Choose any string you like for the boundary, but it must be unique for each message. Two messages in the same mailbox with the same boundary will cause problems. You can include as many sections as you want, delimited by the boundary marker. It is polite to include a text version of your html for people who cannot or prefer not to read HTML messages.
Hi,
I'm a programmer not a sys admin, so please excuse this if it seems a little out of place, but I think it applies to this forum. When I send my HTML newsletter from the server it comes in as plain text on some email programs and not others. Eudora is fine; Outlook Express, Hotmail, and... (2 Replies)
I know how to send an email with sendmail in a shell script.
I know how to send an email with an attachment in a script.
But im trying to send an email and need to set Content-Type to text/html and insert a file as the body and not attachment.
Send email with file as attachment:
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am searching for an option to send mail with multiple attachments using unix. I know uuencode option, but I dont have the executable in our machines. So I am looking for some other option to do this. And I heard that we can send mails using MIME. Can anyone help me with the syntax and... (2 Replies)
Hi:
I have writed a script that read a HTML file and convert this in a multipart mime fail to send in a mail.
But the result isn't interpreted lika a mime file!!
Somebody can see the error???
---------------------------
#! /bin/bash
SB=$1
IF=$2
OF=$3
rm -f $OF.b64
... (7 Replies)
Hi there..
I need a proper "mutt" command to send a mail with html body and html attachment at a time.
Also if possible let me know the other commands to do this task.
Please help me.. (2 Replies)
Hi all.
Urgent help required. I am trying to send and HTML/PNG fromat graph from UNIX using sendmail. The graph needs to be in the body of the HTML email and NOT an attachment.:wall:
Any ideas and help will be really appreciated.
Best regards,
Willz (6 Replies)
This is my below script which is working fine as it send only plain text email.
So My question is- How can I modify my below script to send this as an HTML formatted email? I want to show the text color of this expression `(echo "100*$TEST2/$TEST1" | bc -l)` as `RED` in an email and that can be... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have requirment in shell script to incorporate multipart email with both html and text.
Here am giving the text version.
From: any@email.com
To: your@email.com
Subject: Success Execution - $company - Apps PO File Report
Apps PO File Report
Summary:
#APPS Purchase... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
Sorry for long topic here.
So the drill goes like that, I need a script which gathers different values from different files/locations.
A_CT=`cat a.dat | awk -F'|' '{print $1}' >> report.txt`
B_CT=`cat b.dat | awk -F'|' '{print $3}' >> report.txt`
C_CT=`cat c.dat | awk -F'|'... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: shivakid
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mimegpg
MIMEGPG(1) Double Precision, Inc. MIMEGPG(1)NAME
mimegpg - MIME-GPG utility
SYNOPSIS
mimegpg [-s] [-E] [-e] [-c] [-d] [-p n] {--} {gpg options...}
DESCRIPTION
The mimegpg tool signs, encrypts, or decrypts MIME-formatted E-mail messages using GnuPG. mimegpg does not contain any encryption code. It
uses the GnuPG utility for all encryption and decryption functions.
The -s option signs an E-mail message. The -E or the -e option encrypts the E-mail message. Specifying both -E/-e and -s encrypts and signs
the E-mail message in a single step. The -d option decrypts the message. The -c option checks signatures.
mimegpg works as a filter. It reads an E-mail message from standard input, which must be a MIME-formatted message. mimegpg signs,
encrypts, and/or decrypts the message; then writes the encrypted, signed, or decrypted MIME message on standard output.
The standard input to mimegpg must be a MIME E-mail message, with a "Mime Version: 1.0" header - even if the message does not contain any
attachments. If the message contains any attachments, they are also signed and/or encrypted, individually.
mimegpg automatically runs GnuPG, with the required options. mimegpg's options may also be followed by a single -- option; any remaining
command line options are passed as additional options to GnuPG. The -E/-e option usually requires at least one -r GnuPG option, which may
be specified in this fashion.
The -p option specifies a file descriptor that contains any required passphrase. Any other valid GnuPG options may follow a double-dash,
"--", as long as it makes sense for this operation (note that mimegpg automatically adds any GnuPG options that are needed to perform the
given operation). The "--no-tty" option can be useful when mimegpg is used in a non-interactive mode. As always, secret keys that are
password-protected secret keys cannot be used in the --no-tty mode, unless the -p option is used.
SIGNING AND ENCRYPTING MESSAGES
Use the -s option to sign MIME message content. Use the -E option to encrypt it. Use both options to both sign and encrypt. Follow with --,
then any other GnuPG options. The -E option will require at least one -r GnuPG option.
The -E option encapsulates the message content and all the attachments into a single encrypted MIME object. Some mail software cannot
handle encapsulated content. The -e option encrypts each attachment separately, without encapsulation.
If a secret key used for signing is password protected, the prompt to enter the password will be issued directly by GnuPG. Note that the -s
and the -e (but not -E) options may issue multiple password prompts in interactive mode. mimegpg runs GnuPG multiple times if the MIME
message contains attachments. GnuPG will be invoked separately for each attachment in the MIME message, and each invocation will prompt for
any required key password. Note that the initial message headers are not signed and/or encrypted, except for the MIME headers themselves.
However, any message/rfc822 MIME content - attached messages - are encrypted/signed in their entirety, headers and content.
DECRYPTING AND CHECKING SIGNATURES
The -d option attempts to decrypt any encrypted content in a MIME message. The -c option attempts to verify signatures of any signed
content. Both -c and -d can be specified at the same time. -d looks for any multipart/encrypted MIME content, then attempts to decrypt it.
-c looks for any multipart/signed MIME content, then attempts to verify the signature.
The -c and -d options replace the multipart/signed and multipart/encrypted MIME content with a multipart/x-mimepgp section, that contains
an additional attribute called "xpgpstatus". The value of the attribute is set to the exit code of GnuPG. Succesfully decrypting the
message and/or verifying the signature sets the exit code to 0. A non-zero exit code indicates that the signature could not be verified, or
the message could not be decrypted.
The first section in this multipart/x-mimepgp is a text/plain section that contains any messages from GnuPG. The second section is any
decrypted or signed content. mimegpg will include the signed content even if the signature could not be verified (check xpgpstatus).
Encrypted content that could not be decrypted will not be included (obviously).
Note - any existing x-mimegpg MIME section will have its content-type quietly reset to multipart/mixed, in order to avoid confusion (except
when this is what got decrypted).
SEE ALSO reformime(1)[1].
AUTHOR
Sam Varshavchik
Author
NOTES
1. reformime(1)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/reformime.html
Courier Mail Server 04/04/2011 MIMEGPG(1)