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Mail::Message(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Mail::Message(3) |
Mail::Message - general message object
Mail::Message has extra code in
Mail::Message::Construct
Mail::Message::Construct::Bounce
Mail::Message::Construct::Build
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
Mail::Message::Construct::Read
Mail::Message::Construct::Rebuild
Mail::Message::Construct::Reply
Mail::Message::Construct::Text
Mail::Message
is a Mail::Reporter
Mail::Message is extended by
Mail::Box::Message
Mail::Message::Dummy
Mail::Message::Part
Mail::Message::Replace::MailInternet
use Mail::Box::Manager;
my $mgr = Mail::Box::Manager->new;
my $folder = $mgr->open(folder => 'InBox');
my $msg = $folder->message(2); # $msg is a Mail::Message now
my $subject = $msg->subject; # The message's subject
my @cc = $msg->cc; # List of Mail::Address'es
my Mail::Message::Head $head = $msg->head;
my Mail::Message::Body $body = $msg->decoded;
$msg->decoded->print($outfile);
# Send a simple email
Mail::Message->build
( To => 'you@example.com'
, From => 'me@example.com'
, Subject => "My subject"
, data => "Some plain text content"
)->send(via => 'postfix');
my $reply_msg = Mail::Message->reply(...);
my $frwd_msg = Mail::Message->forward(...);
A "Mail::Message" object is a container for
MIME-encoded message information, as defined by RFC2822. Everything what is
not specificaly related to storing the messages in mailboxes (folders) is
implemented in this class. Methods which are related to folders is implemented
in the Mail::Box::Message extension.
The main methods are get(), to get information from a
message header field, and decoded() to get the intended content of a
message. But there are many more which can assist your program.
Complex message handling, like construction of replies and
forwards, are implemented in separate packages which are autoloaded into
this class. This means you can simply use these methods as if they are part
of this class. Those package add functionality to all kinds of message
objects.
Extends "DESCRIPTION" in Mail::Reporter.
Extends "METHODS" in Mail::Reporter.
Extends "Constructors" in Mail::Reporter.
- $obj->clone(%options)
- Create a copy of this message. Returned is a
"Mail::Message" object. The head and
body, the log and trace levels are taken. Labels are copied with the
message, but the delete and modified flags are not.
BE WARNED: the clone of any kind of message (or a message
part) will always be a
"Mail::Message" object. For example, a
Mail::Box::Message's clone is detached from the folder of its original.
When you use Mail::Box::addMessage() with the cloned message at
hand, then the clone will automatically be coerced into the right
message type to be added.
See also Mail::Box::Message::copyTo() and
Mail::Box::Message::moveTo().
-Option --Default
shallow <false>
shallow_body <false>
shallow_head <false>
- shallow => BOOLEAN
- When a shallow clone is made, the header and body of the message will not
be cloned, but shared. This is quite dangerous: for instance in some
folder types, the header fields are used to store folder flags. When one
of both shallow clones change the flags, that will update the header and
thereby be visible in both.
There are situations where a shallow clone can be used safely.
For instance, when Mail::Box::Message::moveTo() is used and you
are sure that the original message cannot get undeleted after the
move.
- shallow_body => BOOLEAN
- A rather safe bet, because you are not allowed to modify the body of a
message: you may only set a new body with body().
- shallow_head => BOOLEAN
- Only the head uses is reused, not the body. This is probably a bad choice,
because the header fields can be updated, for instance when labels
change.
example:
$copy = $msg->clone;
- Mail::Message->new(%options)
-
-Option --Defined in --Default
body undef
body_type Mail::Message::Body::Lines
deleted <false>
field_type undef
head undef
head_type Mail::Message::Head::Complete
labels {}
log Mail::Reporter 'WARNINGS'
messageId undef
modified <false>
trace Mail::Reporter 'WARNINGS'
trusted <false>
- body => OBJECT
- Instantiate the message with a body which has been created somewhere
before the message is constructed. The OBJECT must be a sub-class of
Mail::Message::Body. See also body() and storeBody().
- body_type => CLASS
- Default type of body to be created for readBody().
