NAME¶
readpst - convert PST (MS Outlook Personal Folders) files to mbox
and other formats
SYNOPSIS¶
readpst [-C default-charset]
[-D] [-M] [-S] [-V] [-b]
[-c format]
[-d debug-file] [-e] [-h]
[-j jobs] [-k] [-m]
[-o output-directory] [-q] [-r]
[-t output-type-codes] [-u] [-w]
pstfile
DESCRIPTION¶
readpst is a program that can read an Outlook PST (Personal
Folders) file and convert it into an mbox file, a format suitable for KMail,
a recursive mbox structure, or separate emails.
OPTIONS¶
-C default-charset
Set the character set to be used for items with an
unspecified character set.
-D
Include deleted items in the output.
-M
Output messages in MH (rfc822) format as separate files.
This will create folders as named in the PST file, and will put each email
together with any attachments into its own file. These files will be numbered
from 1 to n with no leading zeros. This format has no from quoting.
-S
Output messages into separate files. This will create
folders as named in the PST file, and will put each email in its own file.
These files will be numbered from 1 to n with no leading zeros. Attachments
will also be saved in the same folder as the email message. The attachments
for message $m are saved as $m-$name where $name is (the original name of the
attachment, or ´attach$n´ if the attachment had no name), where
$n is another sequential index with no leading zeros. This format has no from
quoting.
-V
Show program version and exit.
-b
Do not save the attachments for the RTF format of the
email body.
-c format
Set the Contact output mode. Use -cv for vcard format or
-cl for an email list.
-d debug-file
Specify name of debug log file. The log file is now an
ascii file, instead of the binary file used in previous versions.
-e
Same as the M option, but each output file will include
an extension from (.eml, .ics, .vcf). This format has no from quoting.
-h
Show summary of options and exit.
-j jobs
Specifies the maximum number of parallel jobs. Specify 0
to suppress running parallel jobs. Folders may be processed in parallel.
Output formats that place each mail message in a separate file (-M, -S, -e)
may process the contents of individual folders in parallel.
-k
Changes the output format to KMail. This format uses
mboxrd from quoting.
-m
Same as the e option, but write .msg files also
-o output-directory
Specifies the output directory. The directory must
already exist, and is entered after the PST file is opened, but before any
processing of files commences.
-q
Changes to silent mode. No feedback is printed to the
screen, except for error messages.
-r
Changes the output format to Recursive. This will create
folders as named in the PST file, and will put all emails in a file called
"mbox" inside each folder. These files are then compatible with all
mbox-compatible email clients. This format uses mboxrd from quoting.
-t output-type-codes
Specifies the item types that are processed. The argument
is a sequence of single letters from (e,a,j,c) for (email, appointment,
journal, contact) types. The default is to process all item types.
-u
Sets Thunderbird mode, a submode of recursive mode. This
causes two extra .type and .size meta files to be created. This format uses
mboxrd from quoting.
-w
Overwrite any previous output files. Beware: When used
with the -S switch, this will remove all files from the target folder before
writing. This is to keep the count of emails and attachments correct.
FROM QUOTING¶
Output formats that place each mail message in a separate file
(-M, -S, -e, -m) don´t do any from quoting. Output formats that place
multiple email messages in a single file (-k, -r, -u) now use mboxrd from
quoting rules. If none of those switches are specified, the default output
format uses mboxrd from quoting rules, since it produces multiple email
messages in a single file. Earlier versions used mboxo from quoting rules
for all output formats.
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was originally written by Dave Smith
<dave.s@earthcorp.com>, and updated by Joe Nahmias
<joe@nahmias.net> for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by
others). It was subsequently updated by Brad Hards
<bradh@frogmouth.net>, and converted to xml format by Carl Byington
<carl@five-ten-sg.com>.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2002 by David Smith <dave.s@earthcorp.com>.
XML version Copyright (C) 2008 by 510 Software Group
<carl@five-ten-sg.com>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any
later version.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; see the file COPYING. If not, please write to the
Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.