Provided by: libemail-folder-perl_0.857-1_all bug

NAME

       Email::Folder::Mbox - reads raw RFC822 mails from an mbox file

VERSION

       version 0.857

SYNOPSIS

       This isa Email::Folder::Reader - read about its API there.

DESCRIPTION

       Does exactly what it says on the tin - fetches raw RFC822 mails from an mbox.

       The mbox format is described at http://www.qmail.org/man/man5/mbox.html

       We attempt to read an mbox as through it's the mboxcl2 variant, falling back to regular
       mbox mode if there is no "Content-Length" header to be found.

   OPTIONS
       The new constructor takes extra options.

       "eol"
           This indicates what the line-ending style is to be.  The default is "\n", but for
           handling files with mac line-endings you would want to specify "eol => "\x0d""

       "jwz_From_"
           The value is taken as a boolean that governs what is used match as a message
           separator.

           If false we use the mutt style

            /^From \S+\s+(?:Mon|Tue|Wed|Thu|Fri|Sat|Sun)/
            /^From (?:Mon|Tue|Wed|Thu|Fri|Sat|Sun)/;

           If true we use

            /^From /

           In deference to this extract from <http://www.jwz.org/doc/content-length.html>

             Essentially the only safe way to parse that file format is to
             consider all lines which begin with the characters ``From ''
             (From-space), which are preceded by a blank line or
             beginning-of-file, to be the division between messages.  That is, the
             delimiter is "\n\nFrom .*\n" except for the very first message in the
             file, where it is "^From .*\n".

             Some people will tell you that you should do stricter parsing on
             those lines: check for user names and dates and so on.  They are
             wrong.  The random crap that has traditionally been dumped into that
             line is without bound; comparing the first five characters is the
             only safe and portable thing to do. Usually, but not always, the next
             token on the line after ``From '' will be a user-id, or email
             address, or UUCP path, and usually the next thing on the line will be
             a date specification, in some format, and usually there's nothing
             after that.  But you can't rely on any of this.

           Defaults to false.

       "seek_to"
           Seek to an offset when opening the mbox.  When used in combination with ->tell you may
           be able to resume reading, with a trailing wind.

       "tell"
           This returns the current filehandle position in the mbox.

AUTHORS

       •   Simon Wistow <simon@thegestalt.org>

       •   Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2006 by Simon Wistow.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.