- deleted => BOOLEAN
- Is the file deleted from the start?
- field_type => CLASS
- head => OBJECT
- Instantiate the message with a head which has been created somewhere
before the message is constructed. The OBJECT must be a (sub-)class of
Mail::Message::Head. See also head().
- head_type => CLASS
- Default type of head to be created for readHead().
- labels => ARRAY|HASH
- Initial values of the labels. In case of Mail::Box::Message's, this shall
reflect the state the message is in. For newly constructed
Mail::Message's, this may be anything you want, because coerce()
will take care of the folder specifics once the message is added to
one.
- log => LEVEL
- messageId => STRING
- The id on which this message can be recognized. If none specified and not
defined in the header --but one is needed-- there will be one assigned to
the message to be able to pass unique message-ids between objects.
- modified => BOOLEAN
- Flags this message as being modified from the beginning on. Usually,
modification is auto-detected, but there may be reasons to be extra
explicit.
- trace => LEVEL
- trusted => BOOLEAN
- Is this message from a trusted source? If not, the content must be checked
before use. This checking will be performed when the body data is decoded
or used for transmission.
- $obj->bounce( [<$rg_object|%options>] )
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Bounce
- Mail::Message->build( [$message|$part|$body], $content )
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Build
- Mail::Message->buildFromBody($body, [$head], $headers)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Build
- $obj->forward(%options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- $obj->forwardAttach(%options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- $obj->forwardEncapsulate(%options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- $obj->forwardInline(%options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- $obj->forwardNo(%options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- $obj->forwardPostlude()
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- $obj->forwardPrelude()
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- $obj->forwardSubject(STRING)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Forward
- Mail::Message->read($fh|STRING|SCALAR|ARRAY, %options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Read
- $obj->rebuild(%options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Rebuild
- $obj->reply(%options)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Reply
- $obj->replyPrelude( [STRING|$field|$address|ARRAY-$of-$things]
)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Reply
- $obj->replySubject(STRING)
- Mail::Message->replySubject(STRING)
- Inherited, see "Constructing a message" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Reply
- $obj->container()
- If the message is a part of another message,
"container" returns the reference to the
containing body.
example:
my Mail::Message $msg = ...
return unless $msg->body->isMultipart;
my $part = $msg->body->part(2);
return unless $part->body->isMultipart;
my $nested = $part->body->part(3);
$nested->container; # returns $msg->body
$nested->toplevel; # returns $msg
$msg->container; # returns undef
$msg->toplevel; # returns $msg
$msg->isPart; # returns false
$part->isPart; # returns true
- $obj->isDummy()
- Dummy messages are used to fill holes in linked-list and such, where only
a message-id is known, but not the place of the header of body data.
This method is also available for Mail::Message::Dummy
objects, where this will return
"true". On any extension of
"Mail::Message", this will return
"false".
- $obj->isPart()
- Returns true if the message is a part of another message. This is the case
for Mail::Message::Part extensions of
"Mail::Message".
- $obj->messageId()
- Retrieve the message's id. Every message has a unique message-id. This id
is used mainly for recognizing discussion threads.
- $obj->partNumber()
- Returns a string representing the location of this part. In case the top
message is a single message, 'undef' is returned. When it is a multipart,
'1' up to the number of multiparts is returned. A multi-level nested part
may for instance return '2.5.1'.
Usually, this string is very short. Numbering follows the
IMAP4 design, see RFC2060 section 6.4.5.
- $obj->print( [$fh] )
- Print the message to the FILE-HANDLE, which defaults to the selected
filehandle, without the encapsulation sometimes required by a folder type,
like write() does.
example:
$message->print(\*STDERR); # to the error output
$message->print; # to the selected file
my $out = IO::File->new('out', 'w');
$message->print($out); # no encapsulation: no folder
$message->write($out); # with encapsulation: is folder.
- $obj->send( [$mailer], %options )
- Transmit the message to anything outside this Perl program. Returns false
when sending failed even after retries.
The optional $mailer is a
Mail::Transport::Send object. When the $mailer
is not specified, one will be created and kept as default for the next
messages as well.
