Provided by: libmime-tools-perl_5.505-1_all bug

NAME

       MIME::Head - MIME message header (a subclass of Mail::Header)

SYNOPSIS

       Before reading further, you should see MIME::Tools to make sure that you understand where
       this module fits into the grand scheme of things.  Go on, do it now.  I'll wait.

       Ready?  Ok...

   Construction
           ### Create a new, empty header, and populate it manually:
           $head = MIME::Head->new;
           $head->replace('content-type', 'text/plain; charset=US-ASCII');
           $head->replace('content-length', $len);

           ### Parse a new header from a filehandle:
           $head = MIME::Head->read(\*STDIN);

           ### Parse a new header from a file, or a readable pipe:
           $testhead = MIME::Head->from_file("/tmp/test.hdr");
           $a_b_head = MIME::Head->from_file("cat a.hdr b.hdr |");

   Output
           ### Output to filehandle:
           $head->print(\*STDOUT);

           ### Output as string:
           print STDOUT $head->as_string;
           print STDOUT $head->stringify;

   Getting field contents
           ### Is this a reply?
           $is_reply = 1 if ($head->get('Subject') =~ /^Re: /);

           ### Get receipt information:
           print "Last received from: ", $head->get('Received', 0);
           @all_received = $head->get('Received');

           ### Print the subject, or the empty string if none:
           print "Subject: ", $head->get('Subject',0);

           ### Too many hops?  Count 'em and see!
           if ($head->count('Received') > 5) { ...

           ### Test whether a given field exists
           warn "missing subject!" if (! $head->count('subject'));

   Setting field contents
           ### Declare this to be an HTML header:
           $head->replace('Content-type', 'text/html');

   Manipulating field contents
           ### Get rid of internal newlines in fields:
           $head->unfold;

           ### Decode any Q- or B-encoded-text in fields (DEPRECATED):
           $head->decode;

   Getting high-level MIME information
           ### Get/set a given MIME attribute:
           unless ($charset = $head->mime_attr('content-type.charset')) {
               $head->mime_attr("content-type.charset" => "US-ASCII");
           }

           ### The content type (e.g., "text/html"):
           $mime_type     = $head->mime_type;

           ### The content transfer encoding (e.g., "quoted-printable"):
           $mime_encoding = $head->mime_encoding;

           ### The recommended name when extracted:
           $file_name     = $head->recommended_filename;

           ### The boundary text, for multipart messages:
           $boundary      = $head->multipart_boundary;

DESCRIPTION

       A class for parsing in and manipulating RFC-822 message headers, with some methods geared
       towards standard (and not so standard) MIME fields as specified in the various
       Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions RFCs (starting with RFC 2045)

PUBLIC INTERFACE

   Creation, input, and output
       new [ARG],[OPTIONS]
           Class method, inherited.  Creates a new header object.  Arguments are the same as
           those in the superclass.

       from_file EXPR,OPTIONS
           Class or instance method.  For convenience, you can use this to parse a header object
           in from EXPR, which may actually be any expression that can be sent to open() so as to
           return a readable filehandle.  The "file" will be opened, read, and then closed:

               ### Create a new header by parsing in a file:
               my $head = MIME::Head->from_file("/tmp/test.hdr");

           Since this method can function as either a class constructor or an instance
           initializer, the above is exactly equivalent to:

               ### Create a new header by parsing in a file:
               my $head = MIME::Head->new->from_file("/tmp/test.hdr");

           On success, the object will be returned; on failure, the undefined value.

           The OPTIONS are the same as in new(), and are passed into new() if this is invoked as
           a class method.

           Note: This is really just a convenience front-end onto "read()", provided mostly for
           backwards-compatibility with MIME-parser 1.0.

       read FILEHANDLE
           Instance (or class) method.  This initializes a header object by reading it in from a
           FILEHANDLE, until the terminating blank line is encountered.  A syntax error or end-
           of-stream will also halt processing.

           Supply this routine with a reference to a filehandle glob; e.g., "\*STDIN":

               ### Create a new header by parsing in STDIN:
               $head->read(\*STDIN);

           On success, the self object will be returned; on failure, a false value.

           Note: in the MIME world, it is perfectly legal for a header to be empty, consisting of
           nothing but the terminating blank line.  Thus, we can't just use the formula that "no
           tags equals error".

           Warning: as of the time of this writing, Mail::Header::read did not flag either syntax
           errors or unexpected end-of-file conditions (an EOF before the terminating blank
           line).  MIME::ParserBase takes this into account.

   Getting/setting fields
       The following are methods related to retrieving and modifying the header fields.  Some are
       inherited from Mail::Header, but I've kept the documentation around for convenience.

       add TAG,TEXT,[INDEX]
           Instance method, inherited.  Add a new occurrence of the field named TAG, given by
           TEXT:

               ### Add the trace information:
               $head->add('Received',
                          'from eryq.pr.mcs.net by gonzo.net with smtp');

           Normally, the new occurrence will be appended to the existing occurrences.  However,
           if the optional INDEX argument is 0, then the new occurrence will be prepended.  If
           you want to be explicit about appending, specify an INDEX of -1.

           Warning: this method always adds new occurrences; it doesn't overwrite any existing
           occurrences... so if you just want to change the value of a field (creating it if
           necessary), then you probably don't want to use this method: consider using
           "replace()" instead.

       count TAG
           Instance method, inherited.  Returns the number of occurrences of a field; in a
           boolean context, this tells you whether a given field exists:

               ### Was a "Subject:" field given?
               $subject_was_given = $head->count('subject');

           The TAG is treated in a case-insensitive manner.  This method returns some false value
           if the field doesn't exist, and some true value if it does.

       decode [FORCE]
           Instance method, DEPRECATED.  Go through all the header fields, looking for RFC 1522 /
           RFC 2047 style "Q" (quoted-printable, sort of) or "B" (base64) encoding, and decode
           them in-place.  Fellow Americans, you probably don't know what the hell I'm talking
           about.  Europeans, Russians, et al, you probably do.  ":-)".

           This method has been deprecated.  See "decode_headers" in MIME::Parser for the full
           reasons.  If you absolutely must use it and don't like the warning, then provide a
           FORCE:

              "I_NEED_TO_FIX_THIS"
                     Just shut up and do it.  Not recommended.
                     Provided only for those who need to keep old scripts functioning.

              "I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING"
                     Just shut up and do it.  Not recommended.
                     Provided for those who REALLY know what they are doing.

           What this method does.  For an example, let's consider a valid email header you might
           get:

               From: =?US-ASCII?Q?Keith_Moore?= <moore@cs.utk.edu>
               To: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Keld_J=F8rn_Simonsen?= <keld@dkuug.dk>
               CC: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Andr=E9_?= Pirard <PIRARD@vm1.ulg.ac.be>
               Subject: =?ISO-8859-1?B?SWYgeW91IGNhbiByZWFkIHRoaXMgeW8=?=
                =?ISO-8859-2?B?dSB1bmRlcnN0YW5kIHRoZSBleGFtcGxlLg==?=
                =?US-ASCII?Q?.._cool!?=

           That basically decodes to (sorry, I can only approximate the Latin characters with 7
           bit sequences /o and 'e):

               From: Keith Moore <moore@cs.utk.edu>
               To: Keld J/orn Simonsen <keld@dkuug.dk>
               CC: Andr'e  Pirard <PIRARD@vm1.ulg.ac.be>
               Subject: If you can read this you understand the example... cool!

           Note: currently, the decodings are done without regard to the character set: thus, the
           Q-encoding "=F8" is simply translated to the octet (hexadecimal "F8"), period.  For
           piece-by-piece decoding of a given field, you want the array context of
           "MIME::Words::decode_mimewords()".

           Warning: the CRLF+SPACE separator that splits up long encoded words into shorter
           sequences (see the Subject: example above) gets lost when the field is unfolded, and
           so decoding after unfolding causes a spurious space to be left in the field.
           THEREFORE: if you're going to decode, do so BEFORE unfolding!

           This method returns the self object.

           Thanks to Kent Boortz for providing the idea, and the baseline RFC-1522-decoding code.

       delete TAG,[INDEX]
           Instance method, inherited.  Delete all occurrences of the field named TAG.

               ### Remove some MIME information:
               $head->delete('MIME-Version');
               $head->delete('Content-type');

       get TAG,[INDEX]
           Instance method, inherited.  Get the contents of field TAG.

           If a numeric INDEX is given, returns the occurrence at that index, or undef if not
           present:

               ### Print the first and last 'Received:' entries (explicitly):
               print "First, or most recent: ", $head->get('received', 0);
               print "Last, or least recent: ", $head->get('received',-1);

           If no INDEX is given, but invoked in a scalar context, then INDEX simply defaults to
           0:

               ### Get the first 'Received:' entry (implicitly):
               my $most_recent = $head->get('received');

           If no INDEX is given, and invoked in an array context, then all occurrences of the
           field are returned:

               ### Get all 'Received:' entries:
               my @all_received = $head->get('received');

           NOTE: The header(s) returned may end with a newline.  If you don't want this, then
           chomp the return value.

       get_all FIELD
           Instance method.  Returns the list of all occurrences of the field, or the empty list
           if the field is not present:

               ### How did it get here?
               @history = $head->get_all('Received');

           Note: I had originally experimented with having "get()" return all occurrences when
           invoked in an array context... but that causes a lot of accidents when you get
           careless and do stuff like this:

               print "\u$field: ", $head->get($field);

           It also made the intuitive behaviour unclear if the INDEX argument was given in an
           array context.  So I opted for an explicit approach to asking for all occurrences.

       print [OUTSTREAM]
           Instance method, override.  Print the header out to the given OUTSTREAM, or the
           currently-selected filehandle if none.  The OUTSTREAM may be a filehandle, or any
           object that responds to a print() message.

           The override actually lets you print to any object that responds to a print() method.
           This is vital for outputting MIME entities to scalars.

           Also, it defaults to the currently-selected filehandle if none is given (not STDOUT!),
           so please supply a filehandle to prevent confusion.

       stringify
           Instance method.  Return the header as a string.  You can also invoke it as
           "as_string".

       unfold [FIELD]
           Instance method, inherited.  Unfold (remove newlines in) the text of all occurrences
           of the given FIELD.  If the FIELD is omitted, all fields are unfolded.  Returns the
           "self" object.

   MIME-specific methods
       All of the following methods extract information from the following fields:

           Content-type
           Content-transfer-encoding
           Content-disposition

       Be aware that they do not just return the raw contents of those fields, and in some cases
       they will fill in sensible (I hope) default values.  Use "get()" or "mime_attr()" if you
       need to grab and process the raw field text.

       Note: some of these methods are provided both as a convenience and for backwards-
       compatibility only, while others (like recommended_filename()) really do have to be in
       MIME::Head to work properly, since they look for their value in more than one field.
       However, if you know that a value is restricted to a single field, you should really use
       the Mail::Field interface to get it.

       mime_attr ATTR,[VALUE]
           A quick-and-easy interface to set/get the attributes in structured MIME fields:

               $head->mime_attr("content-type"         => "text/html");
               $head->mime_attr("content-type.charset" => "US-ASCII");
               $head->mime_attr("content-type.name"    => "homepage.html");

           This would cause the final output to look something like this:

               Content-type: text/html; charset=US-ASCII; name="homepage.html"

           Note that the special empty sub-field tag indicates the anonymous first sub-field.

           Giving VALUE as undefined will cause the contents of the named subfield to be deleted:

               $head->mime_attr("content-type.charset" => undef);

           Supplying no VALUE argument just returns the attribute's value, or undefined if it
           isn't there:

               $type = $head->mime_attr("content-type");      ### text/html
               $name = $head->mime_attr("content-type.name"); ### homepage.html

           In all cases, the new/current value is returned.

       mime_encoding
           Instance method.  Try real hard to determine the content transfer encoding (e.g.,
           "base64", "binary"), which is returned in all-lowercase.

           If no encoding could be found, the default of "7bit" is returned I quote from RFC 2045
           section 6.1:

               This is the default value -- that is, "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7BIT"
               is assumed if the Content-Transfer-Encoding header field is not present.

           I do one other form of fixup: "7_bit", "7-bit", and "7 bit" are corrected to "7bit";
           likewise for "8bit".

       mime_type [DEFAULT]
           Instance method.  Try "real hard" to determine the content type (e.g., "text/plain",
           "image/gif", "x-weird-type", which is returned in all-lowercase.  "Real hard" means
           that if no content type could be found, the default (usually "text/plain") is
           returned.  From RFC 2045 section 5.2:

              Default RFC 822 messages without a MIME Content-Type header are
              taken by this protocol to be plain text in the US-ASCII character
              set, which can be explicitly specified as:

                 Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

              This default is assumed if no Content-Type header field is specified.

           Unless this is a part of a "multipart/digest", in which case "message/rfc822" is the
           default.  Note that you can also set the default, but you shouldn't: normally only the
           MIME parser uses this feature.

       multipart_boundary
           Instance method.  If this is a header for a multipart message, return the
           "encapsulation boundary" used to separate the parts.  The boundary is returned exactly
           as given in the "Content-type:" field; that is, the leading double-hyphen ("--") is
           not prepended.

           Well, almost exactly... this passage from RFC 2046 dictates that we remove any
           trailing spaces:

              If a boundary appears to end with white space, the white space
              must be presumed to have been added by a gateway, and must be deleted.

           Returns undef (not the empty string) if either the message is not multipart or if
           there is no specified boundary.

       recommended_filename
           Instance method.  Return the recommended external filename.  This is used when
           extracting the data from the MIME stream.  The filename is always returned as a string
           in Perl's internal format (the UTF8 flag may be on!)

           Returns undef if no filename could be suggested.

NOTES

       Why have separate objects for the entity, head, and body?
           See the documentation for the MIME-tools distribution for the rationale behind this
           decision.

       Why assume that MIME headers are email headers?
           I quote from Achim Bohnet, who gave feedback on v.1.9 (I think he's using the word
           "header" where I would use "field"; e.g., to refer to "Subject:", "Content-type:",
           etc.):

               There is also IMHO no requirement [for] MIME::Heads to look
               like [email] headers; so to speak, the MIME::Head [simply stores]
               the attributes of a complex object, e.g.:

                   new MIME::Head type => "text/plain",
                                  charset => ...,
                                  disposition => ..., ... ;

           I agree in principle, but (alas and dammit) RFC 2045 says otherwise.  RFC 2045 [MIME]
           headers are a syntactic subset of RFC-822 [email] headers.

           In my mind's eye, I see an abstract class, call it MIME::Attrs, which does what Achim
           suggests... so you could say:

                my $attrs = new MIME::Attrs type => "text/plain",
                                            charset => ...,
                                            disposition => ..., ... ;

           We could even make it a superclass of MIME::Head: that way, MIME::Head would have to
           implement its interface, and allow itself to be initialized from a MIME::Attrs object.

           However, when you read RFC 2045, you begin to see how much MIME information is
           organized by its presence in particular fields.  I imagine that we'd begin to mirror
           the structure of RFC 2045 fields and subfields to such a degree that this might not
           give us a tremendous gain over just having MIME::Head.

       Why all this "occurrence" and "index" jazz?  Isn't every field unique?
           Aaaaaaaaaahh....no.

           Looking at a typical mail message header, it is sooooooo tempting to just store the
           fields as a hash of strings, one string per hash entry.  Unfortunately, there's the
           little matter of the "Received:" field, which (unlike "From:", "To:", etc.) will often
           have multiple occurrences; e.g.:

               Received: from gsfc.nasa.gov by eryq.pr.mcs.net  with smtp
                   (Linux Smail3.1.28.1 #5) id m0tStZ7-0007X4C;
                    Thu, 21 Dec 95 16:34 CST
               Received: from rhine.gsfc.nasa.gov by gsfc.nasa.gov
                    (5.65/Ultrix3.0-C) id AA13596;
                    Thu, 21 Dec 95 17:20:38 -0500
               Received: (from eryq@localhost) by rhine.gsfc.nasa.gov
                    (8.6.12/8.6.12) id RAA28069;
                    Thu, 21 Dec 1995 17:27:54 -0500
               Date: Thu, 21 Dec 1995 17:27:54 -0500
               From: Eryq <eryq@rhine.gsfc.nasa.gov>
               Message-Id: <199512212227.RAA28069@rhine.gsfc.nasa.gov>
               To: eryq@eryq.pr.mcs.net
               Subject: Stuff and things

           The "Received:" field is used for tracing message routes, and although it's not
           generally used for anything other than human debugging, I didn't want to inconvenience
           anyone who actually wanted to get at that information.

           I also didn't want to make this a special case; after all, who knows what other fields
           could have multiple occurrences in the future?  So, clearly, multiple entries had to
           somehow be stored multiple times... and the different occurrences had to be
           retrievable.

SEE ALSO

       Mail::Header, Mail::Field, MIME::Words, MIME::Tools

AUTHOR

       Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com), ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com).  David F. Skoll
       (dfs@roaringpenguin.com) http://www.roaringpenguin.com

       All rights reserved.  This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
       it under the same terms as Perl itself.

       The more-comprehensive filename extraction is courtesy of Lee E. Brotzman, Advanced Data
       Solutions.