class Net::IMAP
Net::IMAP
implements Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) client functionality. The protocol is described in [IMAP4rev1].
IMAP Overview¶ ↑
An IMAP client connects to a server, and then authenticates itself using either authenticate
or login
. Having authenticated itself, there is a range of commands available to it. Most work with mailboxes, which may be arranged in an hierarchical namespace, and each of which contains zero or more messages. How this is implemented on the server is implementation-dependent; on a UNIX server, it will frequently be implemented as files in mailbox format within a hierarchy of directories.
To work on the messages within a mailbox, the client must first select that mailbox, using either select
or examine
(for read-only access). Once the client has successfully selected a mailbox, they enter the “selected” state, and that mailbox becomes the current mailbox, on which mail-item related commands implicitly operate.
Sequence numbers and UIDs¶ ↑
Messages have two sorts of identifiers: message sequence numbers and UIDs.
Message sequence numbers number messages within a mailbox from 1 up to the number of items in the mailbox. If a new message arrives during a session, it receives a sequence number equal to the new size of the mailbox. If messages are expunged from the mailbox, remaining messages have their sequence numbers “shuffled down” to fill the gaps.
To avoid sequence number race conditions, servers must not expunge messages when no command is in progress, nor when responding to fetch
, store
, or search
. Expunges may be sent during any other command, including uid_fetch
, uid_store
, and uid_search
. The noop
and idle
commands are both useful for this side-effect: they allow the server to send all mailbox updates, including expunges.
UIDs, on the other hand, are permanently guaranteed not to identify another message within the same mailbox, even if the existing message is deleted. UIDs are required to be assigned in ascending (but not necessarily sequential) order within a mailbox; this means that if a non-IMAP client rearranges the order of mail items within a mailbox, the UIDs have to be reassigned. An IMAP client thus cannot rearrange message orders.
Server capabilities and protocol extensions¶ ↑
Net::IMAP
does not modify its behavior according to server capability
. Users of the class must check for required capabilities before issuing commands. Special care should be taken to follow all capability
requirements for starttls
, login
, and authenticate
.
See the capability
method for more information.
Examples of Usage¶ ↑
List sender and subject of all recent messages in the default mailbox¶ ↑
imap = Net::IMAP.new('mail.example.com') imap.authenticate('LOGIN', 'joe_user', 'joes_password') imap.examine('INBOX') imap.search(["RECENT"]).each do |message_id| envelope = imap.fetch(message_id, "ENVELOPE")[0].attr["ENVELOPE"] puts "#{envelope.from[0].name}: \t#{envelope.subject}" end
Move all messages from April 2003 from “Mail/sent-mail” to “Mail/sent-apr03”¶ ↑
imap = Net::IMAP.new('mail.example.com') imap.authenticate('LOGIN', 'joe_user', 'joes_password') imap.select('Mail/sent-mail') if not imap.list('Mail/', 'sent-apr03') imap.create('Mail/sent-apr03') end imap.search(["BEFORE", "30-Apr-2003", "SINCE", "1-Apr-2003"]).each do |message_id| imap.copy(message_id, "Mail/sent-apr03") imap.store(message_id, "+FLAGS", [:Deleted]) end imap.expunge
Thread Safety¶ ↑
Net::IMAP
supports concurrent threads. For example,
imap = Net::IMAP.new("imap.foo.net", "imap2") imap.authenticate("cram-md5", "bar", "password") imap.select("inbox") fetch_thread = Thread.start { imap.fetch(1..-1, "UID") } search_result = imap.search(["BODY", "hello"]) fetch_result = fetch_thread.value imap.disconnect
This script invokes the FETCH command and the SEARCH command concurrently.
Errors¶ ↑
An IMAP server can send three different types of responses to indicate failure:
- NO
-
the attempted command could not be successfully completed. For instance, the username/password used for logging in are incorrect; the selected mailbox does not exist; etc.
- BAD
-
the request from the client does not follow the server’s understanding of the IMAP protocol. This includes attempting commands from the wrong client state; for instance, attempting to perform a SEARCH command without having SELECTed a current mailbox. It can also signal an internal server failure (such as a disk crash) has occurred.
- BYE
-
the server is saying goodbye. This can be part of a normal logout sequence, and can be used as part of a login sequence to indicate that the server is (for some reason) unwilling to accept your connection. As a response to any other command, it indicates either that the server is shutting down, or that the server is timing out the client connection due to inactivity.
These three error response are represented by the errors Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
, Net::IMAP::BadResponseError
, and Net::IMAP::ByeResponseError
, all of which are subclasses of Net::IMAP::ResponseError
. Essentially, all methods that involve sending a request to the server can generate one of these errors. Only the most pertinent instances have been documented below.
Because the IMAP
class uses Sockets for communication, its methods are also susceptible to the various errors that can occur when working with sockets. These are generally represented as Errno errors. For instance, any method that involves sending a request to the server and/or receiving a response from it could raise an Errno::EPIPE error if the network connection unexpectedly goes down. See the socket(7), ip(7), tcp(7), socket(2), connect(2), and associated man pages.
Finally, a Net::IMAP::DataFormatError
is thrown if low-level data is found to be in an incorrect format (for instance, when converting between UTF-8 and UTF-16), and Net::IMAP::ResponseParseError
is thrown if a server response is non-parseable.
What’s here?¶ ↑
Connection control methods¶ ↑
-
Net::IMAP.new
: A new client connects immediately and waits for a successful server greeting before returning the new client object. -
starttls
: Asks the server to upgrade a clear-text connection to use TLS. -
logout
: Tells the server to end the session. Enters the “logout” state. -
disconnect
: Disconnects the connection (without sendinglogout
first). -
disconnected?
: True if the connection has been closed.
Core IMAP commands¶ ↑
The following commands are defined either by the [IMAP4rev1] base specification, or by one of the following extensions: [IDLE], [NAMESPACE], [UNSELECT], [MOVE]. These extensions are widely supported by modern IMAP4rev1 servers and have all been integrated into [IMAP4rev2]. Note: Net::IMAP doesn’t fully support IMAP4rev2 yet.
IMAP commands for any state¶ ↑
-
capability
: Returns the server’s capabilities as an array of strings.Capabilities may change after
starttls
,authenticate
, orlogin
and cached capabilities must be reloaded. -
noop
: Allows the server to send unsolicited untaggedresponses
. -
logout
: Tells the server to end the session. Enters the “logout” state.
IMAP commands for the “Not Authenticated” state¶ ↑
In addition to the universal commands, the following commands are valid in the “not authenticated” state:
-
starttls
: Upgrades a clear-text connection to use TLS.Requires the
STARTTLS
capability. -
authenticate
: Identifies the client to the server using a SASL mechanism. Enters the “authenticated” state.Requires the
AUTH=#{mechanism}
capability for the chosen mechanism. -
login
: Identifies the client to the server using a plain text password. Usingauthenticate
is generally preferred. Enters the “authenticated” state.The
LOGINDISABLED
capability must NOT be listed.
IMAP commands for the “Authenticated” state¶ ↑
In addition to the universal commands, the following commands are valid in the “authenticated” state:
-
select
: Open a mailbox and enter the “selected” state. -
examine
: Open a mailbox read-only, and enter the “selected” state. -
create
: Creates a new mailbox. -
delete
: Permanently remove a mailbox. -
rename
: Change the name of a mailbox. -
subscribe
: Adds a mailbox to the “subscribed” set. -
unsubscribe
: Removes a mailbox from the “subscribed” set. -
list
: Returns names and attributes of mailboxes matching a given pattern. -
namespace
: Returns mailbox namespaces, with path prefixes and delimiters.Requires the
NAMESPACE
capability. -
status
: Returns mailbox information, e.g. message count, unseen message count,UIDVALIDITY
andUIDNEXT
. -
append
: Appends a message to the end of a mailbox. -
idle
: Allows the server to send updates to the client, without the client needing to poll usingnoop
.Requires the
IDLE
capability. -
lsub
: Lists mailboxes the user has declared “active” or “subscribed”.
IMAP commands for the “Selected” state¶ ↑
In addition to the universal commands and the “authenticated” commands, the following commands are valid in the “selected” state:
-
close
: Closes the mailbox and returns to the “authenticated” state, expunging deleted messages, unless the mailbox was opened as read-only. -
unselect
: Closes the mailbox and returns to the “authenticated” state, without expunging any messages.Requires the
UNSELECT
capability. -
expunge
: Permanently removes messages which have the Deleted flag set. -
uid_expunge
: Restrictsexpunge
to only remove the specified UIDs.Requires the
UIDPLUS
capability. -
search
,uid_search
: Returns sequence numbers or UIDs of messages that match the given searching criteria. -
fetch
,uid_fetch
: Returns data associated with a set of messages, specified by sequence number or UID. -
copy
,uid_copy
: Copies the specified messages to the end of the specified destination mailbox. -
move
,uid_move
: Moves the specified messages to the end of the specified destination mailbox, expunging them from the current mailbox.Requires the
MOVE
capability.
IMAP commands for the “Logout” state¶ ↑
No IMAP commands are valid in the logout
state. If the socket is still open, Net::IMAP
will close it after receiving server confirmation. Exceptions will be raised by IMAP commands that have already started and are waiting for a response, as well as any that are called after logout.