The %options are mailer specific, and
a mixture of what is usable for the creation of the mailer object and
the sending itself. Therefore, see for possible options
Mail::Transport::Send::new() and
Mail::Transport::Send::send(). That object also provides a
"trySend()" method which gives more
low-level control.
example:
$message->send;
is short (but little less flexibile) for
my $mailer = Mail::Transport::SMTP->new(@smtpopts);
$mailer->send($message, @sendopts);
See examples/send.pl in the distribution of Mail::Box.
example:
$message->send(via => 'sendmail')
- $obj->size()
- Returns an estimated size of the whole message in bytes. In many
occasions, the functions which process the message further, for instance
send() or print() will need to add/change header lines or
add CR characters, so the size is only an estimate with a few percent
margin of the real result.
The computation assumes that each line ending is represented
by one character (like UNIX, MacOS, and sometimes Cygwin), and not two
characters (like Windows and sometimes Cygwin). If you write the message
to file on a system which uses CR and LF to end a single line (all
Windows versions), the result in that file will be at least
nrLines() larger than this method returns.
- $obj->toplevel()
- Returns a reference to the main message, which will be the current message
if the message is not part of another message.
- $obj->write( [$fh] )
- Write the message to the FILE-HANDLE, which defaults to the selected
$fh, with all surrounding information which is
needed to put it correctly in a folder file.
In most cases, the result of
"write" will be the same as with
print(). The main exception is for Mbox folder messages, which
will get printed with their leading 'From ' line and a trailing blank.
Each line of their body which starts with 'From ' will have an '>'
added in front.
- $obj->bcc()
- Returns the addresses which are specified on the
"Bcc" header line (or lines) A list of
Mail::Address objects is returned. "Bcc"
stands for Blind Carbon Copy: destinations of the message which are
not listed in the messages actually sent. So, this field will be empty for
received messages, but may be present in messages you construct
yourself.
- $obj->cc()
- Returns the addresses which are specified on the
"Cc" header line (or lines) A list of
Mail::Address objects is returned. "Cc"
stands for Carbon Copy; the people addressed on this line receive
the message informational, and are usually not expected to reply on its
content.
- $obj->date()
- Method has been removed for reasons of consistency. Use timestamp()
or "$msg->head->get('Date')".
- $obj->destinations()
- Returns a list of Mail::Address objects which contains the combined info
of active "To",
"Cc", and
"Bcc" addresses. Double addresses are
removed if detectable.
- $obj->from()
- Returns the addresses from the senders. It is possible to have more than
one address specified in the "From"
field of the message, according to the specification. Therefore a list of
Mail::Address objects is returned, which usually has length 1.
If you need only one address from a sender, for instance to
create a "original message by" line in constructed forwarded
message body, then use sender().
example: using from() to get all sender addresses
my @from = $message->from;
- $obj->get($fieldname)
- Returns the value which is stored in the header field with the specified
name. The $fieldname is case insensitive. The
unfolded body of the field is returned, stripped from any
attributes. See Mail::Message::Field::body().
If the field has multiple appearances in the header, only the
last instance is returned. If you need more complex handing of fields,
then call Mail::Message::Head::get() yourself. See study()
when you want to be smart, doing the better (but slower) job.
example: the get() short-cut for header fields
print $msg->get('Content-Type'), "\n";
Is equivalent to:
print $msg->head->get('Content-Type')->body, "\n";
- $obj->guessTimestamp()
- Return an estimate on the time this message was sent. The data is derived
from the header, where it can be derived from the
"date" and
"received" lines. For MBox-like folders
you may get the date from the from-line as well.
This method may return
"undef" if the header is not parsed or
only partially known. If you require a time, then use the
timestamp() method, described below.
example: using guessTimestamp() to get a transmission
date
print "Receipt ", ($message->timestamp || 'unknown'), "\n";
- $obj->head( [$head] )
- Return (optionally after setting) the $head of
this message. The head must be an (sub-)class of Mail::Message::Head. When
the head is added, status information is taken from it and transformed
into labels. More labels can be added by the LABELS hash. They are added
later.
example:
my $header = Mail::Message::Head->new;
$msg->head($header); # set
my $head = $msg->head; # get
- $obj->nrLines()
- Returns the number of lines used for the whole message.
