bionic (1) mhfixmsg.1mh.gz

Provided by: nmh_1.7.1~RC3-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       mhfixmsg - nmh's MIME-email rewriter with various transformations

SYNOPSIS

       mhfixmsg [-help] [-version] [+folder] [msgs | absolute pathname | -file file] [-decodetext
            8bit|7bit|binary | -nodecodetext] [-decodetypes type/[subtype][,...]]  [-crlflinebreaks |
            -nocrlflinebreaks] [-textcharset charset | -notextcharset] [-reformat | -noreformat]
            [-replacetextplain | -noreplacetextplain] [-fixboundary | -nofixboundary] [-fixcte | -nofixcte]
            [-fixtype mimetype] [-outfile outfile] [-rmmproc program] [-normmproc] [-changecur | -nochangecur]
            [-verbose | -noverbose]

DESCRIPTION

       mhfixmsg rewrites MIME messages, applying specific  transformations  such  as  decoding  of  MIME-encoded
       message parts and repairing invalid MIME headers.

       MIME  messages  are specified in RFC 2045 to RFC 2049 (see mhbuild(1)).  The mhlist command is invaluable
       for viewing the content structure of MIME messages.  mhfixmsg passes non-MIME  messages  through  without
       any  transformations.  If no transformations apply to a MIME message, the original message or file is not
       modified or removed.  Thus, mhfixmsg can safely be run multiple times on a message.

       The -decodetext switch enables a transformation to decode each base64 and quoted-printable  text  message
       part  to  the  selected  8-bit, 7-bit, or binary encoding.  If 7-bit is selected for a base64 part but it
       will only fit 8-bit, as defined by  RFC  2045,  then  it  will  be  decoded  to  8-bit  quoted-printable.
       Similarly,  with  8-bit, if the decoded text would be binary, then the part is not decoded (and a message
       will be displayed if -verbose is enabled).  Note that -decodetext binary can produce  messages  that  are
       not RFC 2045 compliant.

       When the -decodetext switch is enabled, each carriage return character that precedes a linefeed character
       is removed from text parts encoded in ASCII, ISO-8859-x, UTF-8, or Windows-12xx.

       The -decodetypes switch specifies the message parts, by type and optionally subtype, to which -decodetext
       applies.   Its  argument  is  a  comma-separated  list  of type/subtype elements.  If an element does not
       contain a subtype, then -decodetext applies to all subtypes of the type.   The  default  is  -decodetypes
       text; it can be overridden, e.g., with -decodetypes text/plain to restrict -decodetext to just text/plain
       parts.

       By default, carriage return characters are preserved or inserted at the end of each line of text content.
       The -crlflinebreaks switch selects this behavior and is enabled by default.  The -nocrlflinebreaks switch
       causes carriage return characters to be stripped from, and not inserted  in,  text  content  when  it  is
       decoded  and encoded.  Note that its use can cause the generation of MIME messages that do not conform to
       RFC 2046, §4.1.1, paragraph 1.

       The -textcharset switch specifies that all text/plain parts of the  message(s)  should  be  converted  to
       charset.   Charset  conversions  require that nmh be built with iconv(3); see the mhparam(1) man page for
       how determine whether your nmh installation includes that.  To convert text parts other than  text/plain,
       an external program can be used, via the -reformat switch.

       The  -reformat switch enables a transformation for text parts in the message.  For each text part that is
       not text/plain and that does not  have  a  corresponding  text/plain  in  a  multipart/alternative  part,
       mhfixmsg looks for a mhfixmsg-format-text/subtype profile entry that matches the subtype of the part.  If
       one is found and can be used to successfully convert  the  part  to  text/plain,  mhfixmsg  inserts  that
       text/plain  part  at  the beginning of the containing multipart/alternative part, if present.  If not, it
       creates a multipart/alternative part.

       With the -reformat switch, multipart/related parts are handled  differently  than  multipart/alternative.
       If  the  multipart/related  has  only  a  single  part  that  is  not  text/plain and can be converted to
       text/plain, a text/plain part is added and the type of the part is changed to multipart/alternative.   If
       the  multipart/related  has more than one part but does not have a text/plain part, mhfixmsg tries to add
       one.

       The -replacetextplain switch broadens the applicability of -reformat, by always replacing a corresponding
       text/plain  part,  if one exists.  If -verbose is enabled, the replacement will be shown as two steps:  a
       removal of the text/plain part, followed by the usual insertion of a new part.

       -reformat requires a profile entry for each text part subtype to be  reformatted.   The  mhfixmsg-format-
       text/subtype profile entries are based on external conversion programs, and are used in the same way that
       mhshow uses its mhshow-show-text/subtype entries.  When nmh is installed, it searches  for  a  conversion
       program  for  text/html  content,  and  if  one  is  found,  inserts a mhfixmsg-format-text/html entry in
       /etc/nmh/mhn.defaults.  An entry of the same name in the user's profile takes precedence.  The  user  can
       add entries for other text subtypes to their profile.

       The  -fixboundary  switch  enables  a  transformation  to repair the boundary portion of the Content-Type
       header field of the message to match the boundaries of the outermost multipart part of the message, if it
       does  not.   That  condition  is  indicated  by a “bogus multipart content in message” error message from
       mhlist and other nmh programs that parse MIME messages.

       The -fixcte switch enables a transformation to change the Content-Transfer-Encoding from an invalid value
       to  8-bit  in  message parts with a Content-Type of multipart and message, as required by RFC 2045, §6.4.
       That condition is indicated by a “must be encoded in 7bit, 8bit, or binary” error message from mhlist and
       other nmh programs that parse MIME messages.

       The -fixtype switch ensures that each part of the message has the correct MIME type shown in its Content-
       Type header.  It may be repeated.  It is typically used to replace “application/octet-stream” with a more
       descriptive MIME type.  It may not be used for multipart and message types.

       mhfixmsg applies two transformations unconditionally.  The first removes an extraneous trailing semicolon
       from the parameter lists of MIME header field values.  The second replaces RFC  2047  encoding  with  RFC
       2231  encoding  of  name  and  filename  parameters  in Content-Type and Content-Disposition header field
       values, respectively.

       The -verbose switch directs mhfixmsg to output informational message for each transformation applied.

       The return status of mhfixmsg is 0 if all of the requested transformations  are  performed,  or  non-zero
       otherwise.   (mhfixmsg  will  not  decode  to  binary content with the default -decodetext setting, but a
       request to do so is not considered a failure, and is noted with -verbose.)  If a problem is detected with
       any  one  of multiple messages such that the return status is non-zero, then none of the messages will be
       modified.

       The -file file switch directs mhfixmsg to use the specified file as the source  message,  rather  than  a
       message  from  a folder.  Only one file argument may be provided.  The -file switch is implied if file is
       an absolute pathname.  If the file is “-”, then mhfixmsg accepts the source message on the standard input
       stream.   If  the  -outfile switch is not enabled when using the standard input stream, mhfixmsg will not
       produce a transformed output message.

       mhfixmsg, by default, transforms the message in place.  If the -outfile switch is enabled, then  mhfixmsg
       does  not  modify  the  input  message  or file, but instead places its output in the specified file.  An
       outfile name of “-” specifies the standard output stream.

       Combined with the -verbose switch, the -outfile switch can be used to show what transformations  mhfixmsg
       would apply without actually applying them, e.g.,

            mhfixmsg -outfile /dev/null -verbose

       As always, this usage obeys any mhfixmsg switches in the user's profile.

       -outfile can be combined with rcvstore to add a single transformed message to a different folder, e.g.,

            mhfixmsg -outfile - | \
            /usr/lib/mh/rcvstore +folder

   Summary of Applicability
       The transformations apply to the parts of a message depending on content type and/or encoding as follows:

            -decodetext         base64 and quoted-printable encoded text parts
            -decodetypes        limits parts to which -decodetext applies
            -crlflinebreaks     text parts
            -textcharset        text/plain parts
            -reformat           text parts that are not text/plain
            -fixboundary        outermost multipart part
            -fixcte             multipart or message part
            -fixtype            all except multipart and message parts

   Backup of Original Message/File
       If  it  applies  any  transformations to a message or file, and the -outfile switch is not used, mhfixmsg
       backs up the original the same way as rmm.  That is, it uses the rmmproc profile component,  if  present.
       If not present, mhfixmsg moves the original message to a backup file.  The -rmmproc switch may be used to
       override this profile component.  The -normmproc switch disables the use of any rmmproc profile component
       and negates all prior -rmmproc switches.

   Integration with inc
       mhfixmsg  can  be  used  as an add-hook, as described in /usr/share/doc/nmh/README-HOOKS.  Note that add-
       hooks are called from all nmh programs that add a message to a folder, not just  inc.   Alternatively,  a
       simple  shell alias or function can be used to call mhfixmsg immediately after a successful invocation of
       inc.  One approach could be based on:

            msgs=`inc -format '%(msg)'`  &&  [ -n "$msgs" ]  &&  scan $msgs  &&  mhfixmsg -nochangecur $msgs

       Another approach would rely on adding a sequence to  Unseen-Sequence,  which  inc  sets  with  the  newly
       incorporated messages.  Those could then be supplied to mhfixmsg.  An example is shown below.