Supported IMAP extensions¶ ↑
RFC9051: IMAP4rev2
¶ ↑
Although IMAP4rev2 is not supported yet, Net::IMAP
supports several extensions that have been folded into it: IDLE
, MOVE
, NAMESPACE
, UIDPLUS
, and UNSELECT
. Commands for these extensions are included with the Core IMAP commands, above. Other supported extensons are listed below.
RFC2087: QUOTA
¶ ↑
-
getquota
: returns the resource usage and limits for a quota root -
getquotaroot
: returns the list of quota roots for a mailbox, as well as their resource usage and limits. -
setquota
: sets the resource limits for a given quota root.
RFC2177: IDLE
¶ ↑
Folded into IMAP4rev2, so it is also listed with Core IMAP commands.
-
idle
: Allows the server to send updates to the client, without the client needing to poll usingnoop
.
RFC2342: NAMESPACE
¶ ↑
Folded into IMAP4rev2, so it is also listed with Core IMAP commands.
-
namespace
: Returns mailbox namespaces, with path prefixes and delimiters.
RFC2971: ID
¶ ↑
-
id
: exchanges client and server implementation information.
RFC3691: UNSELECT
¶ ↑
Folded into IMAP4rev2, so it is also listed with Core IMAP commands.
-
unselect
: Closes the mailbox and returns to the “authenticated” state, without expunging any messages.
RFC4314: ACL
¶ ↑
-
getacl
: lists the authenticated user’s access rights to a mailbox. -
setacl
: sets the access rights for a user on a mailbox -
Note:
DELETEACL
,LISTRIGHTS
, andMYRIGHTS
are not supported yet.
RFC4315: UIDPLUS
¶ ↑
Folded into IMAP4rev2, so it is also listed with Core IMAP commands.
-
uid_expunge
: Restrictsexpunge
to only remove the specified UIDs. -
Updates
select
,examine
with theUIDNOTSTICKY
ResponseCode
-
Updates
append
with theAPPENDUID
ResponseCode
-
Updates
copy
,move
with theCOPYUID
ResponseCode
RFC5256: SORT
¶ ↑
-
sort
,uid_sort
: An alternate version ofsearch
oruid_search
which sorts the results by specified keys.
RFC5256: THREAD
¶ ↑
-
thread
,uid_thread
: An alternate version ofsearch
oruid_search
, which arranges the results into ordered groups or threads according to a chosen algorithm.
XLIST
(non-standard, deprecated)¶ ↑
RFC6851: MOVE
¶ ↑
Folded into IMAP4rev2, so it is also listed with Core IMAP commands.
-
move
,uid_move
: Moves the specified messages to the end of the specified destination mailbox, expunging them from the current mailbox.
Handling server responses¶ ↑
-
greeting
: The server’s initial untagged response, which can indicate a pre-authenticated connection. -
responses
: The untagged responses, as a hash. Keys are the untagged response type (e.g. “OK”, “FETCH”, “FLAGS”) and response code (e.g. “ALERT”, “UIDVALIDITY”, “UIDNEXT”, “TRYCREATE”, etc). Values are arrays ofUntaggedResponse
orResponseCode
. -
add_response_handler
: Add a block to be called inside the receiver thread with every server response. -
remove_response_handler
: Remove a previously added response handler.
References¶ ↑
- [IMAP4rev1]
-
Crispin, M., “INTERNET MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL - VERSION 4rev1”, RFC 3501, DOI 10.17487/RFC3501, March 2003, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3501>.
- [IMAP-ABNF-EXT]
-
Melnikov, A. and C. Daboo, “Collected Extensions to IMAP4 ABNF”, RFC 4466, DOI 10.17487/RFC4466, April 2006, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4466>.
Note: Net::IMAP cannot parse the entire RFC4466 grammar yet.
- [IMAP4rev2]
-
Melnikov, A., Ed., and B. Leiba, Ed., “Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - Version 4rev2”, RFC 9051, DOI 10.17487/RFC9051, August 2021, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9051>.
Note: Net::IMAP is not fully compatible with IMAP4rev2 yet.
- [IMAP-IMPLEMENTATION]
-
Leiba, B., “IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations”, RFC 2683, DOI 10.17487/RFC2683, September 1999, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2683>.
- [IMAP-MULTIACCESS]
-
Gahrns, M., “IMAP4 Multi-Accessed Mailbox Practice”, RFC 2180, DOI 10.17487/RFC2180, July 1997, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2180>.
- [UTF7]
-
Goldsmith, D. and M. Davis, “UTF-7 A Mail-Safe Transformation Format of Unicode”, RFC 2152, DOI 10.17487/RFC2152, May 1997, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2152>.
Message envelope and body structure¶ ↑
- [RFC5322]
-
Resnick, P., Ed., “Internet Message Format”, RFC 5322, DOI 10.17487/RFC5322, October 2008, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5322>.
Note: obsoletes RFC-2822 (April 2001) and RFC-822 (August 1982).
- [CHARSET]
-
Freed, N. and J. Postel, “IANA Charset Registration Procedures”, BCP 19, RFC 2978, DOI 10.17487/RFC2978, October 2000, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2978>.
- [DISPOSITION]
-
Troost, R., Dorner, S., and K. Moore, Ed., “Communicating Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The Content-Disposition Header Field”, RFC 2183, DOI 10.17487/RFC2183, August 1997, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2183>.
- [MIME-IMB]
-
Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, “Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies”, RFC 2045, DOI 10.17487/RFC2045, November 1996, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2045>.
- [MIME-IMT]
-
Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, “Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types”, RFC 2046, DOI 10.17487/RFC2046, November 1996, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2046>.
- [MIME-HDRS]
-
Moore, K., “MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) Part Three: Message Header Extensions for Non-ASCII Text”, RFC 2047, DOI 10.17487/RFC2047, November 1996, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2047>.
- [RFC2231]
-
Freed, N. and K. Moore, “MIME Parameter Value and Encoded Word Extensions: Character Sets, Languages, and Continuations”, RFC 2231, DOI 10.17487/RFC2231, November 1997, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2231>.
- [I18n-HDRS]
-
Yang, A., Steele, S., and N. Freed, “Internationalized Email Headers”, RFC 6532, DOI 10.17487/RFC6532, February 2012, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6532>.
- [LANGUAGE-TAGS]
-
Alvestrand, H., “Content Language Headers”, RFC 3282, DOI 10.17487/RFC3282, May 2002, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3282>.
- [LOCATION]
-
Palme, J., Hopmann, A., and N. Shelness, “MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HTML (MHTML)”, RFC 2557, DOI 10.17487/RFC2557, March 1999, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2557>.
- [MD5]
-
Myers, J. and M. Rose, “The Content-MD5 Header Field”, RFC 1864, DOI 10.17487/RFC1864, October 1995, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1864>.
Supported IMAP Extensions¶ ↑
- [QUOTA]
-
Myers, J., “IMAP4 QUOTA extension”, RFC 2087, DOI 10.17487/RFC2087, January 1997, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2087>.
- [IDLE]
-
Leiba, B., “IMAP4 IDLE command”, RFC 2177, DOI 10.17487/RFC2177, June 1997, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2177>.
- [NAMESPACE]
-
Gahrns, M. and C. Newman, “IMAP4 Namespace”, RFC 2342, DOI 10.17487/RFC2342, May 1998, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2342>.
- [ID]
-
Showalter, T., “IMAP4 ID extension”, RFC 2971, DOI 10.17487/RFC2971, October 2000, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2971>.
- [ACL]
-
Melnikov, A., “IMAP4 Access Control List (ACL) Extension”, RFC 4314, DOI 10.17487/RFC4314, December 2005, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4314>.
- [UIDPLUS]
-
Crispin, M., “Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - UIDPLUS extension”, RFC 4315, DOI 10.17487/RFC4315, December 2005, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4315>.
- [SORT]
-
Crispin, M. and K. Murchison, “Internet Message Access Protocol - SORT and THREAD Extensions”, RFC 5256, DOI 10.17487/RFC5256, June 2008, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5256>.
- [THREAD]
-
Crispin, M. and K. Murchison, “Internet Message Access Protocol - SORT and THREAD Extensions”, RFC 5256, DOI 10.17487/RFC5256, June 2008, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5256>.
- [RFC5530]
-
Gulbrandsen, A., “IMAP Response Codes”, RFC 5530, DOI 10.17487/RFC5530, May 2009, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5530>.
- [MOVE]
-
Gulbrandsen, A. and N. Freed, Ed., “Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - MOVE Extension”, RFC 6851, DOI 10.17487/RFC6851, January 2013, <www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6851>.
IANA registries¶ ↑
-
Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number Registry:
imap
: tcp/143,imaps
: tcp/993
Constants
- STRFDATE
strftime/strptime format for an IMAP4
date
, excluding optional dquotes. Use via theencode_date
anddecode_date
methods.date = date-text / DQUOTE date-text DQUOTE date-text = date-day "-" date-month "-" date-year date-day = 1*2DIGIT ; Day of month date-month = "Jan" / "Feb" / "Mar" / "Apr" / "May" / "Jun" / "Jul" / "Aug" / "Sep" / "Oct" / "Nov" / "Dec" date-year = 4DIGIT
- STRFTIME
strftime/strptime format for an IMAP4
date-time
, including dquotes. See theencode_datetime
anddecode_datetime
methods.date-time = DQUOTE date-day-fixed "-" date-month "-" date-year SP time SP zone DQUOTE date-day-fixed = (SP DIGIT) / 2DIGIT ; Fixed-format version of date-day date-month = "Jan" / "Feb" / "Mar" / "Apr" / "May" / "Jun" / "Jul" / "Aug" / "Sep" / "Oct" / "Nov" / "Dec" date-year = 4DIGIT time = 2DIGIT ":" 2DIGIT ":" 2DIGIT ; Hours minutes seconds zone = ("+" / "-") 4DIGIT ; Signed four-digit value of hhmm representing ; hours and minutes east of Greenwich (that is, ; the amount that the given time differs from ; Universal Time). Subtracting the timezone ; from the given time will give the UT form. ; The Universal Time zone is "+0000".
Note that Time.strptime
"%d"
flexibly parses either space or zero padding. However, the DQUOTEs are not optional.- VERSION
Attributes
Returns the initial greeting the server, an UntaggedResponse
.
Seconds to wait until an IDLE response is received.
Seconds to wait until a connection is opened. If the IMAP
object cannot open a connection within this time, it raises a Net::OpenTimeout exception. The default value is 30 seconds.
Returns all response handlers.
Returns recorded untagged responses.
For example:
imap.select("inbox") p imap.responses["EXISTS"][-1] #=> 2 p imap.responses["UIDVALIDITY"][-1] #=> 968263756
Public Class Methods
Returns the debug mode.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 740 def self.debug return @@debug end
Sets the debug mode.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 745 def self.debug=(val) return @@debug = val end
Decodes string
as an IMAP
formatted “date”.
Double quotes are optional. Day of month may be padded with zero or space. See STRFDATE
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 89 def self.decode_date(string) string = string.delete_prefix('"').delete_suffix('"') Date.strptime(string, STRFDATE) end
Decodes string
as an IMAP4 formatted “date-time”.
Note that double quotes are not optional. See STRFTIME
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 106 def self.decode_datetime(string) DateTime.strptime(string, STRFTIME) end
Decodes string
as an IMAP4 formatted “date-time”.
Same as decode_datetime
, but returning a Time instead.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 115 def self.decode_time(string) decode_datetime(string).to_time end
Decode a string from modified UTF-7 format to UTF-8.
UTF-7 is a 7-bit encoding of Unicode [UTF7]. IMAP
uses a slightly modified version of this to encode mailbox names containing non-ASCII characters; see [IMAP] section 5.1.3.
Net::IMAP
does not automatically encode and decode mailbox names to and from UTF-7.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 56 def self.decode_utf7(s) return s.gsub(/&([^-]+)?-/n) { if $1 ($1.tr(",", "/") + "===").unpack1("m").encode(Encoding::UTF_8, Encoding::UTF_16BE) else "&" end } end
The default port for IMAP
connections, port 143
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 750 def self.default_port return PORT end
The default port for IMAPS connections, port 993
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 755 def self.default_tls_port return SSL_PORT end
Formats time
as an IMAP4 date.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 79 def self.encode_date(date) date.to_date.strftime STRFDATE end
Formats time
as an IMAP4 date-time.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 97 def self.encode_datetime(time) time.to_datetime.strftime STRFTIME end
Encode a string from UTF-8 format to modified UTF-7.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 67 def self.encode_utf7(s) return s.gsub(/(&)|[^\x20-\x7e]+/) { if $1 "&-" else base64 = [$&.encode(Encoding::UTF_16BE)].pack("m0") "&" + base64.delete("=").tr("/", ",") + "-" end }.force_encoding("ASCII-8BIT") end
- DEPRECATED
-
The original version returned incorrectly formatted strings. Strings returned by
encode_datetime
orformat_time
use the correct IMAP4rev1 syntax for “date-time”.
This invalid format has been temporarily retained for backward compatibility. A future release will change this method to return the correct format.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/data_encoding.rb, line 137 def self.format_datetime(time) warn("#{self}.format_datetime incorrectly formats IMAP date-time. " \ "Convert to #{self}.encode_datetime or #{self}.format_time instead.", uplevel: 1, category: :deprecated) time.strftime("%d-%b-%Y %H:%M %z") end
Creates a new Net::IMAP
object and connects it to the specified host
.
options
is an option hash, each key of which is a symbol.
The available options are:
- port
-
Port number (default value is 143 for imap, or 993 for imaps)
- ssl
-
If
options[:ssl]
is true, then an attempt will be made to use SSL (now TLS) to connect to the server. Ifoptions[:ssl]
is a hash, it’s passed to OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#set_params as parameters. open_timeout
-
Seconds to wait until a connection is opened
idle_response_timeout
-
Seconds to wait until an IDLE response is received
The most common errors are:
- Errno::ECONNREFUSED
-
Connection refused by
host
or an intervening firewall. - Errno::ETIMEDOUT
-
Connection timed out (possibly due to packets being dropped by an intervening firewall).
- Errno::ENETUNREACH
-
There is no route to that network.
- SocketError
-
Hostname not known or other socket error.
Net::IMAP::ByeResponseError
-
The connected to the host was successful, but it immediately said goodbye.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2009 def initialize(host, port_or_options = {}, usessl = false, certs = nil, verify = true) super() @host = host begin options = port_or_options.to_hash rescue NoMethodError # for backward compatibility options = {} options[:port] = port_or_options if usessl options[:ssl] = create_ssl_params(certs, verify) end end @port = options[:port] || (options[:ssl] ? SSL_PORT : PORT) @tag_prefix = "RUBY" @tagno = 0 @open_timeout = options[:open_timeout] || 30 @idle_response_timeout = options[:idle_response_timeout] || 5 @parser = ResponseParser.new @sock = tcp_socket(@host, @port) begin if options[:ssl] start_tls_session(options[:ssl]) @usessl = true else @usessl = false end @responses = Hash.new([].freeze) @tagged_responses = {} @response_handlers = [] @tagged_response_arrival = new_cond @continued_command_tag = nil @continuation_request_arrival = new_cond @continuation_request_exception = nil @idle_done_cond = nil @logout_command_tag = nil @debug_output_bol = true @exception = nil @greeting = get_response if @greeting.nil? raise Error, "connection closed" end if @greeting.name == "BYE" raise ByeResponseError, @greeting end @client_thread = Thread.current @receiver_thread = Thread.start { begin receive_responses rescue Exception end } @receiver_thread_terminating = false rescue Exception @sock.close raise end end
Public Instance Methods
Adds a response handler. For example, to detect when the server sends a new EXISTS response (which normally indicates new messages being added to the mailbox), add the following handler after selecting the mailbox:
imap.add_response_handler { |resp| if resp.kind_of?(Net::IMAP::UntaggedResponse) and resp.name == "EXISTS" puts "Mailbox now has #{resp.data} messages" end }
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1963 def add_response_handler(handler = nil, &block) raise ArgumentError, "two Procs are passed" if handler && block @response_handlers.push(block || handler) end
Sends an APPEND command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.11] to append the message
to the end of the mailbox
. The optional flags
argument is an array of flags initially passed to the new message. The optional date_time
argument specifies the creation time to assign to the new message; it defaults to the current time.
For example:
imap.append("inbox", <<EOF.gsub(/\n/, "\r\n"), [:Seen], Time.now) Subject: hello From: shugo@ruby-lang.org To: shugo@ruby-lang.org hello world EOF
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if the mailbox does not exist (it is not created automatically), or if the flags, date_time, or message arguments contain errors.
Capabilities¶ ↑
If UIDPLUS
[RFC4315] is supported and the destination supports persistent UIDs, the server’s response should include an APPENDUID
response code with UIDPlusData
. This will report the UIDVALIDITY of the destination mailbox and the assigned UID of the appended message.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1487 def append(mailbox, message, flags = nil, date_time = nil) args = [] if flags args.push(flags) end args.push(date_time) if date_time args.push(Literal.new(message)) send_command("APPEND", mailbox, *args) end
Sends an AUTHENTICATE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.2.2] to authenticate the client. If successful, the connection enters the “authenticated” state.
mechanism
is the name of the SASL authentication mechanism to be used. All other arguments are forwarded to the authenticator for the requested mechanism. The listed call signatures are suggestions. The documentation for each individual mechanism must be consulted for its specific parameters.
An exception Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if authentication fails.
Supported SASL
Mechanisms¶ ↑
PLAIN
-
See
PlainAuthenticator
. Login using clear-text username and password. XOAUTH2
-
See
XOauth2Authenticator
. Login using a username and OAuth2 access token. Non-standard and obsoleted byOAUTHBEARER
, but widely supported.
Deprecated: Obsolete mechanisms are available for backwards compatibility.
For
DIGEST-MD5
seeDigestMD5Authenticator
.For
LOGIN
, seeLoginAuthenticator
.For
CRAM-MD5
, seeCramMD5Authenticator
.Using a deprecated mechanism will print a warning.
See Net::IMAP::Authenticators
for information on plugging in authenticators for other mechanisms. See the SASL mechanism registry for information on these and other SASL
mechanisms.
Capabilities¶ ↑
Clients MUST NOT attempt to authenticate with a mechanism unless "AUTH=#{mechanism}"
for that mechanism is a server capability.
Server capabilities may change after starttls
, login
, and authenticate
. Cached capabilities must be invalidated after this method completes. The TaggedResponse
to authenticate
may include updated capabilities in its ResponseCode
.
Example¶ ↑
If the authenticators ignore unhandled keyword arguments, the same config can be used for multiple mechanisms:
password = nil # saved locally, so we don't ask more than once accesstok = nil # saved locally... creds = { authcid: username, password: proc { password ||= ui.prompt_for_password }, oauth2_token: proc { accesstok ||= kms.fresh_access_token }, } capa = imap.capability if capa.include? "AUTH=OAUTHBEARER" imap.authenticate "OAUTHBEARER", **creds # authcid, oauth2_token elsif capa.include? "AUTH=XOAUTH2" imap.authenticate "XOAUTH2", **creds # authcid, oauth2_token elsif capa.include? "AUTH=SCRAM-SHA-256" imap.authenticate "SCRAM-SHA-256", **creds # authcid, password elsif capa.include? "AUTH=PLAIN" imap.authenticate "PLAIN", **creds # authcid, password elsif capa.include? "AUTH=DIGEST-MD5" imap.authenticate "DIGEST-MD5", **creds # authcid, password elsif capa.include? "LOGINDISABLED" raise "the server has disabled login" else imap.login username, password end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1040 def authenticate(mechanism, *args, **props, &cb) authenticator = self.class.authenticator(mechanism, *args, **props, &cb) send_command("AUTHENTICATE", mechanism) do |resp| if resp.instance_of?(ContinuationRequest) data = authenticator.process(resp.data.text.unpack("m")[0]) s = [data].pack("m0") send_string_data(s) put_string(CRLF) end end end
Sends a CAPABILITY command [IMAP4rev1 §6.1.1] and returns an array of capabilities that the server supports. Each capability is a string.
See the IANA IMAP4 capabilities registry for a list of all standard capabilities, and their reference RFCs.
Note that Net::IMAP does not currently modify its behaviour according to the capabilities of the server; it is up to the user of the class to ensure that a certain capability is supported by a server before using it.
Capability requirements—other than IMAP4rev1
—are listed in the documentation for each command method.
Basic IMAP4rev1 capabilities¶ ↑
All IMAP4rev1 servers must include IMAP4rev1
in their capabilities list. All IMAP4rev1 servers must implement the STARTTLS
, AUTH=PLAIN
, and LOGINDISABLED
capabilities, and clients must respect their presence or absence. See the capabilites requirements on starttls
, login
, and authenticate
.
Using IMAP4rev1 extensions¶ ↑
IMAP4rev1 servers must not activate incompatible behavior until an explicit client action invokes a capability, e.g. sending a command or command argument specific to that capability. Extensions with backward compatible behavior, such as response codes or mailbox attributes, may be sent at any time.
Invoking capabilities which are unknown to Net::IMAP
may cause unexpected behavior and errors, for example ResponseParseError
is raised when unknown response syntax is received. Invoking commands or command parameters that are unsupported by the server may raise NoResponseError
, BadResponseError
, or cause other unexpected behavior.
Caching CAPABILITY
responses¶ ↑
Servers may send their capability list, unsolicited, using the CAPABILITY
response code or an untagged CAPABILITY
response. These responses can be retrieved and cached using responses
or add_response_handler
.
But cached capabilities must be discarded after starttls
, login
, or authenticate
. The OK TaggedResponse
to login
and authenticate
may include CAPABILITY
response code data, but the TaggedResponse
for starttls
is sent clear-text and cannot be trusted.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 849 def capability synchronize do send_command("CAPABILITY") return @responses.delete("CAPABILITY")[-1] end end
Sends a CHECK command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.1] to request a checkpoint of the currently selected mailbox. This performs implementation-specific housekeeping; for instance, reconciling the mailbox’s in-memory and on-disk state.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1503 def check send_command("CHECK") end
Sends a CLOSE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.2] to close the currently selected mailbox. The CLOSE command permanently removes from the mailbox all messages that have the \Deleted
flag set.
Related: unselect
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1513 def close send_command("CLOSE") end
Sends a COPY command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.7] to copy the specified message(s) to the end of the specified destination mailbox
. The set
parameter is a number, an array of numbers, or a Range object. The number is a message sequence number.
Related: uid_copy
Capabilities¶ ↑
If UIDPLUS
[RFC4315] is supported, the server’s response should include a COPYUID
response code with UIDPlusData
. This will report the UIDVALIDITY of the destination mailbox, the UID set of the source messages, and the assigned UID set of the moved messages.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1749 def copy(set, mailbox) copy_internal("COPY", set, mailbox) end
Sends a CREATE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.3] to create a new mailbox
.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if a mailbox with that name cannot be created.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1129 def create(mailbox) send_command("CREATE", mailbox) end
Sends a DELETE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.4] to remove the mailbox
.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if a mailbox with that name cannot be deleted, either because it does not exist or because the client does not have permission to delete it.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1141 def delete(mailbox) send_command("DELETE", mailbox) end
Disconnects from the server.
Related: logout
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 768 def disconnect return if disconnected? begin begin # try to call SSL::SSLSocket#io. @sock.io.shutdown rescue NoMethodError # @sock is not an SSL::SSLSocket. @sock.shutdown end rescue Errno::ENOTCONN # ignore `Errno::ENOTCONN: Socket is not connected' on some platforms. rescue Exception => e @receiver_thread.raise(e) end @receiver_thread.join synchronize do @sock.close end raise e if e end
Returns true if disconnected from the server.
Related: logout
, disconnect
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 793 def disconnected? return @sock.closed? end
Sends a EXAMINE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.2] to select a mailbox
so that messages in the mailbox
can be accessed. Behaves the same as select
, except that the selected mailbox
is identified as read-only.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if the mailbox does not exist or is for some reason non-examinable.
Related: select
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1115 def examine(mailbox) synchronize do @responses.clear send_command("EXAMINE", mailbox) end end
Sends an EXPUNGE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.3] Sends a EXPUNGE command to permanently remove from the currently selected mailbox all messages that have the Deleted flag set.
Related: uid_expunge
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1538 def expunge synchronize do send_command("EXPUNGE") return @responses.delete("EXPUNGE") end end
Sends a FETCH command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.5] to retrieve data associated with a message in the mailbox.
The set
parameter is a number or a range between two numbers, or an array of those. The number is a message sequence number, where -1 represents a ‘*’ for use in range notation like 100..-1 being interpreted as ‘100:*’. Beware that the exclude_end?
property of a Range object is ignored, and the contents of a range are independent of the order of the range endpoints as per the protocol specification, so 1…5, 5..1 and 5…1 are all equivalent to 1..5.
attr
is a list of attributes to fetch; see the documentation for FetchData
for a list of valid attributes.
The return value is an array of FetchData
or nil (instead of an empty array) if there is no matching message.
Related: uid_search
, FetchData
For example:¶ ↑
p imap.fetch(6..8, "UID") #=> [#<Net::IMAP::FetchData seqno=6, attr={"UID"=>98}>, \\ #<Net::IMAP::FetchData seqno=7, attr={"UID"=>99}>, \\ #<Net::IMAP::FetchData seqno=8, attr={"UID"=>100}>] p imap.fetch(6, "BODY[HEADER.FIELDS (SUBJECT)]") #=> [#<Net::IMAP::FetchData seqno=6, attr={"BODY[HEADER.FIELDS (SUBJECT)]"=>"Subject: test\r\n\r\n"}>] data = imap.uid_fetch(98, ["RFC822.SIZE", "INTERNALDATE"])[0] p data.seqno #=> 6 p data.attr["RFC822.SIZE"] #=> 611 p data.attr["INTERNALDATE"] #=> "12-Oct-2000 22:40:59 +0900" p data.attr["UID"] #=> 98
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1681 def fetch(set, attr, mod = nil) return fetch_internal("FETCH", set, attr, mod) end
Sends a GETACL command [RFC4314 §3.3] along with a specified mailbox
. If this mailbox exists, an array containing objects of MailboxACLItem
will be returned.
Related: setacl
, MailboxACLItem
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include ACL
[RFC4314].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1410 def getacl(mailbox) synchronize do send_command("GETACL", mailbox) return @responses.delete("ACL")[-1] end end
Sends a GETQUOTA command [RFC2087 §4.2] along with specified mailbox
. If this mailbox exists, then an array containing a MailboxQuota
object is returned. This command is generally only available to server admin.
Related: getquotaroot
, setquota
, MailboxQuota
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include QUOTA
[RFC2087].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1354 def getquota(mailbox) synchronize do send_command("GETQUOTA", mailbox) return @responses.delete("QUOTA") end end
Sends a GETQUOTAROOT command [RFC2087 §4.3] along with the specified mailbox
. This command is generally available to both admin and user. If this mailbox exists, it returns an array containing objects of type MailboxQuotaRoot
and MailboxQuota
.
Related: getquota
, setquota
, MailboxQuotaRoot
, MailboxQuota
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include QUOTA
[RFC2087].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1333 def getquotaroot(mailbox) synchronize do send_command("GETQUOTAROOT", mailbox) result = [] result.concat(@responses.delete("QUOTAROOT")) result.concat(@responses.delete("QUOTA")) return result end end
Sends an ID command [RFC2971 §3.1] and returns a hash of the server’s response, or nil if the server does not identify itself.
Note that the user should first check if the server supports the ID capability. For example:
capabilities = imap.capability if capabilities.include?("ID") id = imap.id( name: "my IMAP client (ruby)", version: MyIMAP::VERSION, "support-url": "mailto:bugs@example.com", os: RbConfig::CONFIG["host_os"], ) end
See [ID] for field definitions.
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include ID
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 879 def id(client_id=nil) synchronize do send_command("ID", ClientID.new(client_id)) @responses.delete("ID")&.last end end
Sends an IDLE command [RFC2177 §3] [IMAP4rev2 §6.3.13] that waits for notifications of new or expunged messages. Yields responses from the server during the IDLE.
Use idle_done
to leave IDLE.
If timeout
is given, this method returns after timeout
seconds passed. timeout
can be used for keep-alive. For example, the following code checks the connection for each 60 seconds.
loop do imap.idle(60) do |res| ... end end
Related: idle_done
, noop
, check
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include IDLE
[RFC2177].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1910 def idle(timeout = nil, &response_handler) raise LocalJumpError, "no block given" unless response_handler response = nil synchronize do tag = Thread.current[:net_imap_tag] = generate_tag put_string("#{tag} IDLE#{CRLF}") begin add_response_handler(&response_handler) @idle_done_cond = new_cond @idle_done_cond.wait(timeout) @idle_done_cond = nil if @receiver_thread_terminating raise @exception || Net::IMAP::Error.new("connection closed") end ensure unless @receiver_thread_terminating remove_response_handler(response_handler) put_string("DONE#{CRLF}") response = get_tagged_response(tag, "IDLE", @idle_response_timeout) end end end return response end
Leaves IDLE.
Related: idle
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1942 def idle_done synchronize do if @idle_done_cond.nil? raise Net::IMAP::Error, "not during IDLE" end @idle_done_cond.signal end end
Sends a LIST command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.8] and returns a subset of names from the complete set of all names available to the client. refname
provides a context (for instance, a base directory in a directory-based mailbox hierarchy). mailbox
specifies a mailbox or (via wildcards) mailboxes under that context. Two wildcards may be used in mailbox
: ‘*’, which matches all characters including the hierarchy delimiter (for instance, ‘/’ on a UNIX-hosted directory-based mailbox hierarchy); and ‘%’, which matches all characters except the hierarchy delimiter.
If refname
is empty, mailbox
is used directly to determine which mailboxes to match. If mailbox
is empty, the root name of refname
and the hierarchy delimiter are returned.
The return value is an array of MailboxList
.
Related: lsub
, MailboxList
For example:¶ ↑
imap.create("foo/bar") imap.create("foo/baz") p imap.list("", "foo/%") #=> [#<Net::IMAP::MailboxList attr=[:Noselect], delim="/", name="foo/">, \\ #<Net::IMAP::MailboxList attr=[:Noinferiors, :Marked], delim="/", name="foo/bar">, \\ #<Net::IMAP::MailboxList attr=[:Noinferiors], delim="/", name="foo/baz">]
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1213 def list(refname, mailbox) synchronize do send_command("LIST", refname, mailbox) return @responses.delete("LIST") end end
Sends a LOGIN command [IMAP4rev1 §6.2.3] to identify the client and carries the plaintext password
authenticating this user
. If successful, the connection enters the “authenticated” state.
Using authenticate
is generally preferred over login
. The LOGIN command is not the same as authenticate
with the “LOGIN” mechanism
.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if authentication fails.
Related: authenticate
, starttls
Capabilities¶ ↑
Clients MUST NOT call login
if LOGINDISABLED
is listed with the capabilities.
Server capabilities may change after starttls
, login
, and authenticate
. Cached capabilities must be invalidated after this method completes. The TaggedResponse
to login
may include updated capabilities in its ResponseCode
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1073 def login(user, password) send_command("LOGIN", user, password) end
Sends a LOGOUT command [IMAP4rev1 §6.1.3] to inform the command to inform the server that the client is done with the connection.
Related: disconnect
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 907 def logout send_command("LOGOUT") end
Sends a LSUB command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.9] and returns a subset of names from the set of names that the user has declared as being “active” or “subscribed.” refname
and mailbox
are interpreted as for list
.
The return value is an array of MailboxList
objects.
Related: subscribe
, unsubscribe
, list
, MailboxList
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1425 def lsub(refname, mailbox) synchronize do send_command("LSUB", refname, mailbox) return @responses.delete("LSUB") end end
Sends a MOVE command [RFC6851 §3.1] [IMAP4rev2 §6.4.8] to move the specified message(s) to the end of the specified destination mailbox
. The set
parameter is a number, an array of numbers, or a Range object. The number is a message sequence number.
Related: uid_move
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include MOVE
[RFC6851].
If UIDPLUS
[RFC4315] is supported, the server’s response should include a COPYUID
response code with UIDPlusData
. This will report the UIDVALIDITY of the destination mailbox, the UID set of the source messages, and the assigned UID set of the moved messages.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1785 def move(set, mailbox) copy_internal("MOVE", set, mailbox) end
Sends a NAMESPACE command [RFC2342 §5] and returns the namespaces that are available. The NAMESPACE command allows a client to discover the prefixes of namespaces used by a server for personal mailboxes, other users’ mailboxes, and shared mailboxes.
The return value is a Namespaces
object which has personal
, other
, and shared
fields, each an array of Namespace
objects. These arrays will be empty when the server responds with nil
.
Many IMAP servers are configured with the default personal namespaces as ("" "/")
: no prefix and the “/
” hierarchy delimiter. In that common case, the naive client may not have any trouble naming mailboxes. But many servers are configured with the default personal namespace as e.g. ("INBOX." ".")
, placing all personal folders under INBOX, with “.
” as the hierarchy delimiter. If the client does not check for this, but naively assumes it can use the same folder names for all servers, then folder creation (and listing, moving, etc) can lead to errors.
From RFC2342:
Although typically a server will support only a single Personal Namespace, and a single Other User's Namespace, circumstances exist where there MAY be multiples of these, and a client MUST be prepared for them. If a client is configured such that it is required to create a certain mailbox, there can be circumstances where it is unclear which Personal Namespaces it should create the mailbox in. In these situations a client SHOULD let the user select which namespaces to create the mailbox in.
Related: list
, Namespaces
, Namespace
For example:¶ ↑
capabilities = imap.capability if capabilities.include?("NAMESPACE") namespaces = imap.namespace if namespace = namespaces.personal.first prefix = namespace.prefix # e.g. "" or "INBOX." delim = namespace.delim # e.g. "/" or "." # personal folders should use the prefix and delimiter imap.create(prefix + "foo") imap.create(prefix + "bar") imap.create(prefix + %w[path to my folder].join(delim)) end end
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include NAMESPACE
[RFC2342].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1271 def namespace synchronize do send_command("NAMESPACE") return @responses.delete("NAMESPACE")[-1] end end
Sends a NOOP command [IMAP4rev1 §6.1.2] to the server.
This allows the server to send unsolicited untagged EXPUNGE responses
, but does not execute any client request. IMAP servers are permitted to send unsolicited untagged responses at any time, except for ‘EXPUNGE`.
-
EXPUNGE
can only be sent while a command is in progress. -
EXPUNGE
may be sent duringuid_fetch
,uid_store
, oruid_search
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 898 def noop send_command("NOOP") end
Removes the response handler.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1969 def remove_response_handler(handler) @response_handlers.delete(handler) end
Sends a RENAME command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.5] to change the name of the mailbox
to newname
.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if a mailbox with the name mailbox
cannot be renamed to newname
for whatever reason; for instance, because mailbox
does not exist, or because there is already a mailbox with the name newname
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1154 def rename(mailbox, newname) send_command("RENAME", mailbox, newname) end
Sends a SEARCH command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.4] to search the mailbox for messages that match the given searching criteria, and returns message sequence numbers. keys
can either be a string holding the entire search string, or a single-dimension array of search keywords and arguments.
Related: uid_search
Search criteria¶ ↑
For a full list of search criteria, see [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.4], or [IMAP4rev2 §6.4.4], in addition to documentation for any [CAPABILITIES] reported by capability
which may define additional search filters, e.g: CONDSTORE
, WITHIN
, FILTERS
, SEARCH=FUZZY
, OBJECTID
, or SAVEDATE
. The following are some common search criteria:
- <message set>
-
a set of message sequence numbers. “
,
” indicates an interval, “:
” indicates a range. For instance, “2,10:12,15
” means “2,10,11,12,15
”. - BEFORE <date>
-
messages with an internal date strictly before <date>. The date argument has a format similar to
8-Aug-2002
, and can be formatted usingNet::IMAP.format_date
. - BODY <string>
-
messages that contain <string> within their body.
- CC <string>
-
messages containing <string> in their CC field.
- FROM <string>
-
messages that contain <string> in their FROM field.
- NEW
-
messages with the Recent, but not the Seen, flag set.
- NOT <search-key>
-
negate the following search key.
- OR <search-key> <search-key>
-
“or” two search keys together.
- ON <date>
-
messages with an internal date exactly equal to <date>, which has a format similar to 8-Aug-2002.
- SINCE <date>
-
messages with an internal date on or after <date>.
- SUBJECT <string>
-
messages with <string> in their subject.
- TO <string>
-
messages with <string> in their TO field.
For example:¶ ↑
p imap.search(["SUBJECT", "hello", "NOT", "NEW"]) #=> [1, 6, 7, 8]
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1631 def search(keys, charset = nil) return search_internal("SEARCH", keys, charset) end
Sends a SELECT command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.1] to select a mailbox
so that messages in the mailbox
can be accessed.
After you have selected a mailbox, you may retrieve the number of items in that mailbox from imap.responses["EXISTS"][-1]
, and the number of recent messages from imap.responses["RECENT"][-1]
. Note that these values can change if new messages arrive during a session or when existing messages are expunged; see add_response_handler
for a way to detect these events.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if the mailbox does not exist or is for some reason non-selectable.
Related: examine
Capabilities¶ ↑
If [UIDPLUS] is supported, the server may return an untagged “NO” response with a “UIDNOTSTICKY” response code indicating that the mailstore does not support persistent UIDs:
@responses["NO"].last.code.name == "UIDNOTSTICKY"
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1099 def select(mailbox) synchronize do @responses.clear send_command("SELECT", mailbox) end end
Sends a SETACL command [RFC4314 §3.1] along with mailbox
, user
and the rights
that user is to have on that mailbox. If rights
is nil, then that user will be stripped of any rights to that mailbox.
Related: getacl
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include ACL
[RFC4314].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1392 def setacl(mailbox, user, rights) if rights.nil? send_command("SETACL", mailbox, user, "") else send_command("SETACL", mailbox, user, rights) end end
Sends a SETQUOTA command [RFC2087 §4.1] along with the specified mailbox
and quota
. If quota
is nil, then quota
will be unset for that mailbox. Typically one needs to be logged in as a server admin for this to work.
Related: getquota
, getquotaroot
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include QUOTA
[RFC2087].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1372 def setquota(mailbox, quota) if quota.nil? data = '()' else data = '(STORAGE ' + quota.to_s + ')' end send_command("SETQUOTA", mailbox, RawData.new(data)) end
Sends a SORT command [RFC5256 §3] to search a mailbox for messages that match search_keys
and return an array of message sequence numbers, sorted by sort_keys
. search_keys
are interpreted the same as for search
.
Related: uid_sort
, search
, uid_search
, thread
, uid_thread
For example:¶ ↑
p imap.sort(["FROM"], ["ALL"], "US-ASCII") #=> [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 4, 9] p imap.sort(["DATE"], ["SUBJECT", "hello"], "US-ASCII") #=> [6, 7, 8, 1]
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include SORT
[RFC5256].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1829 def sort(sort_keys, search_keys, charset) return sort_internal("SORT", sort_keys, search_keys, charset) end
Sends a STARTTLS command [IMAP4rev1 §6.2.1] to start a TLS session.
Any options
are forwarded to OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#set_params.
This method returns after TLS negotiation and hostname verification are both successful. Any error indicates that the connection has not been secured.
Note:
Any
response_handlers
added before STARTTLS should be aware that theTaggedResponse
to STARTTLS is sent clear-text, before TLS negotiation. TLS negotiation starts immediately after that response.
Related: Net::IMAP.new
, login
, authenticate
Capability¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include STARTTLS
.
Server capabilities may change after starttls
, login
, and authenticate
. Cached capabilities must be invalidated after this method completes.
The TaggedResponse
to starttls
is sent clear-text, so the server must not send capabilities in the starttls
response and clients must not use them if they are sent. Servers will generally send an unsolicited untagged response immeditely after starttls
completes.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 940 def starttls(options = {}, verify = true) send_command("STARTTLS") do |resp| if resp.kind_of?(TaggedResponse) && resp.name == "OK" begin # for backward compatibility certs = options.to_str options = create_ssl_params(certs, verify) rescue NoMethodError end start_tls_session(options) end end end
Sends a STATUS commands [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.10] and returns the status of the indicated mailbox
. attr
is a list of one or more attributes whose statuses are to be requested. Supported attributes include:
MESSAGES:: the number of messages in the mailbox. RECENT:: the number of recent messages in the mailbox. UNSEEN:: the number of unseen messages in the mailbox.
The return value is a hash of attributes. For example:
p imap.status("inbox", ["MESSAGES", "RECENT"]) #=> {"RECENT"=>0, "MESSAGES"=>44}
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if status values for mailbox
cannot be returned; for instance, because it does not exist.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1449 def status(mailbox, attr) synchronize do send_command("STATUS", mailbox, attr) return @responses.delete("STATUS")[-1].attr end end
Sends a STORE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.6] to alter data associated with messages in the mailbox, in particular their flags. The set
parameter is a number, an array of numbers, or a Range object. Each number is a message sequence number. attr
is the name of a data item to store: ‘FLAGS’ will replace the message’s flag list with the provided one, ‘+FLAGS’ will add the provided flags, and ‘-FLAGS’ will remove them. flags
is a list of flags.
The return value is an array of FetchData
Related: uid_store
For example:¶ ↑
p imap.store(6..8, "+FLAGS", [:Deleted]) #=> [#<Net::IMAP::FetchData seqno=6, attr={"FLAGS"=>[:Seen, :Deleted]}>, \\ #<Net::IMAP::FetchData seqno=7, attr={"FLAGS"=>[:Seen, :Deleted]}>, \\ #<Net::IMAP::FetchData seqno=8, attr={"FLAGS"=>[:Seen, :Deleted]}>]
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1719 def store(set, attr, flags) return store_internal("STORE", set, attr, flags) end
Sends a SUBSCRIBE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.6] to add the specified mailbox
name to the server’s set of “active” or “subscribed” mailboxes as returned by lsub
.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if mailbox
cannot be subscribed to; for instance, because it does not exist.
Related: unsubscribe
, lsub
, list
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1166 def subscribe(mailbox) send_command("SUBSCRIBE", mailbox) end
Sends a THREAD command [RFC5256 §3] to search a mailbox and return message sequence numbers in threaded format, as a ThreadMember
tree. search_keys
are interpreted the same as for search
.
The supported algorithms are:
- ORDEREDSUBJECT
-
split into single-level threads according to subject, ordered by date.
- REFERENCES
-
split into threads by parent/child relationships determined by which message is a reply to which.
Unlike search
, charset
is a required argument. US-ASCII and UTF-8 are sample values.
Related: uid_thread
, search
, uid_search
, sort
, uid_sort
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include THREAD
[RFC5256].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1869 def thread(algorithm, search_keys, charset) return thread_internal("THREAD", algorithm, search_keys, charset) end
Sends a UID COPY command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.8] to copy the specified message(s) to the end of the specified destination mailbox
.
Similar to copy
, but set
contains unique identifiers.
Capabilities¶ ↑
UIDPLUS
affects uid_copy
the same way it affects copy
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1762 def uid_copy(set, mailbox) copy_internal("UID COPY", set, mailbox) end
Sends a UID EXPUNGE command [RFC4315 §2.1] [IMAP4rev2 §6.4.9] to permanently remove all messages that have both the \Deleted
flag set and a UID that is included in uid_set
.
By using uid_expunge
instead of expunge
when resynchronizing with the server, the client can ensure that it does not inadvertantly remove any messages that have been marked as \Deleted
by other clients between the time that the client was last connected and the time the client resynchronizes.
Note:
Although the command takes a set of UIDs for its argument, the server still returns regular EXPUNGE responses, which contain a sequence number. These will be deleted from
responses
and this method returns them as an array of sequence number integers.
Related: expunge
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include UIDPLUS
[RFC4315].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1570 def uid_expunge(uid_set) synchronize do send_command("UID EXPUNGE", MessageSet.new(uid_set)) return @responses.delete("EXPUNGE") end end
Sends a UID FETCH command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.8] to retrieve data associated with a message in the mailbox.
Similar to fetch
, but the set
parameter contains unique identifiers instead of message sequence numbers.
Note: Servers MUST implicitly include the
UID
message data item as part of anyFETCH
response caused by aUID
command, regardless of whether aUID
was specified as a message data item to theFETCH
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1697 def uid_fetch(set, attr, mod = nil) return fetch_internal("UID FETCH", set, attr, mod) end
Sends a UID MOVE command [RFC6851 §3.2] [IMAP4rev2 §6.4.9] to move the specified message(s) to the end of the specified destination mailbox
.
Similar to move
, but set
contains unique identifiers.
Related: move
Capabilities¶ ↑
Same as move
: The server’s capabilities must include MOVE
[RFC6851]. UIDPLUS
also affects uid_move
the same way it affects move
.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1803 def uid_move(set, mailbox) copy_internal("UID MOVE", set, mailbox) end
Sends a UID SEARCH command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.8] to search the mailbox for messages that match the given searching criteria, and returns unique identifiers (UID
s).
See search
for documentation of search criteria.
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1640 def uid_search(keys, charset = nil) return search_internal("UID SEARCH", keys, charset) end
Sends a UID SORT command [RFC5256 §3] to search a mailbox for messages that match search_keys
and return an array of unique identifiers, sorted by sort_keys
. search_keys
are interpreted the same as for search
.
Related: sort
, search
, uid_search
, thread
, uid_thread
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include SORT
[RFC5256].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1844 def uid_sort(sort_keys, search_keys, charset) return sort_internal("UID SORT", sort_keys, search_keys, charset) end
Sends a UID STORE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.4.8] to alter data associated with messages in the mailbox, in particular their flags.
Similar to store
, but set
contains unique identifiers instead of message sequence numbers.
Related: store
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1731 def uid_store(set, attr, flags) return store_internal("UID STORE", set, attr, flags) end
Sends a UID THREAD command [RFC5256 §3] Similar to thread
, but returns unique identifiers instead of message sequence numbers.
Related: thread
, search
, uid_search
, sort
, uid_sort
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include THREAD
[RFC5256].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1883 def uid_thread(algorithm, search_keys, charset) return thread_internal("UID THREAD", algorithm, search_keys, charset) end
Sends an UNSELECT command [RFC3691 §2] [IMAP4rev2 §6.4.2] to free the session resources for a mailbox and return to the “authenticated” state. This is the same as close
, except that \Deleted
messages are not removed from the mailbox.
Related: close
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include UNSELECT
[RFC3691].
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1529 def unselect send_command("UNSELECT") end
Sends an UNSUBSCRIBE command [IMAP4rev1 §6.3.7] to remove the specified mailbox
name from the server’s set of “active” or “subscribed” mailboxes.
A Net::IMAP::NoResponseError
is raised if mailbox
cannot be unsubscribed from; for instance, because the client is not currently subscribed to it.
Related: subscribe
, lsub
, list
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1179 def unsubscribe(mailbox) send_command("UNSUBSCRIBE", mailbox) end
Sends a XLIST command, and returns a subset of names from the complete set of all names available to the client. refname
provides a context (for instance, a base directory in a directory-based mailbox hierarchy). mailbox
specifies a mailbox or (via wildcards) mailboxes under that context. Two wildcards may be used in mailbox
: ‘*’, which matches all characters including the hierarchy delimiter (for instance, ‘/’ on a UNIX-hosted directory-based mailbox hierarchy); and ‘%’, which matches all characters except the hierarchy delimiter.
If refname
is empty, mailbox
is used directly to determine which mailboxes to match. If mailbox
is empty, the root name of refname
and the hierarchy delimiter are returned.
The XLIST command is like the LIST command except that the flags returned refer to the function of the folder/mailbox, e.g. :Sent
The return value is an array of MailboxList
objects. For example:
imap.create("foo/bar") imap.create("foo/baz") p imap.xlist("", "foo/%") #=> [#<Net::IMAP::MailboxList attr=[:Noselect], delim="/", name="foo/">, \\ #<Net::IMAP::MailboxList attr=[:Noinferiors, :Marked], delim="/", name="foo/bar">, \\ #<Net::IMAP::MailboxList attr=[:Noinferiors], delim="/", name="foo/baz">]
Related: list
, MailboxList
Capabilities¶ ↑
The server’s capabilities must include XLIST
, a deprecated Gmail extension (replaced by SPECIAL-USE
).
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 1315 def xlist(refname, mailbox) synchronize do send_command("XLIST", refname, mailbox) return @responses.delete("XLIST") end end
Private Instance Methods
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2301 def copy_internal(cmd, set, mailbox) send_command(cmd, MessageSet.new(set), mailbox) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2340 def create_ssl_params(certs = nil, verify = true) params = {} if certs if File.file?(certs) params[:ca_file] = certs elsif File.directory?(certs) params[:ca_path] = certs end end if verify params[:verify_mode] = VERIFY_PEER else params[:verify_mode] = VERIFY_NONE end return params end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2269 def fetch_internal(cmd, set, attr, mod = nil) case attr when String then attr = RawData.new(attr) when Array then attr = attr.map { |arg| arg.is_a?(String) ? RawData.new(arg) : arg } end synchronize do @responses.delete("FETCH") if mod send_command(cmd, MessageSet.new(set), attr, mod) else send_command(cmd, MessageSet.new(set), attr) end return @responses.delete("FETCH") end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2233 def generate_tag @tagno += 1 return format("%s%04d", @tag_prefix, @tagno) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2178 def get_response buff = String.new while true s = @sock.gets(CRLF) break unless s buff.concat(s) if /\{(\d+)\}\r\n/n =~ s s = @sock.read($1.to_i) buff.concat(s) else break end end return nil if buff.length == 0 if @@debug $stderr.print(buff.gsub(/^/n, "S: ")) end return @parser.parse(buff) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2151 def get_tagged_response(tag, cmd, timeout = nil) if timeout deadline = Time.now + timeout end until @tagged_responses.key?(tag) raise @exception if @exception if timeout timeout = deadline - Time.now if timeout <= 0 return nil end end @tagged_response_arrival.wait(timeout) end resp = @tagged_responses.delete(tag) case resp.name when /\A(?:OK)\z/ni return resp when /\A(?:NO)\z/ni raise NoResponseError, resp when /\A(?:BAD)\z/ni raise BadResponseError, resp else raise UnknownResponseError, resp end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2329 def normalize_searching_criteria(keys) keys.collect! do |i| case i when -1, Range, Array MessageSet.new(i) else i end end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2238 def put_string(str) @sock.print(str) if @@debug if @debug_output_bol $stderr.print("C: ") end $stderr.print(str.gsub(/\n(?!\z)/n, "\nC: ")) if /\r\n\z/n.match(str) @debug_output_bol = true else @debug_output_bol = false end end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2080 def receive_responses connection_closed = false until connection_closed synchronize do @exception = nil end begin resp = get_response rescue Exception => e synchronize do @sock.close @exception = e end break end unless resp synchronize do @exception = EOFError.new("end of file reached") end break end begin synchronize do case resp when TaggedResponse @tagged_responses[resp.tag] = resp @tagged_response_arrival.broadcast case resp.tag when @logout_command_tag return when @continued_command_tag @continuation_request_exception = RESPONSE_ERRORS[resp.name].new(resp) @continuation_request_arrival.signal end when UntaggedResponse record_response(resp.name, resp.data) if resp.data.instance_of?(ResponseText) && (code = resp.data.code) record_response(code.name, code.data) end if resp.name == "BYE" && @logout_command_tag.nil? @sock.close @exception = ByeResponseError.new(resp) connection_closed = true end when ContinuationRequest @continuation_request_arrival.signal end @response_handlers.each do |handler| handler.call(resp) end end rescue Exception => e @exception = e synchronize do @tagged_response_arrival.broadcast @continuation_request_arrival.broadcast end end end synchronize do @receiver_thread_terminating = true @tagged_response_arrival.broadcast @continuation_request_arrival.broadcast if @idle_done_cond @idle_done_cond.signal end end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2198 def record_response(name, data) unless @responses.has_key?(name) @responses[name] = [] end @responses[name].push(data) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2253 def search_internal(cmd, keys, charset) if keys.instance_of?(String) keys = [RawData.new(keys)] else normalize_searching_criteria(keys) end synchronize do if charset send_command(cmd, "CHARSET", charset, *keys) else send_command(cmd, *keys) end return @responses.delete("SEARCH")[-1] end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2205 def send_command(cmd, *args, &block) synchronize do args.each do |i| validate_data(i) end tag = generate_tag put_string(tag + " " + cmd) args.each do |i| put_string(" ") send_data(i, tag) end put_string(CRLF) if cmd == "LOGOUT" @logout_command_tag = tag end if block add_response_handler(&block) end begin return get_tagged_response(tag, cmd) ensure if block remove_response_handler(block) end end end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 33 def send_data(data, tag = nil) case data when nil put_string("NIL") when String send_string_data(data, tag) when Integer send_number_data(data) when Array send_list_data(data, tag) when Date send_date_data(data) when Time, DateTime send_time_data(data) when Symbol send_symbol_data(data) else data.send_data(self, tag) end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 108 def send_date_data(date) put_string Net::IMAP.encode_date(date) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 94 def send_list_data(list, tag = nil) put_string("(") first = true list.each do |i| if first first = false else put_string(" ") end send_data(i, tag) end put_string(")") end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 73 def send_literal(str, tag = nil) synchronize do put_string("{" + str.bytesize.to_s + "}" + CRLF) @continued_command_tag = tag @continuation_request_exception = nil begin @continuation_request_arrival.wait e = @continuation_request_exception || @exception raise e if e put_string(str) ensure @continued_command_tag = nil @continuation_request_exception = nil end end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 90 def send_number_data(num) put_string(num.to_s) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 69 def send_quoted_string(str) put_string('"' + str.gsub(/["\\]/n, "\\\\\\&") + '"') end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 54 def send_string_data(str, tag = nil) case str when "" put_string('""') when /[\x80-\xff\r\n]/n # literal send_literal(str, tag) when /[(){ \x00-\x1f\x7f%*"\\]/n # quoted string send_quoted_string(str) else put_string(str) end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 111 def send_symbol_data(symbol) put_string("\\" + symbol.to_s) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 109 def send_time_data(time) put_string Net::IMAP.encode_time(time) end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2305 def sort_internal(cmd, sort_keys, search_keys, charset) if search_keys.instance_of?(String) search_keys = [RawData.new(search_keys)] else normalize_searching_criteria(search_keys) end normalize_searching_criteria(search_keys) synchronize do send_command(cmd, sort_keys, charset, *search_keys) return @responses.delete("SORT")[-1] end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2357 def start_tls_session(params = {}) unless defined?(OpenSSL::SSL) raise "SSL extension not installed" end if @sock.kind_of?(OpenSSL::SSL::SSLSocket) raise RuntimeError, "already using SSL" end begin params = params.to_hash rescue NoMethodError params = {} end context = SSLContext.new context.set_params(params) if defined?(VerifyCallbackProc) context.verify_callback = VerifyCallbackProc end @sock = SSLSocket.new(@sock, context) @sock.sync_close = true @sock.hostname = @host if @sock.respond_to? :hostname= ssl_socket_connect(@sock, @open_timeout) if context.verify_mode != VERIFY_NONE @sock.post_connection_check(@host) end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2290 def store_internal(cmd, set, attr, flags) if attr.instance_of?(String) attr = RawData.new(attr) end synchronize do @responses.delete("FETCH") send_command(cmd, MessageSet.new(set), attr, flags) return @responses.delete("FETCH") end end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2071 def tcp_socket(host, port) s = Socket.tcp(host, port, :connect_timeout => @open_timeout) s.setsockopt(:SOL_SOCKET, :SO_KEEPALIVE, true) s rescue Errno::ETIMEDOUT raise Net::OpenTimeout, "Timeout to open TCP connection to " + "#{host}:#{port} (exceeds #{@open_timeout} seconds)" end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap.rb, line 2318 def thread_internal(cmd, algorithm, search_keys, charset) if search_keys.instance_of?(String) search_keys = [RawData.new(search_keys)] else normalize_searching_criteria(search_keys) end normalize_searching_criteria(search_keys) send_command(cmd, algorithm, charset, *search_keys) return @responses.delete("THREAD")[-1] end
# File net-imap-0.3.4.1/lib/net/imap/command_data.rb, line 12 def validate_data(data) case data when nil when String when Integer NumValidator.ensure_number(data) when Array if data[0] == 'CHANGEDSINCE' NumValidator.ensure_mod_sequence_value(data[1]) else data.each do |i| validate_data(i) end end when Time, Date, DateTime when Symbol else data.validate end end
Basic Mailbox Attributes
↑ topConstants
- HASCHILDREN
Alias for
HAS_CHILDREN
, to match the IMAP spelling.- HASNOCHILDREN
Alias for
HAS_NO_CHILDREN
, to match the IMAP spelling.- HAS_CHILDREN
The presence of this attribute indicates that the mailbox has child mailboxes. A server SHOULD NOT set this attribute if there are child mailboxes and the user does not have permission to access any of them. In this case,
\HasNoChildren
SHOULD be used. In many cases, however, a server may not be able to efficiently compute whether a user has access to any child mailboxes. Note that even though the\HasChildren
attribute for a mailbox must be correct at the time of processing the mailbox, a client must be prepared to deal with a situation when a mailbox is marked with the\HasChildren
attribute, but no child mailbox appears in the response to thelist
command. This might happen, for example, due to child mailboxes being deleted or made inaccessible to the user (using access control) by another client before the server is able to list them.It is an error for the server to return both a
\HasChildren
and a\HasNoChildren
attribute in the samelist
response. A client that encounters alist
response with both\HasChildren
and\HasNoChildren
attributes present should act as if both are absent in thelist
response.- HAS_NO_CHILDREN
The presence of this attribute indicates that the mailbox has NO child mailboxes that are accessible to the currently authenticated user.
It is an error for the server to return both a
\HasChildren
and a\HasNoChildren
attribute in the samelist
response. A client that encounters alist
response with both\HasChildren
and\HasNoChildren
attributes present should act as if both are absent in thelist
response.Note: the
\HasNoChildren
attribute should not be confused with the\NoInferiors
attribute, which indicates that no child mailboxes exist now and none can be created in the future.- MARKED
The mailbox has been marked “interesting” by the server; the mailbox probably contains messages that have been added since the last time the mailbox was selected.
If it is not feasible for the server to determine whether or not the mailbox is “interesting”, the server SHOULD NOT send either
\Marked
or\Unmarked
. The server MUST NOT send more than one of\Marked
,\Unmarked
, and\NoSelect
for a single mailbox, and it MAY send none of these.- NOINFERIORS
Alias for
NO_INFERIORS
, to match the IMAP spelling.- NONEXISTENT
The
\NonExistent
attribute indicates that a mailbox name does not refer to an existing mailbox. Note that this attribute is not meaningful by itself, as mailbox names that match the canonicallist
pattern but don’t exist must not be returned unless one of the two conditions listed below is also satisfied:-
The mailbox name also satisfies the selection criteria (for example, it is subscribed and the “SUBSCRIBED” selection option has been specified).
-
“RECURSIVEMATCH” has been specified, and the mailbox name has at least one descendant mailbox name that does not match the
list
pattern and does match the selection criteria.
In practice, this means that the
\NonExistent
attribute is usually returned with one or more of\Subscribed
,\Remote
,\HasChildren
, or the CHILDINFO extended data item.The client must treat the presence of the
\NonExistent
attribute as if the\NoSelect
attribute was also sent by the server-
- NOSELECT
Alias for
NO_SELECT
, to match the IMAP spelling.- NO_INFERIORS
Mailbox attribute indicating it is not possible for any child levels of hierarchy to exist under this name; no child levels exist now and none can be created in the future children.
The client must treat the presence of the
\NoInferiors
attribute as if the\HasNoChildren
attribute was also sent by the server- NO_SELECT
Mailbox attribute indicating it is not possible to use this name as a selectable mailbox.
- REMOTE
The mailbox is a remote mailbox.
- SUBSCRIBED
The mailbox name was subscribed to using the
subscribe
command.- UNMARKED
The mailbox does not contain any additional messages since the last time the mailbox was selected.
If it is not feasible for the server to determine whether or not the mailbox is “interesting”, the server SHOULD NOT send either
\Marked
or\Unmarked
. The server MUST NOT send more than one of\Marked
,\Unmarked
, and\NoSelect
for a single mailbox, and it MAY send none of these.
Mailbox role attributes
↑ topConstants
- ALL
Mailbox attribute indicating that this mailbox presents all messages in the user’s message store. Implementations MAY omit some messages, such as, perhaps, those in Trash and Junk. When this special use is supported, it is almost certain to represent a virtual mailbox
- ARCHIVE
Mailbox attribute indicating that this mailbox is used to archive messages. The meaning of an “archival” mailbox is server dependent; typically, it will be used to get messages out of the inbox, or otherwise keep them out of the user’s way, while still making them accessible
- DRAFTS
Mailbox attribute indicating that this mailbox is used to hold draft messages – typically, messages that are being composed but have not yet been sent. In some server implementations, this might be a virtual mailbox, containing messages from other mailboxes that are marked with the “Draft” message flag. Alternatively, this might just be advice that a client put drafts here
- JUNK
Mailbox attribute indicating that this mailbox is where messages deemed to be junk mail are held. Some server implementations might put messages here automatically. Alternatively, this might just be advice to a client-side spam filter.
- SENT
Mailbox attribute indicating that this mailbox is used to hold copies of messages that have been sent. Some server implementations might put messages here automatically. Alternatively, this might just be advice that a client save sent messages here.
- TRASH
Mailbox attribute indicating that this mailbox is used to hold messages that have been deleted or marked for deletion. In some server implementations, this might be a virtual mailbox, containing messages from other mailboxes that are marked with the
\Deleted
message flag. Alternatively, this might just be advice that a client that chooses not to use the IMAP\Deleted
model should use as its trash location. In server implementations that strictly expect the IMAP\Deleted
model, this special use is likely not to be supported.
System Flags
↑ topConstants
- ANSWERED
Flag indicating a message has been answered.
- DELETED
Flag indicating a message has been marked for deletion. This will occur when the mailbox is closed or expunged.
- DRAFT
Flag indicating a message is only a draft or work-in-progress version.
- FLAGGED
A message flag indicating a message has been flagged for special or urgent attention.
Also a mailbox special use attribute, which indicates that this mailbox presents all messages marked in some way as “important”. When this special use is supported, it is likely to represent a virtual mailbox collecting messages (from other mailboxes) that are marked with the “Flagged” message flag.
- RECENT
Flag indicating that the message is “recent,” meaning that this session is the first session in which the client has been notified of this message.
This flag was defined by IMAP4rev1 and is deprecated by IMAP4rev2.
- SEEN
Flag indicating a message has been read.