The Mail modules operate at a higher level than the Net modules, interacting with external mail packages such as mail , mailx , sendmail , or a POP3 server in the case of POP3Client. This section describes some of the MailTools modules, Mail::Folder, and Mail::POP3Client.
The Mail::Mailer module interacts with external mail programs. When you use Mail::Mailer or create a new Mail::Mailer object, you can specify which mail program you want your program to talk to:
Another way to specify the mailer is:use Mail::Mailer qw(mail);
whereuse Mail::Mailer; $type = 'sendmail'; $mailprog = Mail::Mailer->new($type);
$type
is the mail program. Once you've created a new object, use the
open
function to send the message headers to the mail program as a hash of key/value pairs, where each key represents a header type, and where the value is the value of that header: This code represents headers where the recipient of the mail message is [email protected] , the mail was sent from [email protected] , and the subject of the mail message is " working? "# mail headers to use in the message %headers = ( 'To' => '[email protected]', 'From' => '[email protected]', 'Subject' => 'working?' );
Once
%headers
has been defined, it is passed to
open
:
You then send the body of the message to the mail program:$mailprog->open(\%headers);
Now, close the program when the message is finished:print $mailprog "This is the message body.\n";
A practical example of using Mail::Mailer might be a command-line-driven application that works much like the Unix mail program, either reading STDIN until EOF or mailing a file specified on the command line.$mailprog->close;
Mail::Mailer uses the environment variable PERL_MAILERS to augment or modify the built-in mailer selection. PERL_MAILERS is specified in the following format:
The possible types are listed for the"type1:mailbinary1;mailbinary2;...:type2:mailbinaryX;...:..."
new
method below.
The following methods are defined in Mail::Mailer:
Mail::Send is built on top of Mail::Mailer, which means that you can also choose the mail program that sends the mail. Mail::Send has implemented the methods
to
,
cc
,
bcc
, and
subject
to replace the
%headers
hash used in Mail::Mailer.
Mail::Send uses the
open
method to open the mail program for output; it is built on Mail::Mailer's
new
method, so that:
serves the same purpose as:# Start mailer and output headers $fh = $msg->open('sendmail');
This code tells Mail::Send to use sendmail as the mail program.# use sendmail for mailing $mailer = Mail::Mailer->new('sendmail)';
Mail::Send also provides the
set
and
add
functions, which assign a value to a header tag and append a value to a header tag, respectively. The
set
function takes two arguments - a header tag and a value - and is used like this:
Therefore, to address a message to [email protected] :$msg->set($scalar, @array);
The above sets the$msg->set('To', '[email protected]');
To
header to
[email protected]
; however, the following sets the
To
header to
[email protected]
and
[email protected]
, because they represent an array of values. You might think that you could use the$msg->set('To', ('[email protected]', '[email protected]'));
set
function as follows to add multiple values to a header value: However,$msg->set('To', '[email protected]'); $msg->set('To', '[email protected]');
set
doesn't append information from one call to another, and the example above would send the mail only to
[email protected]
. To append a name to the
To
header, use the
add
method. For example: $msg->add('To', '[email protected]'); $msg->add('To', '[email protected]');
The following methods are defined for Mail::Send:
Once you've begun downloading and reading your mail from a POP server, you might want to save or categorize your messages into folders, which allow you to add, delete, save, and move messages easily. You can do this with Mail::Folder, which was written by Kevin Johnson as an object-oriented, folder-independent interface to mail folders. Mail::Folder supports a number of mailbox formats with the following interfaces:
A folder interface somewhat similar to MH.
An interface to maildir folders.
Standard Unix mailbox format.
The beginnings of an interface to NNTP; not all the methods are implemented yet.
If you are interested in writing a folder interface, see the documentation for the module. The documentation explains the concepts and issues involved, and describes some of the methods you may need to override.
The following methods are defined for Mail::Folder:
Mail::Internet implements a number of helpful functions for manipulating a mail message. These include
body
,
print_header
, and
head
. Mail::Internet is built on top of Mail::Header, which parses the header of an email message, and it inherits the Mail::Header constructor style that requires a file descriptor or reference to an array be used. For example:
reads a mail message from STDIN (using a reference to an array). The following example reads a mail message from a filehandle, FILE.@lines = <STDIN>; $mi_obj = new Mail::Internet([@lines]);
Theopen(FILE, "/home/nvp/Mail/nvp"); $mi_obj = new Mail::Internet(\*FILE); close(FILE);
print_header
function outputs the header of a message to a file descriptor; the default is STDOUT. The above example might output:open(FILE, "/home/nvp/Mail/nvp"); $mi_obj = new Mail::Internet(\*FILE); close(FILE); $mi_obj->print_header(\*STDOUT);
whereFrom nvp Mon Jun 9 00:11:10 1997 Received: (from nvp@localhost) by mail.somename.com (8.8/8.8) id AAA03248 for nvp; Mon, 9 Jun 1997 00:11:09 -0500 (EST) Date: Mon, 9 Jun 1997 00:11:09 -0500 (EST) From: "Nathan V. Patwardhan" <nvp> Message-Id: <[email protected]> To: nvp Subject: pop test X-Status: X-Uid: 1 Status: RO
print_body
also takes a file descriptor as an argument, but only outputs the body of the message, whereas the
print
function outputs an entire message.
Mail::Address parses RFC 822-compliant mail addresses of the form:
For example, under RFC 822, an address might be represented as:"Full Name or Phrase" <username@host> (Comment Area)
or:"Nathan V. Patwardhan" <[email protected]> (No Comment)
The Mail::Address constructor parses an email address into three parts based on the categories shown above:"Nathan V. Patwardhan" <[email protected]>
Mail::Address also outputs portions of the mail address with the functions$addr = Mail::Address->new("Full Name or Phrase", "username@host", "(Comment Area)");
phrase
,
address
,
comment
,
format
,
name
,
host
, and
user
. The
phrase
,
address
, and
comment
functions represent the first, second, and third entities that were passed to the Mail::Address constructor, where the
phrase
function:
outputs:print $addr->phrase();
TheNathan V. Patwardhan
address
function: outputs:print $addr->address();
And the[email protected]
comment
function: outputs:print $addr->comment();
A real mail address can be "unmangled," or parsed from its [email protected] format, with theNo Comment
user
and
host
functions. The
user
function removes everything starting with the
@
to the end of the address, and
host
removes everything up to and including the
@
. Using the previous example of
[email protected]
, the following line: outputs:print $addr->user;
And the following line using thenvp
host
function: outputs:print $addr->host;
[email protected]
Many networks have machines dedicated to sending and receiving email. Since users might hold accounts on foo.bar.com , while mail is sent to pop-server.bar.com , there must be a means to transfer the mail from the "post office" machine to the host on which the user works. The Post Office Protocol, or POP, negotiates this mail transfer.
When a user wants to retrieve his or her mail, the user's mail client connects to the POP server and authenticates the user with a login name and password, as we described earlier. Once authenticated, the user can list, read, and delete messages from the POP server.
The Mail::POP3Client module simplifies the process of "talking POP" by implementing a number of functions to login, parse, and read mail messages held on the POP server. Information that the POP server needs, such as the user's login name and password, and possibly some optional information (the name of the POP host, the port, and a debugging flag) are passed to the constructor when a new POP3Client object is created. For example:
POP3Client provides functions to perform the following:use Mail::POP3Client; $pop = Mail::POP3Client->new("login", # required "password", #required "pophost.your.domain", # not required port, # default is 110 debug_flag); # any positive integer
The
Count
function returns the number of messages in the mailbox. Once they have been authenticated, users can list the headers of the messages in their
mailbox using the
Head
function in conjunction with the
Count
function, as shown in the following example:
You can also use a regular expression to parse the headers and display certain information, such as the sender and subject of each mail message:use strict; use Mail::POP3Client; my($pop, $num_mesg, $i); $pop = Mail::POP3Client->new("nvp", "xxxxxx"); $num_mesg = $pop->Count; # How many messages are there? print("You have ".$num_mesg." new message(s).\n"); for ($i = 1; $i <= $num_mesg; $i++) { print $pop->Head($i), "\n"; #print header for each message }
my($pop, $num_mesg, $i); $pop = Mail::POP3Client->new("nvp", "xxxxxx"); for ($i = 1; $i <= $pop->Count; $i++) { foreach ($pop->Head($i)) { # output from and subject print $_." " if /^(From|Subject)/; } print "\n"; }
The
Host
method returns or sets the current POP host. For example:
returns the current POP host. To set the new POP host to new-pop.bar.com , you could do this:$obj->Host;
The$new_host = 'new-pop.bar.com'; $obj->Host($new_host);
Port
method works like
Host
, returning or setting the current port that the POP server is bound to: $obj->Port; #return the current port for the POP server $new_port = 7000; #set the port to 7000 $obj->Port($new_port);
Naturally, you'll want to read more than the headers of your mail messages, so you'll want to use the
Body
,
HeadAndBody
, and
Retrieve
methods.
Body
outputs the body of the message, while
HeadAndBody
and
Retrieve
are synonyms that output both the head and the body of the message.
Messages can be deleted from the POP mailbox with the
Delete
method.
Delete
marks messages on the server for deletion; they aren't permanently removed until a QUIT command is received.
Delete
takes one argument - the number of the message to delete:
Like most mail programs, Mail::POP3Client can undelete messages that have been marked for deletion. Use the$pop->Delete(1); #delete the first message
Reset
method to do this: $pop->Reset(1); #undelete the first message
Most programs that require a user to log in will time out after a certain period of time for security and resource reasons. The
Alive
method checks to see if the connection to the POP server is still open; it returns true if the connection is good, and false otherwise.
POP connections can be explicitly opened and closed with
Login
and
Close
.
Close
takes no arguments and closes the connection to the POP server.