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2989 lines
112 KiB
Plaintext
/* ========================================================================
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* Copyright 1988-2006 University of Washington
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*
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* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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* You may obtain a copy of the License at
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*
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* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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*
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*
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* ========================================================================
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*/
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Documentation of c-client Functions and Interfaces
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REVISED: 19 August 1996
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Credits
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The original version of this document was written by Mark Crispin at
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the University of Washington, and described the version of c-client that
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supported the IMAP2 (RFC 1176) and IMAP2bis (unpublished) protocols.
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This version is a substantial rewrite of that document, and was
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written by Mark Crispin with funding from Sun Microsystems, Incorporated.
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Sun's generous support of this work is gratefully acknowledged.
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Road Map
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This document is organized into the following sections. Except as
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noted, an implementor of an application that uses c-client needs to be
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familiar with all of these sections. Someone who plans to write a new
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mailbox driver for c-client (or otherwise modify it) needs to be familiar
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with all sections, no exception.
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History
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History of how c-client came about.
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Overview
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Read this before designing an application that uses c-client.
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c-client Structures
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Documentation of several important c-client structs which are
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used in, and returned by, c-client calls.
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String Structures
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Documentation of the concept of a "string structure", which
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provides random access to strings without requiring that the
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string be in memory.
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c-client Support Functions
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Documentation of support functions for c-client; these deal
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with c-client functionality.
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Only mail_parameters() is of interest to most application
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developers. Advanced application developers, particularly
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for limited memory systems, may also need to know about the
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readfn_t, mailgets_t, mailcache_t, and tcptimeout_t function
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pointer types, and possibly also the mail_valid_net_parse()
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function.
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Mailbox Access Functions
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Documentation of functions which deal with mailboxes;
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listing, subscribing, creating, deleting, renaming, status
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inquiries, opening, and closing mailboxes.
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Handle Functions
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Documentation of mail stream handles, which provide protection
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for an advanced application which may have multiple pointers to
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a single mail stream. If a stream has a handle on it, closing
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the stream does not release its memory, so pointers to it in
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the application remain valid. Freeing the last handle will free
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the entire stream.
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This is only of interest for advanced application developers.
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Message Data Fetching Functions
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Documentation on message data fetching in an open mailbox,
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including parsed representations of RFC-822 and MIME headers
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and message text. Also how to fetch message attributes (flags,
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internal date, sizes).
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Message Status Manipulation Functions
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Documentation on altering message flags in an open mailbox.
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Mailbox Searching
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Documentation on searching an open mailbox for messages which
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match certain criteria (e.g. "messages sent July 4 from Jones
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with text `Paris'").
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Miscellaneous Mailbox and Message Functions
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Documentation on other operations that would be used by an
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application but that don't fit into any of the above categories.
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Date/Time Handling Functions
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Documentation on functions that deal with date/time strings.
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This is only of interest for advanced application developers
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and for implementors of new c-client drivers.
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Utility Functions
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Documentation on internal utility functions.
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This is primarily of interest for implementors of new c-client
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drivers, but advanced application developers may also use some
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of these functions.
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Data Structure Instantiation/Destruction functions
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Documentation on creating and destroy c-client structures.
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This is primarily of interest for implementors of new c-client
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drivers. However, application developers will need some of
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these functions to create and destroy structures which are used
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as arguments to various application functions.
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Authentication Functions
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Documentation on support for network protocol authentication
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functions.
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This is only of interest for implementors of new c-client
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drivers which deal with authentication mechanisms.
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Network Access Functions
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Documentation on creating and destroy c-client structures.
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This is primarily of interest for implementors of new c-client
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drivers which deal with a network. However, advanced
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application developers may need to use this information if they
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wish to insert their own layer into a network session.
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Subscription Management Functions
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Documentation on managing the local (client-based) subscription
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database file.
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This is primarily of interest to advanced application developers.
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Miscellaneous Utility Functions
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Documentation on various useful utility functions, such as "make
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a copy of this string."
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SMTP Functions
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Documentation on posting email messages via SMTP protocol.
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NNTP Functions
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Documentation on posting netnews messages via NNTP protocol.
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RFC 822 Support Functions
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Documentation on public RFC-822/MIME functions.
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This is primarily of interest for implementors of new c-client
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drivers and advanced application developers.
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Operating System-Dependent Public Interface
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Documentation on OS-dependent functions. With the exception of
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fs_get(), fs_give(), and fs_resize(), which should be called
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instead of malloc(), free(), and realloc(), these functions are
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primarily of interest for implementors of new c-client drivers.
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Main Program Callbacks
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Documentation of functions which the main program must provide
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as callbacks from c-client.
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Driver Interface
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Documentation of the driver dispatch vector and the functions
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which a driver must supply.
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This is primarily of interest for implementors of new c-client
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drivers.
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Driver Support Functions
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Documentation of support functions which are called by drivers.
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This is primarily of interest for implementors of new c-client
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drivers.
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History
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The c-client API was originally written by Mark Crispin at Stanford
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University as a set of routines to support IMAP and SMTP from a main
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program which would handle the user interface. In its original form, it
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was written as the low-level routines that were to be used as part of a
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Macintosh client.
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The first IMAP client, MM-D (for "MM on Xerox D machines" -- MM was a
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popular DEC-20 mail program) was written in Interlisp for Xerox Lisp
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machines. At that time, there was no name for the embryonic Mac client,
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but since it was the first one to be written in C instead of Lisp, it was
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given a development name of "C client". This name became "c-client"
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because that is the name of the subdirectory on UNIX where the source files
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were stored.
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To exercise the routines, a minimal main program which uses c-client,
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mtest, was written. mtest has subsequently been extended so that it runs
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on every platform that c-client is ported.
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The real Mac client, was eventually written by Frank Gilmurrary and
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Bill Yeager at Stanford using the autumn 1988 version of c-client and named
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"MacMS". In the winter of 1988-89, Mark Crispin, who had changed jobs to
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the University of Washington, developed MS as an MM-like text-based program
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for UNIX and MailManager as a GUI-based program for NeXT machines.
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The realization sunk in that this API needed its own name. As early
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as spring 1989, there were at least four programs (mtest, MS, MailManager,
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and MacMS) that used it. The name c-client thus became permanent.
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In its history, c-client has undergone two major redesigns, both by
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Mark Crispin who is now on the staff at the University of Washington.
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The first major redesign added the following:
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1) ANSI C calling conventions throughout to assist in function
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argument type checking.
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2) Vectoring mail access calls through "driver" methods; thus
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providing transparent access to multiple types of mail
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stores with the same call.
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3) MIME support.
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The second major redesign was part of the IMAP4 project. Many
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c-client functions were extended with additional arguments and options.
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The driver interface was also made simpler, with more work done by
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driver-independent code.
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Overview
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The most important file for the author of an application using the
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c-client is mail.h. mail.h defines several important structures of
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data which are passed between the main program and the c-client.
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Although some functions (e.g. mail_fetchtext_body()) return the data
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fetched, for certain other data items (e.g. flags) you need to get the
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data as a structure reference. mail.h also defines a large number of
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useful constants and structures.
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When a function in mail.h exists to reference data, it MUST be
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used instead of referencing the structures directly. This is because
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in some cases the data is not actually fetched until a reference (via
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the function call) is made. For example, although the MESSAGECACHE
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element for a message can be obtained by indexing the proper cache
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element in the stream, there is no guarantee that the item in fact
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exists unless mail_fetchstructure_full() is called for that message.
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Less costly functions. also exist to create and load a MESSAGECACHE
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element.
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The main program will probably also need to include smtp.h,
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misc.h, and osdep.h, but this usage should be solely to receive
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function prototypes. Any other definitions in those files should be
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considered private to that module.
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Two important predefined symbols are NIL and T. NIL is any sort
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of "false"; T is any sort of "true". NIL is also used to null-specify
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certain optional arguments.
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* * * IMPORTANT * * *
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Any multi-threaded application should test stream->lock prior to
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calling any c-client stream functions. Any attempt to call a
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mail_xxx() function while one is already in progress on the same
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stream will cause the application to fail in unpredictable ways.
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Note that this check is insufficient in a preemptive-scheduling
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multi-tasking application due to the possibility of a timing race.
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Such applications must be written so that only one process accesses
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the stream, or to have a higher level lock.
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Since MAIL operations will not finish until they are completed, a
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single-tasking application does not have to worry about this problem,
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except in the callback invoked from MAIL (e.g. mm_exists(), etc.) in which
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case the stream is *always* locked.
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c-client Structures
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c-client has a large number of structures which are used for
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multiple functions. The most important of these are described here.
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The MAILSTREAM structure is used to reference open mailboxes.
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Applications may reference the following:
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char *mailbox; mailbox name
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unsigned short use; stream use count, this is incremented
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unsigned short sequence; stream sequence, this is incremented
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each time a stream is reused (i.e.
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mail_open() is called to open a
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different mailbox on this stream)
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unsigned int rdonly : 1; stream is open read-only
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unsigned int anonymous : 1; stream is open with anonymous access
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unsigned int halfopen : 1; stream is half-open; it can be
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reopened or used for functions that
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don't need a open mailbox such as
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mail_create() but no message data
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can be fetched
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unsigned int perm_seen : 1; Seen flag can be set permanently
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unsigned int perm_deleted : 1; Deleted flag can be set permanently
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unsigned int perm_flagged : 1; Flagged flag can be set permanently
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unsigned int perm_answered :1; Answered flag can be set permanently
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unsigned int perm_draft : 1; Draft flag can be set permanently
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unsigned int kwd_create : 1; new user flags can be created by
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referencing then in mail_setflag() or
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mail_clearflag(). Note: this can
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change during a session (e.g. if
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there is a limit on the number of
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keywords), so check after creating a
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new flag to see if any more can be
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created before letting the user try
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to do so
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unsigned long perm_user_flags; corresponding user flags can be set
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permanently. This is a bit mask
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which matches the entries in
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stream->user_flags[]
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unsigned long gensym; generated unique value. Always
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referenced with stream->gensys++
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unsigned long nmsgs; number of messages in current mailbox
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unsigned long recent; number of recent messages in current
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mailbox
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unsigned long uid_validity; UID validity value; this is used to
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verify that recorded UIDs match the
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UIDs that the stream has. If the
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mailbox does not have matching UIDs
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(e.g. the UIDs were lost or not
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recorded) then the UID validity value
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will be different
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unsigned long uid_last; highest currently assigned UID in the
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current mailbox; a new UID will be
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assigned with ++stream->uid_last
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char *user_flags[NUSERFLAGS]; pointers to user flag names in bit
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order from stream->perm_user_flags or
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elt->user_flags
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The following MAILSTREAM values are only used internally:
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DRIVER *dtb; dispatch table for this driver
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void *local; pointer to driver local data
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unsigned int lock : 1; stream lock flag (an operation is in
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progress; used as a bug trap to
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detect recursion back to c-client
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from callback routines).
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unsigned int debug : 1; debugging information should be logged
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via mm_dlog().
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unsigned int silent : 1; don't do main program callbacks on
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this stream (used when a stream is
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opened internally)
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unsigned int scache : 1; short caching; don't cache information
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in memory
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The following MAILSTREAM values are only used by the cache
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manager routine (see the documentation about mailcache_t above):
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unsigned long cachesize; size of c-client message cache
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union {
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void **c; to get at the cache in general
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MESSAGECACHE **s; message cache array
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LONGCACHE **l; long cache array
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} cache;
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The following MAILSTREAM values are for the convenience of
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drivers that use short caching and want to be able to garbage collect
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any values that they returned:
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unsigned long msgno; message number of `current' message
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ENVELOPE *env; pointer to `current' message envelope
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BODY *body; pointer to `current' message body
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char *text; pointer to `current' text
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The MESSAGECACHE structure (commonly called an "elt" as a
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nickname for "cache ELemenT") contains information about messages.
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Applications may use the following:
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unsigned long msgno; message number. If the elt is locked
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(by elt->lockcount++), then the elt
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pointer can be stored (e.g. with the
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data for a window which draws this
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message) and elt->msgno will change
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automatically whenever expunges are
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done so the window will always view
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the correct message. If elt->msgno
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becomes 0, then the message has been
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expunged, but the elt won't be freed
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until the elt lock count is
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decremented (by mail_free_elt()).
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unsigned long uid; message unique ID
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unsigned int hours: 5; internal date hours (0-23)
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unsigned int minutes: 6; internal date minutes (0-59)
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unsigned int seconds: 6; internal date seconds (0-59)
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unsigned int zoccident : 1; non-zero if internal date time zone is
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west of UTC
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unsigned int zhours : 4; internal date time zone hours from UTC
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(0-12)
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unsigned int zminutes: 6; internal date time zone minutes (0-59)
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unsigned int seen : 1; message Seen flag
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unsigned int deleted : 1; message Deleted flag
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unsigned int flagged : 1; message Flagged flag
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unsigned int answered : 1; message Answered glag
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unsigned int draft : 1; message Draft flag
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unsigned int valid : 1; flags are valid in this elt; an elt
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that was newly created but never
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loaded with flags won't have this set.
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unsigned int recent : 1; message recent flag
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unsigned int searched : 1; message matches search criteria in
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most recent mail_search_full() call
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unsigned int spare : 1; reserved for application use
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unsigned int spare2 : 1; reserved for application use
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unsigned int spare3 : 1; reserved for application use
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unsigned int lockcount : 8; non-zero if multiple references to
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this elt. Refer to the msgno member
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for more information.
