emacs-mime.texi (Flowed text): Add a note about mml-enable-flowed variable.
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1\input texinfo
2
db78a8cb 3@setfilename ../../info/emacs-mime
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4@settitle Emacs MIME Manual
5@synindex fn cp
6@synindex vr cp
7@synindex pg cp
8
9@copying
10This file documents the Emacs MIME interface functionality.
11
12Copyright @copyright{} 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
114f9c96 132006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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14
15@quotation
16Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
6a2c4aec 17under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
4009494e 18any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
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19Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual'',
20and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
21is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
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23(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and
24modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF supports it in
25developing GNU and promoting software freedom.''
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26@end quotation
27@end copying
28
29@c Node ``Interface Functions'' uses Latin-1 characters
30@documentencoding ISO-8859-1
31
32@dircategory Emacs
33@direntry
62e034c2 34* Emacs MIME: (emacs-mime). Emacs MIME de/composition library.
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35@end direntry
36@iftex
37@finalout
38@end iftex
39@setchapternewpage odd
40
41@titlepage
42@title Emacs MIME Manual
43
44@author by Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen
45@page
46@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
47@insertcopying
48@end titlepage
49
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50@contents
51
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52@node Top
53@top Emacs MIME
54
55This manual documents the libraries used to compose and display
56@acronym{MIME} messages.
57
58This manual is directed at users who want to modify the behavior of
59the @acronym{MIME} encoding/decoding process or want a more detailed
60picture of how the Emacs @acronym{MIME} library works, and people who want
61to write functions and commands that manipulate @acronym{MIME} elements.
62
63@acronym{MIME} is short for @dfn{Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions}.
64This standard is documented in a number of RFCs; mainly RFC2045 (Format
65of Internet Message Bodies), RFC2046 (Media Types), RFC2047 (Message
66Header Extensions for Non-@acronym{ASCII} Text), RFC2048 (Registration
67Procedures), RFC2049 (Conformance Criteria and Examples). It is highly
68recommended that anyone who intends writing @acronym{MIME}-compliant software
69read at least RFC2045 and RFC2047.
70
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71@ifnottex
72@insertcopying
73@end ifnottex
74
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75@menu
76* Decoding and Viewing:: A framework for decoding and viewing.
77* Composing:: @acronym{MML}; a language for describing @acronym{MIME} parts.
78* Interface Functions:: An abstraction over the basic functions.
79* Basic Functions:: Utility and basic parsing functions.
80* Standards:: A summary of RFCs and working documents used.
81* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
82* Index:: Function and variable index.
83@end menu
84
85
86@node Decoding and Viewing
87@chapter Decoding and Viewing
88
89This chapter deals with decoding and viewing @acronym{MIME} messages on a
90higher level.
91
92The main idea is to first analyze a @acronym{MIME} article, and then allow
93other programs to do things based on the list of @dfn{handles} that are
94returned as a result of this analysis.
95
96@menu
97* Dissection:: Analyzing a @acronym{MIME} message.
98* Non-MIME:: Analyzing a non-@acronym{MIME} message.
99* Handles:: Handle manipulations.
100* Display:: Displaying handles.
101* Display Customization:: Variables that affect display.
102* Files and Directories:: Saving and naming attachments.
103* New Viewers:: How to write your own viewers.
104@end menu
105
106
107@node Dissection
108@section Dissection
109
110The @code{mm-dissect-buffer} is the function responsible for dissecting
111a @acronym{MIME} article. If given a multipart message, it will recursively
112descend the message, following the structure, and return a tree of
113@acronym{MIME} handles that describes the structure of the message.
114
115@node Non-MIME
116@section Non-MIME
117@vindex mm-uu-configure-list
118
119Gnus also understands some non-@acronym{MIME} attachments, such as
120postscript, uuencode, binhex, yenc, shar, forward, gnatsweb, pgp,
121diff. Each of these features can be disabled by add an item into
122@code{mm-uu-configure-list}. For example,
123
124@lisp
125(require 'mm-uu)
126(add-to-list 'mm-uu-configure-list '(pgp-signed . disabled))
127@end lisp
128
129@table @code
130@item postscript
131@findex postscript
132PostScript file.
133
134@item uu
135@findex uu
136Uuencoded file.
137
138@item binhex
139@findex binhex
140Binhex encoded file.
141
142@item yenc
143@findex yenc
144Yenc encoded file.
145
146@item shar
147@findex shar
148Shar archive file.
149
150@item forward
151@findex forward
152Non-@acronym{MIME} forwarded message.
153
154@item gnatsweb
155@findex gnatsweb
156Gnatsweb attachment.
157
158@item pgp-signed
159@findex pgp-signed
160@acronym{PGP} signed clear text.
161
162@item pgp-encrypted
163@findex pgp-encrypted
164@acronym{PGP} encrypted clear text.
165
166@item pgp-key
167@findex pgp-key
168@acronym{PGP} public keys.
169
170@item emacs-sources
171@findex emacs-sources
172@vindex mm-uu-emacs-sources-regexp
173Emacs source code. This item works only in the groups matching
174@code{mm-uu-emacs-sources-regexp}.
175
176@item diff
177@vindex diff
178@vindex mm-uu-diff-groups-regexp
179Patches. This is intended for groups where diffs of committed files
180are automatically sent to. It only works in groups matching
181@code{mm-uu-diff-groups-regexp}.
182
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183@item verbatim-marks
184@cindex verbatim-marks
185Slrn-style verbatim marks.
186
187@item LaTeX
188@cindex LaTeX
189LaTeX documents. It only works in groups matching
190@code{mm-uu-tex-groups-regexp}.
191
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192@end table
193
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194@cindex text/x-verbatim
195@c Is @vindex suitable for a face?
196@vindex mm-uu-extract
197Some inlined non-@acronym{MIME} attachments are displayed using the face
198@code{mm-uu-extract}. By default, no @acronym{MIME} button for these
199parts is displayed. You can force displaying a button using @kbd{K b}
200(@code{gnus-summary-display-buttonized}) or add @code{text/x-verbatim}
201to @code{gnus-buttonized-mime-types}, @xref{MIME Commands, ,MIME
202Commands, gnus, Gnus Manual}.
203
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204@node Handles
205@section Handles
206
207A @acronym{MIME} handle is a list that fully describes a @acronym{MIME}
208component.
209
210The following macros can be used to access elements in a handle:
211
212@table @code
213@item mm-handle-buffer
214@findex mm-handle-buffer
215Return the buffer that holds the contents of the undecoded @acronym{MIME}
216part.
217
218@item mm-handle-type
219@findex mm-handle-type
220Return the parsed @code{Content-Type} of the part.
221
222@item mm-handle-encoding
223@findex mm-handle-encoding
224Return the @code{Content-Transfer-Encoding} of the part.
225
226@item mm-handle-undisplayer
227@findex mm-handle-undisplayer
228Return the object that can be used to remove the displayed part (if it
229has been displayed).
230
231@item mm-handle-set-undisplayer
232@findex mm-handle-set-undisplayer
233Set the undisplayer object.
234
235@item mm-handle-disposition
236@findex mm-handle-disposition
237Return the parsed @code{Content-Disposition} of the part.
238
239@item mm-get-content-id
240Returns the handle(s) referred to by @code{Content-ID}.
241
242@end table
243
244
245@node Display
246@section Display
247
248Functions for displaying, removing and saving.
249
250@table @code
251@item mm-display-part
252@findex mm-display-part
253Display the part.
254
255@item mm-remove-part
256@findex mm-remove-part
257Remove the part (if it has been displayed).
258
259@item mm-inlinable-p
260@findex mm-inlinable-p
261Say whether a @acronym{MIME} type can be displayed inline.
262
263@item mm-automatic-display-p
264@findex mm-automatic-display-p
265Say whether a @acronym{MIME} type should be displayed automatically.
266
267@item mm-destroy-part
268@findex mm-destroy-part
269Free all resources occupied by a part.
