table of contents
MH-MAIL(5) | File Formats Manual | MH-MAIL(5) |
NAME¶
mh-mail - message format for nmh message system
DESCRIPTION¶
nmh processes messages in a particular format. It should be noted that although neither Bell nor Berkeley mailers produce message files in the format that nmh prefers, nmh can read message files in that format.
Each user possesses a mail drop which initially receives all messages processed by post. inc will read from that mail drop and incorporate new messages found there into the user's own mail folders (typically “+inbox”). The mail drop consists of one or more messages.
Messages are expected to consist of lines of text. Graphics and binary data are not handled. No data compression is accepted. All text is clear ASCII 7-bit data.
The general “memo” framework of RFC 822 is used. A message consists of a block of information in a rigid format, followed by general text with no specified format. The rigidly formatted first part of a message is called the header, and the free-format portion is called the body. The header must always exist, but the body is optional. These parts are separated by an empty line, i.e., two consecutive newline characters. Within nmh, the header and body may be separated by a line consisting of dashes:
From: Local Mailbox <user@example.com> To: cc: Fcc: +outbox Subject:
The header is composed of one or more header items. Each header item can be viewed as a single logical line of ASCII characters. If the text of a header item extends across several real lines, the continuation lines are indicated by leading spaces or tabs.
Each header item is called a component and is composed of a keyword or name, along with associated text. The keyword begins at the left margin, may not contain spaces or tabs, may not exceed 63 characters (as specified by RFC 822), and is terminated by a colon (`:'). Certain components (as identified by their keywords) must follow rigidly defined formats in their text portions.
The text for most formatted components (e.g., “Date:” and “Message-Id:”) is produced automatically. The only ones entered by the user are address fields such as “To:”, “cc:”, etc. Internet addresses are assigned mailbox names and host computer specifications. The rough format is “local@domain”, such as “MH@UCI”, or “MH@UCI-ICSA.ARPA”. Multiple addresses are separated by commas. A missing host/domain is assumed to be the local host/domain.
As mentioned above, a blank line (or a line of dashes) signals that all following text up to the end of the file is the body. No formatting is expected or enforced within the body.
Following is a list of header components that are considered meaningful to various nmh programs.
Date:
From:
Envelope-From:
Mail-Reply-To:
Mail-Followup-To:
Reply-To:
Sender:
To:
cc:
Bcc:
Dcc:
Fcc:
Message-ID:
Subject:
In-Reply-To:
Resent-Date:
Resent-From:
Resent-To:
Resent-cc:
Resent-Bcc:
Resent-Fcc:
Resent-Message-Id:
Resent:
Forwarded:
Replied:
Attach:
FILES¶
- /var/mail/$USER
- Location of mail drop.
SEE ALSO¶
Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages (RFC 822)
CONTEXT¶
None
2014-01-08 | nmh-1.8 |