Why not adopt me?
NAME
Email::FolderType - Email::FolderType - determine the type of a mail folder
VERSION
version 0.814
SYNOPSIS
use Email::FolderType qw(folder_type);
print folder_type "~/mymbox"; # prints 'Mbox'
print folder_type "~/a_maildir/"; # prints 'Maildir'
print folder_type "some_mh/."; # prints 'MH'
print folder_type "an_archive//"; # prints 'Ezmlm'
DESCRIPTION
Provides a utility subroutine for detecting the type of a given mail folder.
SUBROUTINES
folder_type <path>
Automatically detects what type of mail folder the path refers to and returns the name of that type.
It primarily bases the type on the suffix of the path given.
Suffix | Type
--------+---------
/ | Maildir
/. | MH
// | Ezmlm
In case of no known suffix it checks for a known file structure. If that doesn't work out it defaults to Mbox
although, if the Mbox
matcher has been overridden or the default changed (see DEFAULT MATCHER below) then it will return undef.
matchers
Returns a list of all the matchers available to the system.
DEFAULT MATCHER
Currently the default matcher is Mbox
and therefore it is always checked last and always returns 1
.
If you really want to change this then you should override Email::FolderType::Mbox::match
and/or change the variable $Email::FolderType::DEFAULT
to be something other than 'Mbox'
.
use Email::FolderType;
use Email::FolderType::Mbox;
$Email::FolderType::DEFAULT = 'NewDefault';
package Email::FolderType::Mbox;
sub match { return (defined $_[0] && -f $_[0]) }
package Email::FolderType::NewDefault;
sub match { return (defined $_[0] && $_[0] =~ m!some crazy pattern!) }
1;
REGISTERING NEW TYPES
Email::FolderType
briefly flirted with a rather clunky register_type
method for registering new matchers but, in retrospect that wasn't a great idea.
Instead, in this version we've reverted to a Module::Pluggable
based system - any classes in the Email::FolderType::
namespace will be interrogated to see if they have a c<match> method.
If they do then it will be passed the folder name. If the folder matches then the match function should return 1
. For example ...
package Email::FolderType::GzippedMbox;
sub match {
my $folder = shift;
return (-f $folder && $folder =~ /.gz$/);
}
1;
These can even be defined inline ...
#!perl -w
use strict;
use Email::Folder;
use Email::LocalDelivery;
# copy all mail from an IMAP folder
my $folder = Email::Folder->new('imap://example.com'); # read INBOX
for ($folder->messages) {
Email::LocalDelivery->deliver($_->as_string, 'local_mbox');
}
package Email::FolderType::IMAP;
sub match {
my $folder = shift;
return $folder =~ m!^imap://!;
}
1;
If there is demand for a compatability shim for the old register_type
method then we can implement one. Really though, this is much better in the long run.
AUTHOR
Simon Wistow <simon@thegestalt.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2005 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.