Mail::MboxParser::Mail(3) Provide mail-objects and methods upon

SYNOPSIS

See Mail::MboxParser for an outline on usage. Examples however are also provided in this manpage further below.

DESCRIPTION

Mail::MboxParser::Mail objects are usually not created directly though, in theory, they could be. A description of the provided methods can be found in Mail::MboxParser.

However, go on reading if you want to use methods from MIME::Entity and learn about overloading.

METHODS

new(header, body)
This is usually not called directly but instead by "get_messages()". You could however create a mail-object manually providing the header and body each as either one string or as an array-ref representing the lines.

Here is a common scenario: Retrieving mails from a remote POP-server using Mail::POP3Client and directly feeding each mail to "Mail::MboxParser::Mail->new":

    use Mail::POP3Client;
    use Mail::MboxParser::Mail;
    
    my $pop = new Mail::POP3Client (...);
    for my $i (1 .. $pop->Count) {
        my $msg = Mail::MboxParser::Mail->new( [ $pop->Head($i) ],
                                               [ $pop->Body($i) ] );
        $msg->store_all_attachments( path => '/home/user/dump' );
    }

The above effectively behaves like an attachment-only retriever.

header
Returns the mail-header as a hash-ref with header-fields as keys. All keys are turned to lower-case, so $header{Subject} has to be written as $header{subject}.

If a header-field occurs more than once in the header, the value of the key is an array_ref. Example:

    my $field = $msg->header->{field};
    print $field->[0]; # first occurance of 'field'
    print $field->[1]; # second one
    ...
from_line
Returns the ``From ''-line of the message.
trace
This method returns the ``Received: ''-lines of the message as a list.
body
body(n)
Returns a Mail::MboxParser::Mail::Body object. For methods upon that see further below. When called with the argument n, the n-th body of the message is retrieved. That is, the body of the n-th entity.

Sets "$mail->error" if something went wrong.

find_body
This will return an index number that represents what Mail::MboxParser::Mail considers to be the actual (main)-body of an email. This is useful if you don't know about the structure of a message but want to retrieve the message's signature for instance:

        $signature = $msg->body($msg->find_body)->signature;

Changes are good that find_body does what it is supposed to do.

make_convertable
Returns a Mail::MboxParser::Mail::Convertable object. For details on what you can do with it, read Mail::MboxParser::Mail::Convertable.
get_field(headerfield)
Returns the specified raw field from the message header, that is: the fieldname is not stripped off nor is any decoding done. Returns multiple lines as needed if the field is ``Received'' or another multi-line field. Not case sensitive.

"get_field()" always returns one string regardless of how many times the field occured in the header. Multiple occurances are separated by a newline and multiple whitespaces squeezed to one. That means you can process each occurance of the field thusly:

    for my $field ( split /\n/, $msg->get_field('received') ) {
        # do something with $field
    }

Sets "$mail->error" if the field was not found in which case "get_field()" returns "undef".

from
Returns a hash-ref with the two fields 'name' and 'email'. Returns "undef" if empty. The name-field does not necessarily contain a value either. Example:

        print $mail->from->{email};

On behalf of suggestions I received from users, from() tries to be smart when 'name'is empty and 'email' has the form '[email protected]'. In this case, 'name' is set to ``First Name''.

to
Returns an array of hash-references of all to-fields in the mail-header. Fields are the same as those of "$mail->from". Example:

        for my $recipient ($mail->to) {
                print $recipient->{name} || "<no name>", "\n";
                print $recipient->{email};
        }

The same 'name'-smartness applies here as described under "from()".

cc
Identical with to() but returning the hash-refed ``Cc: ''-line.

The same 'name'-smartness applies here as described under "from()".

id
Returns the message-id of a message cutting off the leading and trailing '<' and '>' respectively.
num_entities
Returns the number of MIME-entities. That is, the number of sub-entitities actually. If 0 is returned and you think this is wrong, check "$mail->log".
get_entities
get_entities(n)
Either returns an array of all MIME::Entity objects or one particular if called with a number. If no entity whatsoever could be found, an empty list is returned.

"$mail->log" instantly called after get_entities will give you some information of what internally may have failed. If set, this will be an error raised by MIME::Entity but you don't need to worry about it at all. It's just for the record.

get_entity_body(n)
Returns the body of the n-th MIME::Entity as a single string, undef otherwise in which case you could check "$mail->error".
store_entity_body(n, handle => FILEHANDLE)
Stores the stringified body of n-th entity to the specified filehandle. That's basically the same as:

 my $body = $mail->get_entity_body(0);
 print FILEHANDLE $body;

and could be shortened to this:

 $mail->store_entity_body(0, handle => \*FILEHANDLE);

It returns a true value on success and undef on failure. In this case, examine the value of $mail->error since the entity you specified with 'n' might not exist.

store_attachment(n)
store_attachment(n, options)
It is really just a call to store_entity_body but it will take care that the n-th entity really is a saveable attachment. That is, it wont save anything with a MIME-type of, say, text/html or so.

Unless further 'options' have been given, an attachment (if found) is stored into the current directory under the recommended filename given in the MIME-header. 'options' are specified in key/value pairs:

    key:       | value:        | description:
    ===========|================|===============================
    path       | relative or    | directory to store attachment
    (".")      | absolute       |
               | path           |
    -----------|----------------|-------------------------------
    encode     | encoding       | Some platforms store files 
               | suitable for   | in e.g. UTF-8. Specify the
               | Encode::encode | appropriate encoding here and
               |                | and the filename will be en-
               |                | coded accordingly.
    -----------|----------------|-------------------------------
    store_only | a compiled     | store only files whose file
               | regex-pattern  | names match this pattern
    -----------|----------------|-------------------------------
    code       | an anonym      | first argument will be the 
               | subroutine     | $msg-object, second one the 
               |                | index-number of the current
               |                | MIME-part
               |                | should return a filename for
               |                | the attachment
    -----------|----------------|-------------------------------
    prefix     | prefix for     | all filenames are prefixed
               | filenames      | with this value
    -----------|----------------|-------------------------------
    args       | additional     | this array-ref will be passed  
               | arguments as   | on to the 'code' subroutine
               | array-ref      | as a dereferenced array

Example:

        $msg->store_attachment(1, 
                            path => "/home/ethan/", 
                            code => sub {
                                        my ($msg, $n, @args) = @_;
                                        return $msg->id."+$n";
                                        },
                            args => [ "Foo", "Bar" ]);

This will save the attachment found in the second entity under the name that consists of the message-ID and the appendix ``+1'' since the above code works on the second entity (that is, with index = 1). 'args' isn't used in this example but should demonstrate how to pass additional arguments. Inside the 'code' sub, @args equals (``Foo'', ``Bar'').

If 'path' does not exist, it will try to create the directory for you.

You can specify to save only files matching a certain pattern. To do that, use the store-only switch:

    $msg->store_attachment(1, path       => "/home/ethan/", 
                              store_only => qr/\.jpg$/i);

The above will only save files that end on '.jpg', not case-sensitive. You could also use a non-compiled pattern if you want, but that would make for instance case-insensitive matching a little cumbersome:

    store_only => '(?i)\.jpg$'

If you are working on a platform that requires a certain encoding for filenames on disk, you can use the 'encode' option. This becomes necessary for instance on Mac OS X which internally is UTF-8 based. If the filename contains 8bit characters (like the German umlauts or French accented characters as in 'e'), storing the attachment under a non-encoded name will most likely fail. In this case, use something like this:

    $msg->store_attachment(1, path => '/tmp', encode => 'utf-8');

See Encode::Supported for a list of encodings that you may use.

Returns the filename under which the attachment has been saved. undef is returned in case the entity did not contain a saveable attachment, there was no such entity at all or there was something wrong with the 'path' you specified. Check "$mail->error" to find out which of these possibilities apply.

store_all_attachments
store_all_attachments(options)
Walks through an entire mail and stores all apparent attachments. 'options' are exactly the same as in "store_attachment()" with the same behaviour if no options are given.

Returns a list of files that have been successfully saved and an empty list if no attachment could be extracted.

"$mail->error" will tell you possible failures and a possible explanation for that.

get_attachments
get_attachments(file)
This method returns a mapping from attachment-names (if those are saveable) to index-numbers of the MIME-part that represents this attachment. It returns a hash-reference, the file-names being the key and the index the value:

    my $mapping = $msg->get_attachments;
    for my $filename (keys %$mapping) {
        print "$filename => $mapping->{$filename}\n";
    }

If called with a string as argument, it tries to look up this filename. If it can't be found, undef is returned. In this case you also should have an error-message patiently awaiting you in the return value of "$mail->error".

Even though it looks tempting, don't do the following:

    # BAD!
    for my $file (qw/file1.ext file2.ext file3.ext file4.ext/) {
        print "$file is in message ", $msg->id, "\n"  
            if defined $msg->get_attachments($file);
    }

The reason is that "get_attachments()" is currently not optimized to cache the filename mapping. So, each time you call it on (even the same) message, it will scan it from beginning to end. Better would be:

    # GOOD!
    my $mapping = $msg->get_attachments;
    for my $file (qw/file1.ext file2.ext file3.ext file4.ext/) {
        print "$file is in message ", $msg->id, "\n" 
            if exists $mapping->{$file};
    }
as_string
Returns the message as one string. This is the method that string overloading depends on, so these two are the same:

    print $msg;
    
    print $msg->as_string;

EXTERNAL METHODS

Mail::MboxParser::Mail implements an autoloader that will do the appropriate type-casts for you if you invoke methods from external modules. This, however, currently only works with MIME::Entity. Support for other modules will follow. Example:

        my $mb = Mail::MboxParser->new("/home/user/Mail/received");
        for my $msg ($mb->get_messages) {
                print $msg->effective_type, "\n";
        }

"effective_type()" is not implemented by Mail::MboxParser::Mail and thus the corresponding method of MIME::Entity is automatically called.

To learn about what methods might be useful for you, you should read the ``Access''-part of the section ``PUBLIC INTERFACE'' in the MIME::Entity manpage. It may become handy if you have mails with a lot of MIME-parts and you not just want to handle binary-attachments but any kind of MIME-data.

OVERLOADING

Mail::MboxParser::Mail overloads the `` '' operator. Overloading operators is a fancy feature of Perl and some other languages (C++ for instance) which will change the behaviour of an object when one of those overloaded operators is applied onto it. Here you get the stringified mail when you write $mail while otherwise you'd get the stringified reference: "Mail::MboxParser::Mail=HASH(...)".

VERSION

This is version 0.55.

AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT

Tassilo von Parseval <[email protected]>

Copyright (c) 2001-2005 Tassilo von Parseval. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.