X-Git-Url: https://git.phdru.name/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=mimedecode.docbook;h=0129709532dca754b56d05efe16293cca83f9af3;hb=ee5d110d6dc4252a72a56203acc953417bea338a;hp=b4c01878e5b6d4d8bcaa6a211add508b21971bd5;hpb=2b81e4c6b65e7f0e91a98da32fa46c884bedf6aa;p=mimedecode.git
diff --git a/mimedecode.docbook b/mimedecode.docbook
index b4c0187..0129709 100644
--- a/mimedecode.docbook
+++ b/mimedecode.docbook
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
- 2001-2014
+ 2001-2017PhiloSoft Design.
@@ -41,20 +41,62 @@
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DESCRIPTION
Mail users, especially in non-English countries, often find that mail
-messages arrived in different formats, with different content types, in
-different encodings and charsets. Usually it is good because it allows to use
-an appropriate format/encoding/whatever. Sometimes, though, some unification is
-desirable. For example, one may want to put mail messages into an archive,
-make HTML indices, run search indexer, etc. In such situations converting
-messages to text in one character set and skipping some binary attachments is
-much desirable.
+ messages arrived in different formats, with different content types, in
+ different encodings and charsets. Usually it is good because it allows to
+ use an appropriate format/encoding/whatever. Sometimes, though, some
+ unification is desirable. For example, one may want to put mail messages
+ into an archive, make HTML indices, run search indexer, etc. In such
+ situations converting messages to text in one character set and skipping
+ some binary attachments is much desirable.
- Here is the solution - mimedecode.py!
+ Here is a solution - mimedecode.py!
This is a program to decode MIME messages. The program expects one input
-file (either on command line or on stdin) which is treated as an RFC822
-message, and decodes to stdout or an output file. If the file is not an RFC822
-message it is just copied to the output one-to-one. If the file is a simple
-RFC822 message it is decoded as one part. If it is a MIME message with multiple
-parts ("attachments") all parts are decoded. Decoding can be controlled by
-command-line options.
+ file (either on command line or on stdin) which is treated as an RFC822
+ message, and decodes to stdout or an output file. If the file is not an
+ RFC822 message it is just copied to the output one-to-one. If the file is a
+ simple RFC822 message it is decoded as one part. If it is a MIME message
+ with multiple parts ("attachments") all non-multipart subparts are decoded.
+ Decoding can be controlled by the command-line options.
- First, Subject and Content-Disposition headers are examined. If any of those
- exists, it is decoded according to RFC2047. Content-Disposition header is
- not decoded - only its "filename" parameter. Encoded header parameters
- violate the RFC, but widely deployed anyway by ignorant coders who never
- even heard about RFCs. Correct parameter encoding specified by RFC2231. This
- program decodes RFC2231-encoded parameters, too.
+ First, for every part the program removes headers and parameters listed with
+ -r and -R options. Then, Subject and Content-Disposition headers (and all
+ headers listed with -d and -p options) are examined. If any of those exists,
+ they are decoded according to RFC2047. Content-Disposition header is not
+ decoded (if it was not listed in option -d) - only its "filename" parameter.
+ Encoded header parameters violate the RFC, but widely deployed anyway by
+ ignorant coders who never even heard about RFCs. Correct parameter encoding
+ specified by RFC2231. This program decodes RFC2231-encoded parameters, too.
Then the body of the message (or the current part) is decoded. Decoding
starts with looking at header Content-Transfer-Encoding. If the header
specifies non-8bit encoding (usually base64 or quoted-printable), the body
- converted to 8bit. Then, if its content type is multipart (multipart/related
- or multipart/mixed, e.g) every part is recursively decoded. If it is not
- multipart, mailcap database is consulted to find a way to convert the body
- to plain text. (I have no idea how mailcap can be configured on OSes other
- than POSIX, please don't ask me; real OS users can consult my example at
+ is converted to 8bit (can be prevented with -B). Then if its content type
+ is multipart (multipart/related or multipart/mixed, e.g) every part is
+ recursively decoded. If it is not multipart, mailcap database is consulted
+ to find a way to convert the body to plain text (can be prevented with
+ options -Bbei). (The author has no idea how mailcap can be configured on
+ OSes other than POSIX, please don't ask; users can consult an example at
http://phdru.name/Software/dotfiles/mailcap.html).
The decoding process uses the first copiousoutput filter it can find. If
- there is no any filter the body just passed as is.
+ there are no filters the body just passed as is.
Then Content-Type header is consulted for charset. If it is not equal to the
- current locale charset the body text is recoded. Finally message headers and
- the body are flushed to stdout.
+ current locale charset and recoding is allowed (see options -Cc) the body
+ text is recoded. Finally message headers and the body are flushed to stdout.
+
+
+ Please be reminded that in the following options asterisk is a shell
+ metacharacter and should be escaped or quoted. Either write -d \*,-h1,-h2
+ or -d '*,-h1,-h2' or such.
+
+OPTIONS
@@ -151,8 +203,8 @@ command-line options.
-c
- Recode different character sets in message body to current default
- charset; this is the default.
+ Recode different character sets in message bodies to the current
+ default charset; this is the default.
@@ -161,7 +213,17 @@ command-line options.
-C
- Do not recode character sets in message body.
+ Do not recode character sets in message bodies.
+
+
+
+
+
+ -f charset
+
+
+ Force this charset to be used for recoding instead of charset from
+ the current locale.
@@ -178,21 +240,25 @@ command-line options.
- -f charset
+ -d header1[,header2,header3...]
- Force this charset to be the current default charset instead of
- the current locale.
+ Add the header(s) to a list of headers to decode; initially the
+ list contains headers "From", "To", "Cc", "Reply-To",
+ "Mail-Followup-To" and "Subject".
- -d header
+ -d *[,-header1,-header2,-header3...]
- Add the header to a list of headers to decode; initially the list
- contains headers "From" and "Subject".
+ This variant completely changes headers decoding. First, the list of
+ headers to decode is cleared (as with -D). Then all the headers are
+ decoded except the given list of exceptions (headers listed with
+ '-'). In this mode it would be meaningless to give more than one -d
+ options but the program doesn't enforce the limitation.
@@ -207,13 +273,42 @@ command-line options.
- -p header:param
+ -p header1[,header2,header3,...]:param1[,param2,param3,...]
+
+
+ Add the parameter(s) to a list of headers parameters to decode;
+ the parameter(s) will be decoded only for the given header(s).
+ Initially the list contains header "Content-Type", parameter "name";
+ and header "Content-Disposition", parameter "filename".
+
+
+
+
+
+ -p *[,-header1,-header2,-header3,...]:param1[,param2,param3,...]
- Add the pair (header, param) to a list of headers' parameters to
- decode; initially the list contains header "Content-Type",
- parameter "name" and header "Content-Disposition", parameter
- "filename".
+ Add the parameter(s) to a list of headers parameters to decode;
+ the parameter(s) will be decoded for all headers except the given
+ ones.
+
+
+
+
+
+ -p header1[,header2,header3,...]:*[,-param1,-param2,-param3,...]
+
+
+ Decode all parameters except listed for the given list of headers.
+
+
+
+
+
+ -p *[,-header1,-header2,-header3,...]:*[,-param1,-param2,-param3,...]
+
+
+ Decode all parameters except listed for all headers (except listed).
@@ -222,7 +317,85 @@ command-line options.
-P
- Clear the list of headers' parameters to decode (make it empty).
+ Clear the list of headers parameters to decode (make it empty).
+
+
+
+
+
+ -r header1[,header2,header3...]
+
+
+ Add the header(s) to a list of headers to remove completely;
+ initially the list is empty.
+
+
+
+
+
+ -r *[,-header1,-header2,-header3...]
+
+
+ Remove all headers except listed.
