/* $Id$ */ #ifndef mailparse_rfc822_h #define mailparse_rfc822_h /* ** Copyright 1998 - 2000 Double Precision, Inc. ** See COPYING for distribution information. */ #include #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif /* ** The text string we want to parse is first tokenized into an array of ** struct rfc822token records. 'ptr' points into the original text ** string, and 'len' has how many characters from 'ptr' belongs to this ** token. */ struct rfc822token { struct rfc822token *next; /* Unused by librfc822, for use by ** clients */ int token; /* Values for token: '(' - comment '"' - quoted string '<', '>', '@', ',', ';', ':', '.', '[', ']', '%', '!', '=', '?', '/' - RFC atoms. 0 - atom */ #define mailparse_rfc822_is_atom(p) ( (p) == 0 || (p) == '"' || (p) == '(' ) const char *ptr; /* Pointer to value for the token. */ int len; /* Length of token value */ } ; /* ** After the struct rfc822token array is built, it is used to create ** the rfc822addr array, which is the array of addresses (plus ** syntactical fluff) extracted from those text strings. Each rfc822addr ** record has several possible interpretation: ** ** tokens is NULL - syntactical fluff, look in name/nname for tokens ** representing the syntactical fluff ( which is semicolons ** and list name: ** ** tokens is not NULL - actual address. The tokens representing the actual ** address is in tokens/ntokens. If there are comments in ** the address that are possible "real name" for the address ** they are saved in name/nname (name may be null if there ** is none). ** If nname is 1, and name points to a comment token, ** the address was specified in old-style format. Otherwise ** the address was specified in new-style route-addr format. ** ** The tokens and name pointers are set to point to the original rfc822token ** array. */ struct rfc822addr { struct rfc822token *tokens; struct rfc822token *name; } ; /*************************************************************************** ** ** rfc822 tokens ** ***************************************************************************/ struct rfc822t { struct rfc822token *tokens; int ntokens; } ; struct rfc822t * mailparse_rfc822t_alloc(const char *p, void (*err_func)(const char *, int)); /* Parse addresses */ void mailparse_rfc822t_free(struct rfc822t *); /* Free rfc822 structure */ void mailparse_rfc822tok_print(const struct rfc822token *, void (*)(char, void *), void *); /* Print the tokens */ /*************************************************************************** ** ** rfc822 addresses ** ***************************************************************************/ struct rfc822a { struct rfc822addr *addrs; int naddrs; } ; struct rfc822a * mailparse_rfc822a_alloc(struct rfc822t *); void mailparse_rfc822a_free(struct rfc822a *); /* Free rfc822 structure */ void mailparse_rfc822_deladdr(struct rfc822a *, int); /* rfc822_print "unparses" the rfc822 structure. Each rfc822addr is "printed" (via the attached function). NOTE: instead of separating addresses by commas, the print_separator function is called. */ void mailparse_rfc822_print(const struct rfc822a *a, void (*print_func)(char, void *), void (*print_separator)(const char *, void *), void *); /* rfc822_print_common is an internal function */ void mailparse_rfc822_print_common(const struct rfc822a *a, char *(*decode_func)(const char *, const char *), const char *chset, void (*print_func)(char, void *), void (*print_separator)(const char *, void *), void *); /* Another unparser, except that only the raw addresses are extracted, and each address is followed by a newline character */ void mailparse_rfc822_addrlist(const struct rfc822a *, void (*print_func)(char, void *), void *); /* Now, just the comments. If comments not given, the address. */ void mailparse_rfc822_namelist(const struct rfc822a *, void (*print_func)(char, void *), void *); /* Unparse an individual name/addr from a list of addresses. If the given index points to some syntactical fluff, this is a noop */ void mailparse_rfc822_prname(const struct rfc822a *, int, void (*)(char, void *), void *); void mailparse_rfc822_praddr(const struct rfc822a *, int, void (*)(char, void *), void *); /* Like rfc822_prname, except that we'll also print the legacy format ** of a list designation. */ void mailparse_rfc822_prname_orlist(const struct rfc822a *, int, void (*)(char, void *), void *); /* Extra functions */ char *mailparse_rfc822_gettok(const struct rfc822token *); char *mailparse_rfc822_getaddr(const struct rfc822a *, int); char *mailparse_rfc822_getname(const struct rfc822a *, int); char *mailparse_rfc822_getname_orlist(const struct rfc822a *, int); char *mailparse_rfc822_getaddrs(const struct rfc822a *); char *mailparse_rfc822_getaddrs_wrap(const struct rfc822a *, int); char *mailparse_rfc822_coresubj(const char *, int *); char *mailparse_rfc822_coresubj_nouc(const char *, int *); #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif