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-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- NNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE
- metamail - infrastructure for mailcap-based multimedia mail
- handling
-
- SSSSYYYYNNNNOOOOPPPPSSSSIIIISSSS
- mmmmeeeettttaaaammmmaaaaiiiillll[-b] [-B] [-c ccccoooonnnntttteeeennnnttttttttyyyyppppeeee ...] [-d] [-e] [-E
- ccccoooonnnntttteeeennnntttteeeennnnccccooooddddiiiinnnngggg] [-f ffffrrrroooommmm----nnnnaaaammmmeeee] [-h] [-m mmmmaaaaiiiilllleeeerrrr----nnnnaaaammmmeeee] [-p]
- [-P] [-r] [-s ssssuuuubbbbjjjjeeeecccctttt] [-q] [-w] [-x] [-y] [-z] [ffffiiiilllleeee----nnnnaaaammmmeeee]
-
- DDDDEEEESSSSCCCCRRRRIIIIPPPPTTTTIIIIOOOONNNN
- The _m_e_t_a_m_a_i_l program reads a "mailcap" file to determine how
- to display non-text at the local site. Every mail-reading
- interface needs to call metamail whenever non-text mail is
- being viewed, unless the mail is of a type that is already
- understood by the mail-reading program. _M_e_t_a_m_a_i_l consults
- the mailcap file(s) to determine what program to use to show
- the message to the user.
-
- At a site where all mail reading interfaces have been
- modified to call _m_e_t_a_m_a_i_l for non-text mail, extending the
- local email system to handle a new media type in the mail
- becomes a simple matter of adding a line to a mailcap file.
- (Although this manual page will discuss only mail, metamail
- is equally useful in adding multimedia support to news and
- bulletin board reading programs, assuming those programs
- preserve the "Content-type" header or some other indication
- of the content type of the messages.)
-
- In general, users will never run metamail directly.
- Instead, metamail will be invoked for the user automatically
- by the user's mail reading program, whenever a non-text
- message is to be viewed. This manual page, therefore, is
- directed not at end users, but at two categories of readers:
- those who are adding metamail support to a particular mail-
- reading program, and those who are adding lines to a mailcap
- file. The former need only to be concerned with the command
- line syntax of metamail. The latter may ignore the command
- line syntax, and need only be concerned with the mailcap
- file syntax, as described in a later section.
-
- Note: Metamail determines the type of a message using the
- "Content-type" header, as defined in RFC 1049 and RFC-1341
- (MIME). However, using the -b and -c options, metamail can
- be made to work with mail that is not in Internet format,
- including X.400 messages. Note also that metamail
- automatically decodes mail that has been encoded for 7 bit
- transport if the mail includes a Content-Transfer-Encoding
- header as specified by RFC-1341. If data has been encoded
- via the "base64" encoding, it will map CRLF to local
- newlines for textual data, but not for other data, unless
- instructed otherwise by a "textualnewlines" field in a
- mailcap entry.
-
-
-
- Page 1 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- OOOOPPPPTTTTIIIIOOOONNNNSSSS
- When called with no options or arguments, metamail expects
- to receive an RFC 822 format message on its standard input.
- The following options can alter that expectation:
-
- ----bbbb This option tells metamail that the message is not
- in RFC 822 format, but instead is only the body of
- the message (i.e. there are no message headers).
- The use of -b requires the use of -c.
-
- ----BBBB This option tells metamail that the message is to be
- displayed in the background, if it is non-
- interactive (i.e. it doesn't have the
- "needsterminal" attribute in the mailcap file). It
- cannot be used with -p or -P.
-
- ----cccc <<<<ccccoooonnnntttteeeennnnttttttttyyyyppppeeee>>>>
- This option tells metamail to use the specified
- content type rather than the one in the headers, if
- any.
-
- ----dddd This option tells metamail not to ask any questions
- before running an interpreter to view the message.
- (By default, metamail always asks before running
- almost any interpreter, if it is running in an
- interactive terminal and the MM_NOASK environment
- variable is not set. However, it does not ask about
- the content-type "text" -- that is, the default
- value for MM_NOASK is "text,text/plain")
-
- ----eeee This option tells metamail to "eat" leading newlines
- in message bodies. This is particularly useful for
- MH-format mail.
-
- ----ffff <<<<aaaaddddddddrrrreeeessssssss>>>>
- This option specifies the name of the sender of the
- message. Otherwise, this is determined from the
- header, if possible. This information will be
- placed in the environment to make it available to
- any interpreters called by metamail.
