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Mail::Transport::IMAP4(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Mail::Transport::IMAP4(3) |
Mail::Transport::IMAP4 - proxy to Mail::IMAPClient
Mail::Transport::IMAP4
is a Mail::Transport::Receive
is a Mail::Transport
is a Mail::Reporter
my $imap = Mail::Transport::IMAP4->new(...);
my $message = $imap->receive($id);
$imap->send($message);
my Mail::Box::Manager $mgr = Mail::Box::Manager->new;
$mgr->open(
# Generic folder options
folder => 'imaps://...',
access => 'rw',
extract => 'ALWAYS',
# Mail::IMAPClient options start with [A-Z]
IgnoreSizeErrors => 1,
Ssl => 1,
);
The IMAP4 protocol is quite complicated: it is feature rich and allows various
asynchronous actions. The main document describing IMAP is rfc3501 (which
obsoleted the original specification of protocol 4r1 in rfc2060 in March
2003).
This package, as part of MailBox, does not implement the actual
protocol itself but uses Mail::IMAPClient to do the work. The task for this
package is to hide as many differences between that module's interface and
the common MailBox folder types. Multiple Mail::Box::IMAP4 folders can share
one Mail::Transport::IMAP4 connection.
The Mail::IMAPClient module is the best IMAP4 implementation for
Perl5, but is not maintained. There are many known problems with the module,
and solving those is outside the scope of MailBox. See
http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Mail-IMAPClient for
all the reported bugs.
Extends "DESCRIPTION" in Mail::Transport::Receive.
Extends "METHODS" in Mail::Transport::Receive.
Extends "Constructors" in Mail::Transport::Receive.
- Mail::Transport::IMAP4->new(%options)
- Create the IMAP connection to the server. IMAP servers can handle multiple
folders for a single user, which means that connections may get shared.
This is sharing is hidden for the user.
When an "imap_client" is
specified, then the options
"hostname",
"port",
"username", and
"password" are extracted from it.
All %options which start with a
capital are passed as initiation to Mail::IMAPClient. See that manual
about the huge pile of parameters. When talking to Microsoft Exchange,
you probabaly need the
"IgnoreSizeErros". Probably, you need
"Ssl" or
"StartTLS" as well. As feature, you
may also pass a HASH to Ssl, where
"Mail::IMAPClient" only accepts an
ARRAY.
For backwards compatibility,
"ssl" is an alternative for
"Ssl", and
"starttls" for
"StartTLS".
-Option --Defined in --Default
authenticate 'AUTO'
domain <server_name>
executable Mail::Transport undef
hostname Mail::Transport 'localhost'
imap_client Mail::IMAPClient
interval Mail::Transport 30
log Mail::Reporter 'WARNINGS'
password Mail::Transport undef
port Mail::Transport 143
proxy Mail::Transport undef
retry Mail::Transport <false>
timeout Mail::Transport 120
trace Mail::Reporter 'WARNINGS'
username Mail::Transport undef
via Mail::Transport 'imap'
- authenticate => TYPE|ARRAY
- Authenthication method to login(), which will be passed to
Mail::IMAPClient subroutine authenticate. See the latter method for the
available types. You may provide an ARRAY of types.
- domain => WINDOWS_DOMAIN
- Used for NTLM authentication.
- executable => FILENAME
- hostname => HOSTNAME|ARRAY
- imap_client => OBJECT|CLASS
- When an OBJECT is supplied, that client will be used for the
implementation of the IMAP4 protocol. Information about server and such
are extracted from the OBJECT to have the accessors to produce correct
results. The OBJECT shall be a Mail::IMAPClient.
When a CLASS is given, an object of that type is created for
you. The created object can be retrieved via imapClient(), and
than configured as defined by Mail::IMAPClient.
- interval => SECONDS
- log => LEVEL
- password => STRING
- port => INTEGER
- proxy => PATH
- retry => NUMBER|undef
- timeout => SECONDS
- trace => LEVEL
- username => STRING
- via => CLASS|NAME
Extends "Receiving mail" in Mail::Transport::Receive.
- $obj->receive( [$unique_message_id] )
- Inherited, see "Receiving mail" in Mail::Transport::Receive
Extends "Server connection" in Mail::Transport::Receive.
- $obj->findBinary( $name, [@directories] )
- Inherited, see "Server connection" in Mail::Transport
- $obj->remoteHost()
- Inherited, see "Server connection" in Mail::Transport
- $obj->retry()
- Inherited, see "Server connection" in Mail::Transport
- $obj->authentication( ['AUTO'|$type|$types] )
- Returns a LIST of ARRAYS, each describing one possible way to contact the
server. Each pair contains a mechanism name and a challenge callback
(which may be "undef").
The settings are used by login() to get server access.
The initial value origins from new(authenticate), but may be changed
later.
Available basic $types are
"CRAM-MD5",
"NTLM", and
"PLAIN". With
"AUTO", all available types will be
tried. When the Authen::NTLM is not installed, the
"NTLM" option will silently be
skipped. Be warned that, because of
"PLAIN", erroneous username/password
combinations will be passed readible as last attempt!
The "NTLM" authentication
requires Authen::NTLM to be installed. Other methods may be added later.
Besides, you may also specify a CODE reference which implements some
authentication.
An ARRAY as $type can be used to
specify both mechanism as callback. When no array is used, callback of
the pair is set to "undef". See
"authenticate" in Mail::IMAPClient for the gory details.
example:
$transporter->authentication('CRAM-MD5', [MY_AUTH => \&c], 'PLAIN');
foreach my $pair ($transporter->authentication)
{ my ($mechanism, $challenge) = @$pair;
...
