\section{\module{mailbox} --- Read various mailbox formats} \declaremodule{standard}{mailbox} \modulesynopsis{Read various mailbox formats.} This module defines a number of classes that allow easy and uniform access to mail messages in a (\UNIX) mailbox. \begin{classdesc}{UnixMailbox}{fp\optional{, factory}} Access to a classic \UNIX-style mailbox, where all messages are contained in a single file and separated by \samp{From } (a.k.a.\ \samp{From_}) lines. The file object \var{fp} points to the mailbox file. The optional \var{factory} parameter is a callable that should create new message objects. \var{factory} is called with one argument, \var{fp} by the \method{next()} method of the mailbox object. The default is the \class{rfc822.Message} class (see the \refmodule{rfc822} module). For maximum portability, messages in a \UNIX-style mailbox are separated by any line that begins exactly with the string \code{'From '} (note the trailing space) if preceded by exactly two newlines. Because of the wide-range of variations in practice, nothing else on the From_ line should be considered. However, the current implementation doesn't check for the leading two newlines. This is usually fine for most applications. The \class{UnixMailbox} class implements a more strict version of From_ line checking, using a regular expression that usually correctly matched From_ delimiters. It considers delimiter line to be separated by \samp{From \var{name} \var{time}} lines. For maximum portability, use the \class{PortableUnixMailbox} class instead. This class is identical to \class{UnixMailbox} except that individual messages are separated by only \samp{From } lines. For more information, see \citetitle[http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/2.0/relnotes/demo/content-length.html]{Configuring Netscape Mail on \UNIX: Why the Content-Length Format is Bad}. \end{classdesc} \begin{classdesc}{PortableUnixMailbox}{fp\optional{, factory}} A less-strict version of \class{UnixMailbox}, which considers only the \samp{From } at the beginning of the line separating messages. The ``\var{name} \var{time}'' portion of the From line is ignored, to protect against some variations that are observed in practice. This works since lines in the message which begin with \code{'From '} are quoted by mail handling software at delivery-time. \end{classdesc} \begin{classdesc}{MmdfMailbox}{fp\optional{, factory}} Access an MMDF-style mailbox, where all messages are contained in a single file and separated by lines consisting of 4 control-A characters. The file object \var{fp} points to the mailbox file. Optional \var{factory} is as with the \class{UnixMailbox} class. \end{classdesc} \begin{classdesc}{MHMailbox}{dirname\optional{, factory}} Access an MH mailbox, a directory with each message in a separate file with a numeric name. The name of the mailbox directory is passed in \var{dirname}. \var{factory} is as with the \class{UnixMailbox} class. \end{classdesc} \begin{classdesc}{Maildir}{dirname\optional{, factory}} Access a Qmail mail directory. All new and current mail for the mailbox specified by \var{dirname} is made available. \var{factory} is as with the \class{UnixMailbox} class. \end{classdesc} \begin{classdesc}{BabylMailbox}{fp\optional{, factory}} Access a Babyl mailbox, which is similar to an MMDF mailbox. In Babyl format, each message has two sets of headers, the \emph{original} headers and the \emph{visible} headers. The original headers appear before a a line containing only \code{'*** EOOH ***'} (End-Of-Original-Headers) and the visible headers appear after the \code{EOOH} line. Babyl-compliant mail readers will show you only the visible headers, and \class{BabylMailbox} objects will return messages containing only the visible headers. You'll have to do your own parsing of the mailbox file to get at the original headers. Mail messages start with the EOOH line and end with a line containing only \code{'\e{}037\e{}014'}. \var{factory} is as with the \class{UnixMailbox} class. \end{classdesc} \begin{seealso} \seetitle[http://www.qmail.org/man/man5/mbox.html]{mbox - file containing mail messages}{Description of the traditional ``mbox'' mailbox format.} \seetitle[http://www.qmail.org/man/man5/maildir.html]{maildir - directory for incoming mail messages}{Description of the ``maildir'' mailbox format.} \seetitle[http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/2.0/relnotes/demo/content-length.html]{Configuring Netscape Mail on \UNIX: Why the Content-Length Format is Bad}{A description of problems with relying on the \mailheader{Content-Length} header for messages stored in mailbox files.} \end{seealso} \subsection{Mailbox Objects \label{mailbox-objects}} All implementations of mailbox objects are iterable objects, and have one externally visible method. This method is used by iterators created from mailbox objects and may also be used directly. \begin{methoddesc}[mailbox]{next}{} Return the next message in the mailbox, created with the optional \var{factory} argument passed into the mailbox object's constructor. By default this is an \class{rfc822.Message} object (see the \refmodule{rfc822} module). Depending on the mailbox implementation the \var{fp} attribute of this object may be a true file object or a class instance simulating a file object, taking care of things like message boundaries if multiple mail messages are contained in a single file, etc. If no more messages are available, this method returns \code{None}. \end{methoddesc}