-
- ----hhhh This option specifies that metamail is being used
- for _p_r_i_n_t_i_n_g a message. In particular, this means
- that the normal mailcap "command" field will not be
- executed, but instead the command specified in the
- "print" field will be executed. (If there is
- nothing in the print field, the mailcap entry will
- be ignored and the search will continue for a
- matching mailcap entry that does have a print
- field.) The -h option automatically turns on the -d
- option.
-
-
-
-
- Page 2 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- ----mmmm <<<<mmmmaaaaiiiilllleeeerrrrnnnnaaaammmmeeee>>>>
- This option specifies the name of the mail program
- that called metamail. This information will be
- placed in the environment to make it available to
- any interpreters called by metamail.
-
- ----pppp This option specifies that, if necessary, output
- should be shown to the user one page at a time. By
- default, this will cause such output to be piped
- through the "more" command, but the environment
- variable METAMAIL_PAGER can be used to specify an
- alternative command to use. Note that one should
- use -p rather than piping the output of metamail
- through a pager, because some interpreters called by
- metamail might be interactive rather than requiring
- pagination. Metamail can tell whether or not to use
- a pager from information in the mailcap file. This
- option cannot be used with -B.
-
- ----PPPP This option is just like -p, except that it also
- causes metamail to print "Press RETURN to go on" and
- await a RETURN after it has finished with the
- message. This is intended for use only when
- metamail calls itself recursively in a new terminal
- window created only for that purpose. This option
- cannot be used with -B.
-
- ----qqqq This option tells metamail to be quiet. By default,
- metamail prints a few key message headers
- (controllable with the KEYHEADS and KEYIGNHEADS
- environment variables) and some other informative
- information, on stdout before running the
- interpreter, but this behavior is suppressed with
- -q.
-
- ----rrrr This option specifies that it is OK to run as root.
- By default, metamail refuses to run if the real or
- effective user id is root. You can get the same
- effect using the MM_RUNASROOT environment variable.
-
- ----RRRR This option specifies that the /usr/ucb/reset should
- be executed to reset the terminal state, before any
- other I/O activity.
-
- ----ssss <<<<ssssuuuubbbbjjjjeeeecccctttt>>>>
- This option specifies the subject of the mail
- message. By default, this information is obtained
- from the headers. This information will be placed
- in the environment to make it available to any
- interpreters called by metamail.
-
- ----wwww This option tells metamail that instead of
-
-
-
- Page 3 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- consulting a mailcap file to decide how to display
- the data, it should simply decode each part and
- write it to a file in its raw (possibly binary)
- format. Depending on the circumstances in which it
- is called, metamail may derive the file name to use
- from the message headers, by asking the user, or by
- generating a unique temporary file name.
-
- ----xxxx This option tells metamail that it is definitely not
- running on a terminal, no matter what isatty() says.
- This is necessary when metamail is actually running
- on a pseudoterminal and isatty(3) returns TRUE but
- there's really no terminal on which to interact with
- the user. The same effect as -x can also be
- obtained with the environment variable MM_NOTTTY.
-
- ----yyyy This option tells metamail to try to "yank" a MIME-
- format message from the body of the message. It is
- useful when a MIME-format has been rejected by a
- mail delivery system that does not now how to format
- the rejection in a MIME-compliant manner. (For the
- convenience of those who can't control how metamail
- is called from their mail reader, this can also be
- set with the MM_YANKMODE variable.) If you use yank
- mode on messages that really ARE in MIME format, or
- on messages that do not contain a MIME message in
- the body, the effects could be VERY strange. It
- won't hurt you, but you won't see anything very
- useful, either.
-
- ----zzzz This option tells metamail to delete its input file
- when finished. The -z option requires that a file
- name was given as an argument to metamail, i.e. that
- it is not reading stdin.
-
- ----TTTT This option is intended to be used by metamail
- recursively, to turn off the effect of the
- MM_TRANSPARENT environment variable. It should only
- be used when the metamail program restarts itself in
- a terminal emulator window.
-
- FFFFiiiilllleeee NNNNaaaammmmeeee AAAArrrrgggguuuummmmeeeennnnttttssss
- Any argument that does not start with "-" is
- interpreted as the name of a file to read instead of
- standard input.
-
- UUUUNNNNRRRREEEECCCCOOOOGGGGNNNNIIIIZZZZEEEEDDDD MMMMAAAAIIIILLLL TTTTYYYYPPPPEEEESSSS
- From time to time, metamail may tell you something like
-
- **** Unrecognized mail type: 'smell-o-vision'. Writing to
- file /tmp/metamail.1234 ****
-
-
-
-
- Page 4 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- What this means is that your are trying to read a message
- that contains data that is marked as being in "smell-o-
- vision" format, but that your site has not yet configured
- metamail to properly display that type of data. In the
- general case, such configuration is accomplished using the
- mailcap file mechanism, as described in the next section.
-
- For unrecognized types, metamail simply removes all header
- and encoding information from the data, and writes it out to
- a temporary file. (If running interactively, it will give
- you more alternatives -- writing it to a temporary file,
- viewing it as text, or jus skipping it.) It is up to the
- user to delete such files when he or she is through with
- them.
-
-
- TTTTHHHHEEEE MMMMAAAAIIIILLLLCCCCAAAAPPPP FFFFIIIILLLLEEEE((((SSSS))))
- The primary purpose of the metamail program is to allow
- diverse mail reading programs to centralize their access to
- multimedia information. If all the mail reading programs
- call a single program to handle non-text mail, then only
- that program needs to know about the diverse types of non-
- text mail that might be received.
-
- The metamail program is made more flexible in this role
- through the mechanism of one or more "mailcap" files. The
- purpose of the mailcap files is to tell metamail what
- program to run in order to show the user mail in a given
- format. Thus it becomes possible to add a new media type to
- all of the mail reading programs at a site simply by adding
- a line to a mailcap file.
-
- Metamail uses a search path to find the mailcap file(s) to
- consult. Unlike many path searches, if necessary metamail
- will read _a_l_l the mailcap files on its path. That is, it
- will keep reading mailcap files until it runs out of them,
- or until it finds a line that tells it how to handle the
- piece of mail it is looking at. If it finds a matching
- line, it will execute the command that is specified in the
- mailcap file.
-
- The default search path is equivalent to
-
- $HOME/.mailcap:/usr/local/etc/mailcap:/usr/etc/mailcap:/etc/mailcap:/etc/mail/mailcap:/usr/public/lib/mailcap"
-
- It can be overridden by setting the MAILCAPS environment
- variable. Note: Metamail does not actually interpret
- environment variables such as $HOME or the "~" syntax in
- this path search.
-
- The format of mailcap files is explained in the manual entry
- for mailcap(4).
-
-
-
- Page 5 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- NNNNOOOONNNN----AAAASSSSCCCCIIIIIIII HHHHEEEEAAAADDDDEEEERRRR FFFFIIIIEEEELLLLDDDDSSSS
- Metamail has rudimentary built-in support for the emerging
- Internet standards for non-ASCII data in mail headers. What
- this means is that such data will be recognized, decoded,
- and sent to the terminal. This behavior may be more or less
- reasonable, depending on the character set in the header
- data and the capability of the user's terminal, but it will
- rarely be any worse than showing such data in its encoded
- form.
-
- EEEENNNNVVVVIIIIRRRROOOONNNNMMMMEEEENNNNTTTT
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL____TTTTMMMMPPPPDDDDIIIIRRRR
- If set, this variable overrides "/tmp" as the name
- of the directory in which metamail and associated
- programs will create temporary files on UNIX.
-
- MMMMMMMM____NNNNOOOOAAAASSSSKKKK
- If MM_NOASK is set to "1", metamail will never ask
- the user for confirmation before running an
- interpreter. Otherwise, MM_NOASK may be set to a
- comma-separated list of type names (without white
- space) for which the user does not desire
- confirmation. Thus, setting MM_NOASK to
- "magicmail,audio" will cause the user not to be
- asked before running interpreters for magicmail- or
- audio-format mail, but the user will still be asked
- for all other types. (If the -d command line option
- is given, MM_NOASK is set to 1 for spawned
- processes, allowing -d to work recursively.)
-
- KKKKEEEEYYYYHHHHEEEEAAAADDDDSSSS
- The KEYHEADS variable may be set to a colon-
- separated list of header names, which are the only
- headers that metamail will print out. By default,
- the behavior is as if KEYHEADS were set to:
-
- Date:From:Subject:To:CC:Content-Description
-
- If KEYHEADS is set to the empty string, no header
- are printed out. If it is set to an asterisk ("*"),
- all headers are printed out. KKKKEEEEYYYYIIIIGGGGNNNNHHHHEEEEAAAADDDDSSSS The
- KEYIGNHEADS variable may be set to a colon-separated
- list of header names, which are the headers that
- metamail will not print out. This variable is only
- examined if KEYHEADS is not set.
-
- If KEYIGNHEADS is set to the empty string, all
- headers are printed out. If it is set to an
- asterisk ("*"), no headers will be printed out.
-
- MMMMMMMM____NNNNOOOOTTTTTTTTTTTTYYYY
- If MM_NOTTTY is set to any nonzero value, metamail
-
-
-
- Page 6 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- will assume that it is not running in a terminal
- window. MM_NOTTTY implies setting MM_NOASK to 1.
- If -z is given, MM_NOTTTY is set for spawned
- processes, allowing -z to work recursively.
-
- MMMMAAAAIIIILLLLCCCCAAAAPPPPSSSS
- This variable can be used to override the default
- path search for mailcap files.
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL____PPPPAAAAGGGGEEEERRRR
- If set, this variable overrides "more" as the name
- of the program to run to paginate output from an
- interpreter, when pagination has been requested.
- Note that the normal "PAGER" variable is not used
- because many pagers (notably the "less" pager)
- interfere with the workings of termcap-based mail
- viewers.
-
- NNNNOOOOMMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL
- This variable is not actually used by metamail, but
- is used by most metamail-compatible mail reading
- interfaces. If NOMETAMAIL is set to any value, most
- mail reading interfaces will never call the metamail
- program, effectively inhibiting all multimedia
- functionality.
-
- MMMMMMMM____DDDDEEEEBBBBUUUUGGGG
- If MM_DEBUG is set to any value, metamail will
- produce slightly more verbose output to tell what it
- is doing.
-
- MMMMMMMM____QQQQUUUUIIIIEEEETTTT
- If this variable is set to "1", metamail will
- produce even less output than usual. In particular,
- it will suppress the "Executing..." line unless
- MM_DEBUG is set.
-
- Otherwise, this variable can be set to a comma-
- separated list of short commands, and the
- "Executing..." line will be suppressed for those
- commands only.
-
- The default setting for MM_QUIET is "cat", which
- means that the "Executing..." line is printed for
- all commands executed except "cat". This makes text
- support look more natural without sacrificing an
- understanding of what is going on in more complex
- circumstances.
-
- MMMMMMMM____YYYYAAAANNNNKKKKMMMMOOOODDDDEEEE
- Setting this variable to a non-zero value has the
- same effect as the -y switch. Be sure to read the
-
-
-
- Page 7 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- caveats attached to the description of -y before you
- use it. Basically, the only time you would set
- MM_YANKMODE is in order to re-enter a mail reader in
- which you can't control the way metamail is called,
- just to read a single rejected MIME message that was
- rejected by a mail agent that does not understand
- MIME. In such cases, you should read that message,
- exit, and unset this variable.
-
- MMMMMMMM____TTTTRRRRAAAANNNNSSSSPPPPAAAARRRREEEENNNNTTTT
- If this variable is set, metamail will reproduce the
- entire raw message on stdout, and will open up a new
- terminal emulator window in which to do something
- more intelligent. This option supports certain
- brain-dead mail readers, such as mailtool, that
- actually depend on the output of the UNIX "Mail"
- program being the same as the raw message in the
- database.
-
- MMMMMMMM____CCCCHHHHAAAARRRRSSSSEEEETTTT
- If this variable is set, it will suppress the
- printing of character set declarations when mail
- headers being printed contain text in this character
- set. For example, if you set MM_CHARSET to "iso-
- 8859-8", it will suppress warnings when header
- output is produced in that character set.
-
- DDDDIIIISSSSPPPPLLLLAAAAYYYY Used to create a terminal window under the X11
- window system.
-
- WWWWIIIINNNNDDDDOOOOWWWW____PPPPAAAARRRREEEENNNNTTTT
- Used to create a terminal window under the SunTools
- window system.
-
- WWWWMMMMHHHHOOOOSSSSTTTT Used to create a terminal window under the old
- Andrew WM window system.