}
- $obj->domain( [$domain] )
- Used in NTLM authentication to define the Windows domain which is
accessed. Initially set by new(domain) and defaults to the server's
name.
- $obj->usesSSL()
- Returns a boolean.
The follow methods handle protocol internals, and should not be used by a normal
user of this class.
- $obj->appendMessage( $message, $foldername, [$date] )
- Write the message to the server. The optional DATA can be a RFC-822 date
or a timestamp.
- $obj->createFolder($name)
- Add a folder.
- $obj->createImapClient($class, %options)
- Create an object of $class, which extends
Mail::IMAPClient.
All %options will be passed to the
constructor (new) of $class.
- $obj->currentFolder( [$foldername] )
- Be sure that the specific FOLDER is the current one selected. If the
folder is already selected, no IMAP traffic will be produced.
The boolean return value indicates whether the folder is
selectable. It will return undef if it does not exist.
- $obj->deleteFolder($name)
- Remove one folder.
- $obj->destroyDeleted($folder)
- Command the server to delete for real all messages which are flagged to be
deleted.
- $obj->fetch(ARRAY-$of-$messages, $info)
- Get some $info about the
$messages from the server. The specified messages
shall extend Mail::Box::Net::Message, Returned is a list of hashes, each
info about one result. The contents of the hash differs per
$info, but at least a
"message" field will be present, to
relate to the message in question.
The right folder should be selected before this method is
called. When the connection was lost,
"undef" is returned. Without any
messages, and empty array is returned. The retrieval is done by
Mail::IMAPClient method "fetch()",
which is then parsed.
- $obj->flagsToLabels($what, @flags)
- Mail::Transport::IMAP4->flagsToLabels($what, @flags)
- In SCALAR context, a hash with labels is returned. In LIST context, pairs
are returned.
The $what parameter can be
'SET', 'CLEAR', or
'REPLACE'. With the latter, all standard imap
flags which do not appear in the list will be ignored: their value may
either by set or cleared. See getFlags()
Unknown flags in @flags are stripped
from their backslash and lower-cased. For instance, '\SomeWeirdFlag'
will become `someweirdflag => 1'. It will be set to '1' for
"SET", and '0' in case of
"CLEAR".
example: translating IMAP4 flags into MailBox flags
my @flags = ('\Seen', '\Flagged');
my $labels = Mail::Transport::IMAP4->flags2labels(SET => @flags);
- $obj->folders( [$foldername] )
- Returns a list of folder names which are sub-folders of the specified
$foldername. Without
$foldername, the top-level foldernames are
returned.
- $obj->getFields( $uid, $name, [$name, ...] )
- Get the records with the specified NAMES from the header. The header
fields are returned as list of Mail::Message::Field::Fast objects. When
the name is "ALL", the whole header is
returned.
- $obj->getFlags($folder, $id)
- Returns the values of all flags which are related to the message with the
specified $id. These flags are translated into the
names which are standard for the MailBox suite.
A HASH is returned. Names which do not appear will also
provide a value in the returned: the negative for the value is it was
present.
- $obj->getMessageAsString($message|$uid)
- Returns the whole text of the specified message: the head and the
body.
- $obj->ids()
- Returns a list of UIDs which are defined by the IMAP server.
- $obj->imapClient()
- Returns the object which implements the IMAP4 protocol, an instance of a
Mail::IMAPClient, which is logged-in and ready to use.
If the contact to the server was still present or could be
established, an Mail::IMAPClient object is returned. Else,
"undef" is returned and no further
actions should be tried on the object.
- $obj->labelsToFlags(HASH|PAIRS)
- Mail::Transport::IMAP4->labelsToFlags(HASH|PAIRS)
- Convert MailBox labels into IMAP flags. Returned is a string. Unsupported
labels are ignored.
- $obj->listFlags()
- Returns all predefined flags as list.
- $obj->login()
- Establish a new connection to the IMAP4 server, using username and
password.
- $obj->setFlags($id, $label, $value, [$label, $value], ...)
- Change the flags on the message which are represented by the label. The
value which can be related to the label will be lost, because IMAP only
defines a boolean value, where MailBox labels can contain strings.
Returned is a list of
$label=>$value pairs which could not be send
to the IMAP server. These values may be cached in a different way.
Extends "Error handling" in Mail::Transport::Receive.
- $obj->AUTOLOAD()
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->addReport($object)
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->defaultTrace( [$level]|[$loglevel, $tracelevel]|[$level,
$callback] )
- Mail::Transport::IMAP4->defaultTrace( [$level]|[$loglevel,
$tracelevel]|[$level, $callback] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->errors()
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->log( [$level, [$strings]] )
- Mail::Transport::IMAP4->log( [$level, [$strings]] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->logPriority($level)
- Mail::Transport::IMAP4->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
- $obj->trace( [$level] )
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
- $obj->warnings()
- Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
Extends "Cleanup" in Mail::Transport::Receive.
- $obj->DESTROY()
- The connection is cleanly terminated when the program is terminated.
- Error: Cannot connect to $host:$port for IMAP4: $!
- Error: IMAP cannot connect to $host: $@
- Notice: IMAP4 authenication $mechanism to $host:$port successful
- Error: IMAP4 requires a username and password
- Error: IMAP4 username $username requires a password
- 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.
This module is part of Mail-Box-IMAP4 distribution version 3.007, built on June
13, 2019. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/
Copyrights 2001-2019 by [Mark Overmeer]. 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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