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unsigned int day : 5; internal date day of month (1-31)
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unsigned int month : 4; internal date month of year (1-12)
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unsigned int year : 7; internal date year since BASEYEAR
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(currently 1970; was 1969 in older
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versions so use BASEYEAR instead of
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having the base year wired in)
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unsigned long user_flags; message user flags; this is a bit mask
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which matches the entries in
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stream->user_flags[]
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unsigned long rfc822_size; size of message in octets
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The following MESSAGECACHE values are only used internally by
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drivers:
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unsigned int sequence : 1; message is in sequence from either
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mail_sequence() or mail_uid_sequence()
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unsigned long data1; first data item
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unsigned long data2; second data item
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unsigned long data3; third data item
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unsigned long data4; fourth data item
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The ADDRESS structure is a parsed form of a linked list of RFC 822
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addresses. It contains the following information:
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char *personal; personal name phrase
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char *adl; at-domain-list (also called "source
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route")
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char *mailbox; mailbox name
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char *host; domain name of mailbox's host
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char *error; error in address from smtp_mail(); if
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an error is returned from smtp_mail()
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||
for one of the recipient addresses
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the SMTP server's error text for that
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||
recipient can be found here. If it
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is null then there was no error (or
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an error was found with a prior
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recipient
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ADDRESS *next; pointer to next address in list
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The ENVELOPE structure is a parsed form of the RFC 822 header.
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Its member names correspond to the RFC 822 field names. It contains
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the following information:
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char *remail; remail header if any
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||
ADDRESS *return_path; error return address
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||
char *date; message composition date string
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ADDRESS *from; from address list
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ADDRESS *sender; sender address list
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ADDRESS *reply_to; reply address list
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||
char *subject; message subject string
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||
ADDRESS *to; primary recipient list
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ADDRESS *cc; secondary recipient list
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ADDRESS *bcc; blind secondary recipient list
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||
char *in_reply_to; replied message ID
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||
char *message_id; message ID
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||
char *newsgroups; USENET newsgroups
|
||
char *followup_to; USENET reply newsgroups
|
||
char *references; USENET references
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||
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||
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||
The BODY structure is a parsed form of a linked list of the MIME
|
||
structure of a message. It contains the following information.
|
||
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||
unsigned short type; body primary type code. This is an
|
||
index into the body_types vector of
|
||
body type names. The following body
|
||
types are pre-defined:
|
||
TYPETEXT unformatted text
|
||
TYPEMULTIPART multiple part
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TYPEMESSAGE encapsulated message
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TYPEAPPLICATION application data
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TYPEAUDIO audio
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||
TYPEIMAGE static image (GIF, JPEG, etc.)
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TYPEVIDEO video
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||
TYPEOTHER unknown
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Additional types up to TYPEMAX are
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||
dynamically defined if they are
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||
encountered by c-client.
|
||
unsigned short encoding; body transfer encoding. This is an
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||
index into the body_encodings vector
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||
of body encoding names. The
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||
following body encodings are
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||
pre-defined:
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||
ENC7BIT 7 bit SMTP semantic data
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||
ENC8BIT 8 bit SMTP semantic data
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||
ENCBINARY 8 bit binary data
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ENCBASE64 base-64 encoded data
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ENCQUOTEDPRINTABLE human-readable 8-as-7 bit data
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||
ENCOTHER unknown
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Additional encodings up to ENCMAX are
|
||
dynamically defined if they are
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||
encountered by c-client.
|
||
char *subtype; body subtype string
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||
PARAMETER *parameter; parameter list
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||
char *id; body content identifier
|
||
char *description; body content description
|
||
unsigned char *contents.text; when composing a message that is NOT
|
||
of TYPEMULTIPART, non-binary text of
|
||
the content is stored here. Note that
|
||
this happens even when the text is
|
||
of TYPEMESSAGE. Text of encoding
|
||
ENC8BIT may be converted to
|
||
ENCQUOTEDPRINTABLE when it is sent.
|
||
This should not be referenced for any
|
||
other reason; in particular, this is
|
||
NOT the way for an application to
|
||
access content data (use
|
||
mail_fetchbody_full() instead).
|
||
BINARY *contents.binary; when composing a message that is NOT
|
||
of TYPEMULTIPART, binary content (of
|
||
encoding ENCBINARY) is stored here.
|
||
It will be converted to ENCBASE64 when
|
||
it is sent.
|
||
This should not be referenced for any
|
||
other reason; in particular, this is
|
||
NOT the way for an application to
|
||
access content data (use
|
||
mail_fetchbody_full() instead).
|
||
PART *contents.part; for body parts of TYPEMULTIPART, this
|
||
contains the list of body parts in
|
||
this multipart
|
||
MESSAGE contents.msg; for body parts of TYPEMESSAGE with
|
||
subtype "RFC822", this contains the
|
||
encapsulated message
|
||
unsigned long size.lines; size in lines
|
||
unsigned long size.bytes; size in octets. This MUST be set when
|
||
composing a message if the encoding is
|
||
ENC8BIT or ENCBINARY.
|
||
char *md5; body content MD5 checksum
|
||
|
||
The following BODY information is used only by c-client
|
||
internally. The use of this data is driver-specific and it can not be
|
||
relied-upon by applications.
|
||
|
||
unsigned char *contents.text; drivers can store a pointer to the
|
||
body contents as text here.
|
||
unsigned long size.ibytes; internal size of the body content (prior
|
||
to newline conversion, etc.) in octets
|
||
|
||
|
||
The MESSAGE structure is a parsed form of a MESSAGE/RFC822 MIME
|
||
body part. It contains the following information:
|
||
|
||
ENVELOPE *env; encapsulated message RFC 822 header
|
||
BODY *body; encapsulated message MIME structure
|
||
|
||
The following MESSAGE information is used only by c-client
|
||
internally. The use of this data is driver-specific and it can not be
|
||
relied-upon by applications.
|
||
|
||
char *hdr; encapsulated message header
|
||
unsigned long hdrsize; message header size
|
||
char *text; message in RFC 822 form
|
||
unsigned long offset; offset of text from header
|
||
|
||
|
||
The PARAMETER structure is a parsed form of a linked list of
|
||
attribute/value pairs. It contains the following information:
|
||
|
||
char *attribute; attribute name
|
||
char *value; value
|
||
PARAMETER *next; next parameter in list
|
||
|
||
|
||
The PART structure is a parsed form of a linked list of MIME body
|
||
parts. It contains the following information:
|
||
|
||
BODY body; body information for this part
|
||
PART *next; next body part
|
||
|
||
The following PART information is used only by c-client
|
||
internally. The use of this data is driver-specific and it can not be
|
||
relied-upon by applications.
|
||
|
||
unsigned long offset; offset from body origin
|
||
|
||
|
||
The NETMBX structure is a parsed form of a network mailbox name:
|
||
|
||
char host[NETMAXHOST]; remote host name
|
||
char user[NETMAXUSER]; remote user name if specified
|
||
char mailbox[NETMAXMBX]; remote mailbox name
|
||
char service[NETMAXSRV]; remote service name (IMAP4, NNTP, etc.)
|
||
unsigned long port; TCP/IP port number if specified
|
||
unsigned int anoflag : 1; anonymous access requested
|
||
unsigned int dbgflag : 1; protocol debugging telemetry, via
|
||
mm_dlog(), requested
|
||
|
||
|
||
The STRINGLIST structure is a list of strings (which may have
|
||
embedded NULs) and their lengths:
|
||
|
||
char *text; string text
|
||
unsigned long size; string length
|
||
STRINGLIST *next; next string in list
|
||
|
||
String Structures
|
||
|
||
A string structure is analogous to a char*, and is used in some
|
||
functions as an input argument. It represents a string of data in a
|
||
way that does not necessarily require the entire string to be in
|
||
memory at once. This is essential for small machines with
|
||
highly-restricted memory limits (e.g. DOS).
|
||
|
||
String Structure Access
|
||
|
||
To use a string structure, the caller needs to know a string
|
||
driver and needs to know the driver-dependent data used by that string
|
||
structure. A simple string driver is mail_string, a string driver
|
||
that takes an in-memory char* string as the driver-dependent data.
|
||
The DOS port uses string drivers that take a struct holding a file
|
||
descriptor and a file offset. Often the user of a string driver is
|
||
the same module that defined it, so usually the programmer knows about
|
||
its conventions.
|
||
|
||
The following calls are used to access a string structure:
|
||
|
||
void INIT (STRING *s,STRINGDRIVER *d,void *data,unsigned long size);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure to be initialized
|
||
d pointer to the string driver
|
||
data pointer to driver-dependent data, from which the
|
||
driver can determine string data
|
||
size size of the string
|
||
This call initializes the string stucture.
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned long SIZE (STRING *s);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure
|
||
This call returns the number of characters remaining in the string
|
||
after the current string character pointer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char CHR (STRING *s);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure
|
||
This call returns the character at the current string character
|
||
pointer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char SNX (STRING *s);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure
|
||
This call returns the character at the current string character
|
||
pointer, and increments the string character pointer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned long GETPOS (STRING *s);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure
|
||
This returns the value of the current string character pointer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void SETPOS (STRING *s,unsigned long i);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure
|
||
i new string pointer value
|
||
This method sets the string character pointer to the given value.
|
||
|
||
|
||
String Structure Internals
|
||
|
||
A string structure holds the following data:
|
||
|
||
void *data; used by the string driver as it likes
|
||
unsigned long data1; used by the string driver as it likes
|
||
unsigned long size; static, holds the total length of the string
|
||
from the INIT call
|
||
char *chunk; current chunk of in-memory data; this is used
|
||
for buffering to avoid unnecessary calls to
|
||
the string driver's next method.
|
||
unsigned long chunksize; size of an in-memory data chunk
|
||
unsigned long offset; position of first character of the chunk in
|
||
the overall string
|
||
char *curpos; current position; this is what CHR() will
|
||
access
|
||
unsigned long cursize; number of characters remaining in the current
|
||
string
|
||
STRINGDRIVER *dtb; the string driver for this string structure
|
||
|
||
|
||
A string structure is manipulated by a string driver, which has
|
||
the following access methods:
|
||
|
||
void (*init) (STRING *s,void *data,unsigned long size);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure to be initialized
|
||
data pointer to driver-dependent data, from which the
|
||
driver can determine string data
|
||
size size of the string
|
||
This method initializes the string stucture. It can use the data,
|
||
data1, and chunksize values as it likes. The remaining values must be
|
||
set up as follows:
|
||
size static, copied from the size argument
|
||
chunk pointer to a buffer loaded with initial data
|
||
chunksize size of the buffer
|
||
offset 0
|
||
curpos copied from chunk
|
||
cursize copied from chunksize
|
||
dtb STRINGDRIVER identity pointer
|
||
|
||
|
||
char (*next) (STRING *s);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure
|
||
This method returns the character at the current string character
|
||
pointer, and increments the string character pointer. This method
|
||
is likely to call the setpos method if the desired character is not in
|
||
the current chunk.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void (*setpos) (STRING *s,unsigned long i);
|
||
s pointer to the string structure
|
||
i new string pointer value
|
||
This method sets the string character pointer to the given value. If
|
||
the pointer is not in the current chunk, then a new chunk is loaded
|
||
and the associated values (chunk, offset, curpos, cursize) are
|
||
adjusted accordingly.
|
||
|
||
c-client Support Functions
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_string_init (STRING *s,void *data,unsigned long size);
|
||
char mail_string_next (STRING *s);
|
||
void mail_string_setpos (STRING *s,unsigned long i);
|
||
|
||
These three functions are the init, next, and setpos string
|
||
structure access methods for the build-in mail_string string driver.
|
||
mail_string is a basic string driver for a char* string. See the
|
||
documentation below on "String Structures" for more information.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_link (DRIVER *driver);
|
||
driver pointer to the driver to be added
|
||
|
||
This function adds the specified driver to the list of mailbox
|
||
drivers. Initially there are no drivers lunk, so all programs which
|
||
intend to use c-client need to have at least one call to this function.
|
||
|
||
A function which uses IMAP4 would have a statement such as:
|
||
mail_link (&imapdriver); /* link in IMAP driver */
|
||
early in the program's initialization. Normally, this is done by the
|
||
statement
|
||
#include "linkage.c"
|
||
which will include the "system standard driver linkage" defined when
|
||
c-client was built. By using linkage.c instead of explicit mail_link()
|
||
calls, you are guaranteed that you will have a consistant linkage among
|
||
all software built on this system.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void auth_link (AUTHENTICATOR *auth);
|
||
auth pointer to the authenticator to be added
|
||
|
||
This function adds the specified authenticator to the list of
|
||
authenticators. Initially there are no authenticators lunk. Normally,
|
||
this is done by linkage.c so you don't need to call this routine
|
||
explicitly.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void *mail_parameters (MAILSTREAM *stream,long function,void *value);
|
||
stream stream to poll or NIL
|
||
function function code
|
||
value new value for function codes that change a parameter
|
||
|
||
This function fetches or changes the settings of various c-client
|
||
operational parameters depending upon the function. If the stream is
|
||
specified, only the action for the underlying driver for that stream is
|
||
taken; however, the scope of the operational parameters is global so
|
||
there is generally no reason for the stream argument ever to be
|
||
non-NIL.
|
||
|
||
The function codes ENABLE_DRIVER and DISABLE_DRIVER take a driver
|
||
pointer as a value. These functions enable and disable mailbox
|
||
processing by that driver. By default, all drivers are enabled.
|
||
|
||
The remaining function codes are in a pair named GET_xxx to
|
||
fetch an operational parameter and SET_xxx to set the parameter:
|
||
|
||
GET_DRIVERS / SET_DRIVERS
|
||
The list of currently lunk drivers.
|
||
|
||
GET_GETS / SET_GETS
|
||
If non-NIL, points to a function for reading message text.
|
||
Defaults to NIL.
|
||
This function is called with three arguments; a function
|
||
pointer to a "reading function", a stream for the reading
|
||
function, and a size in octets. The reading function is
|
||
in turn called with the stream, a size in octets, and a
|
||
pointer to a readin buffer.