270
271@item mm-save-part
272@findex mm-save-part
273Offer to save the part in a file.
274
275@item mm-pipe-part
276@findex mm-pipe-part
277Offer to pipe the part to some process.
278
279@item mm-interactively-view-part
280@findex mm-interactively-view-part
281Prompt for a mailcap method to use to view the part.
282
283@end table
284
285
286@node Display Customization
287@section Display Customization
288
289@table @code
290
291@item mm-inline-media-tests
292@vindex mm-inline-media-tests
293This is an alist where the key is a @acronym{MIME} type, the second element
294is a function to display the part @dfn{inline} (i.e., inside Emacs), and
295the third element is a form to be @code{eval}ed to say whether the part
296can be displayed inline.
297
298This variable specifies whether a part @emph{can} be displayed inline,
299and, if so, how to do it. It does not say whether parts are
300@emph{actually} displayed inline.
301
302@item mm-inlined-types
303@vindex mm-inlined-types
304This, on the other hand, says what types are to be displayed inline, if
305they satisfy the conditions set by the variable above. It's a list of
306@acronym{MIME} media types.
307
308@item mm-automatic-display
309@vindex mm-automatic-display
310This is a list of types that are to be displayed ``automatically'', but
311only if the above variable allows it. That is, only inlinable parts can
312be displayed automatically.
313
314@item mm-automatic-external-display
315@vindex mm-automatic-external-display
316This is a list of types that will be displayed automatically in an
317external viewer.
318
319@item mm-keep-viewer-alive-types
320@vindex mm-keep-viewer-alive-types
321This is a list of media types for which the external viewer will not
322be killed when selecting a different article.
323
324@item mm-attachment-override-types
325@vindex mm-attachment-override-types
326Some @acronym{MIME} agents create parts that have a content-disposition of
327@samp{attachment}. This variable allows overriding that disposition and
328displaying the part inline. (Note that the disposition is only
329overridden if we are able to, and want to, display the part inline.)
330
331@item mm-discouraged-alternatives
332@vindex mm-discouraged-alternatives
333List of @acronym{MIME} types that are discouraged when viewing
334@samp{multipart/alternative}. Viewing agents are supposed to view the
335last possible part of a message, as that is supposed to be the richest.
336However, users may prefer other types instead, and this list says what
337types are most unwanted. If, for instance, @samp{text/html} parts are
338very unwanted, and @samp{text/richtext} parts are somewhat unwanted,
339you could say something like:
340
341@lisp
342(setq mm-discouraged-alternatives
343 '("text/html" "text/richtext")
344 mm-automatic-display
345 (remove "text/html" mm-automatic-display))
346@end lisp
347
348Adding @code{"image/.*"} might also be useful. Spammers use images as
349the preferred part of @samp{multipart/alternative} messages, so you might
350not notice there are other parts. See also
351@code{gnus-buttonized-mime-types}, @ref{MIME Commands, ,MIME Commands,
352gnus, Gnus Manual}. After adding @code{"multipart/alternative"} to
353@code{gnus-buttonized-mime-types} you can choose manually which
354alternative you'd like to view. For example, you can set those
355variables like:
356
357@lisp
358(setq gnus-buttonized-mime-types
359 '("multipart/alternative" "multipart/signed")
360 mm-discouraged-alternatives
361 '("text/html" "image/.*"))
362@end lisp
363
364In this case, Gnus will display radio buttons for such a kind of spam
365message as follows:
366
367@example
3681. (*) multipart/alternative ( ) image/gif
369
3702. (*) text/plain ( ) text/html
371@end example
372
373@item mm-inline-large-images
374@vindex mm-inline-large-images
375When displaying inline images that are larger than the window, Emacs
376does not enable scrolling, which means that you cannot see the whole
a41c2e6d 377image. To prevent this, the library tries to determine the image size
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378before displaying it inline, and if it doesn't fit the window, the
379library will display it externally (e.g. with @samp{ImageMagick} or
a41c2e6d 380@samp{xv}). Setting this variable to @code{t} disables this check and
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382their size. If you set this variable to @code{resize}, the image will
383be displayed resized to fit in the window, if Emacs has the ability to
384resize images.
385
386@item mm-inline-large-images-proportion
387@vindex mm-inline-images-max-proportion
388The proportion used when resizing large images.
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389
390@item mm-inline-override-types
391@vindex mm-inline-override-types
392@code{mm-inlined-types} may include regular expressions, for example to
393specify that all @samp{text/.*} parts be displayed inline. If a user
394prefers to have a type that matches such a regular expression be treated
395as an attachment, that can be accomplished by setting this variable to a
396list containing that type. For example assuming @code{mm-inlined-types}
397includes @samp{text/.*}, then including @samp{text/html} in this
398variable will cause @samp{text/html} parts to be treated as attachments.
399
400@item mm-text-html-renderer
401@vindex mm-text-html-renderer
402This selects the function used to render @acronym{HTML}. The predefined
85115796 403renderers are selected by the symbols @code{gnus-article-html}, @code{w3},
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404@code{w3m}@footnote{See @uref{http://emacs-w3m.namazu.org/} for more
405information about emacs-w3m}, @code{links}, @code{lynx},
406@code{w3m-standalone} or @code{html2text}. If @code{nil} use an
407external viewer. You can also specify a function, which will be
408called with a @acronym{MIME} handle as the argument.
409
410@item mm-inline-text-html-with-images
411@vindex mm-inline-text-html-with-images
412Some @acronym{HTML} mails might have the trick of spammers using
413@samp{<img>} tags. It is likely to be intended to verify whether you
414have read the mail. You can prevent your personal informations from
415leaking by setting this option to @code{nil} (which is the default).
416It is currently ignored by Emacs/w3. For emacs-w3m, you may use the
417command @kbd{t} on the image anchor to show an image even if it is
418@code{nil}.@footnote{The command @kbd{T} will load all images. If you
419have set the option @code{w3m-key-binding} to @code{info}, use @kbd{i}
420or @kbd{I} instead.}
421
422@item mm-w3m-safe-url-regexp
423@vindex mm-w3m-safe-url-regexp
424A regular expression that matches safe URL names, i.e. URLs that are
425unlikely to leak personal information when rendering @acronym{HTML}
426email (the default value is @samp{\\`cid:}). If @code{nil} consider
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427all URLs safe. In Gnus, this will be overridden according to the value
428of the variable @code{gnus-safe-html-newsgroups}, @xref{Various
429Various, ,Various Various, gnus, Gnus Manual}.
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430
431@item mm-inline-text-html-with-w3m-keymap
432@vindex mm-inline-text-html-with-w3m-keymap
433You can use emacs-w3m command keys in the inlined text/html part by
434setting this option to non-@code{nil}. The default value is @code{t}.
435
436@item mm-external-terminal-program
437@vindex mm-external-terminal-program
438The program used to start an external terminal.
439
440@item mm-enable-external
441@vindex mm-enable-external
442Indicate whether external @acronym{MIME} handlers should be used.
443
444If @code{t}, all defined external @acronym{MIME} handlers are used. If
445@code{nil}, files are saved to disk (@code{mailcap-save-binary-file}).
446If it is the symbol @code{ask}, you are prompted before the external
447@acronym{MIME} handler is invoked.
448
449When you launch an attachment through mailcap (@pxref{mailcap}) an
450attempt is made to use a safe viewer with the safest options---this isn't
451the case if you save it to disk and launch it in a different way
452(command line or double-clicking). Anyhow, if you want to be sure not
453to launch any external programs, set this variable to @code{nil} or
454@code{ask}.
455
456@end table
457
458@node Files and Directories
459@section Files and Directories
460
461@table @code
462
463@item mm-default-directory
464@vindex mm-default-directory
465The default directory for saving attachments. If @code{nil} use
466@code{default-directory}.
467
468@item mm-tmp-directory
469@vindex mm-tmp-directory
470Directory for storing temporary files.
