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MIME::Entity(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
MIME::Entity(3) |
MIME::Entity - class for parsed-and-decoded MIME message
Before reading further, you should see MIME::Tools to make sure that you
understand where this module fits into the grand scheme of things. Go on, do
it now. I'll wait.
Ready? Ok...
### Create an entity:
$top = MIME::Entity->build(From => 'me@myhost.com',
To => 'you@yourhost.com',
Subject => "Hello, nurse!",
Data => \@my_message);
### Attach stuff to it:
$top->attach(Path => $gif_path,
Type => "image/gif",
Encoding => "base64");
### Sign it:
$top->sign;
### Output it:
$top->print(\*STDOUT);
A subclass of Mail::Internet.
This package provides a class for representing MIME message
entities, as specified in RFCs 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048 and 2049.
Create a document for an ordinary 7-bit ASCII text file (lots of stuff is
defaulted for us):
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Path=>"english-msg.txt");
Create a document for a text file with 8-bit (Latin-1)
characters:
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Path =>"french-msg.txt",
Encoding =>"quoted-printable",
From =>'jean.luc@inria.fr',
Subject =>"C'est bon!");
Create a document for a GIF file (the description is completely
optional; note that we have to specify content-type and encoding since
they're not the default values):
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Description => "A pretty picture",
Path => "./docs/mime-sm.gif",
Type => "image/gif",
Encoding => "base64");
Create a document that you already have the text for, using
"Data":
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Type => "text/plain",
Encoding => "quoted-printable",
Data => ["First line.\n",
"Second line.\n",
"Last line.\n"]);
Create a multipart message, with the entire structure given
explicitly:
### Create the top-level, and set up the mail headers:
$top = MIME::Entity->build(Type => "multipart/mixed",
From => 'me@myhost.com',
To => 'you@yourhost.com',
Subject => "Hello, nurse!");
### Attachment #1: a simple text document:
$top->attach(Path=>"./testin/short.txt");
### Attachment #2: a GIF file:
$top->attach(Path => "./docs/mime-sm.gif",
Type => "image/gif",
Encoding => "base64");
### Attachment #3: text we'll create with text we have on-hand:
$top->attach(Data => $contents);
Suppose you don't know ahead of time that you'll have attachments?
No problem: you can "attach" to singleparts as well:
$top = MIME::Entity->build(From => 'me@myhost.com',
To => 'you@yourhost.com',
Subject => "Hello, nurse!",
Data => \@my_message);
if ($GIF_path) {
$top->attach(Path => $GIF_path,
Type => 'image/gif');
}
Copy an entity (headers, parts... everything but external body
data):
my $deepcopy = $top->dup;
### Get the head, a MIME::Head:
$head = $ent->head;
### Get the body, as a MIME::Body;
$bodyh = $ent->bodyhandle;
### Get the intended MIME type (as declared in the header):
$type = $ent->mime_type;
### Get the effective MIME type (in case decoding failed):
$eff_type = $ent->effective_type;
### Get preamble, parts, and epilogue:
$preamble = $ent->preamble; ### ref to array of lines
$num_parts = $ent->parts;
$first_part = $ent->parts(0); ### an entity
$epilogue = $ent->epilogue; ### ref to array of lines
Muck about with the body data:
### Read the (unencoded) body data:
if ($io = $ent->open("r")) {
while (defined($_ = $io->getline)) { print $_ }
$io->close;
}
### Write the (unencoded) body data:
if ($io = $ent->open("w")) {
foreach (@lines) { $io->print($_) }
$io->close;
}
### Delete the files for any external (on-disk) data:
$ent->purge;
Muck about with the signature:
### Sign it (automatically removes any existing signature):
$top->sign(File=>"$ENV{HOME}/.signature");
### Remove any signature within 15 lines of the end:
$top->remove_sig(15);
Muck about with the headers:
### Compute content-lengths for singleparts based on bodies:
### (Do this right before you print!)
$entity->sync_headers(Length=>'COMPUTE');
Muck about with the structure:
### If a 0- or 1-part multipart, collapse to a singlepart:
$top->make_singlepart;
### If a singlepart, inflate to a multipart with 1 part:
$top->make_multipart;
Delete parts:
### Delete some parts of a multipart message:
my @keep = grep { keep_part($_) } $msg->parts;
$msg->parts(\@keep);
Print to filehandles:
### Print the entire message:
$top->print(\*STDOUT);
### Print just the header:
$top->print_header(\*STDOUT);
### Print just the (encoded) body... includes parts as well!
$top->print_body(\*STDOUT);
Stringify... note that
"stringify_xx" can also be written
"xx_as_string"; the methods are
synonymous, and neither form will be deprecated.
