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mbox(5)				 User Manuals			       mbox(5)

NAME
       mbox - Format for mail message storage.

DESCRIPTION
       This  document describes	the format traditionally used by Unix hosts to
       store mail messages locally.  mbox files	typically reside in  the  sys-
       tem's  mail  spool, under various names in users' Mail directories, and
       under the name mbox in users' home directories.

       An mbox is a text file containing an arbitrary number  of  e-mail  mes-
       sages.  Each message consists of	a postmark, followed by	an e-mail mes-
       sage  formatted	according to RFC822, RFC2822. The file format is line-
       oriented. Lines are separated by	line feed characters (ASCII 10).

       A postmark line consists	of the four characters "From", followed	 by  a
       space  character,  followed  by	the message's envelope sender address,
       followed	by whitespace, and followed by a time stamp. This line is  of-
       ten called From_	line.

       The  sender  address  is	expected to be addr-spec as defined in RFC2822
       3.4.1. The date is expected to be date-time as  output  by  asctime(3).
       For compatibility reasons with legacy software, two-digit years greater
       than  or	 equal	to  70 should be interpreted as	the years 1970+, while
       two-digit years less  than  70  should  be  interpreted	as  the	 years
       2000-2069.  Software  reading  files in this format should also be pre-
       pared to	accept non-numeric timezone information	such as	"CET DST"  for
       Central European	Time, daylight saving time.

       Example:

	>From example@example.com Fri Jun 23 02:56:55 2000

       In  order  to  avoid misinterpretation of lines in message bodies which
       begin with the four characters "From", followed by a  space  character,
       the  mail  delivery  agent  must	quote any occurrence of	"From "	at the
       start of	a body line.

       There are two different quoting schemes,	the first (MBOXO) only	quotes
       plain  "From  "	lines in the body by prepending	a '>' to the line; the
       second (MBOXRD) also quotes already quoted "From	" lines	by  prepending
       a '>' (i.e. ">From ", ">>From ",	...). The later	has the	advantage that
       lines like

	>From the command line you can use the '-p' option

       aren't dequoted wrongly as a MBOXRD-MDA would turn the line into

	>>From the command line	you can	use the	'-p' option

       before  storing it. Besides MBOXO and MBOXRD there is also MBOXCL which
       is MBOXO	with a "Content-Length:"-field with the	number of bytes	in the
       message body; some MUAs (like mutt(1)) do automatically transform MBOXO
       mailboxes into MBOXCL ones when ever they write them back as MBOXCL can
       be read by any MBOXO-MUA	without	any problems.

       If the modification-time	(usually determined via	stat(2)) of a nonempty
       mbox file is greater than the access-time the file has new  mail.  Many
       MUAs  place a Status: header in each message to indicate	which messages
       have already been read.

LOCKING
       Since mbox files	are frequently accessed	by multiple programs in	paral-
       lel, mbox files should generally	not be accessed	without	locking.

       Three different locking mechanisms (and combinations  thereof)  are  in
       general use:

             fcntl(2)	locking	is mostly used on recent, POSIX-compliant sys-
	      tems. Use	of this	locking	method is, in particular, advisable if
	      mbox files are accessed through the Network File	System	(NFS),
	      since  it	seems the only way to reliably invalidate NFS clients'
	      caches.

             flock(2) locking is mostly used on BSD-based systems.

             Dotlocking is used on all	kinds of systems. In order to lock  an
	      mbox file	named folder, an application first creates a temporary
	      file with	a unique name in the directory in which	the folder re-
	      sides. The application then tries	to use the link(2) system call
	      to  create  a hard link named folder.lock	to the temporary file.
	      The success of the link(2) system	call  should  be  additionally
	      verified	using  stat(2)	calls.	If the link has	succeeded, the
	      mail folder is considered	dotlocked. The temporary file can then
	      safely be	unlinked.

	      In order to release the lock, an application  just  unlinks  the
	      folder.lock file.

       If  multiple methods are	combined, implementors should make sure	to use
       the non-blocking	variants of the	fcntl(2) and flock(2) system calls  in
       order to	avoid deadlocks.

       If  multiple  methods are combined, an mbox file	must not be considered
       to have been successfully locked	before all individual locks  were  ob-
       tained.	When  one of the individual locking methods fails, an applica-
       tion should release all locks it	acquired successfully, and restart the
       entire locking procedure	from the beginning, after a suitable delay.

       The locking mechanism used on a particular system is a matter of	 local
       policy,	and  should be consistently used by all	applications installed
       on the system which access mbox files. Failure to do so may  result  in
       loss of e-mail data, and	in corrupted mbox files.

FILES
       /var/spool/mail/$LOGNAME
	      $LOGNAME's incoming mail folder.

       $HOME/mbox
	      user's archived mail messages, in	his $HOME directory.

       $HOME/Mail/
	      A	 directory in user's $HOME directory which is commonly used to
	      hold mbox	format folders.

SEE ALSO
       mutt(1),	fcntl(2), flock(2), link(2), stat(2), asctime(3),  maildir(5),
       mmdf(5),	RFC822,	RFC976,	RFC2822

AUTHOR
       Thomas	  Roessler    <roessler@does-not-exist.org>,	Urs    Janssen
       <urs@tin.org>

HISTORY
       The mbox	format occurred	in Version 6 AT&T Unix.
       A variant of this format	was documented in RFC976.

Unix			      February 19th, 2002		       mbox(5)

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