Another test is with the file command. It checks for the presence of "magic numbers" in the file to determine its type. On my system, the file package includes libmagic as well as a ctypes-based wrapper /usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/magic.py. It looks like you use it like:
import magic
ms = magic.open(magic.MAGIC_NONE)
ms.load()
type = ms.file("/path/to/some/file")
print type
f = file("/path/to/some/file", "r")
buffer = f.read(4096)
f.close()
type = ms.buffer(buffer)
print type
ms.close()
(Code from here.)
As to your original question: "Read the Source, Luke."
django/core/files/images.py:
"""
Utility functions for handling images.
Requires PIL, as you might imagine.
"""
from django.core.files import File
class ImageFile(File):
"""
A mixin for use alongside django.core.files.base.File, which provides
additional features for dealing with images.
"""
def _get_width(self):
return self._get_image_dimensions()[0]
width = property(_get_width)
def _get_height(self):
return self._get_image_dimensions()[1]
height = property(_get_height)
def _get_image_dimensions(self):
if not hasattr(self, '_dimensions_cache'):
close = self.closed
self.open()
self._dimensions_cache = get_image_dimensions(self, close=close)
return self._dimensions_cache
def get_image_dimensions(file_or_path, close=False):
"""
Returns the (width, height) of an image, given an open file or a path. Set
'close' to True to close the file at the end if it is initially in an open
state.
"""
# Try to import PIL in either of the two ways it can end up installed.
try:
from PIL import ImageFile as PILImageFile
except ImportError:
import ImageFile as PILImageFile
p = PILImageFile.Parser()
if hasattr(file_or_path, 'read'):
file = file_or_path
file_pos = file.tell()
file.seek(0)
else:
file = open(file_or_path, 'rb')
close = True
try:
while 1:
data = file.read(1024)
if not data:
break
p.feed(data)
if p.image:
return p.image.size
return None
finally:
if close:
file.close()
else:
file.seek(file_pos)
So it looks like it just reads the file 1024 bytes at a time until PIL says it's an image, then stops. This obviously does not integrity-check the entire file, so it really depends on what you mean by "covering my image upload security": illicit data could be appended to an image and passed through your site. Someone could DOS your site by uploading a lot of junk or a really big file. You could be vulnerable to an injection attack if you don't check any uploaded captions or make assumptions about the image's uploaded filename. And so on.