If you set the variable
$MIME::Entity::BOUNDARY_DELIMITER to a string, that
string will be used as the line-end delimiter on output. If it is not set,
the line ending will be a newline character (\n)
NOTE that
$MIME::Entity::BOUNDARY_DELIMITER only applies to
structural parts of the MIME data generated by this package and to the
Base64 encoded output; if a part internally uses a different line-end
delimiter and is output as-is, the line-ending is not changed to match
$MIME::Entity::BOUNDARY_DELIMITER.
### Stringify the entire message:
print $top->stringify; ### or $top->as_string
### Stringify just the header:
print $top->stringify_header; ### or $top->header_as_string
### Stringify just the (encoded) body... includes parts as well!
print $top->stringify_body; ### or $top->body_as_string
Debug:
### Output debugging info:
$entity->dump_skeleton(\*STDERR);
- new [SOURCE]
- Class method. Create a new, empty MIME entity. Basically, this uses
the Mail::Internet constructor...
If SOURCE is an ARRAYREF, it is assumed to be an array of
lines that will be used to create both the header and an in-core
body.
Else, if SOURCE is defined, it is assumed to be a filehandle
from which the header and in-core body is to be read.
Note: in either case, the body will not be
parsed: merely read!
- add_part ENTITY, [OFFSET]
- Instance method. Assuming we are a multipart message, add a body
part (a MIME::Entity) to the array of body parts. Returns the part that
was just added.
If OFFSET is positive, the new part is added at that offset
from the beginning of the array of parts. If it is negative, it counts
from the end of the array. (An INDEX of -1 will place the new part at
the very end of the array, -2 will place it as the penultimate item in
the array, etc.) If OFFSET is not given, the new part is added to the
end of the array. Thanks to Jason L Tibbitts III for providing
support for OFFSET.
Warning: in general, you only want to attach parts to
entities with a content-type of
"multipart/*").
- attach PARAMHASH
- Instance method. The real quick-and-easy way to create multipart
messages. The PARAMHASH is used to
"build" a new entity; this method is
basically equivalent to:
$entity->add_part(ref($entity)->build(PARAMHASH, Top=>0));
Note: normally, you attach to multipart entities;
however, if you attach something to a singlepart (like attaching a GIF
to a text message), the singlepart will be coerced into a multipart
automatically.
- build PARAMHASH
- Class/instance method. A quick-and-easy catch-all way to create an
entity. Use it like this to build a "normal" single-part entity:
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Type => "image/gif",
Encoding => "base64",
Path => "/path/to/xyz12345.gif",
Filename => "saveme.gif",
Disposition => "attachment");
And like this to build a "multipart" entity:
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Type => "multipart/mixed",
Boundary => "---1234567");
A minimal MIME header will be created. If you want to add or
modify any header fields afterwards, you can of course do so via the
underlying head object... but hey, there's now a prettier syntax!
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Type =>"multipart/mixed",
From => $myaddr,
Subject => "Hi!",
'X-Certified' => ['SINED',
'SEELED',
'DELIVERED']);
Normally, an "X-Mailer"
header field is output which contains this toolkit's name and version
(plus this module's RCS version). This will allow any bad MIME we
generate to be traced back to us. You can of course overwrite that
header with your own:
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Type => "multipart/mixed",
'X-Mailer' => "myprog 1.1");
Or remove it entirely:
$ent = MIME::Entity->build(Type => "multipart/mixed",
'X-Mailer' => undef);
OK, enough hype. The parameters are:
- (FIELDNAME)
- Any field you want placed in the message header, taken from the standard
list of header fields (you don't need to worry about case):
Bcc Encrypted Received Sender
Cc From References Subject
Comments Keywords Reply-To To
Content-* Message-ID Resent-* X-*
Date MIME-Version Return-Path
Organization
To give experienced users some veto power, these fields will
be set after the ones I set... so be careful: don't set any
MIME fields (like "Content-type")
unless you know what you're doing!
To specify a fieldname that's not in the above list,
even one that's identical to an option below, just give it with a
trailing ":", like
"My-field:". When in doubt, that
always signals a mail field (and it sort of looks like one
too).
- Boundary
- Multipart entities only. Optional. The boundary string. As per
RFC-2046, it must consist only of the characters
"[0-9a-zA-Z'()+_,-./:=?]" and space
(you'll be warned, and your boundary will be ignored, if this is not the
case). If you omit this, a random string will be chosen... which is
probably safer.
- Charset
- Optional. The character set.
- Data
- Single-part entities only. Optional. An alternative to Path (q.v.):
the actual data, either as a scalar or an array reference (whose elements
are joined together to make the actual scalar). The body is opened on the
data using MIME::Body::InCore.
- Description
- Optional. The text of the content-description. If you don't specify
it, the field is not put in the header.
- Disposition
- Optional. The basic content-disposition
("attachment" or
"inline"). If you don't specify it, it
defaults to "inline" for backwards compatibility. Thanks to
Kurt Freytag for suggesting this feature.
- Encoding
- Optional. The content-transfer-encoding. If you don't specify it, a
reasonable default is put in. You can also give the special value
'-SUGGEST', to have it chosen for you in a heavy-duty fashion which scans
the data itself.
- Filename
- Single-part entities only. Optional. The recommended filename.
Overrides any name extracted from
"Path". The information is stored both
the deprecated (content-type) and preferred (content-disposition)
locations. If you explicitly want to avoid a recommended filename
(even when Path is used), supply this as empty or undef.
- Id
- Optional. Set the content-id.
- Path
- Single-part entities only. Optional. The path to the file to
attach. The body is opened on that file using MIME::Body::File.
- Top
- Optional. Is this a top-level entity? If so, it must sport a
MIME-Version. The default is true. (NB: look at how
"attach()" uses it.)
- Type
- Optional. The basic content-type
("text/plain", etc.). If you don't
specify it, it defaults to "text/plain"
as per RFC 2045. Do yourself a favor: put it in.
- dup
- Instance method. Duplicate the entity. Does a deep, recursive copy,
but beware: external data in bodyhandles is not copied to
new files! Changing the data in one entity's data file, or purging that
entity, will affect its duplicate. Entities with in-core data
probably need not worry.
- body [VALUE]
- Instance method. Get the encoded (transport-ready) body, as
an array of lines. Returns an array reference. Each array entry is a
newline-terminated line.
This is a read-only data structure: changing its contents will
have no effect. Its contents are identical to what is printed by
print_body().
Provided for compatibility with Mail::Internet, so that
methods like "smtpsend()" will work.
Note however that if VALUE is given, a fatal exception is thrown, since
you cannot use this method to set the lines of the encoded
message.
If you want the raw (unencoded) body data, use the
bodyhandle() method to get and use a MIME::Body. The content-type
of the entity will tell you whether that body is best read as text (via
getline()) or raw data (via read()).
- bodyhandle [VALUE]
- Instance method. Get or set an abstract object representing the
body of the message. The body holds the decoded message data.
Note that not all entities have bodies! An entity will
have either a body or parts: not both. This method will only
return an object if this entity can have a body; otherwise, it will
return undefined. Whether-or-not a given entity can have a body is
determined by (1) its content type, and (2) whether-or-not the parser
was told to extract nested messages:
Type: | Extract nested? | bodyhandle() | parts()
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
multipart/* | - | undef | 0 or more MIME::Entity
message/* | true | undef | 0 or 1 MIME::Entity
message/* | false | MIME::Body | empty list
(other) | - | MIME::Body | empty list
If "VALUE" is not
given, the current bodyhandle is returned, or undef if the entity cannot
have a body.