+
+
+
+
+
+ -R header1[,header2,header3,...]:param1[,param2,param3,...]
+
+
+ Add the parameter(s) to a list of headers parameters to remove;
+ the parameter(s) will be removed only for the given header(s).
+ Initially the list is empty.
+
+
+
+
+
+ -R *[,-header1,-header2,-header3,...]:param1[,param2,param3,...]
+
+
+
+ -R header1[,header2,header3,...]:*[,-param1,-param2,-param3,...]
+
+
+
+ -R *[,-header1,-header2,-header3,...]:*[,-param1,-param2,-param3,...]
+
+
+ Remove listed parameters (or all parameters except listed) from
+ these headers (or from all headers except listed).
+
+
+
+
+
+ --set-header header:value
+
+
+ The program sets or changes value for the header to the given value
+ (only at the top-level message).
+
+
+
+
+
+ --set-param header:param=value
+
+
+ The program sets or changes value for the header's parameter to the
+ given value (only at the top-level message). The header must exist.
+
+
+
+
+
+ -B mask
+
+
+ Append mask to the list of binary content types that will be not
+ content-transfer-decoded (will be left as base64 or such).
@@ -232,8 +405,9 @@ command-line options.
Append mask to the list of binary content types; if the message to
- decode has a part of this type the program will pass the part as is,
- without any additional processing.
+ decode has a part of this type the program content-transfer-decodes
+ (base64 or whatever to 8bit binary) it and outputs the decoded part
+ as is, without any further processing.
@@ -248,13 +422,25 @@ command-line options.
+
+ -I mask
+
+
+ Append mask to the list of content types to completely ignore.
+ There will be no output - no headers, no body, no warning. For a
+ multipart part the entire subtree is removed.
+
+
+
+
-i mask
- Append mask to the list of content types to ignore; if the message to
- decode has a part of this type the program will not pass it, instead
- a line "Message body of type `%s' skipped." will be issued.
+ Append mask to the list of content types to ignore; if the message
+ to decode has a part of this type the program outputs headers but
+ skips the body. Instead a line "Message body of type %s skipped."
+ will be issued.
@@ -264,18 +450,50 @@ command-line options.
Append mask to the list of content types to convert to text; if the
- message to decode has a part of this type the program will consult
- mailcap database, find first copiousoutput filter and convert the
- part.
+ message to decode has a part of this type the program consults
+ mailcap database, find the first copiousoutput filter and, if any
+ filter is found, converts the part.
+
+ --save-headers mask
+
+
+
+ --save-body mask
+
+
+
+ --save-message mask
+
+
+ Append mask to lists of content types to save to files;
+ --save-headers saves only decoded headers of the message (or
+ the current subpart); --save-body saves only decoded body;
+ --save-message saves the entire message or subpart (headers +
+ body).
+
+
+
+
+
+ -O dest_dir
+
+
+ Set destination directory for the output files; if the directory
+ doesn't exist it will be created. Default is the current directory.
+
+
+
+
-o output_file
- Useful to set the output file in case of redirected stdin:
+ Save output to the file related to the destination directory from
+ option -O. Also useful in case of redirected stdin:
mimedecode.py -o output_file < input_file
cat input_file | mimedecode.py -o output_file
@@ -284,35 +502,72 @@ cat input_file | mimedecode.py -o output_file
- The 4 list options (-beit) require more explanation. They allow a user
-to control body decoding with great flexibility. Think about said mail
-archive; for example, its maintainer wants to put there only texts, convert
-Postscript/PDF to text, pass HTML and images as is, and ignore everything
-else. Easy:
+ The 5 list options (-Bbeit) require more explanation. They allow a user to
+ control body decoding with great flexibility. Think about said mail archive;
+ for example, its maintainer wants to put there only texts, convert
+ PDF/Postscript to text, pass HTML and images decoding base64 to html but
+ leaving images encoded, and ignore everything else. This is how it could be
+ done:
- mimedecode.py -t application/postscript -t application/pdf -b text/html
- -b 'image/*' -i '*/*'
+ mimedecode.py -t application/pdf -t application/postscript -t text/plain
+ -b text/html -B 'image/*' -i '*/*'
When the program decodes a message (non-MIME or a non-multipart subpart of a
MIME message), it consults Content-Type header. The content type is searched
- in all 4 lists, in order "text-binary-ignore-error". If found, appropriate
- action performed. If not found, the program search the same lists for
+ in all 5 lists, in order "text-binary-ignore-error". If found, appropriate
+ action is performed. If not found, the program searches the same lists for
"type/*" mask (the type of "text/html" is just "text"). If found,
- appropriate action performed. If not found, the program search the same
- lists for "*/*" mask. If found, appropriate action performed. If not found,
- the program uses default action, which is to decode everything to text (if
- mailcap specifies a filter).