- $obj->sender()
- Returns exactly one address, which is the originator of this message. The
returned Mail::Address object is taken from the
"Sender" header field, unless that field
does not exists, in which case the first address from the
"From" field is taken. If none of both
provide an address, "undef" is returned.
example: using sender() to get exactly one sender
address
my $sender = $message->sender;
print "Reply to: ", $sender->format, "\n" if defined $sender;
- $obj->study($fieldname)
- Study the content of a field, like get() does, with as main
difference that a Mail::Message::Field::Full object is returned. These
objects stringify to an utf8 decoded representation of the data contained
in the field, where get() does not decode. When the field does not
exist, then "undef" is returned. See
Mail::Message::Field::study().
example: the study() short-cut for header fields
print $msg->study('to'), "\n";
Is equivalent to:
print $msg->head->study('to'), "\n"; # and
print $msg->head->get('to')->study, "\n";
or better:
if(my $to =
$msg->study('to')) { print "$to\n"
}
if(my $to =
$msg->get('to')) { print
$to->study, "\n" }
- $obj->subject()
- Returns the message's subject, or the empty string. The subject may have
encoded characters in it; use study() to get rit of that.
example: using subject() to get the message's
subject
print $msg->subject;
print $msg->study('subject');
- $obj->timestamp()
- Get a good timestamp for the message, doesn't matter how much work it is.
The value returned is compatible with the platform dependent result of
function time().
In these days, the timestamp as supplied by the message (in
the "Date" field) is not trustable at
all: many spammers produce illegal or unreal dates to influence their
location in the displayed folder.
To start, the received headers are tried for a date (see
Mail::Message::Head::Complete::recvstamp()) and only then the
"Date" field. In very rare cases, only
with some locally produced messages, no stamp can be found.
- $obj->to()
- Returns the addresses which are specified on the
"To" header line (or lines). A list of
Mail::Address objects is returned. The people addressed here are the
targets of the content, and should read it contents carefully.
example: using to() to get all primar destination
addresses
my @to = $message->to;
- $obj->body( [$body] )
- Return the body of this message. BE WARNED that this returns you an object
which may be encoded: use decoded() to get a body with usable data.
With options, a new $body is set for
this message. This is not for normal use unless you understand
the consequences: you change the message content without changing the
message-ID. The right way to go is via
$message = Mail::Message->buildFromBody($body); # or
$message = Mail::Message->build($body); # or
$message = $origmsg->forward(body => $body);
The $body must be an (sub-)class of
Mail::Message::Body. In this case, information from the specified body
will be copied into the header. The body object will be encoded if
needed, because messages written to file or transmitted shall not
contain binary data. The converted body is returned.
When $body is
"undef", the current message body will
be dissected from the message. All relation will be cut. The body is
returned, and can be connected to a different message.
example:
my $body = $msg->body;
my @encoded = $msg->body->lines;
my $new = Mail::Message::Body->new(mime_type => 'text/html');
my $converted = $msg->body($new);
- $obj->contentType()
- Returns the content type header line, or
"text/plain" if it is not defined. The
parameters will be stripped off.
- $obj->decoded(%options)
- Decodes the body of this message, and returns it as a body object. Short
for "$msg->body->decoded" All
%options are passed-on.
- $obj->encode(%options)
- Encode the message to a certain format. Read the details in the dedicated
manual page Mail::Message::Body::Encode. The
%options which can be specified here are those of
the Mail::Message::Body::encode() method.
- $obj->isMultipart()
- Check whether this message is a multipart message (has attachments). To
find this out, we need at least the header of the message; there is no
need to read the body of the message to detect this.
- $obj->isNested()
- Returns "true" for
"message/rfc822" messages and message
parts.
- $obj->parts(
[<'ALL'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETED'|'RECURSE'|$filter>] )
- Returns the parts of this message. Maybe a bit inconvenient: it
returns the message itself when it is not a multipart.