If "VALUE" is given,
the bodyhandle is set to the new value, and the previous value is
returned.
See "parts" for more info.
- effective_type [MIMETYPE]
- Instance method. Set/get the effective MIME type of this
entity. This is usually identical to the actual (or defaulted) MIME
type, but in some cases it differs. For example, from RFC-2045:
Any entity with an unrecognized Content-Transfer-Encoding must be
treated as if it has a Content-Type of "application/octet-stream",
regardless of what the Content-Type header field actually says.
Why? because if we can't decode the message, then we have to
take the bytes as-is, in their (unrecognized) encoded form. So the
message ceases to be a "text/foobar" and becomes a bunch of
undecipherable bytes -- in other words, an
"application/octet-stream".
Such an entity, if parsed, would have its
effective_type() set to
"application/octet_stream", although
the mime_type() and the contents of the header would remain the
same.
If there is no effective type, the method just returns what
mime_type() would.
Warning: the effective type is "sticky"; once
set, that effective_type() will always be returned even if the
conditions that necessitated setting the effective type become no longer
true.
- epilogue [LINES]
- Instance method. Get/set the text of the epilogue, as an array of
newline-terminated LINES. Returns a reference to the array of lines, or
undef if no epilogue exists.
If there is a epilogue, it is output when printing this
entity; otherwise, a default epilogue is used. Setting the epilogue to
undef (not []!) causes it to fallback to the default.
- head [VALUE]
- Instance method. Get/set the head.
If there is no VALUE given, returns the current head. If none
exists, an empty instance of MIME::Head is created, set, and
returned.
Note: This is a patch over a problem in Mail::Internet,
which doesn't provide a method for setting the head to some given
object.
- is_multipart
- Instance method. Does this entity's effective MIME type indicate
that it's a multipart entity? Returns undef (false) if the answer couldn't
be determined, 0 (false) if it was determined to be false, and true
otherwise. Note that this says nothing about whether or not parts were
extracted.
NOTE: we switched to effective_type so that multiparts with
bad or missing boundaries could be coerced to an effective type of
"application/x-unparseable-multipart".
- mime_type
- Instance method. A purely-for-convenience method. This simply
relays the request to the associated MIME::Head object. If there is no
head, returns undef in a scalar context and the empty array in a list
context.
Before you use this, consider using
effective_type() instead, especially if you obtained the entity
from a MIME::Parser.
- open READWRITE
- Instance method. A purely-for-convenience method. This simply
relays the request to the associated MIME::Body object (see
MIME::Body::open()). READWRITE is either 'r' (open for read) or 'w'
(open for write).
If there is no body, returns false.
- parts
- parts INDEX
- parts ARRAYREF
- Instance method. Return the MIME::Entity objects which are the sub
parts of this entity (if any).
If no argument is given, returns the array of all sub
parts, returning the empty array if there are none (e.g., if this is a
single part message, or a degenerate multipart). In a scalar context,
this returns you the number of parts.
If an integer INDEX is given, return the INDEXed part,
or undef if it doesn't exist.
If an ARRAYREF to an array of parts is given, then this
method sets the parts to a copy of that array, and returns the
parts. This can be used to delete parts, as follows:
### Delete some parts of a multipart message:
$msg->parts([ grep { keep_part($_) } $msg->parts ]);
Note: for multipart messages, the preamble and epilogue
are not considered parts. If you need them, use the
"preamble()" and
"epilogue()" methods.
Note: there are ways of parsing with a MIME::Parser
which cause certain message parts (such as those of type
"message/rfc822") to be
"reparsed" into pseudo-multipart entities. You should read the
documentation for those options carefully: it is possible for a
diddled entity to not be multipart, but still have parts attached to
it!
See "bodyhandle" for a discussion of parts vs.
bodies.
- parts_DFS
- Instance method. Return the list of all MIME::Entity objects
included in the entity, starting with the entity itself, in
depth-first-search order. If the entity has no parts, it alone will be
returned.
Thanks to Xavier Armengou for suggesting this
method.
- preamble [LINES]
- Instance method. Get/set the text of the preamble, as an array of
newline-terminated LINES. Returns a reference to the array of lines, or
undef if no preamble exists (e.g., if this is a single-part entity).
If there is a preamble, it is output when printing this
entity; otherwise, a default preamble is used. Setting the preamble to
undef (not []!) causes it to fallback to the default.
- make_multipart [SUBTYPE], OPTSHASH...
- Instance method. Force the entity to be a multipart, if it isn't
already. We do this by replacing the original [singlepart] entity with a
new multipart that has the same non-MIME headers ("From",
"Subject", etc.), but all-new MIME headers
("Content-type", etc.). We then create a copy of the original
singlepart, strip out the non-MIME headers from that, and make it a
part of the new multipart. So this:
From: me
To: you
Content-type: text/plain
Content-length: 12
Hello there!
Becomes something like this:
From: me
To: you
Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="----abc----"
------abc----
Content-type: text/plain
Content-length: 12
Hello there!
------abc------
The actual type of the new top-level multipart will be
"multipart/SUBTYPE" (default SUBTYPE is
"mixed").
Returns 'DONE' if we really did inflate a singlepart to a
multipart. Returns 'ALREADY' (and does nothing) if entity is
already multipart and Force was not chosen.
If OPTSHASH contains Force=>1, then we always bump
the top-level's content and content-headers down to a subpart of this
entity, even if this entity is already a multipart. This is apparently
of use to people who are tweaking messages after parsing them.
- make_singlepart
- Instance method. If the entity is a multipart message with one
part, this tries hard to rewrite it as a singlepart, by replacing the
content (and content headers) of the top level with those of the part.
Also crunches 0-part multiparts into singleparts.
Returns 'DONE' if we really did collapse a multipart to a
singlepart. Returns 'ALREADY' (and does nothing) if entity is already a
singlepart. Returns '0' (and does nothing) if it can't be made into a
singlepart.
- purge
- Instance method. Recursively purge (e.g., unlink) all external
(e.g., on-disk) body parts in this message. See MIME::Body::purge()
for details.
Note: this does not delete the directories that
those body parts are contained in; only the actual message data files
are deleted. This is because some parsers may be customized to create
intermediate directories while others are not, and it's impossible for
this class to know what directories are safe to remove. Only your
application program truly knows that.
If you really want to "clean everything up",
one good way is to use
"MIME::Parser::file_under()", and then
do this before parsing your next message:
$parser->filer->purge();
I wouldn't attempt to read those body files after you do this,
for obvious reasons. As of MIME-tools 4.x, each body's path is
undefined after this operation. I warned you I might do this; truly I
did.
Thanks to Jason L. Tibbitts III for suggesting this
method.
- remove_sig [NLINES]
- Instance method, override. Attempts to remove a user's signature
from the body of a message.
It does this by looking for a line matching
"/^-- $/" within the last
"NLINES" of the message. If found then
that line and all lines after it will be removed. If
"NLINES" is not given, a default value
of 10 will be used. This would be of most use in auto-reply scripts.
For MIME entity, this method is reasonably cautious: it will
only attempt to un-sign a message with a content-type of
"text/*".
If you send remove_sig() to a multipart entity, it will
relay it to the first part (the others usually being the
"attachments").
Warning: currently slurps the whole message-part into
core as an array of lines, so you probably don't want to use this on
extremely long messages.
Returns truth on success, false on error.
- sign PARAMHASH
- Instance method, override. Append a signature to the message. The
params are:
- Attach
- Instead of appending the text, add it to the message as an attachment. The
disposition will be "inline", and the
description will indicate that it is a signature. The default behavior is
to append the signature to the text of the message (or the text of its
first part if multipart). MIME-specific; new in this subclass.
- File
- Use the contents of this file as the signature. Fatal error if it can't be
read. As per superclass method.
- Force
- Sign it even if the content-type isn't
"text/*". Useful for non-standard types
like "x-foobar", but be careful!
MIME-specific; new in this subclass.
- Remove
- Normally, we attempt to strip out any existing signature. If true, this
gives us the NLINES parameter of the remove_sig call. If zero but defined,
tells us not to remove any existing signature. If undefined,
removal is done with the default of 10 lines. New in this
subclass.
- Signature
- Use this text as the signature. You can supply it as either a scalar, or
as a ref to an array of newline-terminated scalars. As per superclass
method.
For MIME messages, this method is reasonably cautious: it will
only attempt to sign a message with a content-type of
"text/*", unless
"Force" is specified.
If you send this message to a multipart entity, it will relay it
to the first part (the others usually being the
"attachments").
Warning: currently slurps the whole message-part into core
as an array of lines, so you probably don't want to use this on extremely
long messages.
Returns true on success, false otherwise.
- suggest_encoding
- Instance method. Based on the effective content type, return a good
suggested encoding.
"text" and
"message" types have their bodies
scanned line-by-line for 8-bit characters and long lines; lack of either
means that the message is 7bit-ok. Other types are chosen independent of
their body:
Major type: 7bit ok? Suggested encoding:
-----------------------------------------------------------
text yes 7bit
text no quoted-printable
message yes 7bit
message no binary
multipart * binary (in case some parts are bad)
image, etc... * base64
- sync_headers OPTIONS
- Instance method. This method does a variety of activities which
ensure that the MIME headers of an entity "tree" are in-synch
with the body parts they describe. It can be as expensive an operation as
printing if it involves pre-encoding the body parts; however, the aim is
to produce fairly clean MIME. You will usually only need to invoke
this if processing and re-sending MIME from an outside source.
The OPTIONS is a hash, which describes what is to be done.
- Length
- One of the "official unofficial" MIME fields is
"Content-Length". Normally, one doesn't care a whit about this
field; however, if you are preparing output destined for HTTP, you may.
The value of this option dictates what will be done:
COMPUTE means to set a
"Content-Length" field for every
non-multipart part in the entity, and to blank that field out for every
multipart part in the entity.
ERASE means that
"Content-Length" fields will all be
blanked out. This is fast, painless, and safe.
Any false value (the default) means to take no
action.
- Nonstandard
- Any header field beginning with "Content-" is, according to the
RFC, a MIME field. However, some are non-standard, and may cause problems
with certain MIME readers which interpret them in different ways.
ERASE means that all such fields will be blanked out.
This is done before the Length option (q.v.) is examined
and acted upon.
Any false value (the default) means to take no
action.
Returns a true value if everything went okay, a false value
otherwise.
- tidy_body
- Instance method, override. Currently unimplemented for MIME
messages. Does nothing, returns false.
- dump_skeleton [FILEHANDLE]
- Instance method. Dump the skeleton of the entity to the given
FILEHANDLE, or to the currently-selected one if none given.
Each entity is output with an appropriate indentation level,
the following selection of attributes:
Content-type: multipart/mixed
Effective-type: multipart/mixed
Body-file: NONE
Subject: Hey there!
Num-parts: 2
This is really just useful for debugging purposes; I make no
guarantees about the consistency of the output format over time.
- print [OUTSTREAM]
- Instance method, override. Print the entity to the given OUTSTREAM,
or to the currently-selected filehandle if none given. OUTSTREAM can be a
filehandle, or any object that responds to a print() message.
The entity is output as a valid MIME stream! This means that
the header is always output first, and the body data (if any) will be
encoded if the header says that it should be. For example, your output
may look like this:
Subject: Greetings
Content-transfer-encoding: base64
SGkgdGhlcmUhCkJ5ZSB0aGVyZSEK
If this entity has MIME type "multipart/*",
the preamble, parts, and epilogue are all output with appropriate
boundaries separating each. Any bodyhandle is ignored:
Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="*----*"
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
[Preamble]
--*----*
[Entity: Part 0]
--*----*
[Entity: Part 1]
--*----*--
[Epilogue]
If this entity has a single-part MIME type with no attached
parts, then we're looking at a normal singlepart entity: the body is
output according to the encoding specified by the header. If no body
exists, a warning is output and the body is treated as empty:
Content-type: image/gif
Content-transfer-encoding: base64
[Encoded body]
If this entity has a single-part MIME type but it also has
parts, then we're probably looking at a "re-parsed"
singlepart, usually one of type
"message/*" (you can get entities like
this if you set the
"parse_nested_messages(NEST)" option
on the parser to true). In this case, the parts are output with single
blank lines separating each, and any bodyhandle is ignored:
Content-type: message/rfc822
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
[Entity: Part 0]
[Entity: Part 1]
In all cases, when outputting a "part" of the
entity, this method is invoked recursively.
Note: the output is very likely not going to be
identical to any input you parsed to get this entity. If you're building
some sort of email handler, it's up to you to save this information.
- print_body [OUTSTREAM]
- Instance method, override. Print the body of the entity to the
given OUTSTREAM, or to the currently-selected filehandle if none given.
OUTSTREAM can be a filehandle, or any object that responds to a
print() message.
The body is output for inclusion in a valid MIME stream; this
means that the body data will be encoded if the header says that it
should be.
Note: by "body", we mean "the stuff
following the header". A printed multipart body includes the
printed representations of its subparts.
Note: The body is stored in an un-encoded form;
however, the idea is that the transfer encoding is used to determine how
it should be output. This means that the
"print()" method is always guaranteed
to get you a sendmail-ready stream whose body is consistent with its
head. If you want the raw body data to be output, you can either
read it from the bodyhandle yourself, or use:
$ent->bodyhandle->print($outstream);
which uses read() calls to extract the information, and
thus will work with both text and binary bodies.
Warning: Please supply an OUTSTREAM. This override
method differs from Mail::Internet's behavior, which outputs to the
STDOUT if no filehandle is given: this may lead to confusion.
- print_header [OUTSTREAM]
- Instance method, inherited. Output the header to the given
OUTSTREAM. You really should supply the OUTSTREAM.
- stringify
- Instance method. Return the entity as a string, exactly as
"print" would print it. The body will be
encoded as necessary, and will contain any subparts. You can also use
"as_string()".
- stringify_body
- Instance method. Return the encoded message body as a
string, exactly as "print_body" would
print it. You can also use
"body_as_string()".
If you want the unencoded body, and you are dealing
with a singlepart message (like a "text/plain"), use
"bodyhandle()" instead:
if ($ent->bodyhandle) {
$unencoded_data = $ent->bodyhandle->as_string;
}
else {
### this message has no body data (but it might have parts!)
}
- stringify_header
- Instance method. Return the header as a string, exactly as
"print_header" would print it. You can
also use "header_as_string()".
A MIME::Entity is composed of the following elements:
MIME::Entity and Mail::Internet see message bodies differently, and this can
cause confusion and some inconvenience. Sadly, I can't change the behavior of
MIME::Entity without breaking lots of code already out there. But let's open
up the floor for a few questions...
- What is the difference between a "message" and an
"entity"?
- A message is the actual data being sent or received; usually this
means a stream of newline-terminated lines. An entity is the
representation of a message as an object.
This means that you get a "message" when you print
an "entity" to a filehandle, and you get an
"entity" when you parse a message from a
filehandle.
- What is a message body?
- Mail::Internet: The portion of the printed message after the
header.
MIME::Entity: The portion of the printed message after
the header.
- How is a message body stored in an entity?
- Mail::Internet: As an array of lines.
MIME::Entity: It depends on the content-type of the
message. For "container" types
("multipart/*",
"message/*"), we store the contained
entities as an array of "parts", accessed via the
"parts()" method, where each part is a
complete MIME::Entity. For "singlepart" types
("text/*",
"image/*", etc.), the unencoded body
data is referenced via a MIME::Body object, accessed via the
"bodyhandle()" method:
bodyhandle() parts()
Content-type: returns: returns:
------------------------------------------------------------
application/* MIME::Body empty
audio/* MIME::Body empty
image/* MIME::Body empty
message/* undef MIME::Entity list (usually 1)
multipart/* undef MIME::Entity list (usually >0)
text/* MIME::Body empty
video/* MIME::Body empty
x-*/* MIME::Body empty
As a special case,
"message/*" is currently ambiguous:
depending on the parser, a "message/*"
might be treated as a singlepart, with a MIME::Body and no parts. Use
bodyhandle() as the final arbiter.
