...

Package mail

import "net/mail"
Overview
Index
Examples

Overview ▾

Package mail implements parsing of mail messages.

For the most part, this package follows the syntax as specified by RFC 5322. Notable divergences:

* Obsolete address formats are not parsed, including addresses with
  embedded route information.
* Group addresses are not parsed.
* The full range of spacing (the CFWS syntax element) is not supported,
  such as breaking addresses across lines.

Variables

var ErrHeaderNotPresent = errors.New("mail: header not in message")

func ParseAddressList

func ParseAddressList(list string) ([]*Address, error)

ParseAddressList parses the given string as a list of addresses.

Example

Code:

const list = "Alice <alice@example.com>, Bob <bob@example.com>, Eve <eve@example.com>"
emails, err := mail.ParseAddressList(list)
if err != nil {
    log.Fatal(err)
}

for _, v := range emails {
    fmt.Println(v.Name, v.Address)
}

Output:

Alice alice@example.com
Bob bob@example.com
Eve eve@example.com

type Address

type Address struct {
    Name    string // Proper name; may be empty.
    Address string // user@domain
}

Address represents a single mail address. An address such as "Barry Gibbs <bg@example.com>" is represented as Address{Name: "Barry Gibbs", Address: "bg@example.com"}.

func ParseAddress

func ParseAddress(address string) (*Address, error)

Parses a single RFC 5322 address, e.g. "Barry Gibbs <bg@example.com>"

Example

Code:

e, err := mail.ParseAddress("Alice <alice@example.com>")
if err != nil {
    log.Fatal(err)
}

fmt.Println(e.Name, e.Address)

Output:

Alice alice@example.com

func (*Address) String

func (a *Address) String() string

String formats the address as a valid RFC 5322 address. If the address's name contains non-ASCII characters the name will be rendered according to RFC 2047.

type AddressParser

type AddressParser struct {
    // WordDecoder optionally specifies a decoder for RFC 2047 encoded-words.
    WordDecoder *mime.WordDecoder
}

An AddressParser is an RFC 5322 address parser.

func (*AddressParser) Parse

func (p *AddressParser) Parse(address string) (*Address, error)

Parse parses a single RFC 5322 address of the form "Gogh Fir <gf@example.com>" or "foo@example.com".

func (*AddressParser) ParseList

func (p *AddressParser) ParseList(list string) ([]*Address, error)

ParseList parses the given string as a list of comma-separated addresses of the form "Gogh Fir <gf@example.com>" or "foo@example.com".

type Header map[string][]string

A Header represents the key-value pairs in a mail message header.

func (Header) AddressList

func (h Header) AddressList(key string) ([]*Address, error)

AddressList parses the named header field as a list of addresses.

func (Header) Date

func (h Header) Date() (time.Time, error)

Date parses the Date header field.

func (Header) Get

func (h Header) Get(key string) string

Get gets the first value associated with the given key. If there are no values associated with the key, Get returns "".

type Message

type Message struct {
    Header Header
    Body   io.Reader
}

A Message represents a parsed mail message.

func ReadMessage

func ReadMessage(r io.Reader) (msg *Message, err error)

ReadMessage reads a message from r. The headers are parsed, and the body of the message will be available for reading from r.

Example

Code:

msg := `Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2015 11:40:36 -0400
From: Gopher <from@example.com>
To: Another Gopher <to@example.com>
Subject: Gophers at Gophercon

Message body
`

r := strings.NewReader(msg)
m, err := mail.ReadMessage(r)
if err != nil {
    log.Fatal(err)
}

header := m.Header
fmt.Println("Date:", header.Get("Date"))
fmt.Println("From:", header.Get("From"))
fmt.Println("To:", header.Get("To"))
fmt.Println("Subject:", header.Get("Subject"))

body, err := ioutil.ReadAll(m.Body)
if err != nil {
    log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Printf("%s", body)

Output:

Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2015 11:40:36 -0400
From: Gopher <from@example.com>
To: Another Gopher <to@example.com>
Subject: Gophers at Gophercon
Message body