Delicious Bookmark this on Delicious Share on Facebook SlashdotSlashdot It! Digg! Digg



PHP : Function Reference : Mailparse Functions : mailparse_msg_extract_part

mailparse_msg_extract_part

Extracts/decodes a message section (PHP 4 >= 4.0.7, PECL mailparse:0.9-2.1.1)
void mailparse_msg_extract_part ( resource mimemail, string msgbody [, callback callbackfunc] )

Warning:

This function is currently not documented; only the argument list is available.

Parameters

mimemail

A valid MIME resource.

msgbody
callbackfunc

Return Values

No value is returned.

Code Examples / Notes » mailparse_msg_extract_part

steve

Unless I've missed something obvious:
get_structure returns array(1,1.1,1.1.2) etc but its not easy to get the contents of each part as mailparse_msg_extract_part() and mailparse_msg_extract_part_file() just return the lot.  However get_part_data will return the string offsets so you know where to chop the message so you can get the contents of the parts.
Only issue is get_part_data returns:
   [starting-pos] => 0
   [starting-pos-body] => 1412
   [ending-pos] => 14989
   [ending-pos-body] => 14989
Unless I'm missed something else, theres a bug here as ending-pos is the same as ending-pos-body so it won't chop the contents cleanly, leaving the:
------=_NextPart_000_0069_01C659A6.9072E590--
...as supposedly part of the section contents.
$file = "..../mail"; // path of your mail
$file_txt = implode("",file($file));
$parse = mailparse_msg_parse_file($file);
$structure = mailparse_msg_get_structure($parse);
// chop message parts into array
$parts = array();
foreach ($structure as $s){
print "Part $s\n";
print "--------------------------------------\n";
$part = mailparse_msg_get_part($parse, $s);
$part_data = mailparse_msg_get_part_data($part);
print_r($part_data);
$starting_pos_body = $part_data['starting-pos-body'];
$ending_pos_body = $part_data['ending-pos-body'];
$parts[$s] = substr($file_txt,$starting_pos_body,$ending_pos_body); // copy data into array
print "[".$parts[$s]."]";
print "\n------------------------------------\n";
}


php

substr() uses the string length, not the position as third argument. The corrected version of the following code line:
<?php
$parts[$s] = substr($file_txt, $starting_pos_body, $ending_pos_body-$starting_pos_body);
?>


will

In mailparse version 2.1.1 (and perhaps earlier), when using mailparse_msg_extract_part() with a callback function, it breaks the data it passes to it into 4kB chunks and calls the callback function for each chunk.  So, for example, if it's extracting a 41kB MIME part, the callback function you define will be called 11 times, each time with the next chunk of data.  Here's some quick-and-dirty code that shows one way to handle this:
<?php
$message = file_get_contents ("email.txt"); // Pull in the e-mail.
function catch_part ($part)
{
$GLOBALS["part_data"] .= $part; // Append the data onto any previously extracted data.
}
mailparse_msg_extract_part ("1.1", $message, "catch_part"); // Extract MIME part 1.1
echo $GLOBALS["part_data"]; // Print out the extracted part.
?>
There's probably a much better way of dealing with this, but hey.  It's what I got.


Change Language


Follow Navioo On Twitter
mailparse_determine_best_xfer_encoding
mailparse_msg_create
mailparse_msg_extract_part_file
mailparse_msg_extract_part
mailparse_msg_extract_whole_part_file
mailparse_msg_free
mailparse_msg_get_part_data
mailparse_msg_get_part
mailparse_msg_get_structure
mailparse_msg_parse_file
mailparse_msg_parse
mailparse_rfc822_parse_addresses
mailparse_stream_encode
mailparse_uudecode_all
eXTReMe Tracker