|
||
This function returns with a char* string, which will be
|
||
returned by the mail_fetchheader(), mail_fetchtext(), or
|
||
mail_fetchbody() function which triggered the message text
|
||
reading.
|
||
The purpose is to permit reading of large strings, without
|
||
requiring an in-memory buffer for the entire string. The idea
|
||
is that this function can store the data in some form other
|
||
than a char* (e.g. a temporary file) and the main program will
|
||
recognize that it should get the text from there instead of
|
||
from the results from mail_fetch....().
|
||
This is only supported on DOS and Win16; on other platforms it
|
||
is inconsistent whether or not it works.
|
||
|
||
GET_CACHE / SET_CACHE
|
||
Points to the c-client cache manager function. Defaults to
|
||
mm_cache().
|
||
|
||
GET_SMTPVERBOSE / SET_SMTPVERBOSE
|
||
If non-NIL, points to a function that accepts a char* string.
|
||
This function is called any time the SMTP routines receive a
|
||
response code less than 100. The argument is the text of the
|
||
response code
|
||
|
||
GET_RFC822OUTPUT / SET_RFC822OUTPUT
|
||
If non-NIL, points to an alternate rfc822_output() function.
|
||
rfc822_output() will call this function and return instead of
|
||
doing its normal action. See the description of
|
||
rfc822_output() for more information.
|
||
|
||
GET_USERNAME / SET_USERNAME
|
||
The logged-in user name.
|
||
|
||
GET_HOMEDIR / SET_HOMEDIR
|
||
The home directory path name.
|
||
|
||
GET_LOCALHOST / SET_LOCALHOST
|
||
The local host name.
|
||
|
||
GET_SYSINBOX / SET_SYSINBOX
|
||
The "system INBOX" (where mail is delivered) path name.
|
||
|
||
GET_OPENTIMEOUT / SET_OPENTIMEOUT
|
||
TCP/IP open timeout in seconds. Defaults to 0 (system
|
||
default timeout, usually 75 seconds on Unix).
|
||
|
||
GET_READTIMEOUT / SET_READTIMEOUT
|
||
TCP/IP read timeout in seconds. Defaults to 0 (no timeout).
|
||
|
||
GET_WRITETIMEOUT / SET_WRITETIMEOUT
|
||
TCP/IP write timeout in seconds. Defaults to 0 (no timeout).
|
||
|
||
GET_CLOSETIMEOUT / SET_CLOSETIMEOUT
|
||
TCP/IP close timeout in seconds. Defaults to 0 (no timeout).
|
||
|
||
GET_TIMEOUT / SET_TIMEOUT
|
||
If non-NIL, points to the function called when a TCP/IP
|
||
timeout occurs. This function is called with the number of
|
||
seconds since the start of the TCP operation. If it returns
|
||
non-zero, the TCP/IP operation is continued; if it returns
|
||
non-zero, the TCP/IP connection is aborted.
|
||
|
||
GET_RSHTIMEOUT / SET_RSHTIMEOUT
|
||
rsh connection timeout in seconds. Defaults to 15 seconds.
|
||
|
||
GET_MAXLOGINTRIALS / SET_MAXLOGINTRIALS
|
||
The maximum number of login attempts permitted in an IMAP or
|
||
POP connection. Defaults to 3.
|
||
|
||
GET_LOOKAHEAD / SET_LOOKAHEAD
|
||
The number of subsequent envelopes prefetched in IMAP when an
|
||
envelope is fetched. Defaults to 20.
|
||
|
||
GET_IMAPPORT / SET_IMAPPORT
|
||
The IMAP port number. Defaults to 143.
|
||
|
||
GET_PREFETCH / SET_PREFETCH
|
||
The number of envelopes prefetched in IMAP from the results
|
||
of a SEARCH. Defaults to 20.
|
||
|
||
GET_CLOSEONERROR / SET_CLOSEONERROR
|
||
If non-NIL, close an opening IMAP connection if the SELECT
|
||
command fails instead of returning a half-open stream.
|
||
Defaults to NIL.
|
||
|
||
GET_POP3PORT / SET_POP3PORT
|
||
The POP3 port number. Defaults to 110.
|
||
|
||
GET_UIDLOOKAHEAD / SET_UIDLOOKAHEAD
|
||
The number of UIDs premapped when a message number is
|
||
translated to a UID. Defaults to 1000.
|
||
|
||
GET_MBXPROTECTION / SET_MBXPROTECTION
|
||
Default file protection for newly created mailboxes.
|
||
Defaults to 0600.
|
||
|
||
GET_DIRPROTECTION / SET_DIRPROTECTION
|
||
Default file protection for newly created directories.
|
||
Defaults to 0700.
|
||
|
||
GET_LOCKPROTECTION / SET_LOCKPROTECTION
|
||
Default file protection for locks. Defaults to 0666.
|
||
WARNING: don't blithely change this. If other processes
|
||
can't get access to a lock then they will have trouble in
|
||
locking properly.
|
||
|
||
GET_FROMWIDGET / SET_FROMWIDGET
|
||
If non-NIL, APPEND in the Unix mbox format will insert a
|
||
">" character in front of all lines which begin with the
|
||
string "From ". If NIL, it will only do so if the entire
|
||
line looks like a message delimiter (that is, the date is
|
||
also in correct format). Defaults to T.
|
||
|
||
GET_NEWSACTIVE / SET_NEWSACTIVE
|
||
Netnews active file path name.
|
||
|
||
GET_NEWSSPOOL / SET_NEWSSPOOL
|
||
Netnews spool directory path name.
|
||
|
||
GET_NEWSRC / SET_NEWSRC
|
||
Netnews newsgroup reading status file (.newsrc) path name.
|
||
|
||
GET_EXTENSION / SET_EXTENSION
|
||
If non-NIL, points to a string holding the extension for all
|
||
mailbox files. This is only supported on DOS and Win16.
|
||
|
||
GET_DISABLEFCNTLLOCK / SET_DISABLEFCNTLLOCK
|
||
If non-NIL, disables fcntl() locking on SVR4. This is done
|
||
if fcntl() tends to hang for no good reason. Now that the
|
||
fcntl() code checks for NFS files and no-ops the locking,
|
||
this problem usually doesn't happen much any more. Defaults
|
||
to NIL.
|
||
|
||
GET_LOCKEACCESERROR / SET_LOCKEACCESERROR
|
||
If non-NIL, give a warning if an attempt to create a .lock
|
||
file gets an EACCES ("Permission denied") error. This usually
|
||
means that somebody protected the system inbox directory (e.g.
|
||
/var/mail) instead of making it public-write with the sticky
|
||
bit. Defaults to non-NIL, since this is usually bad news.
|
||
|
||
GET_LISTMAXLEVEL / SET_LISTMAXLEVEL
|
||
The maximum depth of recusion that LIST will go on a *
|
||
wildcard. Defaults to 20.
|
||
|
||
GET_ANONYMOUSHOME / SET_ANONYMOUSHOME
|
||
The anonymous use home directory name.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef long (*readfn_t) (void *stream,unsigned long size,char *buffer);
|
||
stream a designator suitable
|
||
size a number of octets to read
|
||
buffer a buffer of at least size octets for readin
|
||
|
||
This function reads the given number of octets into the buffer,
|
||
using the given stream. What sort of object the stream is depends upon
|
||
the function and its caller, so you must make sure that the readfn is
|
||
suitable for the caller's purpose. Common uses include support of the
|
||
mailgets function (see below) and of reading from local files on systems
|
||
with limited address space.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef char *(*mailgets_t) (readfn_t f,void *stream,unsigned long size);
|
||
f the readfn to use
|
||
stream stream argument for the readfn
|
||
size total number of octets to read
|
||
|
||
This is the argument to the SET_GETS mail_parameter() call. This
|
||
function must read size octets from the stream, using the readfn f. It
|
||
may call f multiple times to accomplish this; this will read the data in
|
||
a serial fashion. So, for example, if size is a megabyte and there is
|
||
only 4K of available buffer space, it can call f 256 times to satisfy
|
||
the request. There is no way to back up in the reading, so any
|
||
processing or saving of the data must be done when it is read.
|
||
|
||
The function mm_gets() in mail.c is a sample mailgets function; it
|
||
reads the first MAXMESSAGESIZE of data into memory and discards the
|
||
rest.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef void *(*mailcache_t) (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,long op);
|
||
stream stream to cache manage
|
||
msgno message to cache manage in the stream
|
||
op cache management operation
|
||
|
||
This function manages the c-client cache. Normally, a program will
|
||
use the default c-client cache manager routine mm_cache(). However, a
|
||
main program may want to supply its own cache manager, e.g. it may want
|
||
to store the data on a disk file instead of in memory on DOS and Win16
|
||
where memory is tight.
|
||
|
||
If you write your own cache manager, you need to examine the
|
||
default mm_cache() manager closely, as well as paying close attention to
|
||
what goes into an elt (a MESSAGECACHE element). It is highly likely
|
||
that if you roll elts out to disk, you will want to set stream->scache
|
||
and *NOT* use long elts (because long elts have ENVELOPE and BODY
|
||
pointers that you would have to know how to write to disk and read back).
|
||
|
||
The cache management functions are one of the following:
|
||
|
||
CH_INIT Initialize the entire cache for the stream. This is
|
||
called only when creating a new stream or when freeing
|
||
it. The msgno argument is ignored.
|
||
|
||
CH_SIZE Make sure that the cache is at least large enough to
|
||
support msgno. This is a request to grow the cache if
|
||
necessary, not shrink it.
|
||
|
||
CH_MAKELELT Return a long elt for msgno, creating it if necessary.
|
||
This is the underlying support function for mail_lelt().
|
||
|
||
CH_LELT Return the long elt for msgno, or NIL if it does not
|
||
already exist.
|
||
|
||
CH_MAKEELT Return an elt for msgno, creating it if necessary.
|
||
This is the underlying support function for mail_elt().
|
||
|
||
CH_ELT Return the elt for msgno, or NIL if it does not already
|
||
exist.
|
||
|
||
CH_FREE Free the [l]elt for msgno.
|
||
|
||
CH_EXPUNGE Free the [l]elt for msgno, and reclaim its position.
|
||
All subsequent elts are renumbered with their elt->msgno
|
||
decremented by 1. [Hence msgno+1 becomes msgno, etc.]
|
||
This supports message expunging from the cache.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef long (*tcptimeout_t) (long time);
|
||
time total time spent since TCP operation started
|
||
|
||
This function is called when a TCP operation times out. It is set
|
||
by the SET_TIMEOUT mail_parameter(). The function can return non-zero
|
||
to continue the TCP operation (e.g. after outputting a "do you still
|
||
want to wait" prompt) or zero if it wants the TCP operation to abort and
|
||
close. If the TCP operation aborts, it will likely cause the upper
|
||
level IMAP, SMTP, etc. stream to abort and close as well.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DRIVER *mail_valid (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox,char *purpose);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use for validation
|
||
mailbox mailbox name to validate
|
||
purpose filled in as xxx in "Can't xxx" in error messages
|
||
|
||
This function validates the given mailbox name. It successful, it
|
||
returns the driver that can open that name if successful, otherwise it
|
||
returns NIL. If stream is non-NIL, the mailbox name must be valid for
|
||
the type of mailbox associated with that stream (e.g. an NNTP name can
|
||
not be used with an IMAP stream). If purpose is non-NIL, an error
|
||
message is passed via mm_log() when an error occurs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DRIVER *mail_valid_net (char *name,DRIVER *drv,char *host,char *mailbox);
|
||
name mailbox name to validate
|
||
drv driver name to validate against
|
||
host buffer to return host name if non-NIL
|
||
mailbox buffer to return remote mailbox name if non-NIL
|
||
|
||
This function is an alternative to mail_valid_net_parse(). It
|
||
validates the given mailbox name as a network name and makes sure that
|
||
its service name is the same as the driver in drv. If successful, it
|
||
returns drv, and copies the host and mailbox strings as needed.
|
||
Otherwise it returns NIL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_valid_net_parse (char *name,NETMBX *mb);
|
||
name mailbox name to parse
|
||
mb pointer to NETMBX structure to return
|
||
|
||
This function parses a network mailbox name. If the name is a
|
||
network mailbox name, it returns non-NIL, with the NETMBX structure
|
||
loaded with the results form the parse.
|
||
|
||
Mailbox Access Functions
|
||
|
||
void mail_list (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *ref,char *pat);
|
||
void mail_scan (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *ref,char *pat,char *contents);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
ref mailbox reference string
|
||
pat mailbox pattern string
|
||
contents contents to search
|
||
|
||
This function returns a list of mailboxes via the mm_list()
|
||
callback. The reference is applied to the pattern in an implementation
|
||
dependent fashion, and the resulting string is used to search for
|
||
matching mailbox names. "*" is a wildcard which matches zero or more
|
||
characters; "%" is a variant which does not descend a hierarchy level.
|
||
Read the IMAP specification for more information.
|
||
|
||
mail_scan() is a variant which takes a string to search for in the
|
||
text of the mailbox. The string is a free-text string, without regard
|
||
for message boundaries, and thus the choice of strings must be made
|
||
with care.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_lsub (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *ref,char *pat);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
ref mailbox reference string
|
||
pat mailbox pattern string
|
||
|
||
This function returns a list of subscribed mailboxes via the
|
||
mm_lsub() callback. The reference is applied to the pattern in an
|
||
implementation dependent fashion, and the resulting string is used to
|
||
search for matching mailbox names in the subscription list. "*" is a
|
||
wildcard which matches zero or more characters; "%" is a variant which
|
||
does not descend a hierarchy level. Read the IMAP specification for
|
||
more information.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_subscribe (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
mailbox mailbox name
|
||
|
||
This function adds the given name to the subscription list. It
|
||
returns T if successful, NIL if unsuccessful. If unsuccessful, an
|
||
error message is returned via the mm_log() callback.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_unsubscribe (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
mailbox mailbox name
|
||
|
||
This function removes the given name from the subscription list.
