NAME

Mail::IMAPTalk - IMAP client interface with lots of features

SYNOPSIS

use Mail::IMAPTalk;

$IMAP = Mail::IMAPTalk->new(
    Server   => $IMAPServer,
    Username => 'foo',
    Password => 'bar',
) || die "Failed to connect/login to IMAP server";

# Append message to folder
open(my $F, 'rfc822msg.txt');
$IMAP->append($FolderName, $F) || die $@;
close($F);

# Select folder and get first unseen message
$IMAP->select($FolderName) || die $@;
$MsgId = $IMAP->search('not', 'seen')->[0];

# Get message envelope and print some details
$MsgEV = $IMAP->fetch($MsgId, 'envelope')->{$MsgId}->{envelope};
print "From: " . $MsgEv->{From};
print "To: " . $MsgEv->{To};
print "Subject: " . $MsgEv->{Subject};

# Get message body structure
$MsgBS = $IMAP->fetch($MsgId, 'bodystructure')->{$MsgId}->{bodystructure};

# Find imap part number of text part of message
$MsgTxtHash = Mail::IMAPTalk::find_message($MsgBS);
$MsgPart = $MsgTxtHash->{text}->{'IMAP-Partnum'};

# Retrieve message text body
$MsgTxt = $IMAP->fetch($MsgId, "body[$MsgPart]")->{$MsgId}->{body};

$IMAP->logout();

DESCRIPTION

This module communicates with an IMAP server. Each IMAP server command is mapped to a method of this object.

Although other IMAP modules exist on CPAN, this has several advantages over other modules.

  • It parses the more complex IMAP structures like envelopes and body structures into nice Perl data structures.

  • It correctly supports atoms, quoted strings and literals at any point. Some parsers in other modules aren't fully IMAP compatiable and may break at odd times with certain messages on some servers.

  • It allows large return values (eg. attachments on a message) to be read directly into a file, rather than into memory.

  • It includes some helper functions to find the actual text/plain or text/html part of a message out of a complex MIME structure. It also can find a list of attachements, and CID links for HTML messages with attached images.

  • It supports decoding of MIME headers to Perl utf-8 strings automatically, so you don't have to deal with MIME encoded headers (enabled optionally).

While the IMAP protocol does allow for asynchronous running of commands, this module is designed to be used in a synchronous manner. That is, you issue a command by calling a method, and the command will block until the appropriate response is returned. The method will then return the parsed results from the given command.

CLASS OVERVIEW

The object methods have been broken in several sections.

Sections

CONSTANTS

Lists the available constants the class uses.

CONSTRUCTOR

Explains all the options available when constructing a new instance of the Mail::IMAPTalk class.

CONNECTION CONTROL METHODS

These are methods which control the overall IMAP connection object, such as logging in and logging out, how results are parsed, how folder names and message id's are treated, etc.

IMAP FOLDER COMMAND METHODS

These are methods to inspect, add, delete and rename IMAP folders on the server.

IMAP MESSAGE COMMAND METHODS

These are methods to retrieve, delete, move and add messages to/from IMAP folders.

HELPER METHODS

These are extra methods that users of this class might find useful. They generally do extra parsing on returned structures to provide higher level functionality.

INTERNAL METHODS

These are methods used internally by the Mail::IMAPTalk object to get work done. They may be useful if you need to extend the class yourself. Note that internal methods will always 'die' if they encounter any errors.

INTERNAL SOCKET FUNCTIONS

These are functions used internally by the Mail::IMAPTalk object to read/write data to/from the IMAP connection socket. The class does its own buffering so if you want to read/write to the IMAP socket, you should use these functions.

INTERNAL PARSING FUNCTIONS

These are functions used to parse the results returned from the IMAP server into Perl style data structures.

Method results

All methods return undef on failure. There are four main modes of failure:

1. An error occurred reading/writing to a socket. Maybe the server closed it, or you're not connected to any server.
2. An error occurred parsing the response of an IMAP command. This is usually only a problem if your IMAP server returns invalid data.
3. An IMAP command didn't return an 'OK' response.
4. The socket read operation timed out waiting for a response from the server.

In each case, some readable form of error text is placed in $@, or you can call the get_last_error() method. For commands which return responses (e.g. fetch, getacl, etc), the result is returned. See each command for details of the response result. For commands with no response but which succeed (e.g. setacl, rename, etc) the result 'ok' is generally returned.

Method parameters

All methods which send data to the IMAP server (e.g. fetch(), search(), etc) have their arguments processed before they are sent. Arguments may be specified in several ways:

scalar

The value is first checked and quoted if required. Values containing [\000\012\015] are turned into literals, values containing [\000-\040\{\} \%\*\"] are quoted by surrounding with a "..." pair (any " themselves are turned into \"). undef is turned into NIL

file ref

The contents of the file is sent as an IMAP literal. Note that because IMAPTalk has to know the length of the file being sent, this must be a true file reference that can be seeked and not just some stream. The entire file will be sent regardless of the current seek point.

scalar ref

The string/data in the referenced item should be sent as is, no quoting will occur, and the data won't be sent as quoted or as a literal regardless of the contents of the string/data.

array ref

Emits an opening bracket, and then each item in the array separated by a space, and finally a closing bracket. Each item in the array is processed by the same methods, so can be a scalar, file ref, scalar ref, another array ref, etc.

hash ref

The hash reference should contain only 1 item. The key is a text string which specifies what to do with the value item of the hash.

  • 'Literal'

    The string/data in the value is sent as an IMAP literal regardless of the actual data in the string/data.

  • 'Binary'

    The string/data in the value is sent as an IMAP literal8 regardless of the actual data in the string/data. (see RFC 3516)

  • 'Quote'

    The string/data in the value is sent as an IMAP quoted string regardless of the actual data in the string/data.

Examples:

# Password is automatically quoted to "nasty%*\"passwd"
$IMAP->login("joe", 'nasty%*"passwd');
# Append $MsgTxt as string
$IMAP->append("inbox", { Literal => $MsgTxt })
# Append MSGFILE contents as new message
$IMAP->append("inbox", \*MSGFILE ])

CONSTANTS

These constants relate to the standard 4 states that an IMAP connection can be in. They are passed and returned from the state() method. See RFC 3501 for more details about IMAP connection states.

Unconnected

Current not connected to any server.

Connected

Connected to a server, but not logged in.

Authenticated

Connected and logged into a server, but not current folder.

Selected

Connected, logged in and have 'select'ed a current folder.

CONSTRUCTOR

Mail::IMAPTalk->new(%Options)

Creates new Mail::IMAPTalk object. The following options are supported.

Connection Options
Server

The hostname or IP address to connect to. This must be supplied unless the Socket option is supplied.

Port

The port number on the host to connect to. Defaults to 143 if not supplied or 993 if not supplied and UseSSL is true.

UseSSL

If true, use an IO::Socket::SSL connection. All other SSL_* arguments are passed to the IO::Socket::SSL constructor.

Socket

An existing socket to use as the connection to the IMAP server. If you supply the Socket option, you should not supply a Server or Port option.

This is useful if you want to create an SSL socket connection using IO::Socket::SSL and then pass in the connected socket to the new() call.

It's also useful in conjunction with the release_socket() method described below for reusing the same socket beyond the lifetime of the IMAPTalk object. See a description in the section release_socket() method for more information.

You must have write flushing enabled for any socket you pass in here so that commands will actually be sent, and responses received, rather than just waiting and eventually timing out. you can do this using the Perl select() call and $| ($AUTOFLUSH) variable as shown below.

my $ofh = select($Socket); $| = 1; select ($ofh);
UseBlocking

For historical reasons, when reading from a socket, the module sets the socket to non-blocking and does a select(). If you're using an SSL socket that doesn't work, so you have to set UseBlocking to true to use blocking reads instead.

State

If you supply a Socket option, you can specify the IMAP state the socket is currently in, namely one of 'Unconnected', 'Connected', 'Authenticated' or 'Selected'. This defaults to 'Connected' if not supplied and the Socket option is supplied.

ExpectGreeting

If supplied and true, and a socket is supplied via the Socket option, checks that a greeting line is supplied by the server and reads the greeting line.

PreserveINBOX

For historical reasons, the special name "INBOX" is rewritten as Inbox because it looks nicer on the way out, and back on the way in. If you want to preserve the name INBOX on the outside, set this flag to true.

UseCompress

If you have the Compress::Zlib package installed, and the server supports compress, then setting this flag to true will cause compression to be enabled immediately after login.

Login Options
Username

The username to connect to the IMAP server as. If not supplied, no login is attempted and the IMAP object is left in the CONNECTED state. If supplied, you must also supply the Password option and a login is attempted. If the login fails, the connection is closed and undef is returned. If you want to do something with a connection even if the login fails, don't pass a Username option, but instead use the login method described below.

Password

The password to use to login to the account.

AsUser

If the server supports it, access the server as this user rather than the authenticate user.

See the login method for more information.

IMAP message/folder options
Uid

Control whether message ids are message uids or not. This is 1 (on) by default because generally that's how most people want to use it. This affects most commands that require/use/return message ids (e.g. fetch, search, sort, etc)

RootFolder

If supplied, sets the root folder prefix. This is the same as calling set_root_folder() with the value passed. If no value is supplied, set_root_folder() is called with no value. See the set_root_folder() method for more details.

Separator

If supplied, sets the folder name text string separator character. Passed as the second parameter to the set_root_folder() method.

AltRootRegexp

If supplied, passed along with RootFolder to the set_root_folder() method.

NoLiteralPlus

If set, this avoids ever sending literal+ non-synchronising literals. The default is off (false value). Use this if you're dealing with a buggy server that doesn't handle literal+ correctly. Also turns off RFC7888 "literal-" support.

Examples:

$imap = Mail::IMAPTalk->new(
  Server          => 'foo.com',
  Port            => 143,
  Username        => 'joebloggs',
  Password        => 'mypassword',
  Separator       => '.',
  RootFolder      => 'INBOX',
) || die "Connection to foo.com failed. Reason: $@";

$imap = Mail::IMAPTalk->new(
  Socket => $SSLSocket,
  State  => Mail::IMAPTalk::Authenticated,
  Uid    => 0
) || die "Could not query on existing socket. Reason: $@";

CONNECTION CONTROL METHODS

login($User, $Password, [$AsUser])

Attempt to login user specified username and password.

The actual authentication may be done using the LOGIN or AUTHENTICATE commands, depending on what the server advertises support for.

If $AsUser is supplied, an attempt will be made to login on behalf of that user.

authenticate($Sasl)

Attempt to authenticate using the given Authen::SASL object

logout()

Log out of IMAP server. This usually closes the servers connection as well.

state(optional $State)

Set/get the current IMAP connection state. Returned or passed value should be one of the constants (Unconnected, Connected, Authenticated, Selected).

uid(optional $UidMode)

Get/set the UID status of all UID possible IMAP commands. If set to 1, all commands that can take a UID are set to 'UID Mode', where any ID sent to IMAPTalk is assumed to be a UID.

capability()

This method returns the IMAP servers capability command results. The result is a hash reference of (lc(Capability) => 1) key value pairs. This means you can do things like:

if ($IMAP->capability()->{quota}) { ... }

to test if the server has the QUOTA capability. If you just want a list of capabilities, use the Perl 'keys' function to get a list of keys from the returned hash reference.

namespace()

Returns the result of the IMAP servers namespace command.

noop()

Perform the standard IMAP 'noop' command which does nothing.

enable($option)

Enabled the given imap extension

is_open()

Returns true if the current socket connection is still open (e.g. the socket hasn't been closed this end or the other end due to a timeout).

set_root_folder($RootFolder, $Separator, $AltRootRegexp)

Change the root folder prefix. Some IMAP servers require that all user folders/mailboxes live under a root folder prefix (current versions of cyrus for example use 'INBOX' for personal folders and 'user' for other users folders). If no value is specified, it sets it to ''. You might want to use the namespace() method to find out what roots are available.

Setting this affects all commands that take a folder argument. Basically if the foldername begins with root folder prefix, it's left as is, otherwise the root folder prefix and separator char are prefixed to the folder name.

The AltRootRegexp is a regexp that if the start of the folder name matches, does not have $RootFolder preprended. You can use this to protect other namespaces in your IMAP server.

Examples:

# This is what cyrus uses
$IMAP->set_root_folder('INBOX', '.', qr/^user/);

# Selects 'Inbox' (because 'Inbox' eq 'inbox' case insensitive)
$IMAP->select('Inbox');
# Selects 'INBOX.blah'
$IMAP->select('blah');
# Selects 'INBOX.Inbox.fred'
#IMAP->select('Inbox.fred');
# Selects 'user.john' (because 'user' is alt root)
#IMAP->select('user.john'); # Selects 'user.john'
_set_separator($Separator)

Checks if the given separator is the same as the one we used before. If not, it calls set_root_folder to recreate the settings with the new Separator.

literal_handle_control(optional $FileHandle or sub { })

Sets the mode whether to read literals as file handles or scalars.

There's three options here: * undef/0 - always read literals into a scalar in memory * filehandle - always read literals into the given filehandle note: you'll need to make sure you're 'fetch' call only returns a single literal, so you won't want to do much more than ->fetch($uid, "rfc822") * sub - whenever we parse an imap response and encounter a literal, call this sub, and if it returns a filehandle read into that filehandle, otherwise read into a scalar in memory

If a sub is used, when called it's passed two arguments: * bytes - the size of the literal in bytes * previous atom - if parsing a list response, the previous atom that was parsed. Useful when parsing "fetch" responses since you get key/value type list in the fetch response

Examples:

# Read rfc822 text of message 3 into file
# (note that the file will have /r/n line terminators)
open(my $fh, ">messagebody.txt");
$IMAP->literal_handle_control($fh);
$IMAP->fetch(3, 'rfc822');
$IMAP->literal_handle_control(0);

# Read the full rfc822 content into a filehandle, but the headers into a scalar
$IMAP->literal_handle_control(sub { lc $_[1] eq 'rfc822' ? scalar File::Temp::tempfile() : undef });
my $res = $IMAP->fetch(3, [ qw(rfc822 rfc822.header) ]);
$IMAP->literal_handle_control(0);
my $filehandle = $res->{3}->{rfc822};
my $hdrstxt = $res->{3}->{'rfc822.header'};
release_socket($Close)

Release IMAPTalk's ownership of the current socket it's using so it's not disconnected on DESTROY. This returns the socket, and makes sure that the IMAPTalk object doesn't hold a reference to it any more and the connection state is set to "Unconnected".

This means you can't call any methods on the IMAPTalk object any more.

If the socket is being released and being closed, then $Close is set to true.

get_last_error()

Returns a text string which describes the last error that occurred.

get_last_completion_response()

Returns the last completion response to the tagged command.

This is either the string "ok", "no" or "bad" (always lower case)

get_response_code($Response)

Returns the extra response data generated by a previous call. This is most often used after calling select which usually generates some set of the following sub-results.

  • permanentflags

    Array reference of flags which are stored permanently.

  • uidvalidity

    Whether the current UID set is valid. See the IMAP RFC for more information on this. If this value changes, then all UIDs in the folder have been changed.

  • uidnext

    The next UID number that will be assigned.

  • exists

    Number of messages that exist in the folder.

  • recent

    Number of messages that are recent in the folder.

Other possible responses are alert, newname, parse, trycreate, appenduid, etc.

The values are stored in a hash keyed on the $Response item. They're kept until either overwritten by a future response, or explicitly cleared via clear_response_code().

Examples:

# Select inbox and get list of permanent flags, uidnext and number
#  of message in the folder
$IMAP->select('inbox');
my $NMessages = $IMAP->get_response_code('exists');
my $PermanentFlags = $IMAP->get_response_code('permanentflags');
my $UidNext = $IMAP->get_response_code('uidnext');
clear_response_code($Response)

Clears any response code information. Response code information is not normally cleared between calls.

parse_mode(ParseOption => $ParseMode)

Changes how results of fetch commands are parsed. Available options are:

BodyStructure

Parse bodystructure into more Perl-friendly structure See the FETCH RESULTS section.

Envelope

Parse envelopes into more Perl-friendly structure See the FETCH RESULTS section.

Annotation

Parse annotation (from RFC 5257) into more Perl-friendly structure See the FETCH RESULTS section.

EnvelopeRaw

If parsing envelopes, create To/Cc/Bcc and Raw-To/Raw-Cc/Raw-Bcc entries which are array refs of 4 entries each as returned by the IMAP server.

DecodeUTF8

If parsing envelopes, decode any MIME encoded headers into Perl UTF-8 strings.

For this to work, you must have 'used' Mail::IMAPTalk with:

use Mail::IMAPTalk qw(:utf8support ...)

set_tracing($Tracer)

Allows you to trace both IMAP input and output sent to the server and returned from the server. This is useful for debugging. Returns the previous value of the tracer and then sets it to the passed value. Possible values for $Tracer are:

0

Disable all tracing.

1

Print to STDERR.

Code ref

Call code ref for each line input and output. Pass line as parameter.

Glob ref

Print to glob.

Scalar ref

Appends to the referenced scalar.

Note: literals are never passed to the tracer.

set_unicode_folders($Unicode)

$Unicode should be 1 or 0

Sets whether folder names are expected and returned as perl unicode strings.

The default is currently 0, BUT YOU SHOULD NOT ASSUME THIS, because it will probably change in the future.

If you want to work with perl unicode strings for folder names, you should call $ImapTalk->set_unicode_folders(1) and IMAPTalk will automatically encode the unicode strings into IMAP-UTF7 when sending to the IMAP server, and will also decode IMAP-UTF7 back into perl unicode strings when returning results from the IMAP server.

If you want to work with folder names in IMAP-UTF7 bytes, then call $ImapTalk->set_unicode_folders(0) and IMAPTalk will leave folder names as bytes when sending to and returning results from the IMAP server.

get_select_state()

Returns an opaque value that represents the current selected state and folder. You can call select, unselect, etc and then later call set_select_state(...) to return to the previous selected state.

set_select_state($state)

Restores selected state to a value returned from get_select_state

IMAP FOLDER COMMAND METHODS

Note: In all cases where a folder name is used, the folder name is first manipulated according to the current root folder prefix as described in set_root_folder().

select($FolderName, @Opts)

Perform the standard IMAP 'select' command to select a folder for retrieving/moving/adding messages. If $Opts{ReadOnly} is true, the IMAP EXAMINE verb is used instead of SELECT.

Mail::IMAPTalk will cache the currently selected folder, and if you issue another ->select("XYZ") for the folder that is already selected, it will just return immediately. This can confuse code that expects to get side effects of a select call. For that case, call ->unselect() first, then ->select().

unselect()

Performs the standard IMAP unselect command.

examine($FolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'examine' command to select a folder in read only mode for retrieving messages. This is the same as select($FolderName, 1). See select() for more details.

select_with_state($FolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'select' command to select a folder. This returns hashref of uidnext, uidvalidity and messagecount when successful and an undef otherwise.

create($FolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'create' command to create a new folder.

delete($FolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'delete' command to delete a folder.

localdelete($FolderName)

Perform the IMAP 'localdelete' command to delete a folder (doesn't delete subfolders even of INBOX, is always immediate.

rename($OldFolderName, $NewFolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'rename' command to rename a folder.

list($Reference, $Name)

Perform the standard IMAP 'list' command to return a list of available folders.

xlist($Reference, $Name)

Perform the IMAP 'xlist' extension command to return a list of available folders and their special use attributes.

id($key = $value, ...)>

Perform the IMAP extension command 'id'

lsub($Reference, $Name)

Perform the standard IMAP 'lsub' command to return a list of subscribed folders

subscribe($FolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'subscribe' command to subscribe to a folder.

unsubscribe($FolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'unsubscribe' command to unsubscribe from a folder.

check()

Perform the standard IMAP 'check' command to checkpoint the current folder.

setacl($FolderName, $User, $Rights)

Perform the IMAP 'setacl' command to set the access control list details of a folder/mailbox. See RFC 4314 for more details on the IMAP ACL extension. $User is the user name to set the access rights for. $Rights is either a list of absolute rights to set, or a list prefixed by a - to remove those rights, or a + to add those rights.

l - lookup (mailbox is visible to LIST/LSUB commands)
r - read (SELECT the mailbox, perform CHECK, FETCH, PARTIAL, SEARCH, COPY from mailbox)
s - keep seen/unseen information across sessions (STORE SEEN flag)
w - write (STORE flags other than SEEN and DELETED)
i - insert (perform APPEND, COPY into mailbox)
p - post (send mail to submission address for mailbox, not enforced by IMAP4 itself)
k - create mailboxes (CREATE new sub-mailboxes in any implementation-defined hierarchy, parent mailbox for the new mailbox name in RENAME)
x - delete mailbox (DELETE mailbox, old mailbox name in RENAME)
t - delete messages (set or clear \DELETED flag via STORE, set \DELETED flag during APPEND/COPY)
e - perform EXPUNGE and expunge as a part of CLOSE
a - administer (perform SETACL)

Due to ambiguity in RFC 2086, some existing RFC 2086 server implementations use the "c" right to control the DELETE command. Others chose to use the "d" right to control the DELETE command. See the 2.1.1. Obsolete Rights in RFC 4314 for more details.

c - create (CREATE new sub-mailboxes in any implementation-defined hierarchy)
d - delete (STORE DELETED flag, perform EXPUNGE)

The standard access control configurations for cyrus are

read = "lrs"
post = "lrsp"
append = "lrsip"
write = "lrswipcd"
all = "lrswipcda"

Examples:

# Get full access for user 'joe' on his own folder
$IMAP->setacl('user.joe', 'joe', 'lrswipcda') || die "IMAP error: $@";
# Remove write, insert, post, create, delete access for user 'andrew'
$IMAP->setacl('user.joe', 'andrew', '-wipcd') || die "IMAP error: $@";
# Add lookup, read, keep unseen information for user 'paul'
$IMAP->setacl('user.joe', 'paul', '+lrs') || die "IMAP error: $@";
getacl($FolderName)

Perform the IMAP 'getacl' command to get the access control list details of a folder/mailbox. See RFC 4314 for more details on the IMAP ACL extension. Returns an array of pairs. Each pair is a username followed by the access rights for that user. See setacl for more information on access rights.

