  },
		}

	If you need to parse other URLs in addition to these types,
	you can do:

		siptel = require "org.conman.parsers.url.sip"
		url    = require "org.conman.parsers.url"

		url  = siptel + url
		info = url:match(my_url)

soundex.lua

	Implements the Soundex algorithm.

[1]	http://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/lpeg/

[2]	https://github.com/spc476/lua-conmanorg

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