471
472@item mm-file-name-rewrite-functions
473@vindex mm-file-name-rewrite-functions
474A list of functions used for rewriting file names of @acronym{MIME}
475parts. Each function is applied successively to the file name.
476Ready-made functions include
477
478@table @code
479@item mm-file-name-delete-control
480@findex mm-file-name-delete-control
481Delete all control characters.
482
483@item mm-file-name-delete-gotchas
484@findex mm-file-name-delete-gotchas
485Delete characters that could have unintended consequences when used
486with flawed shell scripts, i.e. @samp{|}, @samp{>} and @samp{<}; and
487@samp{-}, @samp{.} as the first character.
488
489@item mm-file-name-delete-whitespace
490@findex mm-file-name-delete-whitespace
491Remove all whitespace.
492
493@item mm-file-name-trim-whitespace
494@findex mm-file-name-trim-whitespace
495Remove leading and trailing whitespace.
496
497@item mm-file-name-collapse-whitespace
498@findex mm-file-name-collapse-whitespace
499Collapse multiple whitespace characters.
500
501@item mm-file-name-replace-whitespace
502@findex mm-file-name-replace-whitespace
503@vindex mm-file-name-replace-whitespace
504Replace whitespace with underscores. Set the variable
505@code{mm-file-name-replace-whitespace} to any other string if you do
506not like underscores.
507@end table
508
509The standard Emacs functions @code{capitalize}, @code{downcase},
510@code{upcase} and @code{upcase-initials} might also prove useful.
511
512@item mm-path-name-rewrite-functions
513@vindex mm-path-name-rewrite-functions
514List of functions used for rewriting the full file names of @acronym{MIME}
515parts. This is used when viewing parts externally, and is meant for
516transforming the absolute name so that non-compliant programs can find
517the file where it's saved.
518
519@end table
520
521@node New Viewers
522@section New Viewers
523
524Here's an example viewer for displaying @code{text/enriched} inline:
525
526@lisp
527(defun mm-display-enriched-inline (handle)
528 (let (text)
529 (with-temp-buffer
530 (mm-insert-part handle)
531 (save-window-excursion
532 (enriched-decode (point-min) (point-max))
533 (setq text (buffer-string))))
534 (mm-insert-inline handle text)))
535@end lisp
536
537We see that the function takes a @acronym{MIME} handle as its parameter. It
538then goes to a temporary buffer, inserts the text of the part, does some
539work on the text, stores the result, goes back to the buffer it was
540called from and inserts the result.
541
542The two important helper functions here are @code{mm-insert-part} and
543@code{mm-insert-inline}. The first function inserts the text of the
544handle in the current buffer. It handles charset and/or content
545transfer decoding. The second function just inserts whatever text you
546tell it to insert, but it also sets things up so that the text can be
547``undisplayed'' in a convenient manner.
548
549
550@node Composing
551@chapter Composing
552@cindex Composing
553@cindex MIME Composing
554@cindex MML
555@cindex MIME Meta Language
556
557Creating a @acronym{MIME} message is boring and non-trivial. Therefore,
558a library called @code{mml} has been defined that parses a language
559called @acronym{MML} (@acronym{MIME} Meta Language) and generates
560@acronym{MIME} messages.
561
562@findex mml-generate-mime
563The main interface function is @code{mml-generate-mime}. It will
564examine the contents of the current (narrowed-to) buffer and return a
565string containing the @acronym{MIME} message.
566
567@menu
568* Simple MML Example:: An example @acronym{MML} document.
569* MML Definition:: All valid @acronym{MML} elements.
570* Advanced MML Example:: Another example @acronym{MML} document.
571* Encoding Customization:: Variables that affect encoding.
572* Charset Translation:: How charsets are mapped from @sc{mule} to @acronym{MIME}.
573* Conversion:: Going from @acronym{MIME} to @acronym{MML} and vice versa.
574* Flowed text:: Soft and hard newlines.
575@end menu
576
577
578@node Simple MML Example
579@section Simple MML Example
580
581Here's a simple @samp{multipart/alternative}:
582
583@example
584<#multipart type=alternative>
585This is a plain text part.
586<#part type=text/enriched>
587<center>This is a centered enriched part</center>
588<#/multipart>
589@end example
590
591After running this through @code{mml-generate-mime}, we get this:
592
593@example
594Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="=-=-="
595
596
597--=-=-=
598
599
600This is a plain text part.
601
602--=-=-=
603Content-Type: text/enriched
604
605
606<center>This is a centered enriched part</center>
607
608--=-=-=--
609@end example
610
611
612@node MML Definition
613@section MML Definition
614
615The @acronym{MML} language is very simple. It looks a bit like an SGML
616application, but it's not.
617
618The main concept of @acronym{MML} is the @dfn{part}. Each part can be of a
619different type or use a different charset. The way to delineate a part
620is with a @samp{<#part ...>} tag. Multipart parts can be introduced
621with the @samp{<#multipart ...>} tag. Parts are ended by the
622@samp{<#/part>} or @samp{<#/multipart>} tags. Parts started with the
623@samp{<#part ...>} tags are also closed by the next open tag.
624
625There's also the @samp{<#external ...>} tag. These introduce
626@samp{external/message-body} parts.
627
628Each tag can contain zero or more parameters on the form
629@samp{parameter=value}. The values may be enclosed in quotation marks,
630but that's not necessary unless the value contains white space. So
631@samp{filename=/home/user/#hello$^yes} is perfectly valid.
632
633The following parameters have meaning in @acronym{MML}; parameters that have no
634meaning are ignored. The @acronym{MML} parameter names are the same as the
635@acronym{MIME} parameter names; the things in the parentheses say which
636header it will be used in.
637
638@table @samp
639@item type
640The @acronym{MIME} type of the part (@code{Content-Type}).
641
642@item filename
643Use the contents of the file in the body of the part
644(@code{Content-Disposition}).
645
646@item charset
647The contents of the body of the part are to be encoded in the character
648set specified (@code{Content-Type}). @xref{Charset Translation}.
649
650@item name
651Might be used to suggest a file name if the part is to be saved
652to a file (@code{Content-Type}).
653
654@item disposition
655Valid values are @samp{inline} and @samp{attachment}
656(@code{Content-Disposition}).
657
658@item encoding
659Valid values are @samp{7bit}, @samp{8bit}, @samp{quoted-printable} and
660@samp{base64} (@code{Content-Transfer-Encoding}). @xref{Charset
661Translation}.
662
663@item description
664A description of the part (@code{Content-Description}).
665
666@item creation-date
667RFC822 date when the part was created (@code{Content-Disposition}).
668
669@item modification-date
670RFC822 date when the part was modified (@code{Content-Disposition}).
671
672@item read-date
673RFC822 date when the part was read (@code{Content-Disposition}).
674
675@item recipients
676Who to encrypt/sign the part to. This field is used to override any
677auto-detection based on the To/CC headers.
678
679@item sender
680Identity used to sign the part. This field is used to override the
681default key used.
682
683@item size
684The size (in octets) of the part (@code{Content-Disposition}).
685
686@item sign
687What technology to sign this @acronym{MML} part with (@code{smime}, @code{pgp}
688or @code{pgpmime})
689
690@item encrypt
691What technology to encrypt this @acronym{MML} part with (@code{smime},
692@code{pgp} or @code{pgpmime})
693
694@end table
695
696Parameters for @samp{text/plain}:
697
698@table @samp
699@item format
700Formatting parameter for the text, valid values include @samp{fixed}
701(the default) and @samp{flowed}. Normally you do not specify this
702manually, since it requires the textual body to be formatted in a
703special way described in RFC 2646. @xref{Flowed text}.
704@end table
705
706Parameters for @samp{application/octet-stream}:
707
708@table @samp
709@item type
710Type of the part; informal---meant for human readers
711(@code{Content-Type}).
712@end table
713
714Parameters for @samp{message/external-body}:
715
716@table @samp
717@item access-type
718A word indicating the supported access mechanism by which the file may
719be obtained. Values include @samp{ftp}, @samp{anon-ftp}, @samp{tftp},
720@samp{localfile}, and @samp{mailserver}. (@code{Content-Type}.)
721
722@item expiration
723The RFC822 date after which the file may no longer be fetched.
724(@code{Content-Type}.)
725
726@item size
727The size (in octets) of the file. (@code{Content-Type}.)
728
729@item permission
730Valid values are @samp{read} and @samp{read-write}
731(@code{Content-Type}).
732
733@end table
734
735Parameters for @samp{sign=smime}:
736
737@table @samp
738
739@item keyfile
740File containing key and certificate for signer.
741
742@end table
743
744Parameters for @samp{encrypt=smime}:
745
746@table @samp
747
748@item certfile
749File containing certificate for recipient.
750
751@end table
752
753
754@node Advanced MML Example
755@section Advanced MML Example
756
757Here's a complex multipart message. It's a @samp{multipart/mixed} that
758contains many parts, one of which is a @samp{multipart/alternative}.
759
760@example
761<#multipart type=mixed>
762<#part type=image/jpeg filename=~/rms.jpg disposition=inline>
763<#multipart type=alternative>
764This is a plain text part.
765<#part type=text/enriched name=enriched.txt>
766<center>This is a centered enriched part</center>
767<#/multipart>
768This is a new plain text part.
769<#part disposition=attachment>
770This plain text part is an attachment.
771<#/multipart>
772@end example
773
774And this is the resulting @acronym{MIME} message:
775
776@example
777Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="=-=-="
778
779
780--=-=-=
781
782
783
784--=-=-=
785Content-Type: image/jpeg;
786 filename="~/rms.jpg"
787Content-Disposition: inline;
788 filename="~/rms.jpg"
789Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
790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808
809--=-=-=
810Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="==-=-="
811
812
813--==-=-=
814
815
816This is a plain text part.
817
818--==-=-=
819Content-Type: text/enriched;
820 name="enriched.txt"
821
822
823<center>This is a centered enriched part</center>
824
825--==-=-=--
826
827--=-=-=
828
829This is a new plain text part.
830
831--=-=-=
832Content-Disposition: attachment
833
834
835This plain text part is an attachment.
836
837--=-=-=--
838@end example
839
840@node Encoding Customization
841@section Encoding Customization
842
843@table @code
844
845@item mm-body-charset-encoding-alist
846@vindex mm-body-charset-encoding-alist
847Mapping from @acronym{MIME} charset to encoding to use. This variable is
848usually used except, e.g., when other requirements force a specific
849encoding (digitally signed messages require 7bit encodings). The
850default is
851
852@lisp
853((iso-2022-jp . 7bit)
854 (iso-2022-jp-2 . 7bit)
855 (utf-16 . base64)
856 (utf-16be . base64)
857 (utf-16le . base64))
858@end lisp
859
860As an example, if you do not want to have ISO-8859-1 characters
861quoted-printable encoded, you may add @code{(iso-8859-1 . 8bit)} to
862this variable. You can override this setting on a per-message basis
863by using the @code{encoding} @acronym{MML} tag (@pxref{MML Definition}).
864
865@item mm-coding-system-priorities
866@vindex mm-coding-system-priorities
867Prioritize coding systems to use for outgoing messages. The default
868is @code{nil}, which means to use the defaults in Emacs, but is
869@code{(iso-8859-1 iso-2022-jp iso-2022-jp-2 shift_jis utf-8)} when
870running Emacs in the Japanese language environment. It is a list of
871coding system symbols (aliases of coding systems are also allowed, use
872@kbd{M-x describe-coding-system} to make sure you are specifying correct
873coding system names). For example, if you have configured Emacs
874to prefer UTF-8, but wish that outgoing messages should be sent in
875ISO-8859-1 if possible, you can set this variable to
876@code{(iso-8859-1)}. You can override this setting on a per-message
877basis by using the @code{charset} @acronym{MML} tag (@pxref{MML Definition}).
878
01c52d31
MB
879As different hierarchies prefer different charsets, you may want to set
880@code{mm-coding-system-priorities} according to the hierarchy in Gnus.
881Here's an example:
882
883@c Corrections about preferred charsets are welcome. de, fr and fj
884@c should be correct, I don't know about the rest (so these are only
885@c examples):
886@lisp
887(add-to-list 'gnus-newsgroup-variables 'mm-coding-system-priorities)
888(setq gnus-parameters
889 (nconc
890 ;; Some charsets are just examples!
891 '(("^cn\\." ;; Chinese
892 (mm-coding-system-priorities
893 '(iso-8859-1 cn-big5 chinese-iso-7bit utf-8)))
894 ("^cz\\.\\|^pl\\." ;; Central and Eastern European
895 (mm-coding-system-priorities '(iso-8859-2 utf-8)))
896 ("^de\\." ;; German language
897 (mm-coding-system-priorities '(iso-8859-1 iso-8859-15 utf-8)))
898 ("^fr\\." ;; French
899 (mm-coding-system-priorities '(iso-8859-15 iso-8859-1 utf-8)))
900 ("^fj\\." ;; Japanese
901 (mm-coding-system-priorities
902 '(iso-8859-1 iso-2022-jp iso-2022-jp-2 shift_jis utf-8)))
903 ("^ru\\." ;; Cyrillic
904 (mm-coding-system-priorities
905 '(koi8-r iso-8859-5 iso-8859-1 utf-8))))
906 gnus-parameters))
907@end lisp
908
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909@item mm-content-transfer-encoding-defaults
910@vindex mm-content-transfer-encoding-defaults
911Mapping from @acronym{MIME} types to encoding to use. This variable is usually
912used except, e.g., when other requirements force a safer encoding
913(digitally signed messages require 7bit encoding). Besides the normal
914@acronym{MIME} encodings, @code{qp-or-base64} may be used to indicate that for
915each case the most efficient of quoted-printable and base64 should be
916used.
917
918@code{qp-or-base64} has another effect. It will fold long lines so that
919MIME parts may not be broken by MTA. So do @code{quoted-printable} and
920@code{base64}.
921
922Note that it affects body encoding only when a part is a raw forwarded
923message (which will be made by @code{gnus-summary-mail-forward} with the
924arg 2 for example) or is neither the @samp{text/*} type nor the
925@samp{message/*} type. Even though in those cases, you can override
926this setting on a per-message basis by using the @code{encoding}
927@acronym{MML} tag (@pxref{MML Definition}).
928
929@item mm-use-ultra-safe-encoding
930@vindex mm-use-ultra-safe-encoding
931When this is non-@code{nil}, it means that textual parts are encoded as
932quoted-printable if they contain lines longer than 76 characters or
933starting with "From " in the body. Non-7bit encodings (8bit, binary)
934are generally disallowed. This reduce the probability that a non-8bit
935clean MTA or MDA changes the message. This should never be set
936directly, but bound by other functions when necessary (e.g., when
937encoding messages that are to be digitally signed).
938
939@end table
940
941@node Charset Translation
942@section Charset Translation
943@cindex charsets
944
945During translation from @acronym{MML} to @acronym{MIME}, for each
946@acronym{MIME} part which has been composed inside Emacs, an appropriate
947charset has to be chosen.
948
949@vindex mail-parse-charset
950If you are running a non-@sc{mule} Emacs, this process is simple: If the
951part contains any non-@acronym{ASCII} (8-bit) characters, the @acronym{MIME} charset
952given by @code{mail-parse-charset} (a symbol) is used. (Never set this
953variable directly, though. If you want to change the default charset,
954please consult the documentation of the package which you use to process
955@acronym{MIME} messages.
956@xref{Various Message Variables, , Various Message Variables, message,
957 Message Manual}, for example.)
958If there are only @acronym{ASCII} characters, the @acronym{MIME} charset US-ASCII is
959used, of course.