|
||
It returns T if successful, NIL if unsuccessful. If unsuccessful, an
|
||
error message is returned via the mm_log() callback.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_create (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
mailbox mailbox name
|
||
|
||
This function creates a mailbox with the given name. It returns T
|
||
if successful, NIL if unsuccessful. If unsuccessful, an error message
|
||
is returned via the mm_log() callback.
|
||
|
||
It is an error to create INBOX or a mailbox name which already
|
||
exists.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_delete (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
mailbox mailbox name
|
||
|
||
This function deletes the named mailbox. It returns T if
|
||
successful, NIL if unsuccessful. If unsuccessful, an error message is
|
||
returned via the mm_log() callback.
|
||
|
||
It is an error to delete INBOX or a mailbox name which does not
|
||
already exist.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_rename (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *old,char *newname);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
old existing mailbox name
|
||
newname new (not yet existing) mailbox name
|
||
|
||
This function renames the old mailbox to the new mailbox name.
|
||
It returns T if successful, NIL if unsuccessful. If unsuccessful, an
|
||
error message is returned via the mm_log() callback.
|
||
|
||
It is an error to reanme a mailbox that does not exist, or rename
|
||
a mailbox to a name that already exists. It is permitted to rename
|
||
INBOX; a new empty INBOX is created in its place.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_status (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mbx,long flags);
|
||
stream if non-NIL, stream to use
|
||
mbx mailbox name
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function returns the status of the given mailbox name via the
|
||
mm_status() callback. It returns T if successful, NIL if unsuccessful.
|
||
If unsuccessful, an error message is returned via the mm_log()
|
||
callback.
|
||
|
||
The options are a bit mask with one or more of the following,
|
||
indicating the data which should be returned.
|
||
SA_MESSAGES number of messages in the mailbox
|
||
SA_RECENT number of recent messages in the mailbox
|
||
SA_UNSEEN number of unseen messages in the mailbox
|
||
SA_UIDNEXT next UID value to be assigned
|
||
SA_UIDVALIDITY UID validity value
|
||
|
||
Note that, depending upon implementation, some of these values may
|
||
be more costly to get than others. For example, calculating the
|
||
number of unseen messages may require opening the mailbox and scanning
|
||
all of the message flags. A mail_status() call should thus be used
|
||
with option flags specifying only the data that is actually needed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MAILSTREAM *mail_open (MAILSTREAM *oldstream,char *name,long options);
|
||
oldstream if non-NIL, stream to recycle
|
||
name mailbox name to open
|
||
options option flags.
|
||
|
||
This function opens the mailbox and if successful returns a stream
|
||
suitable for use by the other MAIL functions.
|
||
|
||
If oldstream is non-NIL, an attempt is made to reuse oldstream as
|
||
the stream for this mailbox; this is useful when you want to open
|
||
another mailbox to the same IMAP or NNTP server without having to open
|
||
a new connection. Doing this will close the previously open mailbox.
|
||
|
||
The options are a bit mask with one or more of the following:
|
||
OP_DEBUG Log IMAP protocol telemetry through mm_debug()
|
||
OP_READONLY Open mailbox read-only.
|
||
OP_ANONYMOUS Don't use or update a .newsrc file for news.
|
||
OP_SHORTCACHE Don't cache envelopes or body structures
|
||
OP_SILENT Don't pass mailbox events (internal use only)
|
||
OP_PROTOTYPE Return the "prototype stream" for the driver
|
||
associated with this mailbox instead of
|
||
opening the stream
|
||
OP_HALFOPEN For IMAP and NNTP names, open a connection
|
||
to the server but don't open a mailbox.
|
||
OP_EXPUNGE Silently expunge the oldstream before recycling
|
||
|
||
NIL is returned if this function fails for any reason.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MAILSTREAM *mail_close (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
MAILSTREAM *mail_close_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,long options);
|
||
stream stream to close
|
||
options option flags
|
||
This function closes the MAIL stream and frees all resources
|
||
associated with it that it may have created (subject to any handles
|
||
existing).
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_close_full() are a bit mask with one or more
|
||
of the following:
|
||
CL_EXPUNGE Silently expunge before closing
|
||
|
||
This function always returns NIL, so it can be used as:
|
||
stream = mail_close (stream);
|
||
|
||
Handle Functions
|
||
|
||
Handles are used when an entity that wishes to access the stream
|
||
may survive the stream without knowing that it outlived it. For
|
||
example, an object reading a message may have a handle to a stream,
|
||
but the message selection object that spawned it (and which owns the
|
||
stream) may have gone away. A stream can be closed or recycled while
|
||
handles are pointing at it, but it is not completely freed until all
|
||
handles are gone. A stream may have an arbitrary number of handles.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MAILHANDLE *mail_makehandle (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to make handle to
|
||
|
||
This function creates and returns a handle to the stream.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_free_handle (MAILHANDLE **handle);
|
||
handle pointer to handle to release
|
||
|
||
This function frees the handle and notifies the stream that it has
|
||
one fewer handle. If this is the last handle on the stream and the
|
||
stream has been closed, then the stream is freed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MAILSTREAM *mail_stream (MAILHANDLE *handle);
|
||
handle handle to look up
|
||
|
||
This function returns the stream associated with the handle if and
|
||
only if the stream still represents the same MAIL connection associated
|
||
with the handle. Otherwise, NIL is returned (meaning that there is no
|
||
active stream associated with this handle).
|
||
|
||
Message Data Fetching Functions
|
||
|
||
[Note!! There is an important difference between a "sequence" and a
|
||
"msgno". A sequence is a string representing one or more messages in
|
||
IMAP4-style sequence format ("n", "n:m", or combination of these
|
||
delimited by commas), whereas a msgno is an int representing a single
|
||
message.]
|
||
|
||
void mail_fetchfast (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence);
|
||
void mail_fetchfast_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,long flags);
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
sequence IMAP-format set of message sequence numbers
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes a cache load of all the "fast" information
|
||
(internal date, RFC 822 size, and flags) for the given sequence. Since
|
||
all this information is also fetched by mail_fetchstructure(), this
|
||
function is generally not used unless the OP_SHORTCACHE option in the
|
||
mail_open() call is used.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_fetchfast_full() are a bit mask with one or
|
||
more of the following:
|
||
FT_UID The sequence argument contains UIDs instead of
|
||
sequence numbers
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_fetchflags (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence);
|
||
void mail_fetchflags_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,long flags);
|
||
|
||
This function causes a fetch of the flags for the given sequence.
|
||
This main reason for using this function is to update the flags in the
|
||
local cache in case some other process changed the flags (multiple
|
||
simultaneous write access is allowed to the flags) as part of a "check
|
||
entire mailbox" (as opposed to "check for new messages") operation.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_fetchflags_full() are a bit mask with one or more
|
||
of the following:
|
||
FT_UID The sequence argument contains UIDs instead of
|
||
sequence numbers
|
||
|
||
|
||
ENVELOPE *mail_fetchenvelope (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
ENVELOPE *mail_fetchstructure (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
BODY **body);
|
||
ENVELOPE *mail_fetchstructure_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
BODY **body,long flags);
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
body pointer to where to return BODY structure if non-NIL
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
This function causes a fetch of all the structured information
|
||
(envelope, internal date, RFC 822 size, flags, and body structure) for
|
||
the given msgno and, in the case of IMAP, up to MAPLOOKAHEAD (a
|
||
parameter in IMAP2.H) subsequent messages which are not yet in the
|
||
cache. No fetch is done if the envelope for the given msgno is already
|
||
in the cache. The ENVELOPE and the BODY for this msgno is returned.
|
||
It is possible for the BODY to be NIL, in which case no information is
|
||
available about the structure of the message body.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_fetchstructure_full() are a bit mask with one
|
||
or more of the following:
|
||
FT_UID The msgno argument is a UID
|
||
|
||
This is the primary function for fetching non-text information
|
||
about messages, and should be called before any attempt to reference
|
||
cache information about this message via mail_elt().
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *mail_fetchheader (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
char *mail_fetchheader_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
STRINGLIST *lines,unsigned long *len,long flags);
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
lines list of header lines to fetch
|
||
len returned length in octets
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes a fetch of the complete, unfiltered RFC 822
|
||
format header of the specified message as a text string and returns
|
||
that text string.
|
||
|
||
If the lines argument is non-NIL, it contains a list of header
|
||
field names to use in subsetting the header text. Only those lines
|
||
which have that header field name are returned, unless FT_NOT is set in
|
||
which case only those lines which do not have that header field name
|
||
are returned.
|
||
|
||
If the len argument is non-NIL, it holds a pointer in which the
|
||
length of the string in octets is returned. This is useful in cases
|
||
where there may be an embedded null in the string.
|
||
|
||
This function always returns a valid string pointer; if no header
|
||
exists or if it can not be fetched (e.g. by a deceased IMAP stream) an
|
||
empty string is returned.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_fetchheader_full() are a bit mask with one or
|
||
more of the following:
|
||
FT_UID The msgno argument is a UID
|
||
FT_NOT The returned header lines are those that are
|
||
not in the lines argument
|
||
FT_INTERNAL The return string is in "internal" format,
|
||
without any attempt to canonicalize to CRLF
|
||
newlines
|
||
FT_PREFETCHTEXT The RFC822.TEXT should be pre-fetched at the
|
||
same time. This avoids an extra RTT on an
|
||
IMAP connection if a full message text is
|
||
desired (e.g. in a "save to local file"
|
||
operation)
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *mail_fetchtext (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
char *mail_fetchtext_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
unsigned long *len,long flags);
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
len returned length in octets
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes a fetch of the non-header text of the
|
||
specified message as a text string and returns that text string. No
|
||
attempt is made to segregate individual body parts.
|
||
|
||
If the len argument is non-NIL, it holds a pointer in which the
|
||
length of the string in octets is returned. This is useful in cases
|
||
where there may be an embedded null in the string.
|
||
|
||
This function always returns a valid string pointer; if no header
|
||
exists or if it can not be fetched (e.g. by a deceased IMAP stream) an
|
||
empty string is returned.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_fetchtext_full() are a bit mask with one or
|
||
more of the following:
|
||
FT_UID The msgno argument is a UID
|
||
FT_PEEK Do not set the \Seen flag if it not already set
|
||
FT_INTERNAL The return string is in "internal" format,
|
||
without any attempt to canonicalize to CRLF
|
||
newlines
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *mail_fetchbody (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,char *sec,
|
||
unsigned long *len);
|
||
char *mail_fetchbody_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,char *sec,
|
||
unsigned long *len,long flags);
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
sec section specifier
|
||
len returned length in octets
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes a fetch of the particular section of the
|
||
body of the specified message as a text string and returns that text
|
||
string. The section specification is a string of integers delimited by
|
||
period which index into a body part list as per the IMAP4
|
||
specification. Body parts are not decoded by this function; see
|
||
rfc822_base64() and rfc822_quotedprintable().
|
||
|
||
If the len argument is non-NIL, it holds a pointer in which the
|
||
length of the string in octets is returned. This is useful in cases
|
||
where there may be an embedded null in the string.
|
||
|
||
This function may return NIL on error.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_fetchbody_full() are a bit mask with one or
|
||
more of the following:
|
||
FT_UID The msgno argument is a UID
|
||
FT_PEEK Do not set the \Seen flag if it not already set
|
||
FT_INTERNAL The return string is in "internal" format,
|
||
without any attempt to canonicalize to CRLF
|
||
newlines
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned long mail_uid (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
|
||
This function returns the UID for the given message sequence
|
||
number.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_fetchfrom (char *s,MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
long length);
|
||
s destination string
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
length maximum field length
|
||
|
||
This function writes a "from" string of the specified length for
|
||
the specified message, suitable for display to the user in a menu line,
|
||
into the string pointed to by s.
|
||
|
||
If the personal name of the first address in the envelope's from
|
||
item is non-NIL, it is used; otherwise a string is created by appending
|
||
the mailbox of the first address, an "@", and the host of the first
|
||
address. The string is trimmed or padded with trailing spaces as
|
||
necessary to make its length match the length argument.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_fetchsubject (char *s,MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
long length);
|
||
s destination string
|
||
stream stream to fetch on
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
length maximum field length
|
||
|
||
This function returns a "subject" string of the specified length
|
||
for the specified message, suitable for display to the user in a menu
|
||
line.
|
||
|
||
The envelope's subject item is copied and trimmed as necessary
|
||
to make its length be no more what the caller requested. Unlike
|
||
mail_fetchfrom(), this function can return a string of shorter length
|
||
than what the caller requested.
|
||
|
||
|
||
LONGCACHE *mail_lelt (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
MESSAGECACHE *mail_elt (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
stream stream to access
|
||
msgno message sequence number
|
||
|
||
This function returns the cache entry for the specified message.
|
||
Although it will create a cache entry if it does not already exist,
|
||
that functionality is for internal use only. This function should
|
||
never be called without having first called mail_fetchfast() or
|
||
mail_fetchstructure() on the message first.
|
||
|
||
A cache entry holds the internal date/time, flags, and RFC 822
|
||
size of a message. It holds other data as well, but that is for
|
||
internal use only.
|
||
|
||
mail_lelt() is a variant that returns a `long' cache entry, which
|
||
consists of an cache entry (as a structure, not a pointer), an envelope
|
||
pointer, and a body pointer. This is used in conjunction with the elt
|
||
lock count functionality, to allow an application to associate the
|
||
cached envelope and body of a message with an open window even if the
|
||
message is subsequently expunged or if the stream is closed.
