jstedfast / gmime

A C/C++ MIME creation and parser library with support for S/MIME, PGP, and Unix mbox spools.
GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1
118 stars 38 forks source link
c email mbox mime mime-parser parser pgp smime

GMime

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What is GMime?

GMime is a C/C++ library which may be used for the creation and parsing of messages using the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extension (MIME) as defined by numerous IETF specifications.

GMime features an extremely robust high-performance parser designed to be able to preserve byte-for-byte information allowing developers to re-seralize the parsed messages back to a stream exactly as the parser found them. It also features integrated GnuPG and S/MIME v3.2 support.

Built on top of GObject (the object system used by the GNOME desktop), many developers should find its API design and memory management very familiar.

History

As a developer and user of Electronic Mail clients, I had come to realize that the vast majority of E-Mail client (and server) software had less-than-satisfactory MIME implementations. More often than not these E-Mail clients created broken MIME messages and/or would incorrectly try to parse a MIME message thus subtracting from the full benefits that MIME was meant to provide. GMime is meant to address this issue by following the MIME specification as closely as possible while also providing programmers with an extremely easy to use high-level application programming interface (API).

License Information

The GMime library is Copyright (C) 2000-2024 Jeffrey Stedfast and is licensed under the LGPL v2.1

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.

Getting the Source Code

You can download official public release tarballs of GMime at https://download.gnome.org/sources/gmime/ or ftp://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/sources/gmime/.

If you would like to contribute to the GMime project, it is recommended that you grab the source code from the official GitHub repository at http://github.com/jstedfast/gmime. Cloning this repository can be done using the following command:

git clone https://github.com/jstedfast/gmime.git

Requirements

For proper compilation and functionality of GMime, the following packages are REQUIRED:

The following packages are RECOMMENDED:

Using GMime

Parsing Messages

One of the more common operations that GMime is meant for is parsing email messages from arbitrary streams. To do this, you will need to use a GMimeParser:

/* load a GMimeMessage from a stream */
GMimeMessage *message;
GMimeStream *stream;
GMimeParser *parser;

stream = g_mime_stream_fs_open ("message.eml", O_RDONLY, 0644, NULL);
parser = g_mime_parser_new_with_stream (stream);

/* Note: we can unref the stream now since the GMimeParser has a reference to it... */
g_object_unref (stream);

message = g_mime_parser_construct_message (parser, NULL);

/* unref the parser since we no longer need it */
g_object_unref (parser);

If you are planning to parse messages from an mbox stream, you can do something like this:

GMimeMessage *message;
GMimeStream *stream;
GMimeParser *parser;
gint64 offset;
char *marker;

stream = g_mime_stream_fs_open ("Inbox.mbox", O_RDONLY, 0644, NULL);
parser = g_mime_parser_new_with_stream (stream);

/* tell the parser to scan mbox-style "From " markers */
g_mime_parser_set_format (parser, GMIME_FORMAT_MBOX);

/* Note: we can unref the stream now since the GMimeParser has a reference to it... */
g_object_unref (stream);

while (!g_mime_parser_eos (parser)) {
    /* load the next message from the mbox */
    if ((message = g_mime_parser_construct_message (parser, NULL)) != NULL)
        g_object_unref (message);

    /* get information about the mbox "From " marker... */
    offset = g_mime_parser_get_mbox_marker_offset (parser);
    marker = g_mime_parser_get_mbox_marker (parser);
}

g_object_unref (parser);

Getting the Body of a Message

A common misunderstanding about email is that there is a well-defined message body and then a list of attachments. This is not really the case. The reality is that MIME is a tree structure of content, much like a file system.

Luckily, MIME does define a set of general rules for how mail clients should interpret this tree structure of MIME parts. The Content-Disposition header is meant to provide hints to the receiving client as to which parts are meant to be displayed as part of the message body and which are meant to be interpreted as attachments.

The Content-Disposition header will generally have one of two values: inline or attachment.

The meaning of these value should be fairly obvious. If the value is attachment, then the content of said MIME part is meant to be presented as a file attachment separate from the core message. However, if the value is inline, then the content of that MIME part is meant to be displayed inline within the mail client's rendering of the core message body. If the Content-Disposition header does not exist, then it should be treated as if the value were inline.

Technically, every part that lacks a Content-Disposition header or that is marked as inline, then, is part of the core message body.

There's a bit more to it than that, though.

Modern MIME messages will often contain a multipart/alternative MIME container which will generally contain a text/plain and text/html version of the text that the sender wrote. The text/html version is typically formatted much closer to what the sender saw in his or her WYSIWYG editor than the text/plain version.

The reason for sending the message text in both formats is that not all mail clients are capable of displaying HTML.

The receiving client should only display one of the alternative views contained within the multipart/alternative container. Since alternative views are listed in order of least faithful to most faithful with what the sender saw in his or her WYSIWYG editor, the receiving client should walk over the list of alternative views starting at the end and working backwards until it finds a part that it is capable of displaying.

Example:

multipart/alternative
  text/plain
  text/html

As seen in the example above, the text/html part is listed last because it is the most faithful to what the sender saw in his or her WYSIWYG editor when writing the message.

To make matters even more complicated, sometimes modern mail clients will use a multipart/related MIME container instead of a simple text/html part in order to embed images and other content within the HTML.

Example:

multipart/alternative
  text/plain
  multipart/related
    text/html
    image/jpeg
    video/mp4
    image/png

In the example above, one of the alternative views is a multipart/related container which contains an HTML version of the message body that references the sibling video and images.

Now that you have a rough idea of how a message is structured and how to interpret various MIME entities, the next step is learning how to traverse the MIME tree using GMime.

Traversing a GMimeMessage

The top-level MIME entity of the message will generally either be a GMimePart or a GMimeMultipart.

As an example, if you wanted to rip out all of the attachments of a message, your code might look something like this:

GMimePartIter *iter = g_mime_part_iter_new (message);
GPtrArray *attachments = g_ptr_array_new ();
GPtrArray *multiparts = g_ptr_array_new ();

/* collect our list of attachments and their parent multiparts */
while (g_mime_part_iter_next (iter)) {
    GMimeObject *current = g_mime_part_iter_get_current (iter);
    GMimeObject *parent = g_mime_part_iter_get_parent (iter);

    if (GMIME_IS_MULTIPART (parent) && GMIME_IS_PART (current)) {
        GMimePart *part = (GMimePart *) current;

        if (g_mime_part_is_attachment (part)) {
            /* keep track of each attachment's parent multipart */
            g_ptr_array_add (multiparts, parent);
            g_ptr_array_add (attachments, part);
        }
    }
}

/* now remove each attachment its parent multipart... */
for (int i = 0; i < attachments->len; i++) {
    GMimeMultipart *multipart = (GMimeMultipart *) multiparts->pdata[i];
    GMimeObject *attachment = (GMimeObject *) attachments->pdata[i];

    g_mime_multipart_remove (multipart, attachment);
}

Creating a Simple Message

Creating MIME messages using GMime is really trivial.

GMimeMessage *message;
GMimeTextPart *body;

message = g_mime_message_new (TRUE);

g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_FROM, "Joey", "joey@friends.com");
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_TO, "Alice", "alice@wonderland.com");
g_mime_message_set_subject (message, "How you doin?", NULL);

body = g_mime_text_part_new_with_subtype ("plain");
g_mime_text_part_set_text (body, "Hey Alice,\n\n"
    "What are you up to this weekend? Monica is throwing one of her parties on\n"
    "Saturday and I was hoping you could make it.\n\n"
    "Will you be my +1?\n\n"
    "-- Joey\n");

g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, (GMimeObject *) body);
g_object_unref (body);

Creating a Message with Attachments

Attachments are just like any other GMimePart, the only difference is that they typically have a Content-Disposition header with a value of "attachment" instead of "inline" or no Content-Disposition header at all.

