Mail::Internet - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


NAME
    Mail::Internet - manipulate email messages

SYNOPSIS
      use Mail::Internet;
      my $msg = Mail::Internet->new(\*STDIN);

DESCRIPTION
    This package implements reading, creating, manipulating, and writing
    email messages. Sometimes, the implementation tries to be too smart, but
    in the general case it works as expected.

    If you start writing a new application, you should use the Mail::Box
    distribution, which has more features and handles messages much better
    according to the RFCs. See <http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/>. You may
    also chose MIME::Entity, to get at least some multipart support in your
    application.

METHODS
  Constructors
    $obj->dup()
        Duplicate the message as a whole. Both header and body will be
        deep-copied: a new Mail::Internet object is returned.

    $obj->extract(\@lines)
        Extract header and body from an ARRAY of message lines. Requires an
        object already created with new(), which contents will get
        overwritten.

    $obj->new( [$arg], [%options] )
    Mail::Internet->new( [$arg], [%options] )
        $arg is optional and may be either a file descriptor (reference to a
        GLOB) or a reference to an array. If given the new object will be
        initialized with headers and body either from the array of read from
        the file descriptor.

        The Mail::Header::new() %options "Modify", "MailFrom" and
        "FoldLength" may also be given.

         -Option--Default
          Body    []
          Header  undef

        Body => ARRAY-of-LINES
          The value of this option should be a reference to an array which
          contains the lines for the body of the message. Each line should
          be terminated with "\n" (LF). If Body is given then
          "Mail::Internet" will not attempt to read the body from $arg (even
          if it is specified).

        Header => Mail::Header
          The value of this option should be a Mail::Header object. If given
          then "Mail::Internet" will not attempt to read a mail header from
          $arg, if it was specified.

    $obj->read($fh)
        Read a message from the $fh into an already existing message object.
        Better use new() with the $fh as first argument.

  Accessors
    $obj->body( [$body] )
        Returns the body of the message. This is a reference to an array.
        Each entry in the array represents a single line in the message.

        If *$body* is given, it can be a reference to an array or an array,
        then the body will be replaced. If a reference is passed, it is used
        directly and not copied, so any subsequent changes to the array will
        change the contents of the body.

    $obj->head()
        Returns the "Mail::Header" object which holds the headers for the
        current message

  Processing the message as a whole
    $obj->as_mbox_string( [$already_escaped] )
        Returns the message as a string in mbox format. $already_escaped, if
        given and true, indicates that escape_from() has already been called
        on this object.

    $obj->as_string()
        Returns the message as a single string.

    $obj->print( [$fh] )
        Print the header, body or whole message to file descriptor *$fh*.
        *$fd* should be a reference to a GLOB. If *$fh* is not given the
        output will be sent to STDOUT.

        example:

            $mail->print( \*STDOUT );  # Print message to STDOUT

    $obj->print_body( [$fh] )
        Print only the body to the $fh (default STDOUT).

    $obj->print_header( [$fh] )
        Print only the header to the $fh (default STDOUT).

  Processing the header
    Most of these methods are simply wrappers around methods provided by
    Mail::Header.

    $obj->add(PAIRS)
        The PAIRS are field-name and field-content. For each PAIR,
        Mail::Header::add() is called. All fields are added after existing
        fields. The last addition is returned.

    $obj->combine( $tag, [$with] )
        See Mail::Header::combine().

    $obj->delete( $tag, [$tags] )
        Delete all fields with the name $tag. Mail::Header::delete() is
        doing the work.

    $obj->fold( [$length] )
        See Mail::Header::fold().

    $obj->fold_length( [$tag], [$length] )
        See Mail::Header::fold_length().

    $obj->get( $tag, [$tags] )
        In LIST context, all fields with the name $tag are returned. In
        SCALAR context, only the first field which matches the earliest $tag
        is returned. Mail::Header::get() is called to collect the data.

    $obj->header(\@lines)
        See Mail::Header::header().

    $obj->replace(PAIRS)
        The PAIRS are field-name and field-content. For each PAIR,
        Mail::Header::replace() is called with index 0. If a $field is
        already in the header, it will be removed first. Do not specified
        the same field-name twice.

  Processing the body
    $obj->remove_sig( [$nlines] )
        Attempts to remove a user's signature from the body of a message. It
        does this by looking for a line equal to '-- ' within the last
        $nlines of the message. If found then that line and all lines after
        it will be removed. If $nlines is not given a default value of 10
        will be used. This would be of most use in auto-reply scripts.

    $obj->sign(%options)
        Add your signature to the body. remove_sig() will strip existing
        signatures first.

         -Option   --Default
          File       undef
          Signature  []

        File => FILEHANDLE
          Take from the FILEHANDLE all lines starting from the first "--".

        Signature => STRING|ARRAY-of-LINES

    $obj->tidy_body()
        Removes all leading and trailing lines from the body that only
        contain white spaces.

  High-level functionality
    $obj->escape_from()
        It can cause problems with some applications if a message contains a
        line starting with `From ', in particular when attempting to split a
        folder. This method inserts a leading "`"'> on any line that matches
        the regular expression "/^"*From/>

    $obj->nntppost( [%options] )
        Post an article via NNTP. Requires Net::NNTP to be installed.

         -Option--Default
          Debug   <false>
          Host    <required>
          Port    119

        Debug => BOOLEAN
          Debug value to pass to Net::NNTP, see Net::NNTP

        Host => HOSTNAME|Net::NNTP object
          Name of NNTP server to connect to, or a Net::NNTP object to use.

        Port => INTEGER
          Port number to connect to on remote host

    $obj->reply(%options)
        Create a new object with header initialised for a reply to the
        current object. And the body will be a copy of the current message
        indented.

        The ".mailhdr" file in your home directory (if exists) will be read
        first, to provide defaults.

         -Option  --Default
          Exclude   []
          Indent    '>'
          Keep      []
          ReplyAll  false

        Exclude => ARRAY-of-FIELDS
          Remove the listed FIELDS from the produced message.

        Indent => STRING
          Use as indentation string. The string may contain "%%" to get a
          single "%", %f to get the first from name, %F is the first
          character of %f, %l is the last name, %L its first character, %n
          the whole from string, and %I the first character of each of the
          names in the from string.

        Keep => ARRAY-of-FIELDS
          Copy the listed FIELDS from the original message.

        ReplyAll => BOOLEAN
          Automatically include all To and Cc addresses of the original
          mail, excluding those mentioned in the Bcc list.

    $obj->send( [$type, [$args...]] )
        Send a Mail::Internet message using Mail::Mailer. $type and $args
        are passed on to Mail::Mailer::new().

    $obj->smtpsend( [%options] )
        Send a Mail::Internet message using direct SMTP to the given
        ADDRESSES, each can be either a string or a reference to a list of
        email addresses. If none of "To", <Cc> or "Bcc" are given then the
        addresses are extracted from the message being sent.

        The return value will be a list of email addresses that the message
        was sent to. If the message was not sent the list will be empty.

        Requires Net::SMTP and Net::Domain to be installed.

         -Option  --Default
          Bcc       undef
          Cc        undef
          Debug     <false>
          Hello     localhost.localdomain
          Host      $ENV{SMTPHOSTS}
          MailFrom  Mail::Util::mailaddress()
          Port      25
          To        undef

        Bcc => ADDRESSES
        Cc => ADDRESSES
        Debug => BOOLEAN
          Debug value to pass to Net::SMTP, see <Net::SMTP>

        Hello => STRING
          Send a HELO (or EHLO) command to the server with the given name.

        Host => HOSTNAME
          Name of the SMTP server to connect to, or a Net::SMTP object to
          use

          If "Host" is not given then the SMTP host is found by attempting
          connections first to hosts specified in $ENV{SMTPHOSTS}, a colon
          separated list, then "mailhost" and "localhost".

        MailFrom => ADDRESS
          The e-mail address which is used as sender. By default,
          Mail::Util::mailaddress() provides the address of the sender.

        Port => INTEGER
          Port number to connect to on remote host

        To => ADDRESSES

    $obj->unescape_from(())
        Remove the escaping added by escape_from().

SEE ALSO
    This module is part of the MailTools distribution,
    http://perl.overmeer.net/mailtools/.

AUTHORS
    The MailTools bundle was developed by Graham Barr. Later, Mark Overmeer
    took over maintenance without commitment to further development.

    Mail::Cap by Gisle Aas <aas AT oslonett.no>. Mail::Field::AddrList by Peter
    Orbaek <poe AT cit.dk>. Mail::Mailer and Mail::Send by Tim Bunce
    <Tim.Bunce AT ig.uk>. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

LICENSE
    Copyrights 1995-2000 Graham Barr <gbarr AT pobox.com> and 2001-2017 Mark
    Overmeer <perl AT overmeer.net>.

    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself. See
    http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html


Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong On Apache Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format
2026-05-21 22:10 @216.73.216.105 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.1!Valid CSS!

^_back to top