Examples:

my $Rights = $IMAP->getacl('user.joe') || die "IMAP error : $@";
$Rights = [
  'joe', 'lrs',
  'andrew', 'lrswipcda'
];

$IMAP->setacl('user.joe', 'joe', 'lrswipcda') || die "IMAP error : $@";
$IMAP->setacl('user.joe', 'andrew', '-wipcd') || die "IMAP error : $@";
$IMAP->setacl('user.joe', 'paul', '+lrs') || die "IMAP error : $@";

$Rights = $IMAP->getacl('user.joe') || die "IMAP error : $@";
$Rights = [
  'joe', 'lrswipcd',
  'andrew', 'lrs',
  'paul', 'lrs'
];
deleteacl($FolderName, $Username)

Perform the IMAP 'deleteacl' command to delete all access control information for the given user on the given folder. See setacl for more information on access rights.

Examples:

my $Rights = $IMAP->getacl('user.joe') || die "IMAP error : $@";
$Rights = [
  'joe', 'lrswipcd',
  'andrew', 'lrs',
  'paul', 'lrs'
];

# Delete access information for user 'andrew'
$IMAP->deleteacl('user.joe', 'andrew') || die "IMAP error : $@";

$Rights = $IMAP->getacl('user.joe') || die "IMAP error : $@";
$Rights = [
  'joe', 'lrswipcd',
  'paul', 'lrs'
];
setquota($FolderName, $QuotaDetails)

Perform the IMAP 'setquota' command to set the usage quota details of a folder/mailbox. See RFC 2087 for details of the IMAP quota extension. $QuotaDetails is a bracketed list of limit item/value pairs which represent a particular type of limit and the value to set it to. Current limits are:

STORAGE - Sum of messages' RFC822.SIZE, in units of 1024 octets
MESSAGE - Number of messages

Examples:

# Set maximum size of folder to 50M and 1000 messages
$IMAP->setquota('user.joe', '(storage 50000)') || die "IMAP error: $@";
$IMAP->setquota('user.john', '(messages 1000)') || die "IMAP error: $@";
# Remove quotas
$IMAP->setquota('user.joe', '()') || die "IMAP error: $@";
getquota($FolderName)

Perform the standard IMAP 'getquota' command to get the quota details of a folder/mailbox. See RFC 2087 for details of the IMAP quota extension. Returns an array reference to quota limit triplets. Each triplet is made of: limit item, current value, maximum value.

Note that this only returns the quota for a folder if it actually has had a quota set on it. It's possible that a parent folder might have a quota as well which affects sub-folders. Use the getquotaroot to find out if this is true.

Examples:

my $Result = $IMAP->getquota('user.joe') || die "IMAP error: $@";
$Result = [
  'STORAGE', 31, 50000,
  'MESSAGE', 5, 1000
];
getquotaroot($FolderName)

Perform the IMAP 'getquotaroot' command to get the quota details of a folder/mailbox and possible root quota as well. See RFC 2087 for details of the IMAP quota extension. The result of this command is a little complex. Unfortunately it doesn't map really easily into any structure since there are several different responses.

Basically it's a hash reference. The 'quotaroot' item is the response which lists the root quotas that apply to the given folder. The first item is the folder name, and the remaining items are the quota root items. There is then a hash item for each quota root item. It's probably easiest to look at the example below.

Examples:

my $Result = $IMAP->getquotaroot('user.joe.blah') || die "IMAP error: $@";
$Result = {
  'quotaroot' => [
    'user.joe.blah', 'user.joe', ''
  ],
  'user.joe' => [
    'STORAGE', 31, 50000,
    'MESSAGES', 5, 1000
  ],
  '' => [
    'MESSAGES', 3498, 100000
  ]
};
message_count($FolderName)

Return the number of messages in a folder. See also status() for getting more information about messages in a folder.

status($FolderName, $StatusList)

Perform the standard IMAP 'status' command to retrieve status information about a folder/mailbox.

The $StatusList is a bracketed list of folder items to obtain the status of. Can contain: messages, recent, uidnext, uidvalidity, unseen.

The return value is a hash reference of lc(status-item) => value.

Examples:

my $Res = $IMAP->status('inbox', '(MESSAGES UNSEEN)');

$Res = {
  'messages' => 8,
  'unseen' => 2
};
multistatus($StatusList, @FolderNames)

Performs many IMAP 'status' commands on a list of folders. Sends all the commands at once and wait for responses. This speeds up latency issues.

Returns a hash ref of folder name => status results.

If an error occurs, the annotation result is a scalar ref to the completion response string (eg 'bad', 'no', etc)

getannotation($FolderName, $Entry, $Attribute)

Perform the IMAP 'getannotation' command to get the annotation(s) for a mailbox. See imap-annotatemore extension for details.

Examples:

my $Result = $IMAP->getannotation('user.joe.blah', '/*' '*') || die "IMAP error: $@";
$Result = {
  'user.joe.blah' => {
    '/vendor/cmu/cyrus-imapd/size' => {
      'size.shared' => '5',
      'content-type.shared' => 'text/plain',
      'value.shared' => '19261'
    },
    '/vendor/cmu/cyrus-imapd/lastupdate' => {
      'size.shared' => '26',
      'content-type.shared' => 'text/plain',
      'value.shared' => '26-Mar-2004 13:31:56 -0800'
    },
    '/vendor/cmu/cyrus-imapd/partition' => {
      'size.shared' => '7',
      'content-type.shared' => 'text/plain',
      'value.shared' => 'default'
    }
  }
};
getmetadata($FolderName, [ \%Options ], @Entries)

Perform the IMAP 'getmetadata' command to get the metadata items for a mailbox. See RFC 5464 for details.

If $Options is passed, it is a hashref of options to set.

If foldername is the empty string, gets server annotations

Examples:

my $Result = $IMAP->getmetadata('user.joe.blah', {depth => 'infinity'}, '/shared') || die "IMAP error: $@";
$Result = {
  'user.joe.blah' => {
    '/shared/vendor/cmu/cyrus-imapd/size' => '19261',
    '/shared/vendor/cmu/cyrus-imapd/lastupdate' => '26-Mar-2004 13:31:56 -0800',
    '/shared/vendor/cmu/cyrus-imapd/partition' => 'default',
  }
};

my $Result = $IMAP->getmetadata('', "/shared/comment");
$Result => {
  '' => {
    '/shared/comment' => "Shared comment",
  }
};
multigetmetadata(\@Entries, @FolderNames)

Performs many IMAP 'getmetadata' commands on a list of folders. Sends all the commands at once and wait for responses. This speeds up latency issues.