-
- IIIINNNNTTTTEEEERRRRPPPPRRRREEEETTTTEEEERRRR EEEENNNNVVVVIIIIRRRROOOONNNNMMMMEEEENNNNTTTT
- When metamail calls an interpreter specified in a mailcap
- file, it sets several environment variables which can be
- used by the interpreter if desired:
-
- MMMMMMMM____HHHHEEEEAAAADDDDEEEERRRRSSSS
- This variable is set to the full set of RFC822
- headers, if any.
-
- MMMMMMMM____MMMMAAAAIIIILLLLEEEERRRR
- This variable is set to the name of the mailer that
- called metamail, if the -m option was used.
-
- MMMMMMMM____CCCCOOOONNNNTTTTEEEENNNNTTTTTTTTYYYYPPPPEEEE
- This variable is set to the content type, as named
-
-
-
- Page 8 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- by the Content-type header or passed in via the -c
- option. If the content-type has a subtype and
- parameters, these are also included in
- MM_CONTENTTYPE, e.g. "multipart/mixed;
- boundary=foobar".
-
- MMMMMMMM____SSSSUUUUMMMMMMMMAAAARRRRYYYY
- This variable is set to an efficient one-line
- "caption" of the message, typically including its
- sender and subject.
-
- MMMMMMMM____UUUUSSSSEEEEPPPPAAAAGGGGEEEERRRR
- This variable is set to a non-zero if the use of a
- pager has been requested for long output (e.g. the
- -p switch was given.) If -p is given, MM_USEPAGER
- is set for spawned processes, allowing -p to work
- recursively. This option cannot be used with -B.
-
- TTTTEEEERRRRMMMMIIIINNNNAAAALLLL____CCCCMMMMDDDD
- This variable may be set to a string that is used to
- start a new terminal window if necessary. The
- command to be executed in that window will be
- APPENDED to this command. By default, this is set
- to something like "xterm -e" if DISPLAY is set, or
- "shelltool" if WINDOW_PARENT is set. Users of Sun's
- OpenWindows may wish to set TERMINAL_CMD to
- "shelltool" if they prefer shelltool over xterm.
-
- MMMMMMMM____RRRRUUUUNNNNAAAASSSSRRRROOOOOOOOTTTT
- If set to a non-zero variable, this will allow the
- metamail program to be run by root, the same effect
- as the "-r" switch to metamail.
-
- FFFFIIIILLLLEEEESSSS
- $HOME/.mailcap:/usr/local/lib/mailcap:/usr/local/contrib/lib/metamail/mailcap
- -- default path for mailcap files.
-
- SSSSEEEEEEEE AAAALLLLSSSSOOOO
- audiocompose(1), audiosend(1), ezview(1), getfilename(1),
- mailto-hebrew(1), mailto(1), metasend(1), mmencode(1),
- richtext(1), showaudio(1), showexternal(1), shownonascii(1),
- showpartial(1), showpicture(1), mailcap(4)
-
- BBBBUUUUGGGGSSSS
- In a multipart/alternative body or body parts, some headers
- in the embedded part that should be displayed may not be
- displayed. This will rarely be a problem. Also, in a
- multipart/alternative, anything of type "multipart" or
- "message" is considered to be a recognized part, regardless
- of the recognizability of its contents. This might be a
- problem, only further experience will tell.
-
-
-
-
- Page 9 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111)))) BBBBeeeellllllllccccoooorrrreeee PPPPrrrroooottttoooottttyyyyppppeeee ((((RRRReeeelllleeeeaaaasssseeee 2222)))) MMMMEEEETTTTAAAAMMMMAAAAIIIILLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- The "textualnewlines" field in mailcap entries affects a
- global table of exceptions. This means that if there is
- more than one mailcap entry for a given content-type, and
- they have conflicting "textualnewlines" settings, the wrong
- value may be used. I have been unable to conceive of a
- situation where this would be a real problem, because it
- seems inconceivable that a single content-type would ever
- require newlines to be treated in two different ways,
- regardless of the environment.
-
- CCCCOOOOPPPPYYYYRRRRIIIIGGGGHHHHTTTT
- Copyright (c) 1991 Bell Communications Research, Inc.
- (Bellcore)
-
- Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this
- material for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
- provided that the above copyright notice and this permission
- notice appear in all copies, and that the name of Bellcore
- not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to this
- material without the specific, prior written permission of
- an authorized representative of Bellcore. BELLCORE MAKES NO
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- MATERIAL FOR ANY PURPOSE. IT IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT
- ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES.
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- AAAAUUUUTTTTHHHHOOOORRRR
- Nathaniel S. Borenstein
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