Usually, the term part is used with multipart
messages: messages which are encapsulated in the body of a message. To
abstract this concept: this method will return you all header-body
combinations which are stored within this message except the
multipart and message/rfc822 wrappers. Objects returned are
"Mail::Message"'s and
Mail::Message::Part's.
The option default to 'ALL', which will return the message
itself for single-parts, the nested content of a message/rfc822 object,
respectively the parts of a multipart without recursion. In case of
'RECURSE', the parts of multiparts will be collected recursively. This
option cannot be combined with the other options, which you may want: it
that case you have to test yourself.
'ACTIVE' and 'DELETED' check for the deleted flag on messages
and message parts. The $filter is a code
reference, which is called for each part of the message; each part as
"RECURSE" would return.
example:
my @parts = $msg->parts; # $msg not multipart: returns ($msg)
my $parts = $msg->parts('ACTIVE'); # returns ($msg)
$msg->delete;
my @parts = $msg->parts; # returns ($msg)
my $parts = $msg->parts('ACTIVE'); # returns ()
- $obj->delete()
- Flag the message to be deleted, which is a shortcut for
$msg->label(deleted => time); The real
deletion only takes place on a synchronization of the folder. See
deleted() as well.
The time stamp of the moment of deletion is stored as value,
but that is not always preserved in the folder (depends on the
implementation). When the same message is deleted more than once, the
first time stamp will stay.
example:
$message->delete;
$message->deleted(1); # exactly the same
$message->label(deleted => 1);
delete $message;
- $obj->deleted( [BOOLEAN] )
- Set the delete flag for this message. Without argument, the method returns
the same as isDeleted(), which is preferred. When a true value is
given, delete() is called.
example:
$message->deleted(1); # delete
$message->delete; # delete (preferred)
$message->deleted(0); # undelete
if($message->deleted) {...} # check
if($message->isDeleted) {...} # check (preferred)
- $obj->isDeleted()
- Short-cut for
$msg->label('deleted')
For some folder types, you will get the time of deletion in
return. This depends on the implementation.
example:
next if $message->isDeleted;
if(my $when = $message->isDeleted) {
print scalar localtime $when;
}
- $obj->isModified()
- Returns whether this message is flagged as being modified. Modifications
are changes in header lines, when a new body is set to the message
(dangerous), or when labels change.
- $obj->label($label|PAIRS)
- Return the value of the $label, optionally after
setting some values. In case of setting values, you specify key-value
PAIRS.
Labels are used to store knowledge about handling of the
message within the folder. Flags about whether a message was read,
replied to, or scheduled for deletion.
Some labels are taken from the header's
"Status" and
"X-Status" lines. Folder types like MH
define a separate label file, and Maildir adds letters to the message
filename. But the MailBox labels are always the same.
example:
print $message->label('seen');
if($message->label('seen')) {...};
$message->label(seen => 1);
$message->label(deleted => 1); # same as $message->delete
- $obj->labels()
- Returns all known labels. In SCALAR context, it returns the knowledge as
reference to a hash. This is a reference to the original data, but you
shall *not* change that data directly: call
"label" for changes!
In LIST context, you get a list of names which are defined. Be
warned that they will not all evaluate to true, although most of them
will.
- $obj->labelsToStatus()
- When the labels were changed, that may effect the
"Status" and/or
"X-Status" header lines of mbox
messages. Read about the relation between these fields and the labels in
the DETAILS chapter.
The method will carefully only affect the result of
modified() when there is a real change of flags, so not for each
call to label().
- $obj->modified( [BOOLEAN] )
- Returns (optionally after setting) whether this message is flagged as
being modified. See isModified().
- $obj->statusToLabels()
- Update the labels according the status lines in the header. See the
description in the DETAILS chapter.
- $obj->file()
- Inherited, see "The whole message as text" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Text
- $obj->lines()
- Inherited, see "The whole message as text" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Text
- $obj->printStructure( [$fh|undef],[$indent] )
- Inherited, see "The whole message as text" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Text
- $obj->string()
- Inherited, see "The whole message as text" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Text
- $obj->clonedFrom()
- Returns the $message which is the source of this
message, which was created by a clone() operation.
- Mail::Message->coerce($message, %options)
- Coerce a $message into a Mail::Message. In some
occasions, for instance where you add a message to a folder, this coercion
is automatically called to ensure that the correct message type is stored.
The coerced message is returned on success, otherwise
"undef". The coerced message may be a
reblessed version of the original message or a new object. In case the
message has to be specialized, for instance from a general Mail::Message
into a Mail::Box::Mbox::Message, no copy is needed. However, to coerce a
Mail::Internet object into a Mail::Message, a lot of copying and
converting will take place.
Valid MESSAGEs which can be coerced into Mail::Message objects
are of type
- Any type of Mail::Box::Message
- MIME::Entity objects, using Mail::Message::Convert::MimeEntity
- Mail::Internet objects, using Mail::Message::Convert::MailInternet
- Email::Simple objects, using Mail::Message::Convert::EmailSimple
- Email::Abstract objects
Mail::Message::Part's, which are extensions of
"Mail::Message"'s, can also be coerced
directly from a Mail::Message::Body.
example:
my $folder = Mail::Box::Mbox->new;
my $message = Mail::Message->build(...);
my $coerced = Mail::Box::Mbox::Message->coerce($message);
$folder->addMessage($coerced);
Simpler replacement for the previous two lines:
my $coerced = $folder->addMessage($message);
- $obj->isDelayed()
- Check whether the message is delayed (not yet read from file). Returns
true or false, dependent on the body type.
- $obj->readBody( $parser, $head, [$bodytype] )
- Read a body of a message. The $parser is the
access to the folder's file, and the $head is
already read. Information from the $head is used
to create expectations about the message's length, but also to determine
the mime-type and encodings of the body data.
The $bodytype determines which kind of
body will be made and defaults to the value specified by new(body_type).
$bodytype may be the name of a body class, or a
reference to a routine which returns the body's class when passed the
$head as only argument.
- $obj->readFromParser( $parser, [$bodytype] )
- Read one message from file. The $parser is opened
on the file. First readHead() is called, and the head is stored in
the message. Then readBody() is called, to produce a body. Also the
body is added to the message without decodings being done.
The optional $bodytype may be a body
class or a reference to a code which returns a body-class based on the
header.
- $obj->readHead( $parser, [$class] )
- Read a head into an object of the specified
$class. The $class
defaults to new(head_type). The $parser is the
access to the folder's file.
- $obj->recursiveRebuildPart($part, %options)
- Inherited, see "Internals" in
Mail::Message::Construct::Rebuild
- $obj->storeBody($body)
- Where the body() method can be used to set and get a body, with all
the necessary checks, this method is bluntly adding the specified body to
the message. No conversions, not checking.
- $obj->takeMessageId( [STRING] )
- Take the message-id from the STRING, or create one when the
"undef" is specified. If not STRING nor
"undef" is given, the current header of
the message is requested for the value of the
'Message-ID' field.
Angles (if present) are removed from the id.
Extends "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter.
- $obj->AUTOLOAD()
- Inherited, see "METHODS" in Mail::Message::Construct
- $obj->addReport($object)
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->defaultTrace( [$level]|[$loglevel, $tracelevel]|[$level,
$callback] )
- Mail::Message->defaultTrace( [$level]|[$loglevel,
$tracelevel]|[$level, $callback] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->errors()
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->log( [$level, [$strings]] )
- Mail::Message->log( [$level, [$strings]] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->logPriority($level)
- Mail::Message->logPriority($level)
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->logSettings()
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->notImplemented()
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->report( [$level] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->reportAll( [$level] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->shortSize( [$value] )
- Mail::Message->shortSize( [$value] )
- Represent an integer $value representing the size
of file or memory, (which can be large) into a short string using M and K
(Megabytes and Kilobytes). Without $value, the
size of the message head is used.
- $obj->shortString()
- Convert the message header to a short string (without trailing newline),
representing the most important facts (for debugging purposes only). For
now, it only reports size and subject.
- $obj->trace( [$level] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->warnings()
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
Extends "Cleanup" in Mail::Reporter.
- $obj->DESTROY()
- Inherited, see "Cleanup" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->destruct()
- Remove the information contained in the message object. This will be
ignored when more than one reference to the same message object exists,
because the method has the same effect as assigning
"undef" to the variable which contains
the reference. Normal garbage collection will call
"DESTROY()" when possible.
This method is only provided to hide differences with messages
which are located in folders: their
Mail::Box::Message::destruct() works quite differently.
example: of Mail::Message destruct
my $msg = Mail::Message->read;
$msg->destruct;
$msg = undef; # same
A MIME-compliant message is build upon two parts: the header and the
body.
The header
The header is a list of fields, some spanning more than one line
(folded) each telling something about the message. Information stored
in here are for instance the sender of the message, the receivers of the
message, when it was transported, how it was transported, etc. Headers can
grow quite large.
In MailBox, each message object manages exactly one header object
(a Mail::Message::Head) and one body object (a Mail::Message::Body). The
header contains a list of header fields, which are represented by
Mail::Message::Field objects.
The body
The body contains the "payload": the data to be
transferred. The data can be encoded, only accessible with a specific
application, and may use some weird character-set, like Vietnamese; the
MailBox distribution tries to assist you with handling these e-mails without
the need to know all the details. This additional information
("meta-information") about the body data is stored in the header.
The header contains more information, for instance about the message
transport and relations to other messages.
The general idea about the structure of a message is
Mail::Message
| |
| `-has-one--Mail::Message::Body
|
`----has-one--Mail::Message::Head
|
`-has-many--Mail::Message::Field
However: there are about 7 kinds of body objects, 3 kinds of
headers and 3 kinds of fields. You will usually not see too much of these
kinds, because they are merely created for performance reasons and can be
used all the same, with the exception of the multipart bodies.
A multipart body is either a Mail::Message::Body::Multipart (mime
type "multipart/*") or a
Mail::Message::Body::Nested (mime type
"message/rfc822"). These bodies are more
complex:
Mail::Message::Body::Multipart
|
`-has-many--Mail::Message::Part
| |
| `-has-one--Mail::Message::Body
|
`----has-one--Mail::Message::Head
Before you try to reconstruct multiparts or nested messages
yourself, you can better take a look at
Mail::Message::Construct::Rebuild.
The class structure of messages is very close to that of folders. For instance,
a Mail::Box::File::Message relates to a Mail::Box::File folder.
As extra level of inheritance, it has a Mail::Message, which is a
message without location. And there is a special case of message:
Mail::Message::Part is a message encapsulated in a multipart body.
The message types are:
Mail::Box::Mbox::Message Mail::Box::POP3::Message
| Mail::Box::Dbx::Message Mail::Box::IMAP4::Message |
| | | |
Mail::Box::File::Message Mail::Box::Net::Message
| |
| Mail::Box::Maildir::Message |
| | Mail::Box::MH::Message |
| | | |
| Mail::Box::Dir::Message |
| | |
`------------. | .-----------------'
| | |
Mail::Box::Message Mail::Message::Part
| |
| .-------------'
| |
Mail::Message
|
|
Mail::Reporter (general base class)
By far most folder features are implemented in Mail::Box, so
available to all folder types. Sometimes, features which appear in only some
of the folder types are simulated for folders that miss them, like
sub-folder support for MBOX.
Two strange other message types are defined: the
Mail::Message::Dummy, which fills holes in Mail::Box::Thread::Node lists,
and a Mail::Box::Message::Destructed, this is an on purpose demolished
message to reduce memory consumption.
Labels (also named "Flags") are used to indicate some special
condition on the message, primary targeted on organizational issues: which
messages are already read or should be deleted. There is a very strong user
relation to labels.
The main complication is that each folder type has its own way of
storing labels. To give an indication: MBOX folders use
"Status" and
"X-Status" header fields, MH uses a
".mh-sequences" file, MAILDIR encodes the
flags in the message's filename, and IMAP has flags as part of the
protocol.
Besides, some folder types can store labels with user defined
names, where other lack that feature. Some folders have case-insensitive
labels, other don't. Read all about the specifics in the manual page of the
message type you actually have.
Predefined labels
To standardize the folder types, MailBox has defined the following
labels, which can be used with the label() and labels()
methods on all kinds of messages:
- deleted
This message is flagged to be deleted once the folder closes.
Be very careful about the concept of 'delete' in a folder context : it
is only a flag, and does not involve immediate action! This means, for
instance, that the memory which is used by Perl to store the message is
not released immediately (see destruct() if you need to).
The methods delete(), deleted(), and
isDeleted() are only short-cuts for managing the
"delete" label (as of MailBox
2.052).
- draft
The user has prepared this message, but is has not been send
(yet). This flag is not automatically added to a message by MailBox, and
has only a meaning in user applications.
- flagged
Messages can be flagged for some purpose, for instance
as result of a search for spam in a folder. The
Mail::Box::messages() method can be used to collect all these
flagged messages from the folder.
Probably it is more useful to use an understandable name (like
"spam") for these selections, however
these self-defined labels can not stored in all folder types.
- old
The message was already in the folder when it was opened the
last time, so was not recently added to the folder. This flag will never
automatically be set by MailBox, because it would probably conflict with
the user's idea of what is old.
- passed
Not often used or kept, this flag indicates that the message
was bounced or forwarded to someone else.
- replied
The user (or application) has sent a message back to the
sender of the message, as response of this one. This flag is
automatically set if you use reply(), but not with
forward() or bounce().
- seen
When this flag is set, the receiver of the message has
consumed the message. A mail user agent (MUA) will set this flag when
the user has opened the message once.
Status and X-Status fields
Mbox folders have no special means of storing information about
messages (except the message separator line), and therefore have to revert
to adding fields to the message header when something special comes up. This
feature is also enabled for POP3, although whether that works depends on the
POP server.
All applications which can handle mbox folders support the
"Status" and
"X-Status" field convensions. The
following encoding is used:
Flag Field Label
R Status => seen (Read)
O Status => old (not recent)
A X-Status => replied (Answered)
F X-Status => flagged
There is no special flag for
"deleted", which most other folders
support: messages flagged to be deleted will never be written to a folder
file when it is closed.
- Error: Cannot coerce a $class object into a $class object
- Error: Cannot include forward source as $include.
- Unknown alternative for the forward(include). Valid choices are
"NO",
"INLINE",
"ATTACH", and
"ENCAPSULATE".
- Error: Cannot include reply source as $include.
- Unknown alternative for the "include"
option of reply(). Valid choices are
"NO",
"INLINE", and
"ATTACH".
- Error: Method bounce requires To, Cc, or Bcc
- The message bounce() method forwards a received message off to
someone else without modification; you must specified it's new
destination. If you have the urge not to specify any destination, you
probably are looking for reply(). When you wish to modify the
content, use forward().
- Error: Method forwardAttach requires a preamble
- Error: Method forwardEncapsulate requires a preamble
- Error: No address to create forwarded to.
- If a forward message is created, a destination address must be
specified.
- Error: No default mailer found to send message.
- The message send() mechanism had not enough information to
automatically find a mail transfer agent to sent this message. Specify a
mailer explicitly using the "via"
options.
- Error: No rebuild rule $name defined.
- Error: Only build() Mail::Message's; they are not in a folder
yet
- You may wish to construct a message to be stored in a some kind of folder,
but you need to do that in two steps. First, create a normal
Mail::Message, and then add it to the folder. During this
Mail::Box::addMessage() process, the message will get
coerce()-d into the right message type, adding storage information
and the like.
- Error: Package $package does not implement $method.
- Fatal error: the specific package (or one of its superclasses) does not
implement this method where it should. This message means that some other
related classes do implement this method however the class at hand does
not. Probably you should investigate this and probably inform the author
of the package.
- Error: coercion starts with some object
This module is part of Mail-Message distribution version 3.012, built on
February 11, 2022. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/
Copyrights 2001-2022 by [Mark Overmeer <markov@cpan.org>]. For other
contributors see ChangeLog.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See
http://dev.perl.org/licenses/
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