|
||
|
||
Unless your application wants to look at cached envelopes and
|
||
bodies even after the message is expunged or the stream is closed, it
|
||
should not use mail_lelt(). Instead, it should use a returned elt from
|
||
mail_elt() and use the elt->msgsno as the argument to
|
||
mail_fetchstructure().
|
||
|
||
BEWARE: the behavior of mail_lelt() is undefined if the
|
||
stream is open with OP_SHORTCACHE. mail_lelt() is extremely
|
||
special purpose, and should only be used in sophisticated
|
||
special purpose applications after discussing its use with
|
||
the c-client author. If you think you need this function,
|
||
you are probably mistaken. In almost all cases, you should
|
||
use mail_elt() and mail_fetchstructure() instead.
|
||
|
||
Message Status Manipulation Functions
|
||
|
||
void mail_setflag (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *flag);
|
||
void mail_setflag_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *flag,
|
||
long flags);
|
||
stream stream to use
|
||
sequence IMAP-format set of message sequence numbers
|
||
flag IMAP-format flag string
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes a store to add the specified flag to the flags
|
||
set for the messages in the specified sequence. If there is any
|
||
problem in setting flags, a message will be passed to the application
|
||
via the mm_log() facility.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_setflag_full() are a bit mask with one or
|
||
more of the following:
|
||
ST_UID The sequence argument contains UIDs instead of
|
||
sequence numbers
|
||
ST_SILENT Do not update the local cache with the new
|
||
value of the flags. This is useful to save
|
||
network bandwidth, at the cost of invalidating
|
||
the cache.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_clearflag (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *flag);
|
||
void mail_clearflag_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *flag,
|
||
long flags);
|
||
stream stream to use
|
||
sequence IMAP-format set of message sequence numbers
|
||
flag IMAP-format flag string
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes a store to delete the specified flag from the
|
||
flags set for the messages in the specified sequence. If there is any
|
||
problem in clearing flags, a message will be passed to the application
|
||
via the mm_log() facility.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_setflag_full() are a bit mask with one or
|
||
more of the following:
|
||
ST_UID The sequence argument contains UIDs instead of
|
||
sequence numbers
|
||
ST_SILENT Do not update the local cache with the new
|
||
value of the flags. This is useful to save
|
||
network bandwidth, at the cost of invalidating
|
||
the cache.
|
||
|
||
Mailbox Searching
|
||
|
||
void mail_search (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *criteria);
|
||
void mail_search_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *charset,SEARCHPGM *pgm,
|
||
long flags);
|
||
stream stream to search
|
||
charset MIME character set to use when searching strings
|
||
pgm search program
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes a mailbox search, using the given MIME
|
||
charset (NIL means the default, US-ASCII) and the given search program.
|
||
A search program is a structure that holds the following data:
|
||
|
||
SEARCHSET *msgno; a set of message sequence numbers
|
||
SEARCHSET *uid; a set of unique identifiers
|
||
SEARCHOR *or; OR result of two search programs
|
||
SEARCHPGMLIST *not; AND result of list of NOT'ed search programs
|
||
SEARCHHEADER *header; message headers
|
||
STRINGLIST *bcc; string(s) appear in bcc list
|
||
STRINGLIST *body; string(s) appear in message body text
|
||
STRINGLIST *cc; string(s) appear in cc list
|
||
STRINGLIST *from; string(s) appear in from
|
||
STRINGLIST *keyword; user flag string(s) set
|
||
STRINGLIST *unkeyword; user flag strings() not set
|
||
STRINGLIST *subject; string(s) appear in subject
|
||
STRINGLIST *text; string(s) appear in message header or body
|
||
STRINGLIST *to; string(s) appear in to list
|
||
unsigned long larger; larger than this many octets
|
||
unsigned long smaller; smaller than this many octes
|
||
The following dates are in form:
|
||
((year - BASEYEAR) << 9) + (month << 5) + day
|
||
unsigned short sentbefore;
|
||
sent before this date
|
||
unsigned short senton; sent on this date
|
||
unsigned short sentsince;
|
||
sent since this date
|
||
unsigned short before; received before this date
|
||
unsigned short on; received on this date
|
||
unsigned short since; received since this date
|
||
unsigned int answered : 1;
|
||
message answered
|
||
unsigned int unanswered : 1;
|
||
message not answered
|
||
unsigned int deleted : 1;
|
||
message deleted
|
||
unsigned int undeleted : 1;
|
||
message not deleted
|
||
unsigned int draft : 1; message is a draft
|
||
unsigned int undraft : 1;
|
||
message is not a draft
|
||
unsigned int flagged : 1;
|
||
message flagged as urgent
|
||
unsigned int unflagged : 1;
|
||
message not flagged as urgent
|
||
unsigned int recent : 1;
|
||
message recent since last parse of mailbox
|
||
unsigned int old : 1; message not recent since last parse of mailbox
|
||
unsigned int seen : 1; message read
|
||
unsigned int unseen : 1;
|
||
message not read
|
||
|
||
The following auxillary structures are used by search programs:
|
||
SEARCHHEADER: header line searching
|
||
char *line; header line field name
|
||
char *text; text header line
|
||
SEARCHHEADER *next; next SEARCHHEADER in list (AND'ed)
|
||
|
||
SEARCHSET: message number set
|
||
unsigned long first; first number in set
|
||
unsigned long last; if non-zero, last number in set
|
||
SEARCHSET *next; next SEARCHSET in list (AND'ed)
|
||
|
||
SEARCHOR: two search programs, OR'ed together
|
||
SEARCHPGM *first; first program
|
||
SEARCHPGM *second; second program
|
||
SEARCHOR *next; next SEARCHOR in list
|
||
|
||
SEARCHPGMLIST: list of search programs
|
||
SEARCHPGM *pgm; search program (AND'd with others in list)
|
||
SEARCHPGMLIST *next; next SEARCHPGM in list
|
||
|
||
mail_search(), the older interface, accepts a search criteria
|
||
argument as a character string in IMAP2 (RFC-1176) format. Do not try
|
||
to use any IMAP4 search criteria with this interface.
|
||
|
||
The application's mm_searched() function is called for each
|
||
message that matches the search criteria. In addition, after the
|
||
search is completed, the "fast" information (see mail_fetchfast_full()
|
||
and envelopes of the searched messages are fetched (this is called
|
||
pre-fetching).
|
||
|
||
If there is any problem in searching, a message will be passed to
|
||
the application via the mm_log() facility.
|
||
|
||
The flags for mail_search_full() are a bit mask with one or more
|
||
of the following:
|
||
SE_UID Return UIDs instead of sequence numbers
|
||
SE_FREE Return the search program to free storage after
|
||
finishing
|
||
SE_NOPREFETCH Don't prefetch searched messages.
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned long *mail_sort (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *charset,SEARCHPGM *spg,
|
||
SORTPGM *pgm,long flags);
|
||
stream stream to sort
|
||
charset MIME character set to use when sorting strings
|
||
spg search program
|
||
pgm sort program
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
|
||
This function is a variant of mail_search_full(). It accepts an
|
||
additional argument, a sort program, which specifies one or more sort
|
||
rules to be applied to the result. If the searching and sorting are
|
||
successful, it returns a 0-terminated vector of message sequence
|
||
numbers (or UIDs if SE_UID is set). This vector is created out of
|
||
free storage, and must be freed with fs_give() when finished with it.
|
||
|
||
A sort program is a structure that holds the following data:
|
||
unsigned int reverse : 1;
|
||
reverse sorting of this key
|
||
short function; sort rule, one of the following:
|
||
SORTDATE message Date
|
||
SORTARRIVAL arrival date
|
||
SORTFROM mailbox in first From address
|
||
SORTSUBJECT message Subject
|
||
SORTTO mailbox in first To address
|
||
SORTCC mailbox in first cc address
|
||
SORTSIZE size of message in octets
|
||
SORTPGM *next; next sort program to be applied if two or more
|
||
messages collate identically with this rule
|
||
|
||
The flags for mail_search_full() are a bit mask with one or more
|
||
of the following:
|
||
SE_UID Return UIDs instead of sequence numbers
|
||
SE_FREE Return the search program to free storage after
|
||
finishing
|
||
SE_NOPREFETCH Don't prefetch searched messages.
|
||
SO_FREE Return the sort program to free storage after
|
||
finishing
|
||
|
||
Miscellaneous Mailbox and Message Functions
|
||
|
||
long mail_ping (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream string to ping
|
||
|
||
The function pings the stream to see if it is still active. It may
|
||
discover new mail; this is the preferred method for a periodic "new mail
|
||
check" as well as a "keep alive" for servers which have an inactivity
|
||
timeout. It returns T if the stream is still alive, NIL otherwise.
|
||
|
||
If new mail is found, the application's mm_exists() function is
|
||
called with the newly-determined number of messages in the mailbox.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_check (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to checkpoint
|
||
|
||
This function causes a mailstore-defined checkpoint of the
|
||
mailbox. This may include such things as a writeback to disk, a check
|
||
for flag changes in a shared mailbox, etc. It is not a "check for new
|
||
mail"; mail_ping() performs this function (as potentially does any other
|
||
function). The status of the check is passed to the application via the
|
||
mm_log() facility.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_expunge (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream string to expunge
|
||
|
||
This function causes an expunge (permanent removal of messages
|
||
which are marked as deleted) of the mailbox. The application's
|
||
mm_expunged() function is called for each message that has been
|
||
expunged. The application's mm_exists() function is called at the start
|
||
and end of the expunge to ensure synchronization. The status of the
|
||
expunge is passed to the application via the mm_log() facility.
|
||
|
||
Note that the decrementing of msgno's for subsequent messages
|
||
happens immediately; for example, if three consequtive messages starting
|
||
at msgno 5 are expunged, mm_expunged() will be called with a msgno of 5
|
||
three times.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_copy (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *mailbox);
|
||
long mail_move (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *mailbox);
|
||
long mail_copy_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *mailbox,
|
||
long options);
|
||
stream stream to copy
|
||
sequence IMAP-format set of message numbers
|
||
mailbox destination mailbox name
|
||
options option flags
|
||
|
||
This function causes the messages in the specified sequence to be
|
||
copied to the specified mailbox. T is returned if the copy is
|
||
successful. mail_move() is equivalent to setting CP_MOVE in the options.
|
||
|
||
If there is any problem in copying, a message will be passed to
|
||
the application via the mm_log() facility and the function returns NIL.
|
||
No copying is actually done in this case.
|
||
|
||
Note that the mailbox must be on the same host as the stream and
|
||
is a mailbox of the type of the source mailbox only.
|
||
|
||
The flags for mail_search_full() are a bit mask with one or more
|
||
of the following:
|
||
CP_UID The sequence argument contains UIDs instead of
|
||
sequence numbers
|
||
CP_MOVE Delete the messages from the current mailbox
|
||
after copying to the destination.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_append (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox,STRING *message);
|
||
long mail_append_full (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox,char *flags,char *date,
|
||
STRING *message);
|
||
stream stream to use if non-NIL (in the IMAP case)
|
||
mailbox destination mailbox name
|
||
flags flags to set on message if non-NIL
|
||
date internal date (received date) to set on message if non-NIL
|
||
message string structure of message to write
|
||
|
||
This function writes the message in the string structure to the
|
||
destination mailbox, along with the flags and date if specified. This
|
||
is useful in those cases where you can't use mail_copy(), e.g. when
|
||
copying from one server to another; you can always fetch the message
|
||
and then mail_append() it to the destination. It may also be useful
|
||
for maintaining an outbox of your outgoing mail.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_gc (MAILSTREAM *stream,long gcflags);
|
||
stream stream to GC if non-NIL (else GC's all streams)
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function garbage collects (purges) the cache of entries of
|
||
a specific type. Some drivers do not allow purging of particular
|
||
cache types, and an attempt to do so is ignored.
|
||
|
||
The flags for mail_gc() are a bit mask with one or more of the
|
||
following:
|
||
GC_ELT message cache elements
|
||
GC_ENV ENVELOPEs and BODYs
|
||
GC_TEXTS cached texts
|
||
|
||
Date/Time Handling Functions
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *mail_date (char *string,MESSAGECACHE *elt);
|
||
string destination string
|
||
elt message cache element containing date
|
||
|
||
This function accepts a message cache element that contains date
|
||
information, and writes an IMAP-4 date string, that is, one in form:
|
||
dd-mmm-yyyy hh:mm:ss +zzzz
|
||
based upon the data in the elt. The destination string must be large
|
||
enough to hold this string.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *mail_cdate (char *string,MESSAGECACHE *elt);
|
||
string destination string
|
||
elt message cache element containing date
|
||
|
||
This function accepts a message cache element that contains date
|
||
information, and writes a ctime() format date string, that is, one in
|
||
form:
|
||
www mmm dd hh:mm:ss yyyy\n
|
||
based upon the data in the elt. The destination string must be large
|
||
enough to hold this string.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_parse_date (MESSAGECACHE *elt,char *string);
|
||
elt message cache element to store parsed date
|
||
string source date string
|
||
|
||
This function parses the date/time stored in the given string,
|
||
in format:
|
||
[www,] date [[hh:mm[:ss][-zzz| +zzzz]
|
||
where the date can be any of:
|
||
mm/dd/yy, mm/dd/yyyy, dd-mmm-yy, dd-mmm-yyyy, dd mmm yy, dd mmm yyyy
|
||
and stores the result of the parse in the elt. If the parse is
|
||
successful, T is returned, else NIL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned long mail_longdate (MESSAGECACHE *elt);
|
||
elt message cache element containing date.
|
||
|
||
This function accepts a message cache element that contains date
|
||
information, and returns the number of days since the base time of the
|
||
imap-4 toolkit. At present, this is the same as the Unix time() value
|
||
for that date/time, and hence can be used for functions such as utime().
|
||
|
||
Utility Functions
|
||
|
||
void mail_debug (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to debug
|
||
|
||
This function enables telemetry logging for this stream. All
|
||
telemetry is passed to the application via the mm_dlog() facility.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mail_nodebug (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to disable debugging
|
||
|
||
This function disables telemetry logging for this stream.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_sequence (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence);
|
||
stream stream to set the sequence bits
|
||
sequence IMAP-format message set string
|
||
|
||
This function parses the given sequence string for message
|
||
numbers, sets the sequence bit in the stream's message cache element
|
||
of all messages in the sequence (and turns it off in all other message
|
||
cache elements). If the parse is successful, T is returned, else NIL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_uid_sequence (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence);
|
||
stream stream to set the sequence bits
|
||
sequence IMAP-format message set string
|
||
|
||
This function parses the given sequence string for unique
|
||
identifiers, sets the sequence bit in the stream's message cache
|
||
element of all messages in the sequence (and turns it off in all other
|
||
message cache elements). If the parse is successful, T is returned,
|
||
else NIL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_parse_flags (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *flag,unsigned long *uf);
|
||
stream stream (used to get user flags)
|
||
flag IMAP-format flag string to parse
|
||
uf returned location of user flags
|
||
|
||
The function parses the given flag string, and returns the system
|
||
flags as its return value and the user flags in the location pointed
|
||
to by the uf argument. If there is an error in parse, a log message
|
||
is issued via mm_log() and this function returns NIL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned long mail_filter (char *text,unsigned long len,STRINGLIST *lines,
|
||
long flags);
|
||
text RFC 822 text to filter
|
||
len length in octets in the text argument
|
||
lines string list of header file names to filter
|
||
flags option flags
|
||
|
||
This function supports the header lines filtering function of
|
||
mail_fetchheader_full(). The lines argument contains a list of header
|
||
field names to use in subsetting the header text. Only those lines
|
||
which have that header field name are returned, unless FT_NOT is set
|
||
in which case only those lines which do not have that header field
|
||
name are returned.
|
||
|
||
The options for mail_filter() are a bit mask with one or more of
|
||
the following:
|
||
FT_NOT The returned header lines are those that are
|
||
not in the lines argument
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mail_search_msg (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,char *charset,
|
||
SEARCHPGM *pgm);
|
||
stream stream to search
|
||
msgno message number of message to inspect
|
||
charset character set of search strings
|
||
pgm search program to test
|
||
|
||
This function implements mail_search_full() locally in cases when
|
||
it is not done by a server (e.g. local mail files, NNTP/POP). It
|
||
inspects the given message on that stream to see if it matches the
|
||
criteria or not. If it matches, T is returned, else NIL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SEARCHPGM *mail_criteria (char *criteria);
|
||
criteria IMAP2-format search criteria string
|
||
|
||
This function accepts an IMAP2-format search criteria string and
|
||
parses it. If the parse is successful, it returns a search program
|
||
suitable for use in mail_search_full().
|
||
WARNING: This function does not accept IMAP4 search criteria.
|
||
The source string must be writeable (this restriction was also
|
||
in the old IMAP2 c-client).
|
||
|
||
Data Structure Instantiation/Destruction functions
|
||
|
||
These functions are used to obtain structures from free storage and
|
||
to release them.
|
||
|
||
ENVELOPE *mail_newenvelope (void);
|
||
ADDRESS *mail_newaddr (void);
|
||
BODY *mail_newbody (void);
|
||
BODY *mail_initbody (BODY *body);
|
||
PARAMETER *mail_newbody_parameter (void);
|
||
PART *mail_newbody_part (void);
|
||
STRINGLIST *mail_newstringlist (void);
|
||
SEARCHPGM *mail_newsearchpgm (void);
|
||
SEARCHHEADER *mail_newsearchheader (char *line);
|
||
SEARCHSET *mail_newsearchset (void);
|
||
SEARCHOR *mail_newsearchor (void);
|
||
SEARCHPGMLIST *mail_newsearchpgmlist (void);
|
||
SORTPGM *mail_newsortpgm (void);
|
||
|
||
These functions, all named mail_new...(), create a new structure of
|
||
the given type and initialize all of its elements to zero or empty.
|
||
|
||
void mail_free_body (BODY **body);
|
||
void mail_free_body_parameter (PARAMETER **parameter);
|
||
void mail_free_body_part (PART **part);
|
||
void mail_free_cache (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
void mail_free_elt (MESSAGECACHE **elt);
|
||
void mail_free_lelt (LONGCACHE **lelt);
|
||
void mail_free_envelope (ENVELOPE **env);
|
||
void mail_free_address (ADDRESS **address);
|
||
void mail_free_stringlist (STRINGLIST **string);
|
||
void mail_free_searchpgm (SEARCHPGM **pgm);
|
||
void mail_free_searchheader (SEARCHHEADER **hdr);
|
||
void mail_free_searchset (SEARCHSET **set);
|
||
void mail_free_searchor (SEARCHOR **orl);
|
||
void mail_free_searchpgmlist (SEARCHPGMLIST **pgl);
|
||
void mail_free_sortpgm (SORTPGM **pgm);
|
||
|
||
These functions, all named mail_free_...(), take a pointer to a
|
||
structure pointer, free all contained strings and structures within the
|
||
structure, and finally free the structure itself and set its pointer to
|
||
NIL. For example, mail_free_envelope() frees all the ADDRESS structures
|
||
contained in the envelope.
|
||
|
||
Normally, mail_free_elt() and mail_free_lelt() are used only if the
|
||
main program has a private pointer to cache elements. If so, it is
|
||
expected to increment the cache element's lockcount when it makes a
|
||
private pointer, and to call this function when it is finished with it.
|
||
|
||
Authentication Functions
|
||
|
||
char *mail_auth (char *mechanism,authresponse_t resp,int argc,char *argv[]);
|
||
mechanism authentication mechanism name
|
||
resp callback function for providing responses
|
||
argc main() function argc value
|
||
argv main() function argv value
|
||
|
||
This server function searches the list of authenticators that was
|
||
established by auth_link() for an authenticator with the given name. If
|
||
an authenticator is found, authentication is initialized. The function
|
||
pointed to by resp is called as the authenticator requires responses.
|
||
|
||
|
||
AUTHENTICATOR *mail_lookup_auth (unsigned int i);
|
||
i position in authenticator list
|
||
|
||
This function returns the nth authenticator in the list, where n is
|
||
the value of it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned int mail_lookup_auth_name (char *mechanism);
|
||
mechanism authentication mechanism name
|
||
|
||
This function searches the list of authenticators for an
|
||
authenticator with the given name, and returns its position in the
|
||
authenticator list.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The functions below are provided by c-client client drivers or by
|
||
servers to support the protocol-dependent parts of authentication.
|
||
|
||
typedef void *(*authchallenge_t) (void *stream,unsigned long *len);
|
||
stream stream to read challenge
|
||
len pointer to returned length in octets
|
||
|
||
This driver function is called by an authenticator to read a
|
||
challenge from the given protocol stream in a protocol-dependent way.
|
||
It returns that challenge in binary and its length in octets to the
|
||
authenticator.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef long (*authrespond_t) (void *stream,char *s,unsigned long size);
|
||
stream stream to send response
|
||
s response string
|
||
size length of response string in octets
|
||
|
||
This driver function is called by an authenticator to send a
|
||
challenge response to the given stream in a protocol-dependent way.
|
||
It returns T if successful, NIL if failure.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef char *(*authresponse_t) (void *challenge,unsigned long clen,
|
||
unsigned long *rlen);
|
||
challenge challenge string
|
||
clen length of challenge string in octets
|
||
rlen pointer to returned length of response string
|
||
|
||
This server function is called with a challenge string of clen
|
||
octets. It sends, according to whatever protocol (IMAP, POP, etc.) it
|
||
uses, and returns the received response and response length in octets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef long (*authclient_t) (authchallenge_t challenger,
|
||
authrespond_t responder,NETMBX *mb,void *s,
|
||
unsigned long trial);
|
||
challenger pointer to protocol-dependent challenge reader function
|
||
responder pointer to protocol-dependent response sender function
|
||
mb NETMBX struct of the mailbox desired to open
|
||
s stream for protocol-dependent routines to use
|
||
trial number of authentication attempts remaining
|
||
|
||
This client authenticator function negotiates reading challenges
|
||
and sending responses for a particular authenticator (Kerberos, etc.)
|
||
over the protocol, and returns T if authenticated or NIL if failed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef char *(*authserver_t) (authresponse_t responder,int argc,char *argv[]);
|
||
responder pointer to protocol-dependent responder function
|
||
argc main() function argc value
|
||
argv main() function argv value
|
||
|
||
This server authenticator function negotiates sending challenges and
|
||
reading responses for a particular authenticator (Kerberos, etc.), and
|
||
returns either the authenticated user name or NIL if authentication
|
||
failed.
|
||
|
||
Network Access Functions
|
||
|
||
These functions provide a layer of indirection between the TCP
|
||
routines and upper level routines. This makes it possible to insert
|
||
additional code (e.g. privacy or checksum handling).
|
||
|
||
NETSTREAM *net_open (char *host,char *service,unsigned long port);
|
||
host host name
|
||
service contact service name
|
||
port contact port number
|
||
|
||
This function opens a TCP connection to the given host and service
|
||
or port.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NETSTREAM *net_aopen (NETMBX *mb,char *service,char *usrbuf);
|
||
NETMBX parsed mailbox specification
|
||
service stream to open (at present, only /etc/rimapd is used)
|
||
usrbuf buffer to return login user name
|
||
|
||
This function attempts to open a preauthenticated connection to the
|
||
given mailbox and service. It will return the login user name of the
|
||
preauthenticated connection, as well as an open network stream, if
|
||
successful.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *net_getline (NETSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream network stream to read
|
||
|
||
This routine reads a text line from the stream. It calls
|
||
stream->dtb->getline, which normally points to tcp_getline() but can be
|
||
set to some other function.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long net_getbuffer (void *stream,unsigned long size,char *buffer);
|
||
stream network stream to read
|
||
size length of data in octets
|
||
buffer buffer of at least size octets
|
||
|
||
This routine reads data from the stream. It calls
|
||
stream->dtb->getbuffer, which normally points to tcp_getbuffer() but can
|
||
be set to some other function.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long net_soutr (NETSTREAM *stream,char *string);
|
||
stream network stream to write
|
||
string null-terminated string to output
|
||
|
||
This routine writes a null-terminated string to the stream. It
|
||
calls stream->dtb->soutr, which normally points to tcp_soutr() but can
|
||
be set to some other function.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long net_sout (NETSTREAM *stream,char *string,unsigned long size);
|
||
stream network stream to write
|
||
string string to output
|
||
size length of string in octets
|
||
|
||
This routine writes a string of length size to the stream. It
|
||
calls stream->dtb->sout, which normally points to tcp_sout() but can be
|
||
set to some other function.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void net_close (NETSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to close
|
||
|
||
This routine closes the stream. It calls stream->dtb->close, which
|
||
normally points to tcp_close() but can point to some other function.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *net_host (NETSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to inspect
|
||
|
||
This routine returns the remote host name of the stream. It calls
|
||
stream->dtb->host, which normally points to tcp_host() but can point
|
||
to some other function.
|
||
|
||
|
||
unsigned long net_port (NETSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to inspect
|
||
|
||
This routine returns the remote port number of the stream. It calls
|
||
stream->dtb->port, which normally points to tcp_port() but can point
|
||
to some other function.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *net_localhost (NETSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to inspect
|
||
|
||
This routine returns the local host name of the stream. It calls
|
||
stream->dtb->localhost, which normally points to tcp_localhost() but can
|
||
point to some other function.
|
||
|
||
Subscription Management Functions
|
||
|
||
long sm_subscribe (char *mailbox);
|
||
mailbox mailbox name to subscribe
|
||
|
||
This function adds the given mailbox name to the local subscription
|
||
list, and returns T if successful, NIL if failure.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long sm_unsubscribe (char *mailbox);
|
||
mailbox mailbox name to unsubscribe
|
||
|
||
This function removes the given mailbox name from the local
|
||
subscription list, and returns T if successful, NIL if failure.
|
||
|
||
char *sm_read (void **sdb);
|
||
sdb data to use in subsequent calls, or NIL if first call
|
||
|
||
This function returns the local subscription list as null
|
||
terminated strings. Each call returns the next element in the list.
|
||
The first call should be with sdb pointing to a NIL pointer; this will
|
||
be filled in for subsequent calls. At the last call, NIL will be
|
||
returned.
|
||
|
||
Miscellaneous Utility Functions
|
||
|
||
char *ucase (char *string);
|
||
string string to convert
|
||
|
||
This function converts each lowercase character of the specified
|
||
string to uppercase and returns the string.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *lcase (char *string);
|
||
string string to convert
|
||
|
||
This function converts each uppercase character of the specified
|
||
string to lowercase and returns the string.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *cpystr (char *string);
|
||
string string to copy
|
||
|
||
This function makes a copy of the string from free storage and returns
|
||
the copy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long find_rightmost_bit (long *valptr);
|
||
valptr pointer to value to search
|
||
|
||
This function returns -1 if the 32-bit value pointed to by valptr
|
||
is non-zero, otherwise it returns the bit number (0 = LSB, 31 = MSB) of
|
||
the right-most bit in that value. This is used to convert from the bits
|
||
in the cache's userflags item to an index into the stream's userFlags
|
||
array of flag texts.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long min (long i,long j);
|
||
i first argument
|
||
j second argument
|
||
|
||
This function returns the minimum of the two integers.
|
||
|
||
long max (long i,long j);
|
||
i first argument
|
||
j second argument
|
||
|
||
This function returns the maximum of the two integers.
|
||
|
||
long search (char *s,long c,char *pat,long patc);
|
||
s string to search
|
||
c size of string
|
||
pat pattern to search in string
|
||
patc size of pattern
|
||
|
||
This function does a fast case-independent search for the given
|
||
pattern in pat (length patc) in base string s, and returns T if the
|
||
pattern is found in the string.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long pmatch (char *s,char *pat,delim);
|
||
long pmatch_full (char *s,char *pat,delim);
|
||
s string to match
|
||
pat wildcard (* and %) to match in pattern
|
||
delim hierarchy delimiter
|
||
|
||
This function returns T if the given wildcard pattern matches the
|
||
string in s with hierarchy delimiter delim. Otherwise NIL is returned.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long dmatch (char *s,char *pat,char delim);
|
||
s string to match
|
||
pat wildcard (* and %) to match in pattern
|
||
delim hierarchy delimiter
|
||
|
||
This function returns T if the given wildcard pattern matches the
|
||
directory. If not, then none of the elements in the directory are
|
||
considered for recursive checking with pmatch_full().
|
||
|
||
SMTP Functions
|
||
|
||
SMTPSTREAM *smtp_open (char **hostlist,long debug);
|
||
hostlist vector of SMTP server host names to try
|
||
debug non-zero if want protocol telemetry debugging
|
||
|
||
This function opens an SMTP connection to a one of the hosts in the
|
||
host list and if successful returns a stream suitable for use by the
|
||
other SMTP functions. The hosts are tried in order until a connection is
|
||
successfully opened. If debug is non-NIL, protocol telemetry is logged
|
||
via mm_dlog(). NIL is returned if this function fails to open a
|
||
connection to any of the hosts in the list.
|
||
|
||
void smtp_close (SMTPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to close
|
||
|
||
This function closes the SMTP stream and frees all resources
|
||
associated with it that it may have created.
|
||
|
||
long smtp_mail (SMTPSTREAM *stream,char *type,ENVELOPE *msg,BODY *body);
|
||
stream stream to transmit mail
|
||
type mail type (MAIL, SEND, SAML, SOML)
|
||
msg message envelope
|
||
body message body
|
||
|
||
This function negotiates an SMTP transaction of the specified type
|
||
(one of "MAIL", "SEND", "SAML", or "SOML") to deliver the specified
|
||
message. This function returns T if success or NIL if there is any
|
||
failure. The text reason for the failure is in stream->reply item; if
|
||
it is associated with a recipient it is also in that address'
|
||
address->error item.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void smtp_debug (SMTPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to enable debugging telemetry
|
||
|
||
This function enables SMTP protocol telemetry logging for this
|
||
stream. All SMTP protocol operations are passed to the application via
|
||
the mm_dlog() facility.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void smtp_nodebug (SMTPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to disable debugging telemetry
|
||
|
||
This function disables SMTP protocol telemetry logging for this
|
||
stream.
|
||
|
||
|
||
typedef void (*smtpverbose_t) (char *buffer);
|
||
buffer pointer to verbose reply buffer
|
||
|
||
This is the argument to the SET_SMTPVERBOSE mail_parmameter() call.
|
||
If this function pointer is non-NIL, then if a verbose SMTP response
|
||
(with SMTP code less than 100) is received, this function is called with
|
||
that response text as its argument.
|
||
|
||
NNTP Functions
|
||
|
||
NNTPSTREAM *nntp_open (char **hostlist,long debug);
|
||
hostlist vector of NNTP server host names to try
|
||
debug non-zero if want protocol telemetry debugging
|
||
|
||
This function opens an NNTP connection to a one of the hosts in the
|
||
host list and if successful returns a stream suitable for use by the
|
||
other MTP functions. The hosts are tried in order until a connection is
|
||
successfully opened. If debug is non-NIL, protocol telemetry is logged
|
||
via mm_dlog(). NIL is returned if this function fails to open a
|
||
connection to any of the hosts in the list.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void nntp_close (NNTPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream to close
|
||
|
||
This function closes the NNTP stream and frees all resources
|
||
associated with it that it may have created.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long nntp_mail (NNTPSTREAM *stream,ENVELOPE *msg,BODY *body);
|
||
stream stream to transmit mail
|
||
msg message envelope
|
||
body message body
|
||
|
||
This function negotiates an NNTP posting transaction to deliver
|
||
the specified news message. This function returns T if success or NIL
|
||
if there is any failure. The text reason for the failure is in
|
||
stream->reply item; if it is associated with a recipient it is also in
|
||
that address' address->error item.
|
||
|
||
RFC 822 Support Functions
|
||
|
||
Although rfc822.c contains several additional functions besides
|
||
these, only the functions documented here should be used by
|
||
applications. The other functions are for internal use only.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void rfc822_header (char *header,ENVELOPE *env,BODY *body);
|
||
header buffer to write RFC 822 header
|
||
env message ENVELOPE (used to obtain RFC 822 information)
|
||
body message BODY (used to obtain MIME information)
|
||
|
||
This function writes an RFC 822 format header into header based
|
||
on the information in the envelope and body. The header buffer must
|
||
be large enough to contain the full text of the resulting header.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void rfc822_write_address (char *dest,ADDRESS *adr);
|
||
dest buffer to write address list
|
||
adr RFC 822 ADDRESS list
|
||
|
||
This function writes an RFC 822 format address list into dest
|
||
based on the information in adr. The dest buffer must be large enough
|
||
to contain the full text of the resulting address list.
|
||
|
||
void rfc822_parse_msg (ENVELOPE **en,BODY **bdy,char *s,unsigned long i,
|
||
STRING *b,char *host,char *tmp);
|
||
en destination pointer where message ENVELOPE will be stored
|
||
bdy destination pointer where message BODY will be stored
|
||
s RFC 822 header to parse (character string)
|
||
i length of RFC 822 header
|
||
b stringstruct of message body
|
||
host default host name if an address lacks an @host.
|
||
temp scratch buffer, must be long enough to hold unwound
|
||
header lines (a buffer that is i octets long is OK)
|
||
|
||
This function parses the RFC 822 header pointed to by s with body
|
||
pointed to by string structure b into the specified destination
|
||
envelope and body pointers, using host as the default host name and
|
||
tmp as a scratch buffer. New ENVELOPE and BODY structures are
|
||
created; when finished with them the application must free them with
|
||
mail_free_envelope() and mail_free_body(). Any parsing errors are
|
||
noted via the mm_log() mechanism using log type PARSE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void rfc822_parse_adrlist (ADDRESS **lst,char *string,char *host);
|
||
lst destination pointer where ADDRESS will be stored
|
||
string string of addresses to parse
|
||
host default host name if an address lacks an @host.
|
||
|
||
This function parses the address list in the given string into an
|
||
address list in lst. Any addresses missing a host name are have the
|
||
host name defaulted from the host argument. If the destination list
|
||
is non-empty it appends the new addresses to the list. Any parsing
|
||
errors are noted via the mm_log() mechanism using log type PARSE.
|
||
|
||
long rfc822_output (char *t,ENVELOPE *env,BODY *body,soutr_t f,void *s,
|
||
long ok8bit);
|
||
t scratch buffer, large enough to hold message header
|
||
env message ENVELOPE
|
||
body message BODY
|
||
f I/O function to write to
|
||
s stream for I/O function f
|
||
ok8bit non-zero if OK to output 8-bit data
|
||
|
||
This function writes the message described with the given
|
||
envelope and body. Any body part contents of type ENCBINARY is
|
||
converted to ENCBASE64 before sending. If ok8bit is NIL, any message
|
||
data of type ENC8BIT is converted to ENCQUOTEDPRINTABLE before
|
||
sending; if ok8bit is non-NIL then ENC8BIT data is sent as-is. T is
|
||
returned if the function succeeds, else NIL is returned.
|
||
|
||
The function f is typically net_soutr(), but it can be any
|
||
function which matches
|
||
typedef long (*soutr_t) (void *stream,char *string);
|
||
where stream holds sufficient information to enable the output routine
|
||
to know where to output to, and the string is a null-terminated string
|
||
to output. This function returns either T or NIL, and that value is
|
||
passed up to rfc822_output() for its return.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void *rfc822_base64 (char *src,unsigned long srcl,unsigned long *len);
|
||
src source string
|
||
srcl size of source string in octets
|
||
len pointer to where destination string length in octets
|
||
will be returned
|
||
|
||
This function decodes a BASE64 body part given a source string
|
||
and its length. The decoded body part as a sequence of binary octets
|
||
is returned, and its length is returned in len.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *rfc822_qprint (char *src,unsigned long srcl,unsigned long *len);
|
||
src source string
|
||
srcl size of source string in octets
|
||
len pointer to where destination string length in octets
|
||
will be returned
|
||
|
||
This function decodes a QUOTED-PRINTABLE body part given a source
|
||
string and its length. The decoded body part as an 8-bit character
|
||
string is returned, and its length is returned in len.
|
||
|
||
Operating System-Dependent Public Interface
|
||
|
||
These functions are in OS-dependent code, and are rewritten each
|
||
time c-client is ported to a new operating system.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void rfc822_date (char *date);
|
||
date buffer to write the date, must be large enough
|
||
|
||
This function is called to get the current date and time in an
|
||
RFC 822 format string into the given buffer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void *fs_get (size_t size);
|
||
size number of octets requested
|
||
|
||
This function allocates and returns a block of free storage of
|
||
the specified size. Unlike malloc(), there is no failure return; this
|
||
function must return with the requested storage.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void fs_resize (void **block,size_t size);
|
||
block pointer to pointer to block to be resized
|
||
size new size in octets
|
||
|
||
This function resizes the free storage block, updating the
|
||
pointer if necessary. Unlike realloc(), there is no failure return;
|
||
this function must return with the requested storage.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void fs_give (void **block);
|
||
block pointer to pointer to block to free
|
||
|
||
This function releases a block of free storage allocated by
|
||
fs_get(). It also erases the block pointer, so it isn't necessary to
|
||
do this in the application.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void fatal (char *string);
|
||
string message string
|
||
|
||
This function is called when an "impossible" error is detected
|
||
and the client wishes to crash. The string should contain a reason.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *strcrlfcpy (char **dst,long *dstl,char *src,long srcl);
|
||
dst pointer to destination string pointer
|
||
dstl pointer to destination string size
|
||
src source strin
|
||
srcl source string size
|
||
|
||
This function is called to copy into a destination string dst of
|
||
size dstl (resized if necessary), a CRLF newline form string from
|
||
local format string src of size srcl.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TCPSTREAM *tcp_open (char *host,long port);
|
||
TCPSTREAM *tcp_aopen (char *host,char *service);
|
||
char *tcp_getline (TCPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
long tcp_getbuffer (TCPSTREAM *stream,long size,char *buffer);
|
||
long tcp_soutr (TCPSTREAM *stream,char *string);
|
||
void tcp_close (TCPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
char *tcp_host (TCPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
unsigned long tcp_port (TCPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
char *tcp_localhost (TCPSTREAM *stream);
|
||
|
||
These functions are TCP-specific versions of the more general
|
||
net_xxx() functions. These should not be called directly by
|
||
applications.
|
||
|
||
|
||
char *tcp_clienthost (char *dst);
|
||
dst destination string buffer
|
||
|
||
This function should be called only by a server called by inetd
|
||
or similar mechanism which maps standard input to a network socket.
|
||
It returns the host name of the other end (e.g. the client of a
|
||
server) using the given string buffer, or NIL if it can't get this
|
||
information.
|
||
|
||
Main Program Callbacks
|
||
|
||
All applications which use the c-client must have the following
|
||
callbacks to handle events from c-client. Note that in any callback
|
||
which involves a mail stream, the stream is locked and you can not
|
||
recursively call c-client from the callback. This may also be true in
|
||
callbacks which do not have a stream; in general, the rule is "do not
|
||
call c-client, especially any mail_xxx() function, from a c-client
|
||
callback".
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_flags (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long number);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
number message number
|
||
|
||
This function is called when c-client manipulates the flags for
|
||
the given message number. This alerts the application that it may
|
||
need to inspect that message's flags to see if there are any
|
||
interesting changes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_status (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox,MAILSTATUS *status);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
mailbox mailbox name for this status
|
||
status MAILSTATUS structure with message status
|
||
|
||
This function is called when c-client reports status of a mailbox
|
||
(generally as the result of a mail_status() function call). The
|
||
returned MAILSTATUS structure has the following members:
|
||
|
||
long flags; validity flags. These are the same as
|
||
the SA_xxx option flags in the
|
||
mail_status() call, and they indicate
|
||
which of the other members of the
|
||
MAILSTATUS structure have usable data
|
||
(i.e. if SA_MESSAGES is not set, do
|
||
not believe status->messages!!).
|
||
unsigned long messages; number of messages if SA_MESSAGES
|
||
unsigned long recent; number of recent messages if SA_RECENT
|
||
unsigned long unseen; number of unseen messages if SA_UNSEEN
|
||
unsigned long uidnext; next UID to be assigned if SA_UIDNEXT
|
||
unsigned long uidvalidity; UID validity value if SA_UIDVALIDITY
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_searched (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long number);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
number message number
|
||
|
||
This function is called to notify the main program that this
|
||
message number matches a search (generally as the result of a
|
||
mail_search_full() function call).
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_exists (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long number);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
number message number
|
||
|
||
This function is called to notify the main program that there are
|
||
this many messages in the mailbox. It is also used to notify the main
|
||
program of new mail, by announcing a higher number than the main
|
||
program was previously aware.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_expunged (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long number);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
number message number
|
||
|
||
This function is called to notify the main program that this
|
||
message number has been expunged from the mail file and that all
|
||
subsequent messages are now referenced by a message number one less
|
||
than before. This implicitly decrements the number of messages in the
|
||
mailbox.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_list (MAILSTREAM *stream,char delim,char *name,long attrib);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
delim hierarchy delimiter
|
||
name mailbox name
|
||
attrib mailbox attributes
|
||
|
||
This function is called to notify the main program that this
|
||
mailbox name matches a mailbox listing request (generally as the
|
||
result of a mail_list() function call). The hierarchy delimiter is a
|
||
character that separates out levels of hierarchy in mailbox names.
|
||
The attributes are a bit mask with one of the following:
|
||
LATT_NOINFERIORS
|
||
it is not possible for there to be any
|
||
hierarchy inferiors to this name (that is,
|
||
this name followed by the hierarchy delimiter
|
||
and additional name characters).
|
||
LATT_NOSELECT this is not a mailbox name, just a hierarchy
|
||
level, and it may not be opened by mail_open()
|
||
LATT_MARKED this mailbox may have recent messages
|
||
LATT_UNMARKED this mailbox does not have any recent messages
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_lsub (MAILSTREAM *stream,char delim,char *name,long attrib);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
delim hierarchy delimiter
|
||
name mailbox name
|
||
attrib mailbox attributes
|
||
|
||
|
||
This function is called to notify the main program that this
|
||
mailbox name matches a subscribed mailbox listing request (generally
|
||
as the result of a mail_lsub() function call). The hierarchy
|
||
delimiter is a character that separates out levels of hierarchy in
|
||
mailbox names. The attributes are a bit mask with one of the
|
||
following:
|
||
LATT_NOINFERIORS
|
||
it is not possible for there to be any
|
||
hierarchy inferiors to this name (that is,
|
||
this name followed by the hierarchy delimiter
|
||
and additional name characters).
|
||
LATT_NOSELECT this is not a mailbox name, just a hierarchy
|
||
level, and it may not be opened by mail_open()
|
||
LATT_MARKED this mailbox may have recent messages
|
||
LATT_UNMARKED this mailbox does not have any recent messages
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_notify (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *string,long errflg);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
string message string
|
||
errflg message error level
|
||
|
||
This function is called to deliver a stream-oriented message
|
||
event. This is the mechanism by which any IMAP response codes for any
|
||
application (e.g. TRYCREATE) are delivered to the application.
|
||
No newline is included in the string, so this function has to output
|
||
its own.
|
||
|
||
The message error level is one of the following:
|
||
|
||
NIL normal operation. The text is `babble' that may be
|
||
interesting to the user, e.g. the greeting message
|
||
from a server.
|
||
|
||
WARN A warning event. This event should be displayed to
|
||
the user. Examples: a mailbox rewrite failed because
|
||
of disk full, but the previous mailbox contents were
|
||
recovered.
|
||
|
||
ERROR An error event. This event should be displayed to
|
||
the user, or at least logged someplace. This type of
|
||
error shouldn't happen, and so should be called to the
|
||
attention of support staff. Whatever happened has
|
||
probably disrupted the user's work. Examples: an
|
||
untagged BAD from an IMAP server.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_log (char *string,long errflg);
|
||
string message string
|
||
errflg message error level
|
||
|
||
This function is called to deliver a log message. No newline is
|
||
included in the string, so this function has to output its own. In
|
||
general, it is intended that these messages are logged someplace, and
|
||
possibly shown to the user.
|
||
|
||
The message error level is one of the following:
|
||
|
||
NIL normal operation. The text is `babble' that may be
|
||
interesting to the user, e.g. "Expunged 3 messages".
|
||
|
||
PARSE An RFC 822 parsing error. Since bogus headers are
|
||
all-too-common in the real world, these can often be
|
||
ignored on the "garbage in, garbage out" princple.
|
||
However, since surprising results can be yielded when
|
||
trying to parse garbage, this message should be logged
|
||
somewhere so it can be figured out what happened.
|
||
|
||
WARN A warning event. This event should be displayed to
|
||
the user. It occurs when an error condition has
|
||
happened, but c-client knows what to do to recover.
|
||
Examples: "Can't open read-write, so opening
|
||
read-only", "Empty mailbox", "Login failed, try
|
||
again", "Waiting for mailbox to become unlocked",
|
||
"IMAP protocol error". Although a user should be
|
||
told about a warning, it's generally not necessary
|
||
to interrupt the flow of her work (e.g. it's alright
|
||
to display the warning in a scrolling window, but
|
||
not necessary to require the user to do anything).
|
||
|
||
ERROR An error event. This event should be displayed to
|
||
the user, or at least logged someplace. This is a
|
||
serious error condition occured that aborted the
|
||
requested operation and possibly also aborted the mail
|
||
stream. This ranges from normal error conditions such
|
||
as "Can't open mailbox", "too many login failures, go
|
||
away" to bizarre conditions such as "Apparent new mail
|
||
appeared in the mailbox that doesn't look like mail,
|
||
program aborting". Errors must be called to the
|
||
user's attention, and probably should require some
|
||
sort of acknowledgement (e.g. answering a modal panel)
|
||
before the application proceeds.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_dlog (char *string);
|
||
string message string
|
||
|
||
This function is called to deliver a debugging telemetry
|
||
message. No newline is included in the string, so this function has
|
||
to output its own. This is called only when debugging is enabled.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_login (NETMBX *mb,char *user,char *pwd,long trial);
|
||
mb parsed mailbox specification
|
||
user pointer to where to return user name
|
||
pwd pointer to where to return password
|
||
trial number of prior login attempts
|
||
|
||
This function is called to get a user name and password for the
|
||
given network mailbox. It stores the user name and password in the
|
||
strings pointed to by the appropriate arguments. The trial argument
|
||
is the number of attempts to perform the login and is initially zero
|
||
(e.g. for a default username and password login functionality). It is
|
||
incremented for each subsequent trial until the maximum number of
|
||
trials are made.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_critical (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
|
||
This function is called to alert the application that c-client
|
||
is about to run some critical code on that stream that may result in a
|
||
clobbered mail file if it is interrupted. It may be desirable to
|
||
disable CTRL/C, etc. during this time.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_nocritical (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
|
||
This function is called to alert the application that c-client
|
||
is no longer running critical code on that stream that may result in a
|
||
clobbered mail file if it is interrupted.
|
||
|
||
|
||
long mm_diskerror (MAILSTREAM *stream,long errcode,long serious);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
errcode OS error code for disk error
|
||
serious non-zero if c-client can not undo the operation (and
|
||
thus must retry to avoid mail file damage)
|
||
|
||
This function is called to alert the application that the
|
||
c-client has encountered an unrecoverable write error when trying to
|
||
update the mail file. errcode contains the system error code. If
|
||
serious is non-zero, then it is probable that the disk copy of the
|
||
mailbox has been damaged.
|
||
|
||
The return value from this function is the abort flag; if serious
|
||
is zero and the abort flag is non-zero, the operation is aborted. If
|
||
the abort flag is zero or if serious was non-zero, a return from this
|
||
function will retry the failing operation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
void mm_fatal (char *string);
|
||
string message string
|
||
|
||
This function is called from the fatal() routine in the
|
||
operating system code to notify the main program that it is about to
|
||
crash. The string contains a reason. At the very minimum, the main
|
||
program should do something like
|
||
mm_log (string,ERROR);
|
||
and then return. No newline is included in the string, so this
|
||
function has to output its own.
|
||
|
||
Driver interface
|
||
|
||
When writing a new driver for the c-client, you must provide a
|
||
DRIVER stucture giving a dispatch vector between MAIL and the driver.
|
||
The DRIVER dispatch vector is described in mail.h.
|
||
|
||
char *name;
|
||
Name by which the driver is known to c-client.
|
||
|
||
unsigned long flags;
|
||
Attribute flags for this driver:
|
||
DR_DISABLE This driver is currently disabled.
|
||
DR_LOCAL This driver deals with local mailboxes; if
|
||
this is off it deals with mailboxes over a
|
||
network.
|
||
DR_MAIL This driver supports e-mail messages.
|
||
DR_NEWS This driver supports netnews messages
|
||
DR_READONLY This driver only allows read-only access;
|
||
mail_setflag(), mail_expunge(), etc. are
|
||
no-ops.
|
||
DR_NOFAST This driver does not implement mail_fetchfast()
|
||
in a fast way (e.g. it may have to fetch the
|
||
entire message text over a network to
|
||
calculate sizes).
|
||
DR_NAMESPACE This driver accepts and uses namespace format
|
||
names.
|
||
DR_LOWMEM This driver is designed for systems with very
|
||
limited amounts of memory (e.g. DOS) and
|
||
support routines called by this driver should
|
||
try not to use much memory.
|
||
|
||
DRIVER *next;
|
||
Pointer to the next driver which this application supports (or NIL if
|
||
this is the last driver). Drivers are lunk together via the mail_link()
|
||
function.
|
||
|
||
DRIVER *driver_valid (char *mailbox);
|
||
This function returns a pointer to the driver's DRIVER dispatch
|
||
vector iff this driver accepts the given name as a valid mailbox for this
|
||
driver. Otherwise, it returns the value of the next driver's
|
||
driver_valid() or NIL if there is no next driver. In other words, calling
|
||
driver_valid() for the first driver will return the driver dispatch vector
|
||
for the driver which supports this type of mailbox.
|
||
|
||
void *driver_parameters (long function,void *value);
|
||
This function implements mail_parameters() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_scan (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *ref,char *pat,char *contents);
|
||
This function implements mail_scan() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_list (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *ref,char *pat);
|
||
This function implements mail_list() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_lsub (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *ref,char *pat);
|
||
This function implements mail_lsub() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_subscribe (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
This function implements mail_subscribe() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_unsubscribe (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
This function implements mail_unsubscribe() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_create (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
This function implements mail_create() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_delete (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox);
|
||
This function implements mail_delete() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_rename (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *old,char *new);
|
||
This function implements mail_rename() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_status (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_status() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
MAILSTREAM *driver_open (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
This function opens the mailbox identified by the given stream. It
|
||
may use the data on the stream and create additional data on stream->local
|
||
as necessary. It should return the given stream unless it failed to open
|
||
the mailbox, in which case it should return NIL.
|
||
|
||
void driver_close (MAILSTREAM *stream,long options);
|
||
This function implements mail_close() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_fetchfast (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_fetchfast() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_fetchflags (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_fetchflags() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
ENVELOPE *driver_fetchstructure (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
BODY **body,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_fetchstructure() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
char *driver_fetchheader (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
STRINGLIST *lines,unsigned long *len,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_fetchheader() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
char *driver_fetchtext (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,
|
||
unsigned long *len,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_fetchtext() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
char *driver_fetchbody (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno,char *section,
|
||
unsigned long *len,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_fetchbody() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_setflag (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *flag,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_setflag() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_clearflag (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *flag,
|
||
long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_clearflag() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_search (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *charset,SEARCHPGM *pgm,
|
||
long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_search() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
unsigned long *driver_sort (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *charset,SEARCHPGM *spg,
|
||
SORTPGM *pgm,long flags);
|
||
This function implements mail_sort() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void *driver_thread (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *seq,long function,long flag);
|
||
This dispatch is reserved for a future threading capability.
|
||
|
||
long driver_ping (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
This function implements mail_ping() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_check (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
This function implements mail_check() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_expunge (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
This function implements mail_expunge() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_copy (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *sequence,char *mailbox,
|
||
long options);
|
||
This function implements mail_copy() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
long driver_append (MAILSTREAM *stream,char *mailbox,char *flags,char *date,
|
||
STRING *message);
|
||
This function implements mail_append() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
void driver_gc (MAILSTREAM *stream,long gcflags);
|
||
This function implements mail_gc() for this driver.
|
||
|
||
Driver Support Functions
|
||
|
||
void mail_searched (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
msgno message number
|
||
|
||
This function is called by the driver to notify c-client that this
|
||
message number matches a search. It invokes the main program's
|
||
mm_searched() function.
|
||
|
||
void mail_exists (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long nmsgs);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
nmsgs number of messages
|
||
|
||
This function is called by the driver to notify c-client that this
|
||
message number exists (i.e. there are this many messages in the mailbox).
|
||
It invokes the main program's mm_exists() function.
|
||
|
||
void mail_recent (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long recent);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
recent number of messages
|
||
|
||
This function is called by the driver to notify c-client that this
|
||
many messages are "recent" (i.e. arrived in the mailbox since the previous
|
||
time the mailbox was opened).
|
||
|
||
void mail_expunged (MAILSTREAM *stream,unsigned long msgno);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
msgno number of messages
|
||
|
||
This function is called by the driver to notify MAIL that this
|
||
message number has been expunged from the mail file and that all subsequent
|
||
messages are now referenced by a message number one less than before. It
|
||
invokes the main program's mm_expunged() function.
|
||
|
||
void mail_lock (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
This function sets the stream lock. It is an error to set the stream
|
||
lock if the stream is already locked.
|
||
|
||
This is mainly used to catch errors due to a callback function
|
||
(e.g. mm_exists) inadvertantly recursing back to the MAIL routines and
|
||
establishing an infinite recursion. Normally, drivers will set the lock
|
||
prior to calling one of the callback functions above or, more likely, in
|
||
the beginning of the driver's non-reentrant "do operation" section. In the
|
||
IMAP4 driver, the stream lock is set when entering imap_send() and cleared
|
||
on exit.
|
||
|
||
void mail_unlock (MAILSTREAM *stream);
|
||
stream stream where event happened
|
||
|
||
This function releases the stream lock. It is an error to release the
|
||
stream lock if the stream is not locked.
|