Expand description

mail-parser

mail-parser is an e-mail parsing library written in Rust that fully conforms to the Internet Message Format standard (RFC 5322), the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME; RFC 2045 - 2049) as well as many other internet messaging RFCs.

It also supports decoding messages in 41 different character sets including obsolete formats such as UTF-7. All Unicode (UTF-*) and single-byte character sets are handled internally by the library while support for legacy multi-byte encodings of Chinese and Japanese languages such as BIG5 or ISO-2022-JP is provided by the optional dependency encoding_rs.

In general, this library abides by the Postel’s law or Robustness Principle which states that an implementation must be conservative in its sending behavior and liberal in its receiving behavior. This means that mail-parser will make a best effort to parse non-conformant e-mail messages as long as these do not deviate too much from the standard.

Unlike other e-mail parsing libraries that return nested representations of the different MIME parts in a message, this library conforms to RFC 8621, Section 4.1.4 and provides a more human-friendly representation of the message contents consisting of just text body parts, html body parts and attachments. Additionally, conversion to/from HTML and plain text inline body parts is done automatically when the alternative version is missing.

Performance and memory safety were two important factors while designing mail-parser:

  • Zero-copy: Practically all strings returned by this library are Cow<str> references to the input raw message.
  • High performance Base64 decoding based on Chromium’s decoder (the fastest non-SIMD decoder).
  • Fast parsing of message header fields, character set names and HTML entities using perfect hashing.
  • Written in 100% safe Rust with no external dependencies.
  • Every function in the library has been fuzzed and thoroughly tested with MIRI.
  • Battle-tested with millions of real-world e-mail messages dating from 1995 until today.

Jump to the example.

Conformed RFCs

Supported Character Sets

  • UTF-8
  • UTF-16, UTF-16BE, UTF-16LE
  • UTF-7
  • US-ASCII
  • ISO-8859-1
  • ISO-8859-2
  • ISO-8859-3
  • ISO-8859-4
  • ISO-8859-5
  • ISO-8859-6
  • ISO-8859-7
  • ISO-8859-8
  • ISO-8859-9
  • ISO-8859-10
  • ISO-8859-13
  • ISO-8859-14
  • ISO-8859-15
  • ISO-8859-16
  • CP1250
  • CP1251
  • CP1252
  • CP1253
  • CP1254
  • CP1255
  • CP1256
  • CP1257
  • CP1258
  • KOI8-R
  • KOI8_U
  • MACINTOSH
  • IBM850
  • TIS-620

Supported character sets via the optional dependency encoding_rs:

  • SHIFT_JIS
  • BIG5
  • EUC-JP
  • EUC-KR
  • GB18030
  • GBK
  • ISO-2022-JP
  • WINDOWS-874
  • IBM-866

Usage Example

   use mail_parser::*;

   let input = br#"From: Art Vandelay <art@vandelay.com> (Vandelay Industries)
To: "Colleagues": "James Smythe" <james@vandelay.com>; Friends:
   jane@example.com, =?UTF-8?Q?John_Sm=C3=AEth?= <john@example.com>;
Date: Sat, 20 Nov 2021 14:22:01 -0800
Subject: Why not both importing AND exporting? =?utf-8?b?4pi6?=
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="festivus";

--festivus
Content-Type: text/html; charset="us-ascii"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

PGh0bWw+PHA+SSB3YXMgdGhpbmtpbmcgYWJvdXQgcXVpdHRpbmcgdGhlICZsZHF1bztle
HBvcnRpbmcmcmRxdW87IHRvIGZvY3VzIGp1c3Qgb24gdGhlICZsZHF1bztpbXBvcnRpbm
cmcmRxdW87LDwvcD48cD5idXQgdGhlbiBJIHRob3VnaHQsIHdoeSBub3QgZG8gYm90aD8
gJiN4MjYzQTs8L3A+PC9odG1sPg==
--festivus
Content-Type: message/rfc822

From: "Cosmo Kramer" <kramer@kramerica.com>
Subject: Exporting my book about coffee tables
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="giddyup";

--giddyup
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-16"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

=FF=FE=0C!5=D8"=DD5=D8)=DD5=D8-=DD =005=D8*=DD5=D8"=DD =005=D8"=
=DD5=D85=DD5=D8-=DD5=D8,=DD5=D8/=DD5=D81=DD =005=D8*=DD5=D86=DD =
=005=D8=1F=DD5=D8,=DD5=D8,=DD5=D8(=DD =005=D8-=DD5=D8)=DD5=D8"=
=DD5=D8=1E=DD5=D80=DD5=D8"=DD!=00
--giddyup
Content-Type: image/gif; name*1="about "; name*0="Book ";
             name*2*=utf-8''%e2%98%95 tables.gif
Content-Transfer-Encoding: Base64
Content-Disposition: attachment

R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7
--giddyup--
--festivus--
"#;

   let message = Message::parse(input).unwrap();

   // Parses addresses (including comments), lists and groups
   assert_eq!(
       message.get_from(),
       &HeaderValue::Address(Addr::new(
           "Art Vandelay (Vandelay Industries)".into(),
           "art@vandelay.com"
       ))
   );
   
   assert_eq!(
       message.get_to(),
       &HeaderValue::GroupList(vec![
           Group::new(
               "Colleagues",
               vec![Addr::new("James Smythe".into(), "james@vandelay.com")]
           ),
           Group::new(
               "Friends",
               vec![
                   Addr::new(None, "jane@example.com"),
                   Addr::new("John Smîth".into(), "john@example.com"),
               ]
           )
       ])
   );

   assert_eq!(
       message.get_date().unwrap().to_iso8601(),
       "2021-11-20T14:22:01-08:00"
   );

   // RFC2047 support for encoded text in message readers
   assert_eq!(
       message.get_subject().unwrap(),
       "Why not both importing AND exporting? ☺"
   );

   // HTML and text body parts are returned conforming to RFC8621, Section 4.1.4
   assert_eq!(
       message.get_html_body(0).unwrap(),
       concat!(
           "<html><p>I was thinking about quitting the &ldquo;exporting&rdquo; to ",
           "focus just on the &ldquo;importing&rdquo;,</p><p>but then I thought,",
           " why not do both? &#x263A;</p></html>"
       )
   );

   // HTML parts are converted to plain text (and viceversa) when missing
   assert_eq!(
       message.get_text_body(0).unwrap(),
       concat!(
           "I was thinking about quitting the “exporting” to focus just on the",
           " “importing”,\nbut then I thought, why not do both? ☺\n"
       )
   );

   // Supports nested messages as well as multipart/digest
   let nested_message = message
       .get_attachment(0)
       .unwrap()
       .unwrap_message();

   assert_eq!(
       nested_message.get_subject().unwrap(),
       "Exporting my book about coffee tables"
   );

   // Handles UTF-* as well as many legacy encodings
   assert_eq!(
       nested_message.get_text_body(0).unwrap(),
       "ℌ𝔢𝔩𝔭 𝔪𝔢 𝔢𝔵𝔭𝔬𝔯𝔱 𝔪𝔶 𝔟𝔬𝔬𝔨 𝔭𝔩𝔢𝔞𝔰𝔢!"
   );
   assert_eq!(
       nested_message.get_html_body(0).unwrap(),
       "<html><body>ℌ𝔢𝔩𝔭 𝔪𝔢 𝔢𝔵𝔭𝔬𝔯𝔱 𝔪𝔶 𝔟𝔬𝔬𝔨 𝔭𝔩𝔢𝔞𝔰𝔢!</body></html>"
   );

   let nested_attachment = nested_message.get_attachment(0).unwrap().unwrap_binary();

   assert_eq!(nested_attachment.len(), 42);

   // Full RFC2231 support for continuations and character sets
   assert_eq!(
       nested_attachment.get_attachment_name().unwrap(),
       "Book about ☕ tables.gif"
   );

   // Integrates with Serde
   println!("{}", serde_json::to_string_pretty(&message).unwrap());
   println!("{}", serde_yaml::to_string(&message).unwrap());

Modules

Structs

An RFC5322 or RFC2369 internet address.

An RFC2047 Content-Type or RFC2183 Content-Disposition MIME header field.

An RFC5322 datetime.

An RFC5322 address group.

Offset of a message element in the raw message.

An RFC5322/RFC822 message.

Multipart part

Part of the message.

Enums

A parsed header value.

Contents of an e-mail message attachment.

A text, binary or nested e-mail MIME message part.

Body structure.

A header field

Traits

An inline Text or Binary body part.

MIME Header field access trait

Type Definitions

Unique ID representing a MIME part within a message.