This package provides a class object which can be used for reading, creating,
manipulating and writing a message with RFC822 compliant headers.
If you start writing a new application, you may want to use the
the Mail::Box manpage set of packages (requires perl 5.6.1), which has more
features and handles modern messages much better.
See http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/.
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.
OPTIONS is a list of options given in the form of key-value
pairs, just like a hash table. Valid options are
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.
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).
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.
Print the header, body or whole message to file descriptor FILEHANDLE.
$fd should be a reference to a GLOB. If FILEHANDLE is not given the
output will be sent to STDOUT.
$mail->print( \*STDOUT ); # Print message to STDOUT
Returns the message as a string in mbox format. ALREADY_ESCAPED, if given and true, indicates that ->escape_from has already been called on
this object.
Attempts to remove a users signature from the body of a message. It does this
by looking for a line equal to '-- ' within the last NLINES of the
message. If found then that line and all lines after it will be removed. If
NLINES is not given a default value of 10 will be used. This would be of
most use in auto-reply scripts.
Append a signature to the message. FILE is a file which contains
the signature, if not given then the file ``$ENV{HOME}/.signature''
will be checked for.
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.
Send the email 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.
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 anyline that matches the regular
expression /^*From/>
Copyright (c) 2002-2003 Mark Overmeer, 1995-2001 Graham Barr. All rights
reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.