mailexec(1)
NAME
mailexec - run program on messages in mbox file or maildir
SYNOPSIS
mailexec [-nvFR] mailbox program [arg ...]
DESCRIPTION
mailexec runs a program over every message in mailbox, which must be an
mbox-format mail file or maildir directory. For each message
encountered, mailexec executes program with the specified arguments,
supplying the message as standard input. mailexec synthesizes a
"From " line and a "Return-Path:" header field for each message if the
message does not already contain one. (This behavior can be modified
by the -F and -R flags, described below.)
- When parsing mbox format files, mailexec unescapes "From " lines. If a
line begins with one or more ">" characters followed by "From ",
mailexec deletes one of the ">" characters. If you do not want this
unescaping behavior, see the formail(1) utility, which has a -s flag that performs a similar function to mailexec. - OPTIONS
- -n When processing a maildir, causes mailexec to look exclusively at
"new" messages that have not yet been moved to the cur directory.
- -v Turns on verbose mode. If mailbox is a maildir, mailexec prints
out the name of each file it processes inside the maildir. If
mailbox is an mbox format file, mailexec prints the message-id of each message it processes (as long as messages have a message-id
header). - -F Suppresses printing of the initial "From " line at the beginning of
each message.
- -R Suppresses printing of initial "Return-Path:" lines.
EXAMPLES
- To get the same behavior as the Unix from(1) command on a mail directory dir, you can run either of the following two commands:
- mailexec -n dir head -1
mailexec -n dir sed -ne 1p - To convert an mbox-format file mbox into a maildir directory dir, you can run:
mailexec mbox deliver dir/- Conversely, to convert maildir dir into an mbox-format file mbox, run:
mailexec dir deliver mbox- To train the spamassassin filter on a mail folder called spam
containing unwanted messages, run:
mailexec spam sa-learn --spam- Note that this works whether spam is an mbox format file or a maildir directory.
- If you have an old mbox file or maildir directory box and wish to
"import" the old mail into your web mail account, say
example@gmail.com, you can run:
mailexec -F box sendmail example@gmail.com- Note again that this works whether box is an mbox format file or a maildir directory.
SEE ALSO
avenger(1), deliver(1), dotlock(1), avenger.local(8)
The Mail Avenger home page: <http://www.mailavenger.org/>.
BUGS
When reading from a maildir and synthesizing a "From " line, mailexec
guesses the delivery date of the message based on the name of the file,
which works in practice but could be considered dangerous since file
names in maildirs are supposed to be opaque. Thus, while generally
mailexec places sensible dates in "From " lines and processes maildir
messages in order of delivery, it might be unwise to rely on this
behavior.
mailexec generates the time for the "From " line in the local time
zone, as is customary on Unix. This could lead to loss of information
when transferring mailboxes across time zones or combining mailboxes
created in different timezones. Moreover, this practice is
incompatible with qmail, which uses GMT in the "From " line.
mailexec expects that if there is a "Return-Path:" header field, it
will be the first header field in the message (possibly after the
initial "From " line, which is not itself a header field).
There are many different variants of the mbox message format. mailexec
expects the "mboxrd" variant, in which each message is delimited by a
"From " line at the beginning and a blank line at the end, and every
line beginning with either "From " or one or more ">" characters
followed by "From " is escaped by adding another ">" character. In
particular, this means mailexec will incorrectly parse System V
"mboxcl2" files, which use "Content-Length:" header fields to determine
message boundaries rather than "From " lines.
mailexec attempts to lock mbox format files, but will execute anyway
even if it cannot obtain the lock. This allows it to work on read-only
files, but if you are highly unlucky could result in the last message
being truncated.
There is no locking for maildir files. If a maildir is modified while
mailexec is running over it, mailexec could miss messages. If you are
concurrently manipulating the maildir with a mail reader, maildir could
even miss old messages that just happen to have been moved from the new
to the cur directory. mailexec will issue a warning if it fails to
open a file that it had previously seen when scanning the directory.
AUTHOR
- David Mazieres