   Integration with procmail
       By  way  of  example,  here  is  an excerpt from a procmailrc file that filters messages through mhfixmsg
       before storing them in the user's nmh-workers folder.  It also stores the incoming message in the Backups
       folder  in  a  filename  generated by mkstemp, which is a non-POSIX utility to generate a temporary file.
       Alternatively, mhfixmsg could be called on the message after it is stored.

            PATH = /usr/bin/mh:$PATH
            LANG = en_US.utf8
            MAILDIR = `mhparam path`
            #### The Backups directory is relative to MAILDIR.
            MKSTEMP = 'mkstemp -directory Backups -prefix mhfixmsg'
            MHFIXMSG = 'mhfixmsg -noverbose -file - -outfile -'
            STORE = /usr/lib/mh/rcvstore

            :0 w: nmh-workers/procmail.$LOCKEXT
            * ^TOnmh-workers@nongnu.org
            | tee `$MKSTEMP` | $MHFIXMSG | $STORE +nmh-workers

EXAMPLES

   Basic usage
       To run mhfixmsg on the current message in the current folder, with default transformations  to  fix  MIME
       boundaries  and Content-Transfer-Encoding, to decode text and application/ics content parts to 8 bit, and
       to add a corresponding text/plain part where lacking:

              mhfixmsg -verbose

   Specified folder and messages
       To run mhfixmsg on specified messages, without its informational output:

              mhfixmsg +inbox last:4

   View without modification
       By default, mhfixmsg transforms the message in place.  To view the MIME structure that would result  from
       running mhfixmsg on the current message, without modifying the message:

              mhfixmsg -outfile - | mhlist -file -

   Search message without modification
       To  search  the  current  message, which possibly contains base64 or quoted printable encoded text parts,
       without modifying it, use the -outfile switch:

              mhfixmsg -outfile - | grep pattern

       -outfile can be abbreviated in usual MH fashion, e.g., to -o.  The search will be on the entire  message,
       not just text parts.

   Translate text/plain parts to UTF-8
       To  translate  all  text/plain  parts  in the current message to UTF-8, in addition to all of the default
       transformations:

              mhfixmsg -textcharset utf-8

   Fix all messages in a folder
       To run mhfixmsg on all of the messages in a folder:

              mhfixmsg +folder all

       Alternatively, mhfixmsg can be run on each message separately, e.g., using a Bourne shell loop:

              for msg in `pick +folder`; do mhfixmsg +folder $msg; done

       The two appearances of the +folder switch in that command protect against concurrent context  changes  by
       other nmh command invocations.

   Run on newly incorporated messages
       To run mhfixmsg on messages as they are incorporated:

              inc  &&  mhfixmsg -nochangecur unseen

       This assumes that the Unseen-Sequence profile entry is set to unseen, as shown in mh-profile(5).

FILES

       mhfixmsg  looks  for  mhn.defaults in multiple locations: absolute pathnames are accessed directly, tilde
       expansion is done on usernames, and files are searched for in the user's Mail directory as  specified  in
       their profile.  If not found there, the directory “/etc/nmh” is checked.

       $HOME/.mh_profile      The user profile
       /etc/nmh/mhn.defaults  Default mhfixmsg conversion entries

PROFILE COMPONENTS

       Path:                To determine the user's nmh directory
       Current-Folder:      To find the default current folder
       rmmproc:             Program to delete original messages or files

SEE ALSO

       iconv(3),   inc(1),   mh-mkstemp(1),   mh-profile(5),   mhbuild(1),   mhlist(1),  mhparam(1),  mhshow(1),
       procmail(1), procmailrc(5), rcvstore(1), rmm(1)

DEFAULTS

       `+folder' defaults to the current folder
       `msgs' defaults to cur
       `-decodetext 8bit'
       `-decodetypes text,application/ics'
       `-crlflinebreaks'
       `-notextcharset'
       `-reformat'
       `-noreplacetextplain'
       `-fixboundary'
       `-fixcte'
       `-changecur'
       `-noverbose'

CONTEXT

       If a folder is given, it will become the current folder.  The last message selected from  a  folder  will
       become  the  current  message,  unless  the  -nochangecur  switch  is enabled.  If the -file switch or an
       absolute pathname is used, the context will not be modified.