960
961@cindex MULE
962@cindex UTF-8
963@cindex Unicode
964@vindex mm-mime-mule-charset-alist
965Things are slightly more complicated when running Emacs with @sc{mule}
966support. In this case, a list of the @sc{mule} charsets used in the
967part is obtained, and the @sc{mule} charsets are translated to
968@acronym{MIME} charsets by consulting the table provided by Emacs itself
969or the variable @code{mm-mime-mule-charset-alist} for XEmacs.
970If this results in a single @acronym{MIME} charset, this is used to encode
971the part. But if the resulting list of @acronym{MIME} charsets contains more
972than one element, two things can happen: If it is possible to encode the
973part via UTF-8, this charset is used. (For this, Emacs must support
974the @code{utf-8} coding system, and the part must consist entirely of
975characters which have Unicode counterparts.) If UTF-8 is not available
976for some reason, the part is split into several ones, so that each one
977can be encoded with a single @acronym{MIME} charset. The part can only be
978split at line boundaries, though---if more than one @acronym{MIME} charset is
979required to encode a single line, it is not possible to encode the part.
980
981When running Emacs with @sc{mule} support, the preferences for which
982coding system to use is inherited from Emacs itself. This means that
983if Emacs is set up to prefer UTF-8, it will be used when encoding
984messages. You can modify this by altering the
985@code{mm-coding-system-priorities} variable though (@pxref{Encoding
986Customization}).
987
988The charset to be used can be overridden by setting the @code{charset}
989@acronym{MML} tag (@pxref{MML Definition}) when composing the message.
990
991The encoding of characters (quoted-printable, 8bit etc) is orthogonal
992to the discussion here, and is controlled by the variables
993@code{mm-body-charset-encoding-alist} and
994@code{mm-content-transfer-encoding-defaults} (@pxref{Encoding
995Customization}).
996
997@node Conversion
998@section Conversion
999
1000@findex mime-to-mml
1001A (multipart) @acronym{MIME} message can be converted to @acronym{MML}
1002with the @code{mime-to-mml} function. It works on the message in the
1003current buffer, and substitutes @acronym{MML} markup for @acronym{MIME}
1004boundaries. Non-textual parts do not have their contents in the buffer,
1005but instead have the contents in separate buffers that are referred to
1006from the @acronym{MML} tags.
1007
1008@findex mml-to-mime
1009An @acronym{MML} message can be converted back to @acronym{MIME} by the
1010@code{mml-to-mime} function.
1011
1012These functions are in certain senses ``lossy''---you will not get back
1013an identical message if you run @code{mime-to-mml} and then
1014@code{mml-to-mime}. Not only will trivial things like the order of the
1015headers differ, but the contents of the headers may also be different.
1016For instance, the original message may use base64 encoding on text,
1017while @code{mml-to-mime} may decide to use quoted-printable encoding, and
1018so on.
1019
1020In essence, however, these two functions should be the inverse of each
1021other. The resulting contents of the message should remain equivalent,
1022if not identical.
1023
1024
1025@node Flowed text
1026@section Flowed text
1027@cindex format=flowed
1028
1029The Emacs @acronym{MIME} library will respect the @code{use-hard-newlines}
1030variable (@pxref{Hard and Soft Newlines, ,Hard and Soft Newlines,
1031emacs, Emacs Manual}) when encoding a message, and the
1032``format=flowed'' Content-Type parameter when decoding a message.
1033
1034On encoding text, regardless of @code{use-hard-newlines}, lines
1035terminated by soft newline characters are filled together and wrapped
1036after the column decided by @code{fill-flowed-encode-column}.
1037Quotation marks (matching @samp{^>* ?}) are respected. The variable
1038controls how the text will look in a client that does not support
1039flowed text, the default is to wrap after 66 characters. If hard
1040newline characters are not present in the buffer, no flow encoding
1041occurs.
1042
ba91f05d
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1043You can customize the value of the @code{mml-enable-flowed} variable
1044to enable or disable the flowed encoding usage when newline
1045characteres are present in the buffer.
1046
4009494e
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1047On decoding flowed text, lines with soft newline characters are filled
1048together and wrapped after the column decided by
1049@code{fill-flowed-display-column}. The default is to wrap after
1050@code{fill-column}.
1051
1052@table @code
1053@item mm-fill-flowed
1054@vindex mm-fill-flowed
1055If non-@code{nil} a format=flowed article will be displayed flowed.
1056@end table
1057
1058
1059@node Interface Functions
1060@chapter Interface Functions
1061@cindex interface functions
1062@cindex mail-parse
1063
1064The @code{mail-parse} library is an abstraction over the actual
1065low-level libraries that are described in the next chapter.
1066
1067Standards change, and so programs have to change to fit in the new
1068mold. For instance, RFC2045 describes a syntax for the
1069@code{Content-Type} header that only allows @acronym{ASCII} characters in the
1070parameter list. RFC2231 expands on RFC2045 syntax to provide a scheme
1071for continuation headers and non-@acronym{ASCII} characters.
1072
1073The traditional way to deal with this is just to update the library
1074functions to parse the new syntax. However, this is sometimes the wrong
1075thing to do. In some instances it may be vital to be able to understand
1076both the old syntax as well as the new syntax, and if there is only one
1077library, one must choose between the old version of the library and the
1078new version of the library.
1079
1080The Emacs @acronym{MIME} library takes a different tack. It defines a
1081series of low-level libraries (@file{rfc2047.el}, @file{rfc2231.el}
1082and so on) that parses strictly according to the corresponding
1083standard. However, normal programs would not use the functions
1084provided by these libraries directly, but instead use the functions
1085provided by the @code{mail-parse} library. The functions in this
1086library are just aliases to the corresponding functions in the latest
1087low-level libraries. Using this scheme, programs get a consistent
1088interface they can use, and library developers are free to create
1089write code that handles new standards.
1090
1091The following functions are defined by this library:
1092
1093@table @code
1094@item mail-header-parse-content-type
1095@findex mail-header-parse-content-type
1096Parse a @code{Content-Type} header and return a list on the following
1097format:
1098
1099@lisp
1100("type/subtype"
1101 (attribute1 . value1)
1102 (attribute2 . value2)
1103 ...)
1104@end lisp
1105
1106Here's an example:
1107
1108@example
1109(mail-header-parse-content-type
1110 "image/gif; name=\"b980912.gif\"")
1111@result{} ("image/gif" (name . "b980912.gif"))
1112@end example
1113
1114@item mail-header-parse-content-disposition
1115@findex mail-header-parse-content-disposition
1116Parse a @code{Content-Disposition} header and return a list on the same
1117format as the function above.
1118
1119@item mail-content-type-get
1120@findex mail-content-type-get
1121Takes two parameters---a list on the format above, and an attribute.
1122Returns the value of the attribute.
1123
1124@example
1125(mail-content-type-get
1126 '("image/gif" (name . "b980912.gif")) 'name)
1127@result{} "b980912.gif"
1128@end example
1129
1130@item mail-header-encode-parameter
1131@findex mail-header-encode-parameter
1132Takes a parameter string and returns an encoded version of the string.
1133This is used for parameters in headers like @code{Content-Type} and
1134@code{Content-Disposition}.
1135
1136@item mail-header-remove-comments
1137@findex mail-header-remove-comments
1138Return a comment-free version of a header.
1139
1140@example
1141(mail-header-remove-comments
1142 "Gnus/5.070027 (Pterodactyl Gnus v0.27) (Finnish Landrace)")
1143@result{} "Gnus/5.070027 "
1144@end example
1145
1146@item mail-header-remove-whitespace
1147@findex mail-header-remove-whitespace
1148Remove linear white space from a header. Space inside quoted strings
1149and comments is preserved.