- What does the body() method return?
- Mail::Internet: As an array of lines, ready for sending.
MIME::Entity: As an array of lines, ready for
sending.
- What's the best way to get at the body data?
- Mail::Internet: Use the body() method.
MIME::Entity: Depends on what you want... the
encoded data (as it is transported), or the unencoded
data? Keep reading...
- How do I get the "encoded" body data?
- Mail::Internet: Use the body() method.
MIME::Entity: Use the body() method. You can
also use:
$entity->print_body()
$entity->stringify_body() ### a.k.a. $entity->body_as_string()
- How do I get the "unencoded" body data?
- Mail::Internet: Use the body() method.
MIME::Entity: Use the
bodyhandle() method! If bodyhandle()
method returns true, then that value is a MIME::Body which can be used
to access the data via its open() method. If bodyhandle()
method returns an undefined value, then the entity is probably a
"container" that has no real body data of its own (e.g., a
"multipart" message): in this case, you should access the
components via the parts() method. Like this:
if ($bh = $entity->bodyhandle) {
$io = $bh->open;
...access unencoded data via $io->getline or $io->read...
$io->close;
}
else {
foreach my $part (@parts) {
...do something with the part...
}
}
You can also use:
if ($bh = $entity->bodyhandle) {
$unencoded_data = $bh->as_string;
}
else {
...do stuff with the parts...
}
- What does the body() method return?
- Mail::Internet: The transport-encoded message body, as an array of
lines.
MIME::Entity: The transport-encoded message body, as an
array of lines.
- What does print_body() print?
- Mail::Internet: Exactly what body() would return to you.
MIME::Entity: Exactly what body() would return
to you.
- Say I have an entity which might be either singlepart or multipart. How do
I print out just "the stuff after the header"?
- Mail::Internet: Use print_body().
MIME::Entity: Use print_body().
- Why is MIME::Entity so different from Mail::Internet?
- Because MIME streams are expected to have non-textual data... possibly,
quite a lot of it, such as a tar file.
Because MIME messages can consist of multiple parts, which are
most-easily manipulated as MIME::Entity objects themselves.
Because in the simpler world of Mail::Internet, the data of a
message and its printed representation are identical... and in
the MIME world, they're not.
Because parsing multipart bodies on-the-fly, or formatting
multipart bodies for output, is a non-trivial task.
- This is confusing. Can the two classes be made more compatible?
- Not easily; their implementations are necessarily quite different.
Mail::Internet is a simple, efficient way of dealing with a "black
box" mail message... one whose internal data you don't care much
about. MIME::Entity, in contrast, cares very much about the message
contents: that's its job!
- Some things just can't be ignored
- In multipart messages, the "preamble" is the portion that
precedes the first encapsulation boundary, and the
"epilogue" is the portion that follows the last
encapsulation boundary.
According to RFC 2046:
There appears to be room for additional information prior
to the first encapsulation boundary and following the final
boundary. These areas should generally be left blank, and
implementations must ignore anything that appears before the
first boundary or after the last one.
NOTE: These "preamble" and "epilogue" areas are generally
not used because of the lack of proper typing of these parts
and the lack of clear semantics for handling these areas at
gateways, particularly X.400 gateways. However, rather than
leaving the preamble area blank, many MIME implementations
have found this to be a convenient place to insert an
explanatory note for recipients who read the message with
pre-MIME software, since such notes will be ignored by
MIME-compliant software.
In the world of standards-and-practices, that's the standard.
Now for the practice:
Some "MIME" mailers may incorrectly put a
"part" in the preamble. Since we have to parse over the
stuff anyway, in the future I may allow the parser option
of creating special MIME::Entity objects for the preamble and epilogue,
with bogus MIME::Head objects.
For now, though, we're MIME-compliant, so I probably won't
change how we work.
MIME::Tools, MIME::Head, MIME::Body, MIME::Decoder, Mail::Internet
Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com), ZeeGee Software Inc
(http://www.zeegee.com). Dianne Skoll (dfs@roaringpenguin.com)
http://www.roaringpenguin.com
All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can
redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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