1mbox(5)                          User Manuals                          mbox(5)
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NAME

6       mbox - Format for mail message storage.
7

DESCRIPTION

9       This  document describes the format traditionally used by Unix hosts to
10       store mail messages locally.  mbox files typically reside in  the  sys‐
11       tem's  mail  spool, under various names in users' Mail directories, and
12       under the name mbox in users' home directories.
13
14       An mbox is a text file containing an arbitrary number  of  e-mail  mes‐
15       sages.  Each message consists of a postmark, followed by an e-mail mes‐
16       sage formatted according to RFC822, RFC2822. The file format  is  line-
17       oriented. Lines are separated by line feed characters (ASCII 10).
18
19       A  postmark  line consists of the four characters "From", followed by a
20       space character, followed by the  message's  envelope  sender  address,
21       followed  by whitespace, and followed by a time stamp. This line is of‐
22       ten called From_ line.
23
24       The sender address is expected to be addr-spec as  defined  in  RFC2822
25       3.4.1.  The  date  is expected to be date-time as output by asctime(3).
26       For compatibility reasons with legacy software, two-digit years greater
27       than  or  equal  to  70 should be interpreted as the years 1970+, while
28       two-digit years less  than  70  should  be  interpreted  as  the  years
29       2000-2069.  Software  reading  files in this format should also be pre‐
30       pared to accept non-numeric timezone information such as "CET DST"  for
31       Central European Time, daylight saving time.
32
33       Example:
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35        >From example@example.com Fri Jun 23 02:56:55 2000
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37       In  order  to  avoid misinterpretation of lines in message bodies which
38       begin with the four characters "From", followed by a  space  character,
39       the  mail  delivery  agent  must quote any occurrence of "From " at the
40       start of a body line.
41
42       There are two different quoting schemes, the first (MBOXO) only  quotes
43       plain  "From  "  lines in the body by prepending a '>' to the line; the
44       second (MBOXRD) also quotes already quoted "From " lines by  prepending
45       a '>' (i.e. ">From ", ">>From ", ...). The later has the advantage that
46       lines like
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48        >From the command line you can use the '-p' option
49
50       aren't dequoted wrongly as a MBOXRD-MDA would turn the line into
51
52        >>From the command line you can use the '-p' option
53
54       before storing it. Besides MBOXO and MBOXRD there is also MBOXCL  which
55       is MBOXO with a "Content-Length:"-field with the number of bytes in the
56       message body; some MUAs (like neomutt(1))  do  automatically  transform
57       MBOXO  mailboxes  into  MBOXCL  ones  when ever they write them back as
58       MBOXCL can be read by any MBOXO-MUA without any problems.
59
60       If the modification-time (usually determined via stat(2)) of a nonempty
61       mbox  file  is greater than the access-time the file has new mail. Many
62       MUAs place a Status: header in each message to indicate which  messages
63       have already been read.
64

LOCKING

66       Since mbox files are frequently accessed by multiple programs in paral‐
67       lel, mbox files should generally not be accessed without locking.
68
69       Three different locking mechanisms (and combinations  thereof)  are  in
70       general use:
71
72fcntl(2)  locking is mostly used on recent, POSIX-compliant sys‐
73              tems. Use of this locking method is, in particular, advisable if
74              mbox  files  are accessed through the Network File System (NFS),
75              since it seems the only way to reliably invalidate NFS  clients'
76              caches.
77
78flock(2) locking is mostly used on BSD-based systems.
79
80       If  multiple methods are combined, implementors should make sure to use
81       the non-blocking variants of the fcntl(2) and flock(2) system calls  in
82       order to avoid deadlocks.
83
84       If  multiple  methods are combined, an mbox file must not be considered
85       to have been successfully locked before all individual locks  were  ob‐
86       tained.  When  one of the individual locking methods fails, an applica‐
87       tion should release all locks it acquired successfully, and restart the
88       entire locking procedure from the beginning, after a suitable delay.
89
90       The  locking mechanism used on a particular system is a matter of local
91       policy, and should be consistently used by all  applications  installed
92       on  the  system which access mbox files. Failure to do so may result in
93       loss of e-mail data, and in corrupted mbox files.
94

FILES

96       /var/spool/mail/$LOGNAME
97              $LOGNAME's incoming mail folder.
98
99       $HOME/mbox
100              user's archived mail messages, in his $HOME directory.
101
102       $HOME/Mail/
103              A directory in user's $HOME directory which is commonly used  to
104              hold mbox format folders.
105

SEE ALSO

107       neomutt(1),   fcntl(2),   flock(2),   link(2),   stat(2),   asctime(3),
108       maildir(5), mmdf(5), RFC822, RFC976, RFC2822
109

AUTHOR

111       Thomas    Roessler    <roessler@does-not-exist.org>,    Urs     Janssen
112       <urs@tin.org>
113

HISTORY

115       The mbox format occurred in Version 6 AT&T Unix.
116       A variant of this format was documented in RFC976.
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120Unix                          February 19th, 2002                      mbox(5)
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