#header #email #component #name #map #subject #header-map

mail-headers

[mail/headers] header parts for the mail crate (inkl. header map and standard header impl)

7 releases

Uses old Rust 2015

0.6.6 Mar 26, 2019
0.6.4 Feb 14, 2019
0.6.2 Dec 4, 2018
0.6.0 Nov 23, 2018

#1190 in Algorithms

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57 downloads per month
Used in 6 crates

MIT/Apache

210KB
4.5K SLoC

mail-headers

Provides header specific functionality for the mail crate


This crate provides header specific functionality for the mail crate. This includes:

  • HeaderName, Header and HeaderMap as for the general API
  • HeaderTryFrom, HeaderTryInto as the TryFrom/TryInto traits are not stable but we need something similar to their functionality.
  • a number of headers like _To,_From, Sender, Subject and many more (Note that _To and _From are prefixed with and _ to prevent name collisions when importing them, i.e. importing _From as From would shadow std::convert::From which can lead to extremely irritating errors).
  • a number of components which are used to represent the content/field body of an header field e.g. MailboxList or Email. They are placed in the components module.
  • a headers! macro for making the creation of an HeaderMap with a number of headers easier.
  • a def_headers! macro for defining new custom headers

Example (HeaderMap)

A header map is a collection representing a number of mail headers in an specific order. It can be created like this:

#[macro_use]
extern crate mail_headers;

// just import all headers
use mail_headers::*;
use mail_headers::error::ComponentCreationError;

fn create_headers() -> Result<HeaderMap, ComponentCreationError> {
    headers!{
        // from and to can have multiple values
        // until specialization is stable is array
        // is necessary
        _From: [("My Fancy Display Name", "theduck@example.com")],
        _To: [ "unknown@example.com", ],
        Subject: "Who are you?"
    }
}

fn main() {
    let headers = create_headers().unwrap();
    assert_eq!(headers.len(), 3);

    if let Some(subject) = headers.get_single(Subject) {
        // as long a you don't play around with custom headers AND
        // don't mix multiple implementations for the same header
        // `.unwrap()` is just fine.
        let subject = subject.expect("mixed different Subject header implementations");
        println!("found subject: {}", subject);
    }
}

Example (custom header)

If needed users of the mail crate can create their own headers, through this should be done with care.

Note that the second field (then unchecked { <name> }), expects a specific naming scheme, the auto-generated test do check if it's violated but if you just run the code and ignore the failing tests strange error can occure. ( The scheme is a capitalise the first letter of each word and write all other letter in lower case, i.e. X-Id is ok but X-ID isn't). The reason for this is because of the way the header does the field lookup. While this is not nice, for most use cases there is no need to generate custom headers and in the future this might be circumvented by auto-generating the name with a proc-derive.

#[macro_use]
extern crate mail_headers;

use mail_headers::components;

// this will define two headers `XFooEmail` and `XBarMailbox`
// the first will add a header field named `X-Foo-Email` with
// a value which is an `components::Email` and the second will
// add field with a value which is an `components::Mailbox`.
//
// Note that through the way they are defined `XFooEmail` can
// at most appear 1 time in an header map, while `XBarMailbox`
// can appear multiple times. Be aware that this is checked through
// so called validators which needs to be explicitly run, which they
// are if this header map is used to create a mail (running them
// when adding fields would be a mess as you would have to add
// transactions which can add/remove multiple fields at once, and
// implementing auto-generation for some fields which are required if
// some other fields are given in a certain way would be harder too).

// If in scope both can be used in the `headers!` macro,
// like any other header.
//
def_headers! {
    // the name of the auto-generated test
    test_name: validate_header_names,

    // the scope from which all components should be imported
    // E.g. `DateTime` refers to `components::DateTime`.
    scope: components,

    // definitions of the headers or the form
    // <type_name>, unchecked { <filed_name> }, <component>, <validator>
    XFooEmail, unchecked { "X-Foo-Email"      }, Email ,   maxOne,
    XBarMailbox, unchecked { "X-Bar-Mailbox" }, Mailbox, None
}

fn main() {
    let headers = headers! {
        XFooEmail: "123@example.com",
        XBarMailbox: ("My Funy Name", "notfunny@example.com"),
        XBarMailbox: "without.display.name@example.com"
    }.unwrap();
}

Documentation

Documentation can be viewed on docs.rs. (once it is published ;) )

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

Dependencies

~5MB
~107K SLoC