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- A Fast Method for Identifying Plain Text Files
- ==============================================
- Introduction
- ------------
- Given a file coming from an unknown source, it is sometimes desirable
- to find out whether the format of that file is plain text. Although
- this may appear like a simple task, a fully accurate detection of the
- file type requires heavy-duty semantic analysis on the file contents.
- It is, however, possible to obtain satisfactory results by employing
- various heuristics.
- Previous versions of PKZip and other zip-compatible compression tools
- were using a crude detection scheme: if more than 80% (4/5) of the bytes
- found in a certain buffer are within the range [7..127], the file is
- labeled as plain text, otherwise it is labeled as binary. A prominent
- limitation of this scheme is the restriction to Latin-based alphabets.
- Other alphabets, like Greek, Cyrillic or Asian, make extensive use of
- the bytes within the range [128..255], and texts using these alphabets
- are most often misidentified by this scheme; in other words, the rate
- of false negatives is sometimes too high, which means that the recall
- is low. Another weakness of this scheme is a reduced precision, due to
- the false positives that may occur when binary files containing large
- amounts of textual characters are misidentified as plain text.
- In this article we propose a new, simple detection scheme that features
- a much increased precision and a near-100% recall. This scheme is
- designed to work on ASCII, Unicode and other ASCII-derived alphabets,
- and it handles single-byte encodings (ISO-8859, MacRoman, KOI8, etc.)
- and variable-sized encodings (ISO-2022, UTF-8, etc.). Wider encodings
- (UCS-2/UTF-16 and UCS-4/UTF-32) are not handled, however.
- The Algorithm
- -------------
- The algorithm works by dividing the set of bytecodes [0..255] into three
- categories:
- - The white list of textual bytecodes:
- 9 (TAB), 10 (LF), 13 (CR), 32 (SPACE) to 255.
- - The gray list of tolerated bytecodes:
- 7 (BEL), 8 (BS), 11 (VT), 12 (FF), 26 (SUB), 27 (ESC).
- - The black list of undesired, non-textual bytecodes:
- 0 (NUL) to 6, 14 to 31.
- If a file contains at least one byte that belongs to the white list and
- no byte that belongs to the black list, then the file is categorized as
- plain text; otherwise, it is categorized as binary. (The boundary case,
- when the file is empty, automatically falls into the latter category.)
- Rationale
- ---------
- The idea behind this algorithm relies on two observations.
- The first observation is that, although the full range of 7-bit codes
- [0..127] is properly specified by the ASCII standard, most control
- characters in the range [0..31] are not used in practice. The only
- widely-used, almost universally-portable control codes are 9 (TAB),
- 10 (LF) and 13 (CR). There are a few more control codes that are
- recognized on a reduced range of platforms and text viewers/editors:
- 7 (BEL), 8 (BS), 11 (VT), 12 (FF), 26 (SUB) and 27 (ESC); but these
- codes are rarely (if ever) used alone, without being accompanied by
- some printable text. Even the newer, portable text formats such as
- XML avoid using control characters outside the list mentioned here.
- The second observation is that most of the binary files tend to contain
- control characters, especially 0 (NUL). Even though the older text
- detection schemes observe the presence of non-ASCII codes from the range
- [128..255], the precision rarely has to suffer if this upper range is
- labeled as textual, because the files that are genuinely binary tend to
- contain both control characters and codes from the upper range. On the
- other hand, the upper range needs to be labeled as textual, because it
- is used by virtually all ASCII extensions. In particular, this range is
- used for encoding non-Latin scripts.
- Since there is no counting involved, other than simply observing the
- presence or the absence of some byte values, the algorithm produces
- consistent results, regardless what alphabet encoding is being used.
- (If counting were involved, it could be possible to obtain different
- results on a text encoded, say, using ISO-8859-16 versus UTF-8.)
- There is an extra category of plain text files that are "polluted" with
- one or more black-listed codes, either by mistake or by peculiar design
- considerations. In such cases, a scheme that tolerates a small fraction
- of black-listed codes would provide an increased recall (i.e. more true
- positives). This, however, incurs a reduced precision overall, since
- false positives are more likely to appear in binary files that contain
- large chunks of textual data. Furthermore, "polluted" plain text should
- be regarded as binary by general-purpose text detection schemes, because
- general-purpose text processing algorithms might not be applicable.
- Under this premise, it is safe to say that our detection method provides
- a near-100% recall.
- Experiments have been run on many files coming from various platforms
- and applications. We tried plain text files, system logs, source code,
- formatted office documents, compiled object code, etc. The results
- confirm the optimistic assumptions about the capabilities of this
- algorithm.
- --
- Cosmin Truta
- Last updated: 2006-May-28
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