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Fred Drake295da241998-08-10 19:42:37 +00001\section{\module{poplib} ---
Fred Drakee2effbd1999-04-22 16:21:09 +00002 POP3 protocol client}
Fred Drakeb91e9341998-07-23 17:59:49 +00003
Fred Drakee2effbd1999-04-22 16:21:09 +00004\declaremodule{standard}{poplib}
Fred Drakeb91e9341998-07-23 17:59:49 +00005\modulesynopsis{POP3 protocol client (requires sockets).}
6
Fred Drake38e5d272000-04-03 20:13:55 +00007%By Andrew T. Csillag
8%Even though I put it into LaTeX, I cannot really claim that I wrote
9%it since I just stole most of it from the poplib.py source code and
10%the imaplib ``chapter''.
Eric S. Raymond5ac97952001-01-11 04:19:52 +000011%Revised by ESR, January 2000
Fred Drake38e5d272000-04-03 20:13:55 +000012
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000013\indexii{POP3}{protocol}
14
15This module defines a class, \class{POP3}, which encapsulates a
Martin v. Löwis48440b72003-10-31 12:52:35 +000016connection to a POP3 server and implements the protocol as defined in
Thomas Woutersf8316632000-07-16 19:01:10 +000017\rfc{1725}. The \class{POP3} class supports both the minimal and
Martin v. Löwis48440b72003-10-31 12:52:35 +000018optional command sets. Additionally, this module provides a class
19\class{POP3_SSL}, which provides support for connecting to POP3
20servers that use SSL as an underlying protocol layer.
21
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000022
Eric S. Raymond5ac97952001-01-11 04:19:52 +000023Note that POP3, though widely supported, is obsolescent. The
24implementation quality of POP3 servers varies widely, and too many are
25quite poor. If your mailserver supports IMAP, you would be better off
Georg Brandl4e9165d2007-04-01 21:29:15 +000026using the \class{\refmodule{imaplib}.IMAP4} class, as IMAP
Fred Drakea7c9ac62001-05-09 03:49:48 +000027servers tend to be better implemented.
Eric S. Raymond5ac97952001-01-11 04:19:52 +000028
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000029A single class is provided by the \module{poplib} module:
30
Facundo Batista1b1c3472007-03-27 18:23:21 +000031\begin{classdesc}{POP3}{host\optional{, port\optional{, timeout}}}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000032This class implements the actual POP3 protocol. The connection is
33created when the instance is initialized.
34If \var{port} is omitted, the standard POP3 port (110) is used.
Facundo Batista1b1c3472007-03-27 18:23:21 +000035The optional \var{timeout} parameter specifies a timeout in seconds for the
36connection attempt (if not specified, or passed as None, the global default
37timeout setting will be used).
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000038\end{classdesc}
39
Martin v. Löwis48440b72003-10-31 12:52:35 +000040\begin{classdesc}{POP3_SSL}{host\optional{, port\optional{, keyfile\optional{, certfile}}}}
41This is a subclass of \class{POP3} that connects to the server over an
42SSL encrypted socket. If \var{port} is not specified, 995, the
43standard POP3-over-SSL port is used. \var{keyfile} and \var{certfile}
44are also optional - they can contain a PEM formatted private key and
45certificate chain file for the SSL connection.
46
47\versionadded{2.4}
48\end{classdesc}
49
Fred Drakee2effbd1999-04-22 16:21:09 +000050One exception is defined as an attribute of the \module{poplib} module:
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000051
52\begin{excdesc}{error_proto}
Facundo Batistac3a35e12007-04-03 14:05:08 +000053Exception raised on any errors from this module (errors from
54\module{socket} module are not caught). The reason for the exception
55is passed to the constructor as a string.
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000056\end{excdesc}
57
Fred Drakea7c9ac62001-05-09 03:49:48 +000058\begin{seealso}
59 \seemodule{imaplib}{The standard Python IMAP module.}
Andrew M. Kuchling44a98232004-01-11 23:00:16 +000060 \seetitle[http://www.catb.org/\~{}esr/fetchmail/fetchmail-FAQ.html]
Fred Draked8eeeae2002-10-18 16:50:17 +000061 {Frequently Asked Questions About Fetchmail}
62 {The FAQ for the \program{fetchmail} POP/IMAP client collects
63 information on POP3 server variations and RFC noncompliance
64 that may be useful if you need to write an application based
65 on the POP protocol.}
Fred Drakea7c9ac62001-05-09 03:49:48 +000066\end{seealso}
67
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000068
Fred Drakee2effbd1999-04-22 16:21:09 +000069\subsection{POP3 Objects \label{pop3-objects}}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000070
71All POP3 commands are represented by methods of the same name,
Fred Drakee2effbd1999-04-22 16:21:09 +000072in lower-case; most return the response text sent by the server.
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000073
74An \class{POP3} instance has the following methods:
75
76
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +000077\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{set_debuglevel}{level}
Fred Drakea16433b2001-12-05 22:37:21 +000078Set the instance's debugging level. This controls the amount of
79debugging output printed. The default, \code{0}, produces no
80debugging output. A value of \code{1} produces a moderate amount of
81debugging output, generally a single line per request. A value of
82\code{2} or higher produces the maximum amount of debugging output,
83logging each line sent and received on the control connection.
84\end{methoddesc}
85
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +000086\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{getwelcome}{}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000087Returns the greeting string sent by the POP3 server.
88\end{methoddesc}
89
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +000090\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{user}{username}
Thomas Woutersf8316632000-07-16 19:01:10 +000091Send user command, response should indicate that a password is required.
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000092\end{methoddesc}
93
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +000094\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{pass_}{password}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +000095Send password, response includes message count and mailbox size.
96Note: the mailbox on the server is locked until \method{quit()} is
97called.
98\end{methoddesc}
99
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000100\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{apop}{user, secret}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000101Use the more secure APOP authentication to log into the POP3 server.
102\end{methoddesc}
103
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000104\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{rpop}{user}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000105Use RPOP authentication (similar to UNIX r-commands) to log into POP3 server.
106\end{methoddesc}
107
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000108\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{stat}{}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000109Get mailbox status. The result is a tuple of 2 integers:
110\code{(\var{message count}, \var{mailbox size})}.
111\end{methoddesc}
112
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000113\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{list}{\optional{which}}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000114Request message list, result is in the form
Georg Brandl2772c672005-08-05 21:01:58 +0000115\code{(\var{response}, ['mesg_num octets', ...], \var{octets})}.
116If \var{which} is set, it is the message to list.
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000117\end{methoddesc}
118
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000119\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{retr}{which}
Eric S. Raymond5ac97952001-01-11 04:19:52 +0000120Retrieve whole message number \var{which}, and set its seen flag.
121Result is in form \code{(\var{response}, ['line', ...], \var{octets})}.
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000122\end{methoddesc}
123
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000124\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{dele}{which}
Eric S. Raymond5ac97952001-01-11 04:19:52 +0000125Flag message number \var{which} for deletion. On most servers
126deletions are not actually performed until QUIT (the major exception is
Fred Draked8eeeae2002-10-18 16:50:17 +0000127Eudora QPOP, which deliberately violates the RFCs by doing pending
Eric S. Raymond5ac97952001-01-11 04:19:52 +0000128deletes on any disconnect).
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000129\end{methoddesc}
130
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000131\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{rset}{}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000132Remove any deletion marks for the mailbox.
133\end{methoddesc}
134
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000135\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{noop}{}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000136Do nothing. Might be used as a keep-alive.
137\end{methoddesc}
138
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000139\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{quit}{}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000140Signoff: commit changes, unlock mailbox, drop connection.
141\end{methoddesc}
142
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000143\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{top}{which, howmuch}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000144Retrieves the message header plus \var{howmuch} lines of the message
Fred Draked8eeeae2002-10-18 16:50:17 +0000145after the header of message number \var{which}. Result is in form
Fred Drake3a4ceb71999-07-07 14:04:38 +0000146\code{(\var{response}, ['line', ...], \var{octets})}.
Eric S. Raymond5ac97952001-01-11 04:19:52 +0000147
148The POP3 TOP command this method uses, unlike the RETR command,
149doesn't set the message's seen flag; unfortunately, TOP is poorly
150specified in the RFCs and is frequently broken in off-brand servers.
151Test this method by hand against the POP3 servers you will use before
152trusting it.
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000153\end{methoddesc}
154
Georg Brandlae91afd2007-04-01 22:39:10 +0000155\begin{methoddesc}[POP3]{uidl}{\optional{which}}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000156Return message digest (unique id) list.
Fred Drakedbc2d081999-05-13 18:48:14 +0000157If \var{which} is specified, result contains the unique id for that
158message in the form \code{'\var{response}\ \var{mesgnum}\ \var{uid}},
Fred Drake3a4ceb71999-07-07 14:04:38 +0000159otherwise result is list \code{(\var{response}, ['mesgnum uid', ...],
160\var{octets})}.
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000161\end{methoddesc}
162
Martin v. Löwis48440b72003-10-31 12:52:35 +0000163Instances of \class{POP3_SSL} have no additional methods. The
164interface of this subclass is identical to its parent.
165
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000166
Fred Drakee2effbd1999-04-22 16:21:09 +0000167\subsection{POP3 Example \label{pop3-example}}
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000168
169Here is a minimal example (without error checking) that opens a
170mailbox and retrieves and prints all messages:
171
172\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumaac399b1998-12-08 16:30:10 +0000173import getpass, poplib
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000174
175M = poplib.POP3('localhost')
176M.user(getpass.getuser())
Guido van Rossumaac399b1998-12-08 16:30:10 +0000177M.pass_(getpass.getpass())
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000178numMessages = len(M.list()[1])
179for i in range(numMessages):
180 for j in M.retr(i+1)[1]:
Guido van Rossumaac399b1998-12-08 16:30:10 +0000181 print j
Fred Drakea4684041998-04-24 20:49:02 +0000182\end{verbatim}
183
184At the end of the module, there is a test section that contains a more
185extensive example of usage.