email-print-mime-structure(1) | User Commands | email-print-mime-structure(1) |
email-print-mime-structure - display a tree-like view of the MIME structure of an e-mail
email-print-mime-structure <message.eml
email-print-mime-structure reads a MIME message from stdin and produces a treelike representation to stdout.
If the user wants the parts numbered, they can feed the output through something like "cat -n".
OpenPGP secret keys listed in --pgpkey= are used ephemerally, and do not interact with any local GnuPG keyring.
X.509 private keys listed in --cmskey= are used ephemerally, and do not interact with any local GnuPG keyring.
If --use-gpg-agent is supplied along with either --pgpkey=KEYFILE or --cmskey=KEYFILE arguments, the KEYFILE arguments will be tried before falling back to GnuPG.
If email-print-mime-structure has been asked to decrypt parts with either --pgpkey=KEYFILE or with --use-gpg-agent, and it is unable to decrypt an encrypted part, it will emit a warning to stderr.
$ email-print-mime-structure <test.eml └┬╴multipart/signed 6546 bytes ├─╴text/plain inline 895 bytes └─╴application/pgp-signature inline [signature.asc] 836 bytes
email-print-mime-structure's output is not stable, and is not intended to be interpreted by machines, so please do not depend on it in scripts!
email-print-mime-structure displays some data from within the e-mail, but does not sanitize it before display. Some particularly cleverly-malformed MIME parameters might be able to induce apparent formatting changes or emit arbitrary characters to stdout.
email-print-mime-structure expects to be run in a UTF-8-friendly environment.
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2045, https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2049, https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3156
email-print-mime-structure and this manpage were written by Daniel Kahn Gillmor and Jameson Graef Rollins, with suggestions and feedback from many others in the community that develops the notmuch mail user agent. It originated in the notmuch source tree.
Debian Project | perl v5.36.0 |