| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283 | URI.MungeTYPE: string/nullVERSION: 1.3.0DEFAULT: NULL--DESCRIPTION--<p>    Munges all browsable (usually http, https and ftp)    absolute URIs into another URI, usually a URI redirection service.    This directive accepts a URI, formatted with a <code>%s</code> where    the url-encoded original URI should be inserted (sample:    <code>http://www.google.com/url?q=%s</code>).</p><p>    Uses for this directive:</p><ul>    <li>        Prevent PageRank leaks, while being fairly transparent        to users (you may also want to add some client side JavaScript to        override the text in the statusbar). <strong>Notice</strong>:        Many security experts believe that this form of protection does not deter spam-bots.    </li>    <li>        Redirect users to a splash page telling them they are leaving your        website. While this is poor usability practice, it is often mandated        in corporate environments.    </li></ul><p>    Prior to HTML Purifier 3.1.1, this directive also enabled the munging    of browsable external resources, which could break things if your redirection    script was a splash page or used <code>meta</code> tags. To revert to    previous behavior, please use %URI.MungeResources.</p><p>    You may want to also use %URI.MungeSecretKey along with this directive    in order to enforce what URIs your redirector script allows. Open    redirector scripts can be a security risk and negatively affect the    reputation of your domain name.</p><p>    Starting with HTML Purifier 3.1.1, there is also these substitutions:</p><table>    <thead>        <tr>            <th>Key</th>            <th>Description</th>            <th>Example <code><a href=""></code></th>        </tr>    </thead>    <tbody>        <tr>            <td>%r</td>            <td>1 - The URI embeds a resource<br />(blank) - The URI is merely a link</td>            <td></td>        </tr>        <tr>            <td>%n</td>            <td>The name of the tag this URI came from</td>            <td>a</td>        </tr>        <tr>            <td>%m</td>            <td>The name of the attribute this URI came from</td>            <td>href</td>        </tr>        <tr>            <td>%p</td>            <td>The name of the CSS property this URI came from, or blank if irrelevant</td>            <td></td>        </tr>    </tbody></table><p>    Admittedly, these letters are somewhat arbitrary; the only stipulation    was that they couldn't be a through f. r is for resource (I would have preferred    e, but you take what you can get), n is for name, m    was picked because it came after n (and I couldn't use a), p is for    property.</p>--# vim: et sw=4 sts=4
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