1150
1151@example
1152(mail-header-remove-whitespace
1153 "image/gif; name=\"Name with spaces\"")
1154@result{} "image/gif;name=\"Name with spaces\""
1155@end example
1156
1157@item mail-header-get-comment
1158@findex mail-header-get-comment
1159Return the last comment in a header.
1160
1161@example
1162(mail-header-get-comment
1163 "Gnus/5.070027 (Pterodactyl Gnus v0.27) (Finnish Landrace)")
1164@result{} "Finnish Landrace"
1165@end example
1166
1167@item mail-header-parse-address
1168@findex mail-header-parse-address
1169Parse an address and return a list containing the mailbox and the
1170plaintext name.
1171
1172@example
1173(mail-header-parse-address
1174 "Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@@srce.hr>")
1175@result{} ("hniksic@@srce.hr" . "Hrvoje Niksic")
1176@end example
1177
1178@item mail-header-parse-addresses
1179@findex mail-header-parse-addresses
1180Parse a string with list of addresses and return a list of elements like
1181the one described above.
1182
1183@example
1184(mail-header-parse-addresses
1185 "Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@@srce.hr>, Steinar Bang <sb@@metis.no>")
1186@result{} (("hniksic@@srce.hr" . "Hrvoje Niksic")
1187 ("sb@@metis.no" . "Steinar Bang"))
1188@end example
1189
1190@item mail-header-parse-date
1191@findex mail-header-parse-date
1192Parse a date string and return an Emacs time structure.
1193
1194@item mail-narrow-to-head
1195@findex mail-narrow-to-head
1196Narrow the buffer to the header section of the buffer. Point is placed
1197at the beginning of the narrowed buffer.
1198
1199@item mail-header-narrow-to-field
1200@findex mail-header-narrow-to-field
1201Narrow the buffer to the header under point. Understands continuation
1202headers.
1203
1204@item mail-header-fold-field
1205@findex mail-header-fold-field
1206Fold the header under point.
1207
1208@item mail-header-unfold-field
1209@findex mail-header-unfold-field
1210Unfold the header under point.
1211
1212@item mail-header-field-value
1213@findex mail-header-field-value
1214Return the value of the field under point.
1215
1216@item mail-encode-encoded-word-region
1217@findex mail-encode-encoded-word-region
1218Encode the non-@acronym{ASCII} words in the region. For instance,
01c52d31 1219@samp{Na@"{@dotless{i}}ve} is encoded as @samp{=?iso-8859-1?q?Na=EFve?=}.
4009494e
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1220
1221@item mail-encode-encoded-word-buffer
1222@findex mail-encode-encoded-word-buffer
1223Encode the non-@acronym{ASCII} words in the current buffer. This function is
1224meant to be called narrowed to the headers of a message.
1225
1226@item mail-encode-encoded-word-string
1227@findex mail-encode-encoded-word-string
1228Encode the words that need encoding in a string, and return the result.
1229
1230@example
1231(mail-encode-encoded-word-string
01c52d31 1232 "This is na@"{@dotless{i}}ve, baby")
4009494e
GM
1233@result{} "This is =?iso-8859-1?q?na=EFve,?= baby"
1234@end example
1235
1236@item mail-decode-encoded-word-region
1237@findex mail-decode-encoded-word-region
1238Decode the encoded words in the region.
1239
1240@item mail-decode-encoded-word-string
1241@findex mail-decode-encoded-word-string
1242Decode the encoded words in the string and return the result.
1243
1244@example
1245(mail-decode-encoded-word-string
1246 "This is =?iso-8859-1?q?na=EFve,?= baby")
01c52d31 1247@result{} "This is na@"{@dotless{i}}ve, baby"
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1248@end example
1249
1250@end table
1251
1252Currently, @code{mail-parse} is an abstraction over @code{ietf-drums},
1253@code{rfc2047}, @code{rfc2045} and @code{rfc2231}. These are documented
1254in the subsequent sections.
1255
1256
1257
1258@node Basic Functions
1259@chapter Basic Functions
1260
1261This chapter describes the basic, ground-level functions for parsing and
1262handling. Covered here is parsing @code{From} lines, removing comments
1263from header lines, decoding encoded words, parsing date headers and so
1264on. High-level functionality is dealt with in the first chapter
1265(@pxref{Decoding and Viewing}).
1266
1267@menu
1268* rfc2045:: Encoding @code{Content-Type} headers.
1269* rfc2231:: Parsing @code{Content-Type} headers.
1270* ietf-drums:: Handling mail headers defined by RFC822bis.
1271* rfc2047:: En/decoding encoded words in headers.
1272* time-date:: Functions for parsing dates and manipulating time.
1273* qp:: Quoted-Printable en/decoding.
1274* base64:: Base64 en/decoding.
1275* binhex:: Binhex decoding.
1276* uudecode:: Uuencode decoding.
1277* yenc:: Yenc decoding.
1278* rfc1843:: Decoding HZ-encoded text.
1279* mailcap:: How parts are displayed is specified by the @file{.mailcap} file
1280@end menu
1281
1282
1283@node rfc2045
1284@section rfc2045
1285
1286RFC2045 is the ``main'' @acronym{MIME} document, and as such, one would
1287imagine that there would be a lot to implement. But there isn't, since
1288most of the implementation details are delegated to the subsequent
1289RFCs.
1290
1291So @file{rfc2045.el} has only a single function:
1292
1293@table @code
1294@item rfc2045-encode-string
1295@findex rfc2045-encode-string
1296Takes a parameter and a value and returns a @samp{PARAM=VALUE} string.
1297@var{value} will be quoted if there are non-safe characters in it.
1298@end table
1299
1300
1301@node rfc2231
1302@section rfc2231
1303
1304RFC2231 defines a syntax for the @code{Content-Type} and
1305@code{Content-Disposition} headers. Its snappy name is @dfn{MIME
1306Parameter Value and Encoded Word Extensions: Character Sets, Languages,
1307and Continuations}.
1308
1309In short, these headers look something like this:
1310
1311@example
1312Content-Type: application/x-stuff;
1313 title*0*=us-ascii'en'This%20is%20even%20more%20;
1314 title*1*=%2A%2A%2Afun%2A%2A%2A%20;
1315 title*2="isn't it!"
1316@end example
1317
1318They usually aren't this bad, though.
1319
1320The following functions are defined by this library:
1321
1322@table @code
1323@item rfc2231-parse-string
1324@findex rfc2231-parse-string
1325Parse a @code{Content-Type} header and return a list describing its
1326elements.
1327
1328@example
1329(rfc2231-parse-string
1330 "application/x-stuff;
1331 title*0*=us-ascii'en'This%20is%20even%20more%20;
1332 title*1*=%2A%2A%2Afun%2A%2A%2A%20;
1333 title*2=\"isn't it!\"")
1334@result{} ("application/x-stuff"
1335 (title . "This is even more ***fun*** isn't it!"))
1336@end example
1337
1338@item rfc2231-get-value
1339@findex rfc2231-get-value
1340Takes one of the lists on the format above and returns
1341the value of the specified attribute.
1342
1343@item rfc2231-encode-string
1344@findex rfc2231-encode-string
1345Encode a parameter in headers likes @code{Content-Type} and
1346@code{Content-Disposition}.
1347
1348@end table
1349
1350
1351@node ietf-drums
1352@section ietf-drums
1353
1354@dfn{drums} is an IETF working group that is working on the replacement
1355for RFC822.
1356
1357The functions provided by this library include:
1358
1359@table @code
1360@item ietf-drums-remove-comments
1361@findex ietf-drums-remove-comments
1362Remove the comments from the argument and return the results.
1363
1364@item ietf-drums-remove-whitespace
1365@findex ietf-drums-remove-whitespace
1366Remove linear white space from the string and return the results.
1367Spaces inside quoted strings and comments are left untouched.
1368
1369@item ietf-drums-get-comment
1370@findex ietf-drums-get-comment
1371Return the last most comment from the string.
