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% Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Python Software Foundation % Author: [email protected] (Barry Warsaw) \section{\module{email} --- An email and MIME handling package} \declaremodule{standard}{email} \modulesynopsis{Package supporting the parsing, manipulating, and generating email messages, including MIME documents.} \moduleauthor{Barry A. Warsaw}{[email protected]} \sectionauthor{Barry A. Warsaw}{[email protected]} \versionadded{2.2} The \module{email} package is a library for managing email messages, including MIME and other \rfc{2822}-based message documents. It subsumes most of the functionality in several older standard modules such as \refmodule{rfc822}, \refmodule{mimetools}, \refmodule{multifile}, and other non-standard packages such as \module{mimecntl}. It is specifically \emph{not} designed to do any sending of email messages to SMTP (\rfc{2821}), NNTP, or other servers; those are functions of modules such as \refmodule{smtplib} and \refmodule{nntplib}. The \module{email} package attempts to be as RFC-compliant as possible, supporting in addition to \rfc{2822}, such MIME-related RFCs as \rfc{2045}, \rfc{2046}, \rfc{2047}, and \rfc{2231}. The primary distinguishing feature of the \module{email} package is that it splits the parsing and generating of email messages from the internal \emph{object model} representation of email. Applications using the \module{email} package deal primarily with objects; you can add sub-objects to messages, remove sub-objects from messages, completely re-arrange the contents, etc. There is a separate parser and a separate generator which handles the transformation from flat text to the object model, and then back to flat text again. There are also handy subclasses for some common MIME object types, and a few miscellaneous utilities that help with such common tasks as extracting and parsing message field values, creating RFC-compliant dates, etc. The following sections describe the functionality of the \module{email} package. The ordering follows a progression that should be common in applications: an email message is read as flat text from a file or other source, the text is parsed to produce the object structure of the email message, this structure is manipulated, and finally, the object tree is rendered back into flat text. It is perfectly feasible to create the object structure out of whole cloth --- i.e. completely from scratch. From there, a similar progression can be taken as above. Also included are detailed specifications of all the classes and modules that the \module{email} package provides, the exception classes you might encounter while using the \module{email} package, some auxiliary utilities, and a few examples. For users of the older \module{mimelib} package, or previous versions of the \module{email} package, a section on differences and porting is provided. \begin{seealso} \seemodule{smtplib}{SMTP protocol client} \seemodule{nntplib}{NNTP protocol client} \end{seealso} \subsection{Representing an email message} \input{emailmessage} \subsection{Parsing email messages} \input{emailparser} \subsection{Generating MIME documents} \input{emailgenerator} \subsection{Creating email and MIME objects from scratch} \input{emailmimebase} \subsection{Internationalized headers} \input{emailheaders} \subsection{Representing character sets} \input{emailcharsets} \subsection{Encoders} \input{emailencoders} \subsection{Exception and Defect classes} \input{emailexc} \subsection{Miscellaneous utilities} \input{emailutil} \subsection{Iterators} \input{emailiter} \subsection{Package History\label{email-pkg-history}} This table describes the release history of the email package, corresponding to the version of Python that the package was released with. For purposes of this document, when you see a note about change or added versions, these refer to the Python version the change was made it, \emph{not} the email package version. This table also describes the Python compatibility of each version of the package. \begin{tableiii}{l|l|l}{constant}{email version}{distributed with}{compatible with} \lineiii{1.x}{Python 2.2.0 to Python 2.2.1}{\emph{no longer supported}} \lineiii{2.5}{Python 2.2.2+ and Python 2.3}{Python 2.1 to 2.5} \lineiii{3.0}{Python 2.4}{Python 2.3 to 2.5} \lineiii{4.0}{Python 2.5}{Python 2.3 to 2.5} \end{tableiii} Here are the major differences between \module{email} version 4 and version 3: \begin{itemize} \item All modules have been renamed according to \pep{8} standards. For example, the version 3 module \module{email.Message} was renamed to \module{email.message} in version 4. \item A new subpackage \module{email.mime} was added and all the version 3 \module{email.MIME*} modules were renamed and situated into the \module{email.mime} subpackage. For example, the version 3 module \module{email.MIMEText} was renamed to \module{email.mime.text}. \emph{Note that the version 3 names will continue to work until Python 2.6}. \item The \module{email.mime.application} module was added, which contains the \class{MIMEApplication} class. \item Methods that were deprecated in version 3 have been removed. These include \method{Generator.__call__()}, \method{Message.get_type()}, \method{Message.get_main_type()}, \method{Message.get_subtype()}. \item Fixes have been added for \rfc{2231} support which can change some of the return types for \function{Message.get_param()} and friends. Under some circumstances, values which used to return a 3-tuple now return simple strings (specifically, if all extended parameter segments were unencoded, there is no language and charset designation expected, so the return type is now a simple string). Also, \%-decoding used to be done for both encoded and unencoded segments; this decoding is now done only for encoded segments. \end{itemize} Here are the major differences between \module{email} version 3 and version 2: \begin{itemize} \item The \class{FeedParser} class was introduced, and the \class{Parser} class was implemented in terms of the \class{FeedParser}. All parsing therefore is non-strict, and parsing will make a best effort never to raise an exception. Problems found while parsing messages are stored in the message's \var{defect} attribute. \item All aspects of the API which raised \exception{DeprecationWarning}s in version 2 have been removed. These include the \var{_encoder} argument to the \class{MIMEText} constructor, the \method{Message.add_payload()} method, the \function{Utils.dump_address_pair()} function, and the functions \function{Utils.decode()} and \function{Utils.encode()}. \item New \exception{DeprecationWarning}s have been added to: \method{Generator.__call__()}, \method{Message.get_type()}, \method{Message.get_main_type()}, \method{Message.get_subtype()}, and the \var{strict} argument to the \class{Parser} class. These are expected to be removed in future versions. \item Support for Pythons earlier than 2.3 has been removed. \end{itemize} Here are the differences between \module{email} version 2 and version 1: \begin{itemize} \item The \module{email.Header} and \module{email.Charset} modules have been added. \item The pickle format for \class{Message} instances has changed. Since this was never (and still isn't) formally defined, this isn't considered a backward incompatibility. However if your application pickles and unpickles \class{Message} instances, be aware that in \module{email} version 2, \class{Message} instances now have private variables \var{_charset} and \var{_default_type}. \item Several methods in the \class{Message} class have been deprecated, or their signatures changed. Also, many new methods have been added. See the documentation for the \class{Message} class for details. The changes should be completely backward compatible. \item The object structure has changed in the face of \mimetype{message/rfc822} content types. In \module{email} version 1, such a type would be represented by a scalar payload, i.e. the container message's \method{is_multipart()} returned false, \method{get_payload()} was not a list object, but a single \class{Message} instance. This structure was inconsistent with the rest of the package, so the object representation for \mimetype{message/rfc822} content types was changed. In \module{email} version 2, the container \emph{does} return \code{True} from \method{is_multipart()}, and \method{get_payload()} returns a list containing a single \class{Message} item. Note that this is one place that backward compatibility could not be completely maintained. However, if you're already testing the return type of \method{get_payload()}, you should be fine. You just need to make sure your code doesn't do a \method{set_payload()} with a \class{Message} instance on a container with a content type of \mimetype{message/rfc822}. \item The \class{Parser} constructor's \var{strict} argument was added, and its \method{parse()} and \method{parsestr()} methods grew a \var{headersonly} argument. The \var{strict} flag was also added to functions \function{email.message_from_file()} and \function{email.message_from_string()}. \item \method{Generator.__call__()} is deprecated; use \method{Generator.flatten()} instead. The \class{Generator} class has also grown the \method{clone()} method. \item The \class{DecodedGenerator} class in the \module{email.Generator} module was added. \item The intermediate base classes \class{MIMENonMultipart} and \class{MIMEMultipart} have been added, and interposed in the class hierarchy for most of the other MIME-related derived classes. \item The \var{_encoder} argument to the \class{MIMEText} constructor has been deprecated. Encoding now happens implicitly based on the \var{_charset} argument. \item The following functions in the \module{email.Utils} module have been deprecated: \function{dump_address_pairs()}, \function{decode()}, and \function{encode()}. The following functions have been added to the module: \function{make_msgid()}, \function{decode_rfc2231()}, \function{encode_rfc2231()}, and \function{decode_params()}. \item The non-public function \function{email.Iterators._structure()} was added. \end{itemize} \subsection{Differences from \module{mimelib}} The \module{email} package was originally prototyped as a separate library called \ulink{\module{mimelib}}{http://mimelib.sf.net/}. Changes have been made so that method names are more consistent, and some methods or modules have either been added or removed. The semantics of some of the methods have also changed. For the most part, any functionality available in \module{mimelib} is still available in the \refmodule{email} package, albeit often in a different way. Backward compatibility between the \module{mimelib} package and the \module{email} package was not a priority. Here is a brief description of the differences between the \module{mimelib} and the \refmodule{email} packages, along with hints on how to port your applications. Of course, the most visible difference between the two packages is that the package name has been changed to \refmodule{email}. In addition, the top-level package has the following differences: \begin{itemize} \item \function{messageFromString()} has been renamed to \function{message_from_string()}. \item \function{messageFromFile()} has been renamed to \function{message_from_file()}. \end{itemize} The \class{Message} class has the following differences: \begin{itemize} \item The method \method{asString()} was renamed to \method{as_string()}. \item The method \method{ismultipart()} was renamed to \method{is_multipart()}. \item The \method{get_payload()} method has grown a \var{decode} optional argument. \item The method \method{getall()} was renamed to \method{get_all()}. \item The method \method{addheader()} was renamed to \method{add_header()}. \item The method \method{gettype()} was renamed to \method{get_type()}. \item The method \method{getmaintype()} was renamed to \method{get_main_type()}. \item The method \method{getsubtype()} was renamed to \method{get_subtype()}. \item The method \method{getparams()} was renamed to \method{get_params()}. Also, whereas \method{getparams()} returned a list of strings, \method{get_params()} returns a list of 2-tuples, effectively the key/value pairs of the parameters, split on the \character{=} sign. \item The method \method{getparam()} was renamed to \method{get_param()}. \item The method \method{getcharsets()} was renamed to \method{get_charsets()}. \item The method \method{getfilename()} was renamed to \method{get_filename()}. \item The method \method{getboundary()} was renamed to \method{get_boundary()}. \item The method \method{setboundary()} was renamed to \method{set_boundary()}. \item The method \method{getdecodedpayload()} was removed. To get similar functionality, pass the value 1 to the \var{decode} flag of the {get_payload()} method. \item The method \method{getpayloadastext()} was removed. Similar functionality is supported by the \class{DecodedGenerator} class in the \refmodule{email.generator} module. \item The method \method{getbodyastext()} was removed. You can get similar functionality by creating an iterator with \function{typed_subpart_iterator()} in the \refmodule{email.iterators} module. \end{itemize} The \class{Parser} class has no differences in its public interface. It does have some additional smarts to recognize \mimetype{message/delivery-status} type messages, which it represents as a \class{Message} instance containing separate \class{Message} subparts for each header block in the delivery status notification\footnote{Delivery Status Notifications (DSN) are defined in \rfc{1894}.}. The \class{Generator} class has no differences in its public interface. There is a new class in the \refmodule{email.generator} module though, called \class{DecodedGenerator} which provides most of the functionality previously available in the \method{Message.getpayloadastext()} method. The following modules and classes have been changed: \begin{itemize} \item The \class{MIMEBase} class constructor arguments \var{_major} and \var{_minor} have changed to \var{_maintype} and \var{_subtype} respectively. \item The \code{Image} class/module has been renamed to \code{MIMEImage}. The \var{_minor} argument has been renamed to \var{_subtype}. \item The \code{Text} class/module has been renamed to \code{MIMEText}. The \var{_minor} argument has been renamed to \var{_subtype}. \item The \code{MessageRFC822} class/module has been renamed to \code{MIMEMessage}. Note that an earlier version of \module{mimelib} called this class/module \code{RFC822}, but that clashed with the Python standard library module \refmodule{rfc822} on some case-insensitive file systems. Also, the \class{MIMEMessage} class now represents any kind of MIME message with main type \mimetype{message}. It takes an optional argument \var{_subtype} which is used to set the MIME subtype. \var{_subtype} defaults to \mimetype{rfc822}. \end{itemize} \module{mimelib} provided some utility functions in its \module{address} and \module{date} modules. All of these functions have been moved to the \refmodule{email.utils} module. The \code{MsgReader} class/module has been removed. Its functionality is most closely supported in the \function{body_line_iterator()} function in the \refmodule{email.iterators} module. \subsection{Examples} Here are a few examples of how to use the \module{email} package to read, write, and send simple email messages, as well as more complex MIME messages. First, let's see how to create and send a simple text message: \verbatiminput{email-simple.py} Here's an example of how to send a MIME message containing a bunch of family pictures that may be residing in a directory: \verbatiminput{email-mime.py} Here's an example of how to send the entire contents of a directory as an email message: \footnote{Thanks to Matthew Dixon Cowles for the original inspiration and examples.} \verbatiminput{email-dir.py} And finally, here's an example of how to unpack a MIME message like the one above, into a directory of files: \verbatiminput{email-unpack.py}