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NAMEMail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure - parse fetched resultsSYNOPSISuse Mail::IMAPClient; use Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure; my $imap = Mail::IMAPClient->new( Server => $server, User => $login, Password => $pass ); $imap->select("INBOX") or die "Could not select INBOX: $@\n"; my @recent = $imap->search("recent") or die "No recent msgs in INBOX\n"; foreach my $id (@recent) { my $bsdat = $imap->fetch( $id, "bodystructure" ); my $bso = Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure->new( join("", $imap->History) ); my $mime = $bso->bodytype . "/" . $bso->bodysubtype; my $parts = map( "\n\t" . $_, $bso->parts ); print "Msg $id (Content-type: $mime) contains these parts:$parts\n"; } DESCRIPTIONThis extension will parse the result of an IMAP FETCH BODYSTRUCTURE command into a perl data structure. It also provides helper methods to help pull information out of the data structure.This module requires Parse::RecDescent. Class MethodsThe following class method is available:newThis class method is the constructor method for instantiating new Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure objects. The new method accepts one argument, a string containing a server response to a FETCH BODYSTRUCTURE directive.The module Mail::IMAPClient provides the get_bodystructure convenience method to simplify use of this module when starting with just a messages sequence number or unique ID (UID). Object MethodsThe following object methods are available:bodytypeThe bodytype object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodytype for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodysubtypeThe bodysubtype object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodysubtype for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodyparmsThe bodyparms object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodyparms for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodydispThe bodydisp object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodydisp for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodyidThe bodyid object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodyid for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodydescThe bodydesc object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodydesc for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodyencThe bodyenc object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodyenc for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodysizeThe bodysize object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodysize for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodylangThe bodylang object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodylang for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.bodystructureThe bodystructure object method requires no arguments. It returns the bodystructure for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.envelopestructThe envelopestruct object method requires no arguments. It returns a Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Envelope object for the message from the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.textlinesThe textlines object method requires no arguments. It returns the textlines for the message whose structure is described by the calling Mail::IMAPClient::Bodystructure object.Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::EnvelopeThe IMAP standard specifies that output from the IMAP FETCH ENVELOPE command will be an RFC2060 envelope structure. It further specifies that output from the FETCH BODYSTRUCTURE command may also contain embedded envelope structures (if, for example, a message's subparts contain one or more included messages). Objects belonging to Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Envelope are Perl representations of these envelope structures, which is to say the nested parenthetical lists of RFC2060 translated into a Perl datastructure.Note that all of the fields relate to the specific part to which they belong. In other words, output from a FETCH nnnn ENVELOPE command (or, in Mail::IMAPClient, "$imap-"fetch($msgid,"ENVELOPE")> or "my $env = $imap-"get_envelope($msgid)>) are for the message, but fields from within a bodystructure relate to the message subpart and not the parent message. An envelope structure's Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Envelope representation is a hash of thingies that looks like this: { subject => "subject", inreplyto => "reference_message_id", from => [ addressStruct1 ], messageid => "message_id", bcc => [ addressStruct1, addressStruct2 ], date => "Tue, 09 Jul 2002 14:15:53 -0400", replyto => [ adressStruct1, addressStruct2 ], to => [ adressStruct1, addressStruct2 ], sender => [ adressStruct1 ], cc => [ adressStruct1, addressStruct2 ], } The ...::Envelope object also has methods for accessing data in the structure. They are:
You can also use the following methods to get addressing information. Each of these methods returns an array of Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Address objects, which are perl data structures representing RFC2060 address structures. Some of these arrays would naturally contain one element (such as from, which normally contains a single "From:" address); others will often contain more than one address. However, because RFC2060 defines all of these as "lists of address structures", they are all translated into arrays of ...::Address objects. See the section on Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Address, below, for alternate (and preferred) ways of accessing these data. The methods available are:
Each of the methods that returns a list of address structures (i.e. a list of Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Address arrays) also has an analogous method that will return a list of E-Mail addresses instead. The addresses are in the format "personalname <mailboxname@hostname>" (see the section on Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Address, below) However, if the personal name is 'NIL' then it is omitted from the address. These methods are:
Note that context affects the behavior of all of the above methods. Those fields that will commonly contain multiple entries (i.e. they are recipients) will return an array reference when called in scalar context. You can use this behavior to optimize performance. Those fields that will commonly contain just one address (the sender's) will return the first (and usually only) address. You can use this behavior to optimize your development time. Addresses and the Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::AddressSeveral components of an envelope structure are address structures. They are each parsed into their own object, Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Address, which looks like this:{ mailboxname => 'somebody.special', hostname => 'somplace.weird.com' personalname => 'Somebody Special sourceroute => 'NIL' } RFC2060 specifies that each address component of a bodystructure is a list of address structures, so Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure parses each of these into an array of Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Address objects. Each of these objects has the following methods available to it:
Taken together, the parts of an address structure form an address that will look something like this: "personalname <mailboxname@hostname>" Note that because the Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Address objects come in arrays, it's generally easier to use the methods available to Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Envelope to obtain all of the addresses in a particular array in one operation. These methods are provided, however, in case you'd rather do things the hard way. (And also because the aforementioned methods from Mail::IMAPClient::BodyStructure::Envelope need them anyway.) AUTHOROriginal author: David J. Kernen; Reworked by: Mark Overmeer; Maintained by Phil Pearl.SEE ALSOperl(1), Mail::IMAPClient, Parse::RecDescent, and RFC2060.
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