1372
1373@item ietf-drums-parse-address
1374@findex ietf-drums-parse-address
1375Parse an address string and return a list that contains the mailbox and
1376the plain text name.
1377
1378@item ietf-drums-parse-addresses
1379@findex ietf-drums-parse-addresses
1380Parse a string that contains any number of comma-separated addresses and
1381return a list that contains mailbox/plain text pairs.
1382
1383@item ietf-drums-parse-date
1384@findex ietf-drums-parse-date
1385Parse a date string and return an Emacs time structure.
1386
1387@item ietf-drums-narrow-to-header
1388@findex ietf-drums-narrow-to-header
1389Narrow the buffer to the header section of the current buffer.
1390
1391@end table
1392
1393
1394@node rfc2047
1395@section rfc2047
1396
1397RFC2047 (Message Header Extensions for Non-@acronym{ASCII} Text) specifies how
1398non-@acronym{ASCII} text in headers are to be encoded. This is actually rather
1399complicated, so a number of variables are necessary to tweak what this
1400library does.
1401
1402The following variables are tweakable:
1403
1404@table @code
1405@item rfc2047-header-encoding-alist
1406@vindex rfc2047-header-encoding-alist
1407This is an alist of header / encoding-type pairs. Its main purpose is
1408to prevent encoding of certain headers.
1409
1410The keys can either be header regexps, or @code{t}.
1411
1412The values can be @code{nil}, in which case the header(s) in question
1413won't be encoded, @code{mime}, which means that they will be encoded, or
1414@code{address-mime}, which means the header(s) will be encoded carefully
1415assuming they contain addresses.
1416
1417@item rfc2047-charset-encoding-alist
1418@vindex rfc2047-charset-encoding-alist
1419RFC2047 specifies two forms of encoding---@code{Q} (a
1420Quoted-Printable-like encoding) and @code{B} (base64). This alist
1421specifies which charset should use which encoding.
1422
1423@item rfc2047-encode-function-alist
1424@vindex rfc2047-encode-function-alist
1425This is an alist of encoding / function pairs. The encodings are
1426@code{Q}, @code{B} and @code{nil}.
1427
1428@item rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp
1429@vindex rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp
1430When decoding words, this library looks for matches to this regexp.
1431
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1432@item rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp-loose
1433@vindex rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp-loose
1434This is a version from which the regexp for the Q encoding pattern of
1435@code{rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp} is made loose.
1436
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1437@item rfc2047-encode-encoded-words
1438@vindex rfc2047-encode-encoded-words
1439The boolean variable specifies whether encoded words
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1440(e.g. @samp{=?us-ascii?q?hello?=}) should be encoded again.
1441@code{rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp} is used to look for such words.
1442
1443@item rfc2047-allow-irregular-q-encoded-words
1444@vindex rfc2047-allow-irregular-q-encoded-words
1445The boolean variable specifies whether irregular Q encoded words
1446(e.g. @samp{=?us-ascii?q?hello??=}) should be decoded. If it is
1447non-@code{nil}, @code{rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp-loose} is used instead
1448of @code{rfc2047-encoded-word-regexp} to look for encoded words.
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1449
1450@end table
1451
1452Those were the variables, and these are this functions:
1453
1454@table @code
1455@item rfc2047-narrow-to-field
1456@findex rfc2047-narrow-to-field
1457Narrow the buffer to the header on the current line.
1458
1459@item rfc2047-encode-message-header
1460@findex rfc2047-encode-message-header
1461Should be called narrowed to the header of a message. Encodes according
1462to @code{rfc2047-header-encoding-alist}.
1463
1464@item rfc2047-encode-region
1465@findex rfc2047-encode-region
1466Encodes all encodable words in the region specified.
1467
1468@item rfc2047-encode-string
1469@findex rfc2047-encode-string
1470Encode a string and return the results.
1471
1472@item rfc2047-decode-region
1473@findex rfc2047-decode-region
1474Decode the encoded words in the region.
1475
1476@item rfc2047-decode-string
1477@findex rfc2047-decode-string
1478Decode a string and return the results.
1479
1480@item rfc2047-encode-parameter
1481@findex rfc2047-encode-parameter
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1482Encode a parameter in the RFC2047-like style. This is a substitution
1483for the @code{rfc2231-encode-string} function, that is the standard but
1484many mailers don't support it. @xref{rfc2231}.
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1485
1486@end table
1487
1488
1489@node time-date
1490@section time-date
1491
1492While not really a part of the @acronym{MIME} library, it is convenient to
1493document this library here. It deals with parsing @code{Date} headers
1494and manipulating time. (Not by using tesseracts, though, I'm sorry to
1495say.)
1496
1497These functions convert between five formats: A date string, an Emacs
1498time structure, a decoded time list, a second number, and a day number.
1499
1500Here's a bunch of time/date/second/day examples:
1501
1502@example
1503(parse-time-string "Sat Sep 12 12:21:54 1998 +0200")
1504@result{} (54 21 12 12 9 1998 6 nil 7200)
1505
1506(date-to-time "Sat Sep 12 12:21:54 1998 +0200")
1507@result{} (13818 19266)
1508
1509(time-to-seconds '(13818 19266))
1510@result{} 905595714.0
1511
1512(seconds-to-time 905595714.0)
1513@result{} (13818 19266 0)
1514
1515(time-to-days '(13818 19266))
1516@result{} 729644
1517
1518(days-to-time 729644)
1519@result{} (961933 65536)
1520
1521(time-since '(13818 19266))
1522@result{} (0 430)
1523
1524(time-less-p '(13818 19266) '(13818 19145))
1525@result{} nil
1526
1527(subtract-time '(13818 19266) '(13818 19145))
1528@result{} (0 121)
1529
1530(days-between "Sat Sep 12 12:21:54 1998 +0200"
1531 "Sat Sep 07 12:21:54 1998 +0200")
1532@result{} 5
1533
1534(date-leap-year-p 2000)
1535@result{} t
1536
1537(time-to-day-in-year '(13818 19266))
1538@result{} 255
1539
1540(time-to-number-of-days
1541 (time-since
1542 (date-to-time "Mon, 01 Jan 2001 02:22:26 GMT")))
1543@result{} 4.146122685185185
1544@end example
1545
1546And finally, we have @code{safe-date-to-time}, which does the same as
1547@code{date-to-time}, but returns a zero time if the date is
1548syntactically malformed.
1549
1550The five data representations used are the following:
1551
1552@table @var
1553@item date
1554An RFC822 (or similar) date string. For instance: @code{"Sat Sep 12
155512:21:54 1998 +0200"}.
1556
1557@item time
1558An internal Emacs time. For instance: @code{(13818 26466)}.
1559
1560@item seconds
1561A floating point representation of the internal Emacs time. For
1562instance: @code{905595714.0}.
1563
1564@item days
1565An integer number representing the number of days since 00000101. For
1566instance: @code{729644}.
1567
1568@item decoded time
1569A list of decoded time. For instance: @code{(54 21 12 12 9 1998 6 t
15707200)}.
1571@end table
1572
1573All the examples above represent the same moment.
1574
1575These are the functions available:
1576
1577@table @code
1578@item date-to-time
1579Take a date and return a time.
1580
1581@item time-to-seconds
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1582Take a time and return seconds. Note that Emacs has a built-in
1583function, @code{float-time}, that does this.
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1584
1585@item seconds-to-time
1586Take seconds and return a time.
1587
1588@item time-to-days
1589Take a time and return days.
1590
1591@item days-to-time
1592Take days and return a time.
1593
1594@item date-to-day
1595Take a date and return days.
1596
1597@item time-to-number-of-days
1598Take a time and return the number of days that represents.
1599
1600@item safe-date-to-time
1601Take a date and return a time. If the date is not syntactically valid,
1602return a ``zero'' time.
1603
1604@item time-less-p
1605Take two times and say whether the first time is less (i. e., earlier)
1606than the second time.
1607
1608@item time-since
1609Take a time and return a time saying how long it was since that time.
1610
1611@item subtract-time
1612Take two times and subtract the second from the first. I. e., return
1613the time between the two times.
1614
1615@item days-between
1616Take two days and return the number of days between those two days.
1617
1618@item date-leap-year-p
1619Take a year number and say whether it's a leap year.
1620
1621@item time-to-day-in-year
1622Take a time and return the day number within the year that the time is
1623in.
1624
1625@end table
1626
1627
1628@node qp
1629@section qp
1630
1631This library deals with decoding and encoding Quoted-Printable text.
1632
1633Very briefly explained, qp encoding means translating all 8-bit
1634characters (and lots of control characters) into things that look like
1635@samp{=EF}; that is, an equal sign followed by the byte encoded as a hex
1636string.
1637
1638The following functions are defined by the library:
1639
1640@table @code
1641@item quoted-printable-decode-region
1642@findex quoted-printable-decode-region
1643QP-decode all the encoded text in the specified region.
1644
1645@item quoted-printable-decode-string
1646@findex quoted-printable-decode-string
1647Decode the QP-encoded text in a string and return the results.
1648
1649@item quoted-printable-encode-region
1650@findex quoted-printable-encode-region
1651QP-encode all the encodable characters in the specified region. The third
1652optional parameter @var{fold} specifies whether to fold long lines.
1653(Long here means 72.)
1654
1655@item quoted-printable-encode-string
1656@findex quoted-printable-encode-string
1657QP-encode all the encodable characters in a string and return the
1658results.
1659
1660@end table
1661
1662
1663@node base64
1664@section base64
1665@cindex base64
1666
1667Base64 is an encoding that encodes three bytes into four characters,
1668thereby increasing the size by about 33%. The alphabet used for
1669encoding is very resistant to mangling during transit.
1670
1671The following functions are defined by this library:
1672
1673@table @code
1674@item base64-encode-region
1675@findex base64-encode-region
1676base64 encode the selected region. Return the length of the encoded
1677text. Optional third argument @var{no-line-break} means do not break
1678long lines into shorter lines.
1679
1680@item base64-encode-string
1681@findex base64-encode-string
1682base64 encode a string and return the result.
1683
1684@item base64-decode-region
1685@findex base64-decode-region
1686base64 decode the selected region. Return the length of the decoded
1687text. If the region can't be decoded, return @code{nil} and don't
1688modify the buffer.
1689
1690@item base64-decode-string
1691@findex base64-decode-string
1692base64 decode a string and return the result. If the string can't be
1693decoded, @code{nil} is returned.
1694
1695@end table
1696
1697
1698@node binhex
1699@section binhex
1700@cindex binhex
1701@cindex Apple
1702@cindex Macintosh
1703
1704@code{binhex} is an encoding that originated in Macintosh environments.
1705The following function is supplied to deal with these:
1706
1707@table @code
1708@item binhex-decode-region
1709@findex binhex-decode-region
1710Decode the encoded text in the region. If given a third parameter, only
1711decode the @code{binhex} header and return the filename.
1712
1713@end table
1714
1715@node uudecode
1716@section uudecode
1717@cindex uuencode
1718@cindex uudecode
1719
1720@code{uuencode} is probably still the most popular encoding of binaries
1721used on Usenet, although @code{base64} rules the mail world.
1722
1723The following function is supplied by this package:
1724
1725@table @code
1726@item uudecode-decode-region
1727@findex uudecode-decode-region
1728Decode the text in the region.
1729@end table
1730
1731
1732@node yenc
1733@section yenc
1734@cindex yenc
1735
1736@code{yenc} is used for encoding binaries on Usenet. The following
1737function is supplied by this package:
1738
1739@table @code
1740@item yenc-decode-region
1741@findex yenc-decode-region
1742Decode the encoded text in the region.
1743
1744@end table
1745
1746
1747@node rfc1843
1748@section rfc1843
1749@cindex rfc1843
1750@cindex HZ
1751@cindex Chinese
1752
1753RFC1843 deals with mixing Chinese and @acronym{ASCII} characters in messages. In
1754essence, RFC1843 switches between @acronym{ASCII} and Chinese by doing this:
1755
1756@example
1757This sentence is in @acronym{ASCII}.
1758The next sentence is in GB.~@{<:Ky2;S@{#,NpJ)l6HK!#~@}Bye.
1759@end example
1760
1761Simple enough, and widely used in China.
1762
1763The following functions are available to handle this encoding:
1764
1765@table @code
1766@item rfc1843-decode-region
1767Decode HZ-encoded text in the region.
1768
1769@item rfc1843-decode-string
1770Decode a HZ-encoded string and return the result.
1771
1772@end table
1773
1774
1775@node mailcap
1776@section mailcap
1777
1778The @file{~/.mailcap} file is parsed by most @acronym{MIME}-aware message
1779handlers and describes how elements are supposed to be displayed.
1780Here's an example file:
1781
1782@example
1783image/*; gimp -8 %s
1784audio/wav; wavplayer %s
1785application/msword; catdoc %s ; copiousoutput ; nametemplate=%s.doc
1786@end example
1787
1788This says that all image files should be displayed with @code{gimp},
1789that WAVE audio files should be played by @code{wavplayer}, and that
1790MS-WORD files should be inlined by @code{catdoc}.
1791
1792The @code{mailcap} library parses this file, and provides functions for
1793matching types.
1794
1795@table @code
1796@item mailcap-mime-data
1797@vindex mailcap-mime-data
1798This variable is an alist of alists containing backup viewing rules.
1799
1800@end table
1801
1802Interface functions:
1803
1804@table @code
1805@item mailcap-parse-mailcaps
1806@findex mailcap-parse-mailcaps
1807Parse the @file{~/.mailcap} file.
1808
1809@item mailcap-mime-info
1810Takes a @acronym{MIME} type as its argument and returns the matching viewer.
1811
1812@end table
1813
1814
1815
1816
1817@node Standards
1818@chapter Standards
1819
1820The Emacs @acronym{MIME} library implements handling of various elements
1821according to a (somewhat) large number of RFCs, drafts and standards
1822documents. This chapter lists the relevant ones. They can all be
1823fetched from @uref{http://quimby.gnus.org/notes/}.
1824
1825@table @dfn
1826@item RFC822
1827@itemx STD11
1828Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages.
1829
1830@item RFC1036
1831Standard for Interchange of USENET Messages
1832
1833@item RFC2045
1834Format of Internet Message Bodies
1835
1836@item RFC2046
1837Media Types
1838
1839@item RFC2047
1840Message Header Extensions for Non-@acronym{ASCII} Text
1841
1842@item RFC2048
1843Registration Procedures
1844
1845@item RFC2049
1846Conformance Criteria and Examples
1847
1848@item RFC2231
1849@acronym{MIME} Parameter Value and Encoded Word Extensions: Character Sets,
1850Languages, and Continuations
1851
1852@item RFC1843
1853HZ - A Data Format for Exchanging Files of Arbitrarily Mixed Chinese and
1854@acronym{ASCII} characters
1855
1856@item draft-ietf-drums-msg-fmt-05.txt
1857Draft for the successor of RFC822
1858
1859@item RFC2112
1860The @acronym{MIME} Multipart/Related Content-type
1861
1862@item RFC1892
1863The Multipart/Report Content Type for the Reporting of Mail System
1864Administrative Messages
1865
1866@item RFC2183
1867Communicating Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The
1868Content-Disposition Header Field
1869
1870@item RFC2646
1871Documentation of the text/plain format parameter for flowed text.
1872
1873@end table
1874
1875@node GNU Free Documentation License
1876@chapter GNU Free Documentation License
1877@include doclicense.texi
1878
1879@node Index
1880@chapter Index
1881@printindex cp
1882
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1883@bye
1884
1885\f
1886@c Local Variables:
1887@c mode: texinfo
1888@c coding: iso-8859-1
1889@c End: