Skip to content

๐Ÿ› Parses forwarded emails and extracts original content.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

baztar/email-forward-parser

ย 
ย 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 

Repository files navigation

Email Forward Parser

Test and Build Build and Release NPM Downloads

Parses forwarded emails and extracts original content.

This library supports most common email clients and locales.

๐Ÿ˜˜ Maintainer: @eliottvincent

Who uses it?

Crisp

๐Ÿ‘‹ You use this library and you want to be listed there? Contact us.

Features

This library is used at Crisp everyday with around 1 million inbound emails.

  • Supported clients: Apple Mail, Gmail, Outlook Live / 365, Outlook 2013, Outlook 2019, New Outlook 2019, Yahoo Mail, Thunderbird, Missive, HubSpot, IONOS by 1 & 1, MailMate
  • Supported locales: Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, French, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian

Usage

const EmailForwardParser = require("email-forward-parser");

const result = new EmailForwardParser().read(MY_EMAIL_STRING);

console.log(