Typically, when a mail client adds attachments to a message, it will create a multipart/mixed part and add the text body part and all of the file attachments to the multipart/mixed.

Here's how you can do that with GMime:

GMimeMultipart *multipart;
GMimeDataWrapper *content;
GMimeMessage *message;
GMimePart *attachment;
GMimeTextPart *body;
GMimeStream *stream;

message = g_mime_message_new (TRUE);
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_FROM, "Joey", "joey@friends.com");
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_TO, "Alice", "alice@wonderland.com");
g_mime_message_set_subject (message, "How you doin?", NULL);

/* create our message text, just like before... */
body = g_mime_text_part_new_with_subtype ("plain");
g_mime_text_part_set_text (body, "Hey Alice,\n\n"
    "What are you up to this weekend? Monica is throwing one of her parties on\n"
    "Saturday and I was hoping you could make it.\n\n"
    "Will you be my +1?\n\n"
    "-- Joey\n");

/* create an image attachment for the file located at path */
attachment = g_mime_part_new_with_type ("image", "gif");
g_mime_part_set_filename (attachment, basename (path));

/* create the content for the image attachment */
stream = g_mime_stream_fs_open (path, O_RDONLY, 0644, NULL);
content = g_mime_data_wrapper_new_with_stream (stream, GMIME_CONTENT_ENCODING_DEFAULT);
g_object_unref (stream);

/* set the content of the attachment */
g_mime_part_set_content (attachment, content);
g_object_unref (content);

/* set the Content-Transfer-Encoding to base64 */
g_mime_part_set_content_encoding (attachment, GMIME_CONTENT_ENCODING_BASE64);

/* now create the multipart/mixed container to hold the message text and the image attachment */
multipart = g_mime_multipart_new_with_subtype ("mixed");

/* add the text body first */
g_mime_multipart_add (multipart, (GMimeObject *) body);
g_object_unref (body);

/* now add the attachment(s) */
g_mime_multipart_add (multipart, (GMimeObject *) attachment);
g_object_unref (attachment);

/* set the multipart/mixed as the message body */
g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, (GMimeObject *) multipart);
g_object_unref (multipart);

Of course, that is just a simple example. A lot of modern mail clients such as Outlook or Thunderbird will send out both a text/html and a text/plain version of the message text. To do this, you'd create a GMimeTextPart for the text/plain part and another GMimeTextPart for the text/html part and then add them to a multipart/alternative like so:

GMimeMultipart *mixed, *alternative;
GMimeTextPart *plain, *html;
GMimePart *attachment;

/* see above for how to create each of these... */
attachment = CreateAttachment ();
plain = CreateTextPlainPart ();
html = CreateTextHtmlPart ();

/* Note: it is important that the text/html part is added second, because it is the
 * most expressive version and (probably) the most faithful to the sender's WYSIWYG 
 * editor. */
alternative = g_mime_multipart_new_with_subtype ("alternative");

g_mime_multipart_add (alternative, (GMimeObject *) plain);
g_object_unref (plain);

g_mime_multipart_add (alternative, (GMimeObject *) html);
g_object_unref (html);

/* now create the multipart/mixed container to hold the multipart/alternative
 * and the image attachment */
mixed = g_mime_multipart_new_with_subtype ("mixed");

g_mime_multipart_add (mixed, (GMimeObject *) alternative);
g_object_unref (alternative);

g_mime_multipart_add (mixed, (GMimeObject *) attachment);
g_object_unref (attachment);

/* now set the multipart/mixed as the message body */
g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, (GMimeObject *) mixed);
g_object_unref (mixed);

Encrypting Messages with S/MIME

S/MIME uses an application/pkcs7-mime MIME part to encapsulate encrypted content (as well as other things).

GMimeApplicationPkcs7Mime *encrypted;
GMimeMessage *message;
GError *err = NULL;
GMimeObject *body;
GPtrArray *rcpts;

message = g_mime_message_new (TRUE);
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_FROM, "Joey", "joey@friends.com");
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_TO, "Alice", "alice@wonderland.com");
g_mime_message_set_subject (message, "How you doin?", NULL);

/* create our message body (perhaps a multipart/mixed with the message text and some
 * image attachments, for example) */
body = CreateMessageBody ();

/* create a list of key ids to encrypt to */
rcpts = g_ptr_array_new ();
g_ptr_array_add (rcpts, "alice@wonderland.com"); // or use her fingerprint

/* now to encrypt our message body */
if (!(encrypted = g_mime_application_pkcs7_mime_encrypt (body, GMIME_ENCRYPT_NONE, rcpts, &err))) {
    fprintf (stderr, "encrypt failed: %s\n", err->message);
    g_object_unref (body);
    g_error_free (err);
    return;
}

g_object_unref (body);

g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, encrypted);
g_object_unref (encrypted);

Decrypting S/MIME Messages

As mentioned earlier, S/MIME uses an application/pkcs7-mime part with an "smime-type" parameter with a value of "enveloped-data" to encapsulate the encrypted content.

The first thing you must do is find the GMimeApplicationPkcs7Mime part (see the section on traversing MIME parts).

if (GMIME_IS_APPLICATION_PKCS7_MIME (entity)) {
    GMimeApplicationPkcs7Mime *pkcs7 = (GMimeApplicationPkcs7Mime *) entity;
    GMimeSecureMimeType smime_type;
    GError *err = NULL;

    smime_type = g_mime_application_pkcs7_mime_get_smime_type (pkcs7_mime);
    if (smime_type == GMIME_SECURE_MIME_TYPE_ENVELOPED_DATA)
        return g_mime_application_pkcs7_mime_decrypt (pkcs7, 0, NULL, NULL, &err);
}

Encrypting Messages with PGP/MIME

Unlike S/MIME, PGP/MIME uses multipart/encrypted to encapsulate its encrypted data.

GMimeMultipartEncrypted *encrypted;
GMimeCryptoContext *ctx;
GMimeMessage *message;
GError *err = NULL;
GMimeObject *body;
GPtrArray *rcpts;

message = g_mime_message_new (TRUE);
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_FROM, "Joey", "joey@friends.com");
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_TO, "Alice", "alice@wonderland.com");
g_mime_message_set_subject (message, "How you doin?", NULL);

/* create our message body (perhaps a multipart/mixed with the message text and some
 * image attachments, for example) */
body = CreateMessageBody ();

/* create a list of key ids to encrypt to */
rcpts = g_ptr_array_new ();
g_ptr_array_add (rcpts, "alice@wonderland.com"); // or use her fingerprint

/* now to encrypt our message body */
ctx = g_mime_gpg_context_new ();

encrypted = g_mime_multipart_encrypted_encrypt (ctx, body, FALSE, NULL, GMIME_ENCRYPT_NONE, rcpts, &err);
g_ptr_array_free (rcpts, TRUE);
g_object_unref (body);
g_object_unref (ctx);

if (encrypted == NULL) {
    fprintf (stderr, "encrypt failed: %s\n", err->message);
    g_error_free (err);
    return;
}

g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, (GMimeObject *) encrypted);
g_object_unref (encrypted);

Decrypting PGP/MIME Messages

As mentioned earlier, PGP/MIME uses a multipart/encrypted part to encapsulate the encrypted content.

A multipart/encrypted contains exactly 2 parts: the first GMimeObject is the version information while the second GMimeObject is the actual encrypted content and will typically be an application/octet-stream.

The first thing you must do is find the GMimeMultipartEncrypted part (see the section on traversing MIME parts).

if (GMIME_IS_MULTIPART_ENCRYPTED (entity)) {
    GMimeMultipartEncrypted *encrypted = (GMimeMultipartEncrypted *) entity;
    GMimeDecryptResult *result = NULL;
    GError *err = NULL;

    return g_mime_multipart_encrypted_decrypt (encrypted, GMIME_DECRYPT_NONE, NULL, &result, &err);
}

Digitally Signing Messages with S/MIME or PGP/MIME

Both S/MIME and PGP/MIME use a multipart/signed to contain the signed content and the detached signature data.

Here's how you might digitally sign a message using S/MIME:

GMimeApplicationPkcs7Mime *pkcs7;
GMimeMessage *message;
GError *err = NULL;
GMimeObject *body;

message = g_mime_message_new (TRUE);
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_FROM, "Joey", "joey@friends.com");
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_TO, "Alice", "alice@wonderland.com");
g_mime_message_set_subject (message, "How you doin?", NULL);

/* create our message body (perhaps a multipart/mixed with the message text and some
 * image attachments, for example) */
body = CreateMessageBody ();

/* now to sign our message body */
if (!(pkcs7 = g_mime_application_pkcs7_mime_sign (body, "joey@friends.com", &err))) {
    fprintf (stderr, "sign failed: %s\n", err->message);
    g_object_unref (body);
    g_error_free (err);
    return;
}

g_object_unref (body);

g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, (GMimeObject *) pkcs7);
g_object_unref (pkcs7);

S/MIME also gives you the option of using a multipart/signed method of signing a message.

GMimeMultipartSigned *ms;
GMimeCryptoContext *ctx;
GMimeMessage *message;
GError *err = NULL;
GMimeObject *body;

message = g_mime_message_new (TRUE);
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_FROM, "Joey", "joey@friends.com");
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_TO, "Alice", "alice@wonderland.com");
g_mime_message_set_subject (message, "How you doin?", NULL);

/* create our message body (perhaps a multipart/mixed with the message text and some
 * image attachments, for example) */
body = CreateMessageBody ();

/* create our crypto context - needed because multipart/signed works for both S/MIME and PGP/MIME */
ctx = g_mime_pkcs7_context_new ();

/* now to sign our message body */
if (!(ms = g_mime_multipart_signed_sign (ctx, body, "joey@friends.com", &err))) {
    fprintf (stderr, "sign failed: %s\n", err->message);
    g_object_unref (body);
    g_object_unref (ctx);
    g_error_free (err);
    return;
}

g_object_unref (body);
g_object_unref (ctx);

g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, (GMimeObject *) ms);
g_object_unref (ms);

If you'd prefer to use PGP instead of S/MIME, things work almost exactly the same except that you would use the GMimeGpgContext.

GMimeMultipartSigned *ms;
GMimeCryptoContext *ctx;
GMimeMessage *message;
GError *err = NULL;
GMimeObject *body;

message = g_mime_message_new (TRUE);
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_FROM, "Joey", "joey@friends.com");
g_mime_message_add_mailbox (message, GMIME_ADDRESS_TYPE_TO, "Alice", "alice@wonderland.com");
g_mime_message_set_subject (message, "How you doin?", NULL);

/* create our message body (perhaps a multipart/mixed with the message text and some
 * image attachments, for example) */
body = CreateMessageBody ();

/* create our crypto context - needed because multipart/signed works for both S/MIME and PGP/MIME */
ctx = g_mime_gpg_context_new ();

/* now to sign our message body */
if (!(ms = g_mime_multipart_signed_sign (ctx, body, "joey@friends.com", &err))) {
    fprintf (stderr, "sign failed: %s\n", err->message);
    g_object_unref (body);
    g_object_unref (ctx);
    g_error_free (err);
    return;
}

g_object_unref (body);
g_object_unref (ctx);

g_mime_message_set_mime_part (message, (GMimeObject *) ms);
g_object_unref (ms);

Verifying S/MIME and PGP/MIME Digital Signatures

As mentioned earlier, both S/MIME and PGP/MIME typically use a multipart/signed part to contain the signed content and the detached signature data.

A multipart/signed contains exactly 2 parts: the first GMimeObject is the signed content while the second GMimeObject is the detached signature and, by default, will either be a GMimeApplicationPgpSignature part or a GMimeApplicationPkcs7Signature part (depending on whether the sending client signed using OpenPGP or S/MIME).

