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MHSTORE(1)		    General Commands Manual		    MHSTORE(1)

NAME
       mhstore - store contents	of nmh MIME messages into files

SYNOPSIS

       mhstore [-help] [-version] [+folder] [msgs] [-file file]	[-outfile out-
	    file] [-part number] ...  [-type content] ...  [-prefer content]
	    ...	 [-noprefer] [-auto | -noauto] [-clobber always	| auto | suf-
	    fix	| ask |	never] [-verbose | -noverbose]

DESCRIPTION
       The mhstore command allows you to store the contents of a collection of
       MIME (multi-media) messages into	files or other messages.

       mhstore	manipulates  multi-media  messages as specified	in RFC 2045 to
       RFC 2049.

       By default, mhstore will	store all the parts  of	 each  message.	  Each
       part  will be stored in a separate file.	 The header fields of the mes-
       sage are	not stored.  By	using the -part, -type,	and -prefer  switches,
       you  may	limit and reorder the set of parts to be stored, based on part
       number and/or content type.

       The -file file switch directs mhstore to	use the	specified file as  the
       source  message,	 rather	 than a	message	from a folder.	If you specify
       this file as "-", then mhstore will accept the source  message  on  the
       standard	 input.	  Note	that  the  file, or input from standard	input,
       should be a validly formatted message, just like	any other nmh message.
       It should not be	in mail	drop format (to	convert	a file	in  mail  drop
       format to a folder of nmh messages, see inc(1)).

       A part specification consists of	a series of numbers separated by dots.
       For example, in a multipart content containing three parts, these would
       be  named as 1, 2, and 3, respectively.	If part	2 was also a multipart
       content containing two parts, these would be named as 2.1 and 2.2,  re-
       spectively.   Note that the -part switch	is effective only for messages
       containing a multipart content.	If a message has some  other  kind  of
       content,	 or if the part	is itself another multipart content, the -part
       switch will not prevent the content from	being acted upon.

       The -type switch	can also be used to restrict (or, when	used  in  con-
       junction	 with  -part,  to further restrict) the	selection of parts ac-
       cording to content type.	 One or	more -type switches part will only se-
       lect the	first match from a multipart/alternative,  even	 if  there  is
       more than one subpart that matches (one of) the given content type(s).

       Using  either -part or -type switches alone will	cause either to	select
       the part(s) they	match.	Using  them  together  will  select  only  the
       part(s) matched by both (sets of) switches.  In other words, the	result
       is  the	intersection,  and  not	the union, of their separate match re-
       sults.

       A content specification consists	of a content type and a	subtype.   The
       initial	list  of "standard" content types and subtypes can be found in
       RFC 2046.

       A list of commonly used contents	is briefly reproduced here:

	    Type	 Subtypes
	    ----	 --------
	    text	 plain,	enriched
	    multipart	 mixed,	alternative, digest, parallel
	    message	 rfc822, external-body
	    application	 octet-stream, postscript
	    image	 jpeg, gif, png
	    audio	 basic
	    video	 mpeg

       A legal MIME message must contain a subtype specification.

       To specify a content, regardless	of its subtype,	just use the  name  of
       the  content,  e.g.,  "audio".  To specify a specific subtype, separate
       the two with a slash, e.g., "audio/basic".  Note	that regardless	of the
       values given to the -type switch, a multipart content (of  any  subtype
       listed  above)  is  always  acted upon.	Further	note that if the -type
       switch is used, and it is desirable to act on  a	 message/external-body
       content,	then the -type switch must be used twice: once for message/ex-
       ternal-body and once for	the content externally referenced.

       The  -prefer  switch will alter the part-ordering of multipart/alterna-
       tive MIME sections in order to override the sender-imposed default  or-
       dering.	 The -prefer switch is functionally most important for mhshow,
       but is also implemented in mhlist and mhstore to	make common  part-num-
       bering  possible	across all three programs.  The	last of	multiple -pre-
       fer switches will have the highest priority.  This allows  the  command
       line switches to	override profile entries.  See mhlist(1) and mhshow(1)
       for more	information on -prefer.

       The -noprefer switch will cancel	any previous -prefer switches.

   Storing the Contents
       mhstore	will store the contents	of the named messages in "native" (de-
       coded) format.  Two things must be determined: the directory  in	 which
       to  store the content, and the filenames.  Files	are written in the di-
       rectory given by	the "nmh-storage" profile entry, e.g.,

	    nmh-storage: /tmp

       If this entry isn't present, the	current	working	directory is used.

       If the -outfile switch is given,	its argument is	used for the  filename
       to  store  all of the content, with "-" indicating standard output.  If
       the -auto switch	is given, then mhstore will check if the message  con-
       tains  information indicating the filename that should be used to store
       the content.  This information should be	specified  as  the  "filename"
       attribute  in  the  "Content-Disposition"  header  or as	the "name" at-
       tribute in the "Content-Type" header for	the content you	 are  storing.
       For  security  reasons, this filename will be ignored if	it begins with
       the character `/', `.', `|', or `!', or if it  contains	the  character
       `%'.  We	also recommend using a "nmh-storage" profile entry or a	-clob-
       ber  switch  setting  other than	the default of "always"	to avoid over-
       writing existing	files.

       If the -auto switch is not given	(or is being ignored for security rea-
       sons) then mhstore will look in the user's profile  for	a  "formatting
       string"	to  determine  how  the	 different  contents should be stored.
       First, mhstore will look	for an entry of	the form:

	    mhstore-store-<type>/<subtype>

       to determine the	formatting string.  If this isn't found, mhstore  will
       look for	an entry of the	form:

	    mhstore-store-<type>

       to determine the	formatting string.

       If  the	formatting string starts with a	"+" character, then content is
       stored in the named folder.  A formatting string	consisting solely of a
       "+" character is	interpreted to be the current folder.

       If the formatting string	consists solely	of a "-" character,  then  the
       content is sent to the standard output.

       If  the	formatting string starts with a	`|', then it represents	a com-
       mand for	mhstore	to execute which should	ultimately store the  content.
       The  content  will be passed to the standard input of the command.  Be-
       fore the	command	is executed, mhstore will change  to  the  appropriate
       directory,  and any escapes (given below) in the	formatting string will
       be expanded.  The use of	the "%a" sequence is not  recommended  because
       the user	has no control over the	Content-Type parameter data.

       Otherwise,  the formatting string will represent	a pathname in which to
       store the content.  If the formatting string starts with	 a  `/',  then
       the  content  will be stored in the full	path given, else the file name
       will be relative	to the value of	"nmh-storage" or the  current  working
       directory.   Any	escapes	(given below) will be expanded,	except for the
       a-escape.  Note that if "nmh-storage" is	not an absolute	path, it  will
       be relative to the folder that contains the message(s).

       A  command  or pathname formatting string may contain the following es-
       capes.  If the content isn't part of a multipart	(of any	subtype	listed
       above) content, the p-escapes are ignored.

	    %a	Parameters from	Content-Type  (only valid with command)
	    %m	Insert message number
	    %P	Insert part number with	leading	dot
	    %p	Insert part number without leading dot
	    %t	Insert content type
	    %s	Insert content subtype
	    %%	Insert character %

       If no formatting	string is found, mhstore will check to see if the con-
       tent is application/octet-stream	with parameter "type=tar".  If so, mh-
       store will choose an appropriate	filename.  If the content is  not  ap-
       plication/octet-stream,	then  mhstore will check to see	if the content
       is a message.  If so, mhstore will use the value	"+".  As  a  last  re-
       sort, mhstore will use the value	"%m%P.%s".

       Example profile entries might be:

	    mhstore-store-text:	%m%P.txt
	    mhstore-store-text:	+inbox
	    mhstore-store-audio/basic: | raw2audio -e ulaw -s 8000 -c 1	> %m%P.au
	    mhstore-store-image/jpeg: %m%P.jpg
	    mhstore-store-application/PostScript: %m%P.ps

       The  -verbose  switch  directs  mhstore to print	out the	names of files
       that it stores.	For backward compatibility, it is  the	default.   The
       -noverbose switch suppresses these printouts.

   Overwriting Existing	Files
       The  -clobber switch controls whether mhstore should overwrite existing
       files.  The allowed values for this switch and  corresponding  behavior
       when mhstore encounters an existing file	are:

	    always    Overwrite	existing file (default)
	    auto      Create new file of form name-n.extension
	    suffix    Create new file of form name.extension.n
	    ask	      Prompt the user to specify whether or not	to overwrite
		      the existing file
	    never     Do not overwrite existing	file

       With auto and suffix, n is the lowest unused number, starting from one,
       in  the same form.  If a	filename does not have an extension (following
       a `.'), then auto and suffix create a new file of the form  name-n  and
       name.n,	respectively.	With never and ask, the	exit status of mhstore
       will be the number of files that	were requested but not stored.

       With ask, if standard input is connected	to a  terminal,	 the  user  is
       prompted	 to  respond yes, no, or rename, to whether the	file should be
       overwritten.  The responses can be abbreviated.	If the	user  responds
       with rename, then mhstore prompts the user for the name of the new file
       to  be  created.	  If  it  is a relative	path name (does	not begin with
       `/'), then it is	relative to the	current	directory.  If it  is  an  ab-
       solute  or  relative  path to a directory that does not exist, the user
       will be prompted	whether	to create the directory.  If standard input is
       not connected to	a terminal, ask	behaves	the same as always.

   External Access
       For contents of type message/external-body, mhstore supports these  ac-
       cess-types:

          afs

          anon-ftp

          ftp

          local-file

          mail-server

          url

       For  the	 "anon-ftp"  and "ftp" access types, mhstore will look for the
       "nmh-access-ftp"	profile	entry, e.g.,

	    nmh-access-ftp: myftp.sh

       to determine the	pathname of a program to perform  the  FTP  retrieval.
       This program is invoked with these arguments:

	    domain name	of FTP-site
	    username
	    password
	    remote directory
	    remote filename
	    local filename
	    "ascii" or "binary"

       The  program  should  terminate	with an	exit status of zero if the re-
       trieval is successful, and a non-zero exit status otherwise.

       For the "url" access types, mhstore will	look for the  "nmh-access-url"
       profile entry, e.g.,

	    nmh-access-url: curl -L

       to  determine  the  program to use to perform the HTTP retrieval.  This
       program is invoked with one argument: the URL of	 the  content  to  re-
       trieve.	 The  program  should  write  the content to standard out, and
       should terminate	with a status of zero if the retrieval	is  successful
       and a non-zero exit status otherwise.

   User	Environment
       Because	the environment	in which mhstore operates may vary for differ-
       ent machines, mhstore will look for the environment variable MHSTORE  .
       If present, this	specifies the name of an additional user profile which
       should  be  read.   Hence, when a user logs in on a particular machine,
       this environment	variable should	be set to refer	to a  file  containing
       definitions  useful for that machine.  Finally, mhstore will attempt to
       consult

	    /usr/local/etc/nmh/mhn.defaults

       which is	created	automatically during nmh installation.

       See "Profile Lookup" in mh-profile(5) for the profile search order, and
       for how duplicate entries are treated.

EXAMPLES
   Decoding RFC	2047-encoded file names
       The improper RFC	2047 encoding of file name parameters can be  replaced
       with  correct  RFC  2231	encoding using mhfixmsg, either	permanently or
       ephemerally, e.g.,

	      mhfixmsg -outfile	- | mhstore -auto -clobber ask -file -

       The -clobber ask	is not necessary, though recommended to	avoid silently
       overwriting an existing file.

FILES
       mhstore looks for additional profile files in multiple  locations:  ab-
       solute  pathnames  are  accessed	 directly,  tilde expansion is done on
       usernames, and files are	searched for in	the user's Mail	 directory  as
       specified  in  their  profile.	If  not	 found	there,	the  directory
       "/usr/local/etc/nmh" is checked.

       $HOME/.mh_profile		    The	user profile
       $MHSTORE				    Additional profile entries
       /usr/local/etc/nmh/mhn.defaults	    System default MIME	profile	entries

PROFILE	COMPONENTS
       Path:		    To determine the user's nmh	directory
       Current-Folder:	    To find the	default	current	folder
       nmh-access-ftp:	    Program to retrieve	contents via FTP
       nmh-access-url:	    Program to retrieve	contents via HTTP
       nmh-storage	    Directory to store contents
       mhstore-store-<type>*Template for storing contents

SEE ALSO
       mhbuild(1), mhfixmsg(1),	mhlist(1), mhshow(1), sendfiles(1)

DEFAULTS
       `+folder' defaults to the current folder
       `msgs' defaults to cur
       `-noauto'
       `-clobber always'
       `-verbose'

CONTEXT
       If a folder is given, it	will become the	current	folder.	 The last mes-
       sage selected will become the current message.

BUGS
       Partial messages	contained within a multipart content are not  reassem-
       bled.

nmh-1.8+dev			  2015-02-06			    MHSTORE(1)

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