NAME
reformime - MIME E-mail reformatting tool
SYNOPSIS
reformime [options...]
DESCRIPTION
reformime is a utility for reformatting MIME messages.
Generally, reformime expects to see an RFC 2045[1] compliant message on
standard input, except in few cases such as the -m option.
If no options are given, reformime prints the MIME structure of the
message. The output consists of so-called "MIME reference tags", one
per line. For example:
1
1.1
1.2
This shows that the message contains two different MIME sections. The
first line of the MIME structure output will always contain "1", which
refers to the entire message. In this case it happens to be a
multipart/mixed message. "1.1" refers to the first section of the
multipart message, which happens to be a text/plain section. "1.2"
refers to the second section of the message, which happens to be an
application/octet-stream section.
If the message is not a MIME message, or it does not contain any
attachments, reformime prints only "1", that refers to the entire
message itself:
Here´s the output from reformime when the first part of the message was
itself a multipart/alternative section:
1
1.1
1.1.1
1.1.2
1.2
Arbitrarily complex MIME constructs are possible.
OPTIONS
-d
Parse a delivery status notification MIME message (RFC 1894[2]).
reformime expects to see on standard input a MIME message that
consists of a delivery status notification, as defined by RFC 1894.
reformime reads the message and prints on standard output a list of
addresses and their corresponding delivery status, as specified in
the delivery status notification. Each line printed by reformime
consists of a delivery status, a space, and the address. reformime
then terminates with a 0 exit status. reformime produces no output
and terminates with an exit status of 1 if the standard input does
not contain a delivery status notification.
-D
Like the -d except that reformime lists the address found in the
Original-Recipient: header, if it exists.
-e
Extract the contents of the indicated MIME section, and display it
on standard output. The -s option is required when -e is specified.
If the indicated section uses either the base64 or quoted-printable
encoding method, reformime automatically decodes it. In this case
you´re better off redirecting the standard output into a file.
-i
Display MIME information for each section. reformime displays the
contents of the Content-Type: header, any encoding used, and the
character set. reformime also displays the byte offset in the
message where each section starts and ends (and where the actual
contents of the section start, after skipping all the headers).
-m
Create a multipart/digest MIME message digest.
-r
Rewrite message, adding or standardizing RFC 2045[1] MIME headers.
-r7
Like -r but also convert 8bit-encoded MIME sections to
quoted-printable.
-r8
Like -r but also convert quoted-printable-encoded MIME sections to
8bit.
-s section
Display MIME information for this section only. section is a MIME
specification tag. The -s option is required if -e is also
specified, and is optional with -i.
-x
Extract the contents of the indicated MIME section to a file.
-X
Pipe the contents of the indicated MIME section to a program.
Extracting RFC 2045 MIME section(s) to file(s)
The -x and -X options extract a specific MIME section to a file or to a
pipe to an external program. Use the -s option to identify the MIME
section to extract. If the -s option is not specified, every MIME
section in the message is extracted, one at a time. quoted-printable
and base64 encoding are automatically decoded.
-x
Interactive extraction. reformime prints the MIME content type of
each section. Answer with ´y´ or ´Y´ to extract the MIME section.
Specify the filename at the next prompt. reformime prompts with a
default filename. reformime tries to choose the default filename
based on the MIME headers, if possible. If not, the default
filename will be attachment1.dat (if the -s option is not
specified, the next filename will be attachment2.dat, and so on).
-xPREFIX
Automatic extraction. reformime automatically extracts one or more
MIME sections, and saves them to a file. The filename is formed by
taking PREFIX, and appending the default filename to it. Note that
there´s no space between "-x" and "PREFIX". For example:
reformime -xfiles-
This command saves MIME sections as files-attachment1.dat, then
files-attachment2.dat, etc. reformime tries to append the filename
specified in the MIME headers for each section, where possible.
reformime replaces all suspect characters with the underscore
character.
-X prog arg1 arg2 ...
The -X option must be the last option to reformime. reformime runs
an external program prog, and pipes the contents of the MIME
section to the program. reformime sets the environment variable
CONTENT_TYPE to the MIME content type. The environment variable
FILENAME gets set to the default filename of reformime´s liking. If
the -s option is not specified, the program runs once for every
MIME section in the message. The external program, prog must
terminate with a zero exit status in order for reformime to proceed
to the next MIME section in the message. In any case, if prog
terminates with a non-zero exit status, reformime terminates with
the exit status of 20 plus prog´s exit status.
Note
reformime extracts every MIME section in the message unless the -s
option is specified. This includes even the text/plain MIME content
that usually precedes a binary attachment.
Adding RFC 2045 MIME headers
The -r option performs the following actions:
If there is no Mime-Version:, Content-Type:, or
Content-Transfer-Encoding: header, reformime adds one.
If the Content-Transfer-Encoding: header contains 8bit or raw, but only
seven-bit data is found, reformime changes the
Content-Transfer-Encoding header to 7bit.
-r7 does the same thing, but also converts 8bit-encoded content that
contains eight-bit characters to quoted-printable encoding.
-r8 does the same thing, but also converts quoted-printable-encoded
content to 8bit, except in some situations.
Creating multipart/digest MIME digests
The -m option creates a MIME digest. reformime reads a list of
filenames on standard input. Each line read from standard input
contains the name of a file that is presumed to contain an RFC
2822-formatted message. reformime splices all files into a
multipart/digest MIME section, and writes it to standard output.
Translating MIME headers
The following options do not read a message from standard input. These
options process MIME headers via the command line, and are designed to
be conveniently used by mail-handling scripts.
-h "header"
Decode a MIME-encoded "header" and print the decoded 8-bit content
on standard output. Example:
$ reformime -h ´=?iso-8859-1?Q?H=F3la!?=´
Hóla!
-o "text"
MIME-encode "text", and print the results on standard output. Use
the -c option to specify the character set.
-O "text"
Like the -o option, except that text is a structured header with
RFC 2822 addresses.
SEE ALSO
reformail(1)[3], sendmail(8), mailbot(1)[4], maildrop(1)[5],
maildropfilter(5)[6], egrep(1), grep(1), sendmail(8).
NOTES
1. RFC 2045
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2045.txt
2. RFC 1894
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1894.txt
3. reformail(1)
reformail.html
4. mailbot(1)
mailbot.html
5. maildrop(1)
maildrop.html
6. maildropfilter(5)
maildropfilter.html