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* Re: Extracting Binaries from MIME-Encoded messages
@  Martin McCormick
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Martin McCormick @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Linux for blind general discussion

	Since several of you pointed me in the right direction, I have
found that uudeview is one of the ports in the FreeBSD distribution
and, as previously stated, mpack and munpack are found in Debian.
Those two utilities appear to be installed when you build a normal
installation of Debian.  The uudeview utility is part of the FreeBSD
ports collection which is similar to all the Redhat RPM's and the
Debian .deb packages.

	I installed the uudeview package because I use FreeBSD at work
and hit it with a message somebody had sent that had about 4 pdf
documents in it.  It extracted them all in about half a second.  Sure
beats manually looking for them.  It also gave them their correct file
names so I didn't even have to think about that.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Extracting Binaries from MIME-Encoded messages
@  Martin McCormick
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Martin McCormick @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Linux for blind general discussion

	My thanks to all the rest who had suggestions.  I am more
interested in a faster way to extract the attachments than I am in
trying to use what data are there as I read the mail.  So anything
that ends up with 1 or more extracted files is fine with me.  It is
basic laziness on my part.

Martin McCormick


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Extracting Binaries from MIME-Encoded messages
@  Martin McCormick
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Martin McCormick @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Linux for blind general discussion

Kirk Reiser writes:
>Yes, the mpack and munpack utilities do it very nicely.  I'm not sure
>where to tell you to look though because I use debian and they have a
>package called mpack which contains the utilities.

	Thank you.  I use Debian also so I'll just take care of that.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Extracting Binaries from MIME-Encoded messages
@  Karl Dahlke
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Karl Dahlke @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: blinux-list

My edbrowse program handles this pretty well.

http://www.eklhad.net/linux/app


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Extracting Binaries from MIME-Encoded messages
@  Martin McCormick
   ` Kirk Reiser
                   ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Martin McCormick @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Linux for blind general discussion

	I use nmh for reading Email.  This user agent places each
incoming message in to a directory with the name of a given folder
such as inbox for all messages that don't belong in other folders.  Is
there a good utility for stripping attachments out of a message when
it may contain one or more?  Right now, I do it by hand when I need to
and I can probably write a program to do it, but I thought I would
check to see if that is necessary.

	The manual process is to copy the message to some scratch
file, run vi on the scratch file and look for base64 which is one type
of encoding, and then strip away all but the garbage of the 7-bit data
which is the base64 representation of the binary.  Then, I run a perl
script that has been out on the Internet for years which is called
base64decode.  It's standard output is the decoded data stream.

	I know that base64 decoding is part of many applications so I
want simply to be able to extract attachments that aren't understood
or can't be displayed such as sound files, etc.

	By the way, it is kind of funny to see some of those spam
messages that claim to be the document I requested or some other
enticement to open them.  When I do extract the binary just for fun
and run strings on it, I see something like w32.dll or a message
stating that this program can't run in DOS.  I saw that on a file that
had a .wav extension.  Some poor Windows user was going to dance to
some pretty bad music if they plaid that file.

Martin McCormick WB5AGZ  Stillwater, OK 
OSU Information Technology Division Network Operations Group


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

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Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
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 ` Kirk Reiser
 ` Mike Gorse
 ` Henry Yen
   ` Hart Larry

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