Because the multipart/signed part may have been signed by multiple signers, the g_mime_multipart_signed_verify() function returns a GMimeSignatureList which contains a list of digital signatures (one for each signer) that each contain their own metadata describing who that signer is and what the status of their signature is.

if (GMIME_IS_MULTIPART_SIGNED (entity)) {
    GMimeMultipartSigned *ms = (GMimeMultipartSigned *) entity;
    GMimeSignatureList *signatures;
    GError *err = NULL;
    int i, count;

    if (!(signatures = g_mime_multipart_signed_verify (ms, GMIME_VERIFY_ENABLE_KEYSERVER_LOOKUPS, &err))) {
        fprintf (stderr, "verify failed: %s\n", err->message);
        g_error_free (err);
        return;
    }

    fputs ("\nSignatures:\n", stdout);
    count = g_mime_signature_list_length (signatures);
    for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
        GMimeSignature *sig = g_mime_signature_list_get_signature (signatures, i);
        GMimeSignatureStatus status = g_mime_signature_get_status (sig);
        GMimeCertificate *cert = g_mime_signature_get_certificate (sig);
        time_t created = g_mime_signature_get_created (sig);
        time_t expires = g_mime_signature_get_expires (sig);

        fprintf (stdout, "\tName: %s\n", g_mime_certificate_get_name (cert));
        fprintf (stdout, "\tKeyId: %s\n", g_mime_certificate_get_key_id (cert));
        fprintf (stdout, "\tFingerprint: %s\n", g_mime_certificate_get_fingerprint (cert));

        fprintf (stdout, "\tTrust: ");
        switch (g_mime_certificate_get_trust (cert)) {
        case GMIME_TRUST_UNKNOWN:   fputs ("Unknown\n", stdout); break;
        case GMIME_TRUST_NEVER:     fputs ("Never\n", stdout); break;
        case GMIME_TRUST_UNDEFINED: fputs ("Undefined\n", stdout); break;
        case GMIME_TRUST_MARGINAL:  fputs ("Marginal\n", stdout); break;
        case GMIME_TRUST_FULL:      fputs ("Full\n", stdout); break;
        case GMIME_TRUST_ULTIMATE:  fputs ("Ultimate\n", stdout); break;
        }

        fprintf (stdout, "\tStatus: ");
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_RED)
            fputs ("BAD\n", stdout);
        else if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_GREEN)
            fputs ("GOOD\n", stdout);
        else if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_VALID)
            fputs ("VALID\n", stdout);
        else
            fputs ("UNKNOWN\n", stdout);

        fprintf (stdout, "\tSignature made on %s", ctime (&created));
        if (expires != (time_t) 0)
            fprintf (stdout, "\tSignature expires on %s", ctime (&expires));
        else
            fprintf (stdout, "\tSignature never expires\n");

        fprintf (stdout, "\tErrors: ");
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_KEY_REVOKED)
            fputs ("Key Revoked, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_KEY_EXPIRED)
            fputs ("Key Expired, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_SIG_EXPIRED)
            fputs ("Sig Expired, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_KEY_MISSING)
            fputs ("Key Missing, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_CRL_MISSING)
            fputs ("CRL Missing, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_CRL_TOO_OLD)
            fputs ("CRL Too Old, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_BAD_POLICY)
            fputs ("Bad Policy, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_SYS_ERROR)
            fputs ("System Error, ", stdout);
        if (status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_TOFU_CONFLICT)
            fputs ("Tofu Conflict", stdout);
        if ((status & GMIME_SIGNATURE_STATUS_ERROR_MASK) == 0)
            fputs ("None", stdout);
        fputs ("\n\n", stdout);
    }

    g_object_unref (signatures);
}

It should be noted, however, that while most S/MIME clients will use the preferred multipart/signed approach, it is possible that you may encounter an application/pkcs7-mime part with an "smime-type" parameter set to "signed-data". Luckily, GMime can handle this format as well:

if (GMIME_IS_APPLICATION_PKCS7_MIME (entity)) {
    GMimeApplicationPkcs7Mime *pkcs7 = (GMimeApplicationPkcs7Mime *) entity;
    GMimeSecureMimeType smime_type;

    smime_type = g_mime_application_pkcs7_mime_get_smime_type (pkcs7);

    if (smime_type == GMIME_SECURE_MIME_TYPE_SIGNED_DATA) {
        /* extract the original content and get a list of signatures */
        GMimeSignatureList *signatures;
        GMimeObject *extracted;
        GError *err = NULL;
        int i, count;

        /* Note: if you are rendering the message, you'll want to render the
         * extracted mime part rather than the application/pkcs7-mime part. */

        if (!(signatures = g_mime_application_pkcs7_mime_verify (pkcs7, GMIME_VERIFY_NONE, &extracted, &err))) {
            fprintf (stderr, "verify failed: %s\n", err->message);
            g_error_free (err);
            return;
        }

        count = g_mime_signature_list_length (signatures);
        for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
            GMimeSignature *sig = g_mime_signature_list_get_signature (signatures, i);
            /* ... */
        }

        g_object_unref (signatures);
    }
}

Understanding Memory Management in GMime

For functions throughout the GMime API that return an object reference:

For example, the stream in the following code would need to be unreffed (using g_object_unref()) because it was freshly allocated by the function:

GMimeStream *stream = g_mime_stream_mem_new ();

The next example shows a function that returns a reference to an existing GMimeStream object that is stored on (and therefor managed by) the GMimeDataWrapper object:

GMimeStream *stream = g_mime_data_wrapper_get_stream (wrapper);

In the above example, the stream should not be unreffed because the stream object's memory is managed by the wrapper object. In other words, when the wrapper object is freed, the stream will be freed as well.

Where many developers get confused is when they create a new object and then add it to another object.

For example:

GMimeStream *stream = g_mime_stream_mem_new ();
GMimeDataWrapper *wrapper = g_mime_data_wrapper_new_with_stream (stream, GMIME_CONTENT_ENCODING_DEFAULT);
g_object_unref (stream);

Even in this situation, it is necessary to unref the allocated object because all GMime functions that add an object to another object will ref that object themselves.

In other words, in the above example, the GMimeStream is being added to the GMimeDataWrapper. The GMimeDataWrapper calls g_object_ref() on the stream which means that the stream object now has a ref count of 2.

When g_object_unref() is called on the stream after adding it to the GMimeDataWrapper, the ref count drops down to 1.

And when the wrapper object is eventually finalized after calling g_object_unref() on it, the ref count on the stream object will be reduced to 0 as well, thereby freeing the stream object.

Documentation

This is the README file for GMime. Additional documentation related to development using GMime has been included within the source release of GMime.

Description
docs/reference/ Contains SGML and HTML versions of the GMime reference manual
docs/tutorial/ Contains SGML and HTML versions of the GMime tutorial
AUTHORS List of primary authors (source code developers)
COPYING The GNU Lesser General Public License, version 2
INSTALL In-depth installation instructions
TODO Description of planned GMime development
PORTING Guide for developers porting their application from an older version of GMime

Discussion Forums

For discussion of GMime development (either of GMime itself or using GMime in your own application), you may find the GMime Discussion forum helpful.

Bindings

Other developers have been working to make GMime available to programmers in other languages. The current list of known bindings are:

Language Location
Go https://github.com/sendgrid/go-gmime
Perl http://search.cpan.org/dist/MIME-Fast
C# https://github.com/jstedfast/MimeKit
Julia https://github.com/bhftbootcamp/GMime.jl

Reporting Bugs

Bugs may be reported to the GMime development team by creating a new issue.

Reporting Security Issues

Security issues should be reported to jestedfa@microsoft.com.

Using a Subject along the lines of "GMime security issue" would be helpful in helping to spot the email message.