+ appropriate action is performed. If not found, the program searches the same
+ lists for "*/*" mask. If found, appropriate action is performed. If not
+ found, the program uses the default action, which is to decode everything to
+ text (if mailcap specifies a filter). This algorithm allows more specific
+ content types to override less specific: -b image/* will be processed
+ earlier than -B */*.
+
+
+
+ Options -e/-I/-i can also work with multipart subparts of a MIME message. In
+ case of -I/-i the entire subtree of that multipart is removed; with -i it's
+ replaced with ignore warning.
+
+
+
+ Initially all 5 lists are empty, so without any additional parameters
+ the program always uses the default decoding (as -t */*).
+
+
+
+ The 3 save options (--save-headers/body/message) are similar. They make the
+ program to save every non-multipart subpart (only headers, or body, or the
+ entire subpart: headers + body) that corresponds to the given mask to a file.
+ Before saving the message (or the subpart) is decoded according to all other
+ options and is placed to the output stream as usual. Filename for the file is
+ created using "filename" parameter from the Content-Disposition header, or
+ "name" parameter from the Content-Type header if one of those exist; a serial
+ counter is prepended to the filename to avoid collisions; if there are no
+ name/filename parameters, or the name/filename parameters contain forbidden
+ characters (null, slash, backslash) the filename is just the serial counter.
+
+
+
+ If the file doesn't have any extensions (no dots in the value of the
+ name/filename parameters, or the name is just the counter) the program tries
+ to guess an extension by looking up the content type in mime.types files
+ including .mime.types file in the user's home directory (if it exists). If
+ the file has an extension the program doesn't try to verify that it
+ corresponds to the content type.
- Initially all 4 lists are empty, so without any additional parameters
-the program always uses the default decoding.
+ The file is saved in the directory set with -O (default is the current
+ directory). The save options are proceeded before -e options so the user can
+ save the message that causes an error.
@@ -335,12 +590,13 @@ the program always uses the default decoding.
BUGS
The program may produce incorrect MIME message. The purpose of the program
-is to decode whatever it is possible to decode, not to produce absolutely
-correct MIME output. The incorrect parts are obvious - decoded Subject headers
-and filenames. Other than that output is correct MIME message. The program does
-not try to guess whether the headers are correct. For example, if a message
-header states that charset is iso8859-5, but the body is actually in utf-8
-the program will recode the message with the wrong charset.
+ is to decode whatever it is possible to decode, not to produce absolutely
+ correct MIME output. The incorrect parts are obvious - decoded
+ From/To/Cc/Reply-To/Mail-Followup-To/Subject headers and filenames. Other
+ than that output is correct MIME message. The program does not try to guess
+ whether the headers are correct. For example, if a message header states
+ that charset is iso8859-1, but the body (HTML, for example) is actually in
+ utf-8 the program will recode the message with the wrong charset.
@@ -358,7 +614,7 @@ the program will recode the message with the wrong charset.
COPYRIGHT
- Copyright (C) 2001-2014 PhiloSoft Design.
+ Copyright (C) 2001-2017 PhiloSoft Design.