Returns a hash ref of folder name => metadata results.

If an error occurs, the annotation result is a scalar ref to the completion response string (eg 'bad', 'no', etc)

setannotation($FolderName, $Entry, [ $Attribute, $Value ])

Perform the IMAP 'setannotation' command to get the annotation(s) for a mailbox. See imap-annotatemore extension for details.

Examples:

my $Result = $IMAP->setannotation('user.joe.blah', '/comment', [ 'value.priv' 'A comment' ])
  || die "IMAP error: $@";
setmetadata($FolderName, $Name, $Value, $Name2, $Value2)

Perform the IMAP 'setmetadata' command. See RFC 5464 for details.

Examples:

my $Result = $IMAP->setmetadata('user.joe.blah', '/comment', 'A comment')
  || die "IMAP error: $@";
close()

Perform the standard IMAP 'close' command to expunge deleted messages from the current folder and return to the Authenticated state.

idle(\&Callback, [ $Timeout ])

Perform an IMAP idle call. Call given callback for each IDLE event received.

If the callback returns 0, the idle continues. If the callback returns 1, the idle is finished and this call returns.

If no timeout is passed, will continue to idle until the callback returns 1 or the server disconnects.

If a timeout is passed (including a 0 timeout), the call will return if no events are received within the given time. It will return the result of the DONE command, and set $Self->get_response_code('timeout') to true.

If the server closes the connection with a "bye" response, it will return undef and $@ =~ /bye/ will be true with the remainder of the bye line following.

IMAP MESSAGE COMMAND METHODS

fetch([ \%ParseMode ], $MessageIds, $MessageItems)

Perform the standard IMAP 'fetch' command to retrieve the specified message items from the specified message IDs.

The first parameter can be an optional hash reference that overrides particular parse mode parameters just for this fetch. See parse_mode for possible keys.

$MessageIds can be one of two forms:

  1. A text string with a comma separated list of message ID's or message ranges separated by colons. A '*' represents the highest message number.

    Examples:

    • '1' - first message

    • '1,2,5'

    • '1:*' - all messages

    • '1,3:*' - all but message 2

    Note that , separated lists and : separated ranges can be mixed, but to make sure a certain hack works, if a '*' is used, it must be the last character in the string.

  2. An array reference with a list of message ID's or ranges. The array contents are join(',', ...)ed together.

Note: If the uid() state has been set to true, then all message ID's must be message UIDs.

$MessageItems can be one of, or a bracketed list of:

  • uid

  • flags

  • internaldate

  • envelope

  • bodystructure

  • body

  • body[section]<partial>

  • body.peek[section]<partial>

  • rfc822

  • rfc822.header

  • rfc822.size

  • rfc822.text

  • fast

  • all

  • full

It would be a good idea to see RFC 3501 for what all these means.

Examples:

my $Res = $IMAP->fetch('1:*', 'rfc822.size');
my $Res = $IMAP->fetch([1,2,3], '(bodystructure envelope)');

Return results:

The results returned by the IMAP server are parsed into a Perl structure. See the section FETCH RESULTS for all the interesting details.

Note that message can disappear on you, so you may not get back all the entries you expect in the hash

There is one piece of magic. If your request is for a single uid, (eg "123"), and no data is return, we return undef, because it's easier to handle as an error condition.

copy($MsgIds, $ToFolder)

Perform standard IMAP copy command to copy a set of messages from one folder to another.

append($FolderName, optional $MsgFlags, optional $MsgDate, $MessageData)

Perform standard IMAP append command to append a new message into a folder.

The $MessageData to append can either be a Perl scalar containing the data, or a file handle to read the data from. In each case, the data must be in proper RFC 822 format with \r\n line terminators.

Any optional fields not needed should be removed, not left blank.

Examples:

# msg.txt should have \r\n line terminators
open(F, "msg.txt");
$IMAP->append('inbox', \*F);

my $MsgTxt =<<MSG;
From: blah\@xyz.com
To: whoever\@whereever.com
...
MSG

$MsgTxt =~ s/\n/\015\012/g;
$IMAP->append('inbox', { Literal => $MsgTxt });
search($MsgIdSet, @SearchCriteria)

Perform standard IMAP search command. The result is an array reference to a list of message IDs (or UIDs if in Uid mode) of messages that are in the $MsgIdSet and also meet the search criteria.

@SearchCriteria is a list of search specifications, for example to look for ASCII messages bigger than 2000 bytes you would set the list to be:

my @SearchCriteria = ('CHARSET', 'US-ASCII', 'LARGER', '2000');

Examples:

my $Res = $IMAP->search('1:*', 'NOT', 'DELETED');
$Res = [ 1, 2, 5 ];
store($MsgIdSet, $FlagOperation, $Flags)

Perform standard IMAP store command. Changes the flags associated with a set of messages.

Examples:

$IMAP->store('1:*', '+flags', '(\\deleted)');
$IMAP->store('1:*', '-flags.silent', '(\\read)');
expunge()

Perform standard IMAP expunge command. This actually deletes any messages marked as deleted.

uidexpunge($MsgIdSet)

Perform IMAP uid expunge command as per RFC 2359.

sort($SortField, $CharSet, @SearchCriteria)

Perform extension IMAP sort command. The result is an array reference to a list of message IDs (or UIDs if in Uid mode) in sorted order.

It would probably be a good idea to look at the sort RFC 5256 details at somewhere like : http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5256.txt

Examples:

my $Res = $IMAP->sort('(subject)', 'US-ASCII', 'NOT', 'DELETED');
$Res = [ 5, 2, 3, 1, 4 ];
thread($ThreadType, $CharSet, @SearchCriteria)

Perform extension IMAP thread command. The $ThreadType should be one of 'REFERENCES' or 'ORDEREDSUBJECT'. You should check the capability() of the server to see if it supports one or both of these.

Examples

my $Res = $IMAP->thread('REFERENCES', 'US-ASCII', 'NOT', 'DELETED');
$Res = [ [10, 15, 20], [11], [ [ 12, 16 ], [13, 17] ];
fetch_flags($MessageIds)

Perform an IMAP 'fetch flags' command to retrieve the specified flags for the specified messages.

This is just a special fast path version of fetch.

fetch_meta($MessageIds, @MetaItems)

Perform an IMAP 'fetch' command to retrieve the specified meta items. These must be simple items that return only atoms (eg no flags, bodystructure, body, envelope, etc)

This is just a special fast path version of fetch.

IMAP CYRUS EXTENSION METHODS

Methods provided by extensions to the cyrus IMAP server

Note: In all cases where a folder name is used, the folder name is first manipulated according to the current root folder prefix as described in set_root_folder().

xrunannotator($MessageIds)

Run the xannotator command on the given message id's

IMAP HELPER FUNCTIONS

get_body_part($BodyStruct, $PartNum)

This is a helper function that can be used to further parse the results of a fetched bodystructure. Given a top level body structure, and a part number, it returns the reference to the bodystructure sub part which that part number refers to.

Examples:

# Fetch body structure
my $FR = $IMAP->fetch(1, 'bodystructure');
my $BS = $FR->{1}->{bodystructure};

# Parse further to find particular sub part
my $P12 = $IMAP->get_body_part($BS, '1.2');
$P12->{'IMAP->Partnum'} eq '1.2' || die "Unexpected IMAP part number";
find_message($BodyStruct)

This is a helper function that can be used to further parse the results of a fetched bodystructure. It returns a hash reference with the following items.

text => $best_text_part
html => $best_html_part (optional)
textlist => [ ... text/html (if no alt text bits)/image (if inline) parts ... ]
htmllist => [ ... text (if no alt html bits)/html/image (if inline) parts ... ]
att => [ {
   bs => $part, text => 0/1, html => 0/1, msg => 1/0,
 }, { ... }, ... ]

For instance, consider a message with text and html pages that's then gone through a list software manager that attaches a header/footer

multipart/mixed
  text/plain, cd=inline - A
  multipart/mixed
    multipart/alternative
      multipart/mixed
        text/plain, cd=inline - B
        image/jpeg, cd=inline - C
        text/plain, cd=inline - D
      multipart/related
        text/html - E
        image/jpeg - F
    image/jpeg, cd=attachment - G
    application/x-excel - H
    message/rfc822 - J
  text/plain, cd=inline - K

In this case, we'd have the following list items

text => B
html => E
textlist => [ A, B, C, D, K ]
htmllist => [ A, E, K ]
att => [
  { bs => C, text => 1, html => 1 },
  { bs => F, text => 1, html => 0 },
  { bs => G, text => 1, html => 1 },
  { bs => H, text => 1, html => 1 },
  { bs => J, text => 0, html => 0, msg => 1 },
]

Examples:

# Fetch body structure
my $FR = $IMAP->fetch(1, 'bodystructure');
my $BS = $FR->{1}->{bodystructure};

# Parse further to find message components
my $MC = $IMAP->find_message($BS);
$MC = { 'plain' => ... text body struct ref part ...,
        'html' => ... html body struct ref part (if present) ... 
        'htmllist' => [ ... html body struct ref parts (if present) ... ] };

# Now get the text part of the message
my $MT = $IMAP->fetch(1, 'body[' . $MC->{text}->{'IMAP-Part'} . ']');
generate_cid( $Token, $PartBS )

This method generates a ContentID based on $Token and $PartBS.

The same value should always be returned for a given $Token and $PartBS

build_cid_map($BodyStruct, [ $IMAP, $Uid, $GenCidToken ])

This is a helper function that can be used to further parse the results of a fetched bodystructure. It recursively parses the bodystructure and returns a hash of Content-ID to bodystruct part references. This is useful when trying to determine CID links from an HTML message.

If you pass a Mail::IMAPTalk object as the second parameter, the CID map built may be even more detailed. It seems some stupid versions of exchange put details in the Content-Location header rather than the Content-Type header. If that's the case, this will try and fetch the header from the message

Examples:

# Fetch body structure
my $FR = $IMAP->fetch(1, 'bodystructure');
my $BS = $FR->{1}->{bodystructure};

# Parse further to get CID links
my $CL = build_cid_map($BS);
$CL = { '2958293123' => ... ref to body part ..., ... };
obliterate($CyrusName)

Given a username (optionally username\@domain) immediately delete all messages belonging to this user. Uses LOCALDELETE. Quite FastMail Patchd Cyrus specific.

make_sequence_set($MessageIds)
my $SetSeq = $IMAP->make_sequence_set($Ids);

This method returns a reference to a sequence-set string suitable for use in IMAP commands. A reference is returned instead of a string so that the result can be passed directly to IMAP-generating methods and the sequence set will not be quoted. (This quoting is especially problematic when quoting a range like 1:*).

IMAP CALLBACKS

By default, these methods do nothing, but you can dervice from Mail::IMAPTalk and override these methods to trap any things you want to catch

cb_switch_folder($CurrentFolder, $NewFolder)

Called when the currently selected folder is being changed (eg 'select' called and definitely a different folder is being selected, or 'unselect' methods called)

cb_folder_changed($Folder)

Called when a command changes the contents of a folder (eg copy, append, etc). $Folder is the name of the folder that's changing.

FETCH RESULTS

The 'fetch' operation is probably the most common thing you'll do with an IMAP connection. This operation allows you to retrieve information about a message or set of messages, including header fields, flags or parts of the message body.

Mail::IMAPTalk will always parse the results of a fetch call into a Perl like structure, though 'bodystructure', 'envelope' and 'uid' responses may have additional parsing depending on the parse_mode state and the uid state (see below).

For an example case, consider the following IMAP commands and responses (C is what the client sends, S is the server response).

C: a100 fetch 5,6 (flags rfc822.size uid)
S: * 1 fetch (UID 1952 FLAGS (\recent \seen) RFC822.SIZE 1150)
S: * 2 fetch (UID 1958 FLAGS (\recent) RFC822.SIZE 110)
S: a100 OK Completed

The fetch command can be sent by calling:

my $Res = $IMAP->fetch('1:*', '(flags rfc822.size uid)');

The result in response will look like this:

$Res = {
  1 => {
    'uid' => 1952,
    'flags' => [ '\\recent', '\\seen' ],
    'rfc822.size' => 1150
  },
  2 => {
    'uid' => 1958,
    'flags' => [ '\\recent' ],
    'rfc822.size' => 110
  }
};

A couple of points to note:

  1. The message IDs have been turned into a hash from message ID to fetch response result.

  2. The response items (e.g. uid, flags, etc) have been turned into a hash for each message, and also changed to lower case values.

  3. Other bracketed (...) lists have become array references.

In general, this is how all fetch responses are parsed. There is one major difference however when the IMAP connection is in 'uid' mode. In this case, the message IDs in the main hash are changed to message UIDs, and the 'uid' entry in the inner hash is removed. So the above example would become:

my $Res = $IMAP->fetch('1:*', '(flags rfc822.size)');

$Res = {
  1952 => {
    'flags' => [ '\\recent', '\\seen' ],
    'rfc822.size' => 1150
  },
  1958 => {
    'flags' => [ '\\recent' ],
    'rfc822.size' => 110
  }
};

Bodystructure

When dealing with messages, we need to understand the MIME structure of the message, so we can work out what is the text body, what is attachments, etc. This is where the 'bodystructure' item from an IMAP server comes in.

C: a101 fetch 1 (bodystructure)
S: * 1 fetch (BODYSTRUCTURE ("TEXT" "PLAIN" NIL NIL NIL "QUOTED-PRINTABLE" 255 11 NIL ("INLINE" NIL) NIL))
S: a101 OK Completed

The fetch command can be sent by calling:

my $Res = $IMAP->fetch(1, 'bodystructure');

As expected, the resultant response would look like this:

$Res = {
  1 => {
    'bodystructure' => [
      'TEXT', 'PLAIN', undef, undef, undef, 'QUOTED-PRINTABLE',
        255, 11, UNDEF, [ 'INLINE', undef ], undef
    ]
  }
};

However, if you set the parse_mode(BodyStructure = 1)>, then the result would be:

$Res = {
  '1' => {
    'bodystructure' => {
      'MIME-Type' => 'text',
      'MIME-Subtype' => 'plain',
      'MIME-TxtType' => 'text/plain',
      'Content-Type' => {},
      'Content-ID' => undef,
      'Content-Description' => undef,
      'Content-Transfer-Encoding' => 'QUOTED-PRINTABLE',
      'Size' => '3569',
      'Lines' => '94',
      'Content-MD5' => undef,
      'Disposition-Type' => 'inline',
      'Content-Disposition' => {},
      'Content-Language' => undef,
      'Remainder' => [],
      'IMAP-Partnum' => ''
    }
  }
};

A couple of points to note here:

  1. All the positional fields from the bodystructure list response have been turned into nicely named key/value hash items.

  2. The MIME-Type and MIME-Subtype fields have been made lower case.

  3. An IMAP-Partnum item has been added. The value in this field can be passed as the 'section' number of an IMAP body fetch call to retrieve the text of that IMAP section.

In general, the following items are defined for all body structures:

  • MIME-Type

  • MIME-Subtype

  • Content-Type

  • Disposition-Type

  • Content-Disposition

  • Content-Language

For all bodystructures EXCEPT those that have a MIME-Type of 'multipart', the following are defined:

  • Content-ID

  • Content-Description

  • Content-Transfer-Encoding

  • Size

  • Content-MD5

  • Remainder

  • IMAP-Partnum

For bodystructures where MIME-Type is 'text', an extra item 'Lines' is defined.

For bodystructures where MIME-Type is 'message' and MIME-Subtype is 'rfc822', the extra items 'Message-Envelope', 'Message-Bodystructure' and 'Message-Lines' are defined. The 'Message-Bodystructure' item is itself a reference to an entire bodystructure hash with all the format information of the contained message. The 'Message-Envelope' item is a hash structure with the message header information. See the Envelope entry below.

For bodystructures where MIME-Type is 'multipart', an extra item 'MIME-Subparts' is defined. The 'MIME-Subparts' item is an array reference, with each item being a reference to an entire bodystructure hash with all the format information of each MIME sub-part.

For further processing, you can use the find_message() function. This will analyse the body structure and find which part corresponds to the main text/html message parts to display. You can also use the find_cid_parts() function to find CID links in an html message.

Envelope

The envelope structure contains most of the addressing header fields from an email message. The following shows an example envelope fetch (the response from the IMAP server has been neatened up here)

C: a102 fetch 1 (envelope)
S: * 1 FETCH (ENVELOPE
    ("Tue, 7 Nov 2000 08:31:21 UT"      # Date
     "FW: another question"             # Subject
     (("John B" NIL "jb" "abc.com"))    # From
     (("John B" NIL "jb" "abc.com"))    # Sender
     (("John B" NIL "jb" "abc.com"))    # Reply-To
     (("Bob H" NIL "bh" "xyz.com")      # To
      ("K Jones" NIL "kj" "lmn.com"))
     NIL                                # Cc
     NIL                                # Bcc
     NIL                                # In-Reply-To
     NIL)                               # Message-ID
   )
S: a102 OK Completed

The fetch command can be sent by calling:

my $Res = $IMAP->fetch(1, 'envelope');

And you get the idea of what the resultant response would be. Again if you change parse_mode(Envelope = 1)>, you get a neat structure as follows:

$Res = {
  '1' => {
    'envelope' => {
      'Date' => 'Tue, 7 Nov 2000 08:31:21 UT',
      'Subject' => 'FW: another question',
      'From' => '"John B" <jb@abc.com>',
      'Sender' => '"John B" <jb@abc.com>',
      'Reply-To' => '"John B" <jb@abc.com>',
      'To' => '"Bob H" <bh@xyz.com>, "K Jones" <kj@lmn.com>',
      'Cc' => '',
      'Bcc' => '',
      'In-Reply-To' => undef,
      'Message-ID' => undef,

      'From-Raw' => [ [ 'John B', undef, 'jb', 'abc.com' ] ],
      'Sender-Raw' => [ [ 'John B', undef, 'jb', 'abc.com' ] ],
      'Reply-To-Raw' => [ [ 'John B', undef, 'jb', 'abc.com' ] ],
      'To-Raw' => [
        [ 'Bob H', undef, 'bh', 'xyz.com' ],
        [ 'K Jones', undef, 'kj', 'lmn.com' ],
      ],
      'Cc-Raw' => [],
      'Bcc-Raw' => [],
    }
  }
};

All the fields here are from straight from the email headers. See RFC 822 for more details.

Annotation

If the server supports RFC 5257 (ANNOTATE Extension), then you can fetch per-message annotations.

Annotation responses would normally be returned as a a nested set of arrays. However it's much easier to access the results as a nested set of hashes, so the results are so converted if the Annotation parse mode is enabled, which is on by default.

Part of an example from the RFC

S: * 12 FETCH (UID 1123 ANNOTATION
   (/comment (value.priv "My comment"
      size.priv "10")
   /altsubject (value.priv "Rhinoceroses!"
      size.priv "13")

So the fetch command:

my $Res = $IMAP->fetch(1123, 'annotation', [ '/*', [ 'value.priv', 'size.priv' ] ]);

Would have the result:

$Res = {
  '1123' => {
    'annotation' => {
      '/comment' => {
        'value.priv' => 'My comment',
        'size.priv => 10
      },
      '/altsubject' => {
        'value.priv' => '"Rhinoceroses',
        'size.priv => 13
      }
    }
  }
}

INTERNAL METHODS

_imap_cmd($Command, $IsUidCmd, $RespItems, @Args)

Executes a standard IMAP command.

Method arguments
$Command

Text string of command to call IMAP server with (e.g. 'select', 'search', etc).

$IsUidCmd

1 if command involved message ids and can be prefixed with UID, 0 otherwise.

$RespItems

Responses to look for from command (eg 'list', 'fetch', etc). Commands which return results usually return them untagged. The following is an example of fetching flags from a number of messages.

C123 uid fetch 1:* (flags)
* 1 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) UID 1)
* 2 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) UID 2)
C123 OK Completed

Between the sending of the command and the 'OK Completed' response, we have to pick up all the untagged 'FETCH' response items so we would pass 'fetch' (always use lower case) as the $RespItems to extract.

This can also be a hash ref of callback functions. See _parse_response for more examples

@Args

Any extra arguments to pass to command.

_send_cmd($Self, $Cmd, @InArgs)

Helper method used by the _imap_cmd method to actually build (and quote where necessary) the command arguments and then send the actual command.

_send_data($Self, $Opts, $Buffer, @Args)

Helper method used by the _send_cmd method to actually build (and quote where necessary) the command arguments and then send the actual command.

_parse_response($Self, $RespItems, [ \%ParseMode ])

Helper method called by _imap_cmd after sending the command. This methods retrieves data from the IMAP socket and parses it into Perl structures and returns the results.

$RespItems is either a string, which is the untagged response(s) to find and return, or for custom processing, it can be a hash ref.

If a hash ref, then each key will be an untagged response to look for, and each value a callback function to call for the corresponding untagged response.

Each callback will be called with 2 or 3 arguments; the untagged response string, the remainder of the line parsed into an array ref, and for fetch type responses, the id will be passed as the third argument.

One other piece of magic, if you pass a 'responseitem' key, then the value should be a string, and will be the untagged response returned from the function

_require_capability($Self, $Capability)

Helper method which checks that the server has a certain capability. If not, it sets the internal last error, $@ and returns undef.

_trace($Self, $Line)

Helper method which outputs any tracing data.

_is_current_folder($Self, $FolderName)

Return true if a folder is currently selected and that folder is $FolderName

INTERNAL SOCKET FUNCTIONS

_next_atom($Self)

Returns the next atom from the current line. Uses $Self->{ReadLine} for line data, or if undef, fills it with a new line of data from the IMAP connection socket and then begins processing.

If the next atom is:

  • An unquoted string, simply returns the string.

  • A quoted string, unquotes the string, changes any occurances of \" to " and returns the string.

  • A literal (e.g. {NBytes}\r\n), reads the number of bytes of data in the literal into a scalar or file (depending on literal_handle_control).

  • A bracketed structure, reads all the sub-atoms within the structure and returns an array reference with all the sub-atoms.

In each case, after parsing the atom, it removes any trailing space separator, and then returns the remainder of the line to $Self->{ReadLine} ready for the next call to _next_atom().

_next_simple_atom($Self)

Faster version of _next_atom() for known simple cases

_remaining_atoms($Self)

Returns all the remaining atoms for the current line in the read line buffer as an array reference. Leaves $Self->{ReadLine} eq ''. See _next_atom()

_remaining_line($Self)

Returns the remaining data in the read line buffer ($Self->{ReadLine}) as a scalar string/data value.

_fill_imap_read_buffer($Self)

Wait until data is available on the IMAP connection socket (or a timeout occurs). Read the data into the internal buffer $Self->{ReadBuf}. You can then use _imap_socket_read_line(), _imap_socket_read_bytes() or _copy_imap_socket_to_handle() to read data from the buffer in lines or bytes at a time.

_imap_socket_read_line($Self)

Read a \r\n terminated list from the buffered IMAP connection socket.

_imap_socket_read_bytes($Self, $NBytes)

Read a certain number of bytes from the buffered IMAP connection socket.

_imap_socket_out($Self, $Data)

Write the data in $Data to the IMAP connection socket.

_copy_handle_to_imapsocket($Self, $InHandle)

Copy a given number of bytes from a file handle to the IMAP connection

_copy_imap_socket_to_handle($Self, $OutHandle, $NBytes)

Copies data from the IMAP socket to a file handle. This is different to _copy_handle_to_imap_socket() because we internally buffer the IMAP socket so we can't just use it to copy from the socket handle, we have to copy the contents of our buffer first.

The number of bytes specified must be available on the IMAP socket, if the function runs out of data it will 'die' with an error.

_quote($String)

Returns an IMAP quoted version of a string. This place "..." around the string, and replaces any internal " with \".

INTERNAL PARSING FUNCTIONS

_parse_list_to_hash($ListRef, $Recursive)

Parses an array reference list of ($Key, $Value) pairs into a hash. Makes sure that all the keys are lower cased (lc) first.

_fix_folder_name($FolderName, %Opts)

Changes a folder name based on the current root folder prefix as set with the set_root_prefix() call.

Wildcard => 1 = a folder name with % or * is left alone
NoEncoding => 1 = don't do modified utf-7 encoding, leave as unicode
_fix_folder_encoding($FolderName)

Encode folder name using IMAP-UTF-7

_unfix_folder_name($FolderName)

Unchanges a folder name based on the current root folder prefix as set with the set_root_prefix() call.

_parse_email_address($EmailAddressList)

Converts a list of IMAP email address structures as parsed and returned from an IMAP fetch (envelope) call into a single RFC 822 email string (e.g. "Person 1 Name" <ename@ecorp.com>, "Person 2 Name" <...>, etc) to finally return to the user.

This is used to parse an envelope structure returned from a fetch call.

See the documentation section 'FETCH RESULTS' for more information.

_parse_envelope($Envelope, $IncludeRaw, $DecodeUTF8)

Converts an IMAP envelope structure as parsed and returned from an IMAP fetch (envelope) call into a convenient hash structure.

If $IncludeRaw is true, includes the XXX-Raw fields, otherwise these are left out.

If $DecodeUTF8 is true, then checks if the fields contain any quoted-printable chars, and decodes them to a Perl UTF8 string if they do.

See the documentation section 'FETCH RESULTS' from more information.

_parse_bodystructure($BodyStructure, $IncludeRaw, $DecodeUTF8, $PartNum)

Parses a standard IMAP body structure and turns it into a Perl friendly nested hash structure. This routine is recursive and you should not pass a value for $PartNum when called for the top level bodystructure item. Note that this routine destroys the array reference structure passed in as $BodyStructure.

See the documentation section 'FETCH RESULTS' from more information

_parse_fetch_annotation($AnnotateItem)

Takes the result from a single IMAP annotation item into a Perl friendly structure.

See the documentation section 'FETCH RESULTS' from more information.

_parse_fetch_result($FetchResult)

Takes the result from a single IMAP fetch response line and parses it into a Perl friendly structure.

See the documentation section 'FETCH RESULTS' from more information.

_parse_header_result($HeaderResults, $Value, $FetchResult)

Take a body[header.fields (xyz)] fetch response and parse out the header fields and values

_decode_utf8($Value)

Decodes the passed quoted printable value to a Perl Unicode string.

_expand_sequence(@Sequences)

Expand a list of IMAP id sequences into a full list of ids

PERL METHODS

DESTROY()

Called by Perl when this object is destroyed. Logs out of the IMAP server if still connected.

GMAIL, OFFICE 365, YAHOO and XOAUTH2

GMail, Office 365 and Yahoo are all moving to OAUTH authentication using the XOAUTH2 SASL mechanism. At the moment, there doesn't appear to be a XOAUTH2 Authen::SASL module on CPAN. If you need to authenticate with those systems, you should be able to use this simple module.

package Authen::SASL::Perl::XOAUTH2;

use strict;
use warnings
use parent qw(Authen::SASL::Perl);

sub _order { 1 }
sub _secflags { () }
sub mechanism { 'XOAUTH2' }

sub client_start {
  my $self = shift;

  $self->{error} = undef;
  $self->{need_step} = 0;

  my ($user, $auth, $access_token) = map {
    my $v = $self->_call($_);
    defined($v) ? $v : ''
  } qw(user auth access_token);

  return "user=$user\001auth=$auth $access_token\001\001";
}

1;

And then authenticate using:

my $sasl = Authen::SASL->new(
  mechanism => 'XOAUTH2',
  callback => {
    user => $username,
    auth => 'Bearer',
    access_token => $token,
  }
);

$login_res = $connection->authenticate($sasl);

SEE ALSO

Net::IMAP, Mail::IMAPClient, IMAP::Admin, RFC 3501

Latest news/details can also be found at:

http://cpan.robm.fastmail.fm/mailimaptalk/

Available on github at:

https://github.com/robmueller/mail-imaptalk/

AUTHOR

Rob Mueller <cpan@robm.fastmail.fm>. Thanks to Jeremy Howard <j+daemonize@howard.fm> for socket code, support and documentation setup.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2003-2016 by FastMail Pty Ltd

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.