Congratulations on increasing the local population density just a bit in favor of the smart people :)
As for the attachments, ISTR when I was mucking around with something mildly related a few years back you could grep for something like "multipart boundary" in the headers. This identifies a random-ish string that separates the text part of the message from the non-text (HTML and/or attachments). Not sure if you want to strip HTML as well, but I think if you look around in that fashion you could write a quick and dirty attachment stripper. Just make sure to stuff a dollar it the g-string if it works... > -----Original Message----- > Hello, all -- first and foremost, I'm pleased to announce the > birth of Isabella Francesca D'Ambrosio -- for those with > places in their hearts for baby pics, have at: > http://flyingtoasters.net/gallery/album26?page=4 > . Now that the birth done with, I hope to be able to make > impending meetings again (what with all my new-found spare > time </sarcasm>). > > And now for the actual on-topic stuff: I've got a Blackberry > user who gets inbound e-mail bounced from time to time > because of large attachments. Since I route all his e-mail > both to his IMAP account and the Blackberry, there's no > reason I couldn't strip off the attachments > -- *IF* I knew what it was that designated the start of an > attachment. > Upon looking at the raw text of a message, I remain somewhat > ignorant. > While I'm somewhat tempted to delve into the RFC's, if > there's a quick-n-dirty way to find out where to start > stripping off text, I'd appreciate being told about it. > _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss