NAME

Mail::Box::IMAP4 - handle IMAP4 folders as client

INHERITANCE

Mail::Box::IMAP4
  is a Mail::Box::Net
  is a Mail::Box
  is a Mail::Reporter

SYNOPSIS

use Mail::Box::IMAP4;
my $folder = new Mail::Box::IMAP4 folder => $ENV{MAIL}, ...;

DESCRIPTION

Maintain a folder which has its messages stored on a remote server. The communication between the client application and the server is implemented using the IMAP4 protocol. See also Mail::Server::IMAP4.

This class uses Mail::Transport::IMAP4 to hide the transport of information, and focusses solely on the correct handling of messages within a IMAP4 folder. More than one IMAP4 folder can be handled by one single IMAP4 connection.

OVERLOADED

overload: ""

overload: @{}

overload: cmp

METHODS

Constructors

Mail::Box::IMAP4->new(OPTIONS)

    The new can have many OPTIONS. Not only the ones listed here below, but also all the OPTIONS for Mail::Transport::IMAP4::new() can be passed.

    The default depends on the value of new(cache_head).

    Without folder name, no folder is selected. Only few methods are available now, for instance listSubFolders() to get the top-level folder names. Usually, the folder named INBOX will be present.

    Option           --Defined in     --Default
    access             Mail::Box        'r'
    body_delayed_type  Mail::Box        Mail::Message::Body::Delayed
    body_type          Mail::Box        Mail::Message::Body::Lines
    cache_body                          NO
    cache_head                          NO or DELAY
    cache_labels                        NO or DELAY
    coerce_options     Mail::Box        []
    create             Mail::Box        <false>
    extract            Mail::Box        10240
    field_type         Mail::Box        undef
    fix_headers        Mail::Box        <false>
    folder             Mail::Box        /
    folderdir          Mail::Box        <not used>
    head_delayed_type  Mail::Box        Mail::Message::Head::Delayed
    head_type          Mail::Box        Mail::Box::IMAP4::Head or Mail::Message::Head::Complete
    join_connection                     true
    keep_dups          Mail::Box        <false>
    lock_file          Mail::Box        undef
    lock_timeout       Mail::Box        1 hour
    lock_type          Mail::Box        'NONE'
    lock_wait          Mail::Box        10 seconds
    locker             Mail::Box        undef
    log                Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'
    manager            Mail::Box        undef
    message_type       Mail::Box        Mail::Box::IMAP4::Message
    multipart_type     Mail::Box        Mail::Message::Body::Multipart
    password           Mail::Box::Net   undef
    remove_when_empty  Mail::Box        <false>
    save_on_exit       Mail::Box        <true>
    server_name        Mail::Box::Net   undef
    server_port        Mail::Box::Net   143
    trace              Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'
    transporter                         Mail::Transport::IMAP4
    trusted            Mail::Box        <false>
    username           Mail::Box::Net   undef

    . access => MODE

    . body_delayed_type => CLASS

    . body_type => CLASS|CODE

    . cache_body => 'NO'|'YES'|'DELAY'

      Body objects are immutable, but may still cached or not. In common case, the body of a message is requested via Mail::Message::body() or Mail::Message::decoded(). This returns a handle to a body object. You may decide wether that body object can be reused or not. NO means: retreive the data each time again, YES will cache the body data, DELAY will send the whole message when the folder is closed.

             [local cache]  [write]
      NO         no           no
      YES        yes          no
      DELAY      yes          yes

    . cache_head => 'NO'|'PARTIAL'|'DELAY'

      For a read-only folder, DELAY is the default, otherwise NO is choosen. The four configuration parameter have subtile consequences. To start with a table:

             [local cache]  [write]  [default head_type]
      NO         no           no     Mail::Box::IMAP4::Head
      PARTIAL    yes          no     Mail::Box::IMAP4::Head
      DELAY      yes          yes    Mail::Message::Head::Complete

      The default head_type is Mail::Box::IMAP4::Head, the default cached_head_type is Mail::Message::Head::Complete.

      Having a local cache means that a lookup for a field is first done in a local data-structure (which extends Mail::Message::Head::Partial), and only on the remote server if it was not found. This is dangerous, because your locally cached data can be out-of-sync with the server. However, it may give you a nice performance benefit.

      DELAY will always collect the whole header for you. This is required when you want to look for Resent Groups (See Mail::Message::Head::ResentGroup) or other field order dependent header access. A Mail::Message::Head::Delayed will be created first.

    . cache_labels => 'NO'|'WRITE'|'DELAY'

      When labels from a message are received, these values can be kept. However, this imposes dangers where the server's internal label storage may get out of sync with your data.

      With NO, no caching will take place (but the performance will be worse). With WRITE, all label access will be cached, but written to the server as well. Both NO and WRITE will update the labels on the served, even when the folder was opened read-only. DELAY will not write the changed information to the server, but delay that till the moment that the folder is closed. It only works when the folder is opened read/write or write is enforced.

      The default is DELAY for folders which where opened read-only. This means that you still can force an update with close(write). For folders which are opened read-write, the default is the safeset setting, which is NO.

    . coerce_options => ARRAY

    . create => BOOLEAN

    . extract => INTEGER | CODE | METHOD | 'LAZY'|'ALWAYS'

    . field_type => CLASS

    . fix_headers => BOOLEAN

    . folder => FOLDERNAME

    . folderdir => DIRECTORY

    . head_delayed_type => CLASS

    . head_type => CLASS

    . join_connection => BOOLEAN

      Within this Mail::Box::IMAP4 class is registered which transporters are already in use, i.e. which connections to the IMAP server are already in established. When this option is set, multiple folder openings on the same server will try to reuse one connection.

    . keep_dups => BOOLEAN

    . lock_file => FILENAME

    . lock_timeout => SECONDS

    . lock_type => CLASS|STRING|ARRAY

    . lock_wait => SECONDS

    . locker => OBJECT

    . log => LEVEL

    . manager => MANAGER

    . message_type => CLASS

    . multipart_type => CLASS

    . password => STRING

    . remove_when_empty => BOOLEAN

    . save_on_exit => BOOLEAN

    . server_name => HOSTNAME

    . server_port => INTEGER

    . trace => LEVEL

    . transporter => OBJECT|CLASS

      The name of the CLASS which will interface with the connection. When you implement your own extension to Mail::Transport::IMAP4, you can either specify a fully instantiated transporter OBJECT, or the name of your own CLASS. When an OBJECT is given, most other options will be ignored.

    . trusted => BOOLEAN

    . username => STRING

    example:

    my $imap   = Mail::Box::IMAP4->new(username => 'myname',
       password => 'mypassword', server_name => 'imap.xs4all.nl');
    
    my $url    = 'imap4://user:password@imap.xs4all.nl');
    my $imap   = $mgr->open($url);
    
    my $client = Mail::IMAPClient->new(...);
    my $imap   = Mail::Box::IMAP4->new(imap_client => $client);

The folder

$obj->addMessage(MESSAGE, OPTIONS)

$obj->addMessages(MESSAGE [, MESSAGE, ...])

Mail::Box::IMAP4->appendMessages(OPTIONS)

$obj->close(OPTIONS)

    Close the folder. In the case of IMAP, more than one folder can use the same connection, therefore, closing a folder does not always close the connection to the server. Only when no folder is using the connection anymore, a logout will be invoked by Mail::Transport::IMAP4::DESTROY()

    Option      --Defined in     --Default
    force         Mail::Box        <false>
    save_deleted  Mail::Box        false
    write         Mail::Box        MODIFIED

    . force => BOOLEAN

    . save_deleted => BOOLEAN

    . write => 'ALWAYS'|'NEVER'|'MODIFIED'

$obj->copyTo(FOLDER, OPTIONS)

$obj->delete(OPTIONS)

$obj->folderdir([DIRECTORY])

$obj->name

$obj->organization

$obj->size

$obj->type

$obj->update(OPTIONS)

$obj->url

Folder flags

$obj->access

$obj->isModified

$obj->modified([BOOLEAN])

$obj->writable

The messages

$obj->current([NUMBER|MESSAGE|MESSAGE-ID])

$obj->find(MESSAGE-ID)

$obj->findFirstLabeled(LABEL, [BOOLEAN, [ARRAY-OF-MSGS]])

$obj->message(INDEX [,MESSAGE])

$obj->messageId(MESSAGE-ID [,MESSAGE])

$obj->messageIds

$obj->messages(['ALL',RANGE,'ACTIVE','DELETED',LABEL,!LABEL,FILTER])

$obj->nrMessages(OPTIONS)

$obj->scanForMessages(MESSAGE, MESSAGE-IDS, TIMESPAN, WINDOW)

Sub-folders

$obj->listSubFolders(OPTIONS)

Mail::Box::IMAP4->listSubFolders(OPTIONS)

$obj->nameOfSubFolder(SUBNAME, [PARENTNAME])

Mail::Box::IMAP4->nameOfSubFolder(SUBNAME, [PARENTNAME])

$obj->openRelatedFolder(OPTIONS)

$obj->openSubFolder(SUBNAME, OPTIONS)

$obj->topFolderWithMessages

Mail::Box::IMAP4->topFolderWithMessages

Internals

$obj->body([BODY])

$obj->coerce(MESSAGE, OPTIONS)

$obj->create(FOLDER, OPTIONS)

Mail::Box::IMAP4->create(FOLDER, OPTIONS)

$obj->createTransporter(CLASS, OPTIONS)

    Create a transporter object (an instance of Mail::Transport::IMAP4), where CLASS defines the exact object type. As OPTIONS, everything which is acceptable to a transporter initiation can be used (see Mail::Transport::IMAP4::new().

    Option         --Default
    join_connection  true

    . join_connection => BOOLEAN

      See new(join_connection). When false, the connection will never be shared with other IMAP mail boxes.

$obj->determineBodyType(MESSAGE, HEAD)

$obj->fetch(ARRAY-OF-MESSAGES|MESSAGE-SELECTION, INFO)

    Low-level data retreival about one or more messages via IMAP4 from the remote server. Some of this data may differ from the information which is stored in the message objects which are created by MailBox, so you should avoid the use of this method for your own purposes. The IMAP implementation provides some wrappers around this, providing the correct behavior.

    An array of MESSAGES may be specified or some MESSAGE SELECTION, acceptable to Mail::Box::messages(). Examples of the latter are 'ALL', 'DELETED', or spam (messages labelled to contain spam).

    The INFO contains one or more attributes as defined by the IMAP protocol. You have to read the full specs of the related RFCs to see these.

Mail::Box::IMAP4->foundIn([FOLDERNAME], OPTIONS)

$obj->getHead(MESSAGE)

    Read the header for the specified message from the remote server. undef is returned in case the message disappeared.

$obj->getHeadAndBody(MESSAGE)

    Read all data for the specified message from the remote server. Return head and body of the mesasge as list, or an empty list if the MESSAGE disappeared from the server.

$obj->lineSeparator([STRING|'CR'|'LF'|'CRLF'])

$obj->locker

$obj->read(OPTIONS)

$obj->readMessages(OPTIONS)

$obj->storeMessage(MESSAGE)

$obj->toBeThreaded(MESSAGES)

$obj->toBeUnthreaded(MESSAGES)

$obj->transporter([OBJECT])

    Returns the object which is the interface to the IMAP4 protocol handler. The IMAP4 handler has the current folder selected. When an OBJECT is specified, it is set to be the transporter from that moment on. The OBJECT must extend Mail::Transport::IMAP4.

$obj->updateMessages(OPTIONS)

$obj->write(OPTIONS)

    The IMAP protocol usually writes the data immediately to the remote server, because that's what the protocol wants. However, some options to new() may delay that to boost performance. This method will, when the folder is being closed, write that info after all.

    Option      --Defined in     --Default
    force         Mail::Box        <false>
    save_deleted                   <false>

    . force => BOOLEAN

    . save_deleted => BOOLEAN

      You may be able to save the messages which are flagged for deletion now, but they will be removed anyway when the folder is closed.

$obj->writeMessages(OPTIONS)

    Option     --Defined in     --Default
    messages     Mail::Box        <required>
    transporter                   <required>

    . messages => ARRAY

    . transporter => OBJECT

Other methods

$obj->timespan2seconds(TIME)

Mail::Box::IMAP4->timespan2seconds(TIME)

Error handling

$obj->AUTOLOAD

$obj->addReport(OBJECT)

$obj->defaultTrace([LEVEL]|[LOGLEVEL, TRACELEVEL]|[LEVEL, CALLBACK])

Mail::Box::IMAP4->defaultTrace([LEVEL]|[LOGLEVEL, TRACELEVEL]|[LEVEL, CALLBACK])

$obj->errors

$obj->log([LEVEL [,STRINGS]])

Mail::Box::IMAP4->log([LEVEL [,STRINGS]])

$obj->logPriority(LEVEL)

Mail::Box::IMAP4->logPriority(LEVEL)

$obj->logSettings

$obj->notImplemented

$obj->report([LEVEL])

$obj->reportAll([LEVEL])

$obj->trace([LEVEL])

$obj->warnings

Cleanup

$obj->DESTROY

$obj->inGlobalDestruction

DETAILS

How IMAP4 folders work

DIAGNOSTICS

Warning: Cannot find head back for $uidl in $folder.

    The header was read before, but now seems empty: the IMAP4 server does not produce the header lines anymore.

Warning: Cannot read body for $uidl in $folder.

    The header of the message was retreived from the IMAP4 server, but the body is not read, for an unknown reason.

Error: Copying failed for one message.

    For some reason, for instance disc full, removed by external process, or read-protection, it is impossible to copy one of the messages. Copying will proceed for the other messages.

Error: Couldn't select IMAP4 folder $name

Error: Destination folder $name is not writable.

    The folder where the messages are copied to is not opened with write access (see new(access)). This has no relation with write permission to the folder which is controled by your operating system.

Warning: Different messages with id $msgid

    The message id is discovered more than once within the same folder, but the content of the message seems to be different. This should not be possible: each message must be unique.

Error: Folder $name not deleted: not writable.

    The folder must be opened with write access via new(access), otherwise removing it will be refused. So, you may have write-access according to the operating system, but that will not automatically mean that this delete method permits you to. The reverse remark is valid as well.

Notice: Impossible to keep deleted messages in IMAP

    Some folder type have a 'deleted' flag which can be stored in the folder to be performed later. The folder keeps that knowledge even when the folder is rewritten. Well, IMAP4 cannot play that trick.

Error: Invalid timespan '$timespan' specified.

    The string does not follow the strict rules of the time span syntax which is permitted as parameter.

Warning: Message $uidl disappeared from $folder.

    Trying to get the specific message from the server, but it appears to be gone.

Warning: Message $uidl disappeared from $folder.

    Trying to get the specific message from the server, but it appears to be gone.

Warning: Message-id '$msgid' does not contain a domain.

    According to the RFCs, message-ids need to contain a unique random part, then an @, and then a domain name. This is made to avoid the creation of two messages with the same id. The warning emerges when the @ is missing from the string.

Error: No IMAP4 transporter configured

Error: Package $package does not implement $method.

    Fatal error: the specific package (or one of its superclasses) does not implement this method where it should. This message means that some other related classes do implement this method however the class at hand does not. Probably you should investigate this and probably inform the author of the package.

Error: Unable to create subfolder $name of $folder.

    The copy includes the subfolders, but for some reason it was not possible to copy one of these. Copying will proceed for all other sub-folders.

SEE ALSO

This module is part of Mail-Box distribution version 2.088, built on March 19, 2009. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/

LICENSE

Copyrights 2001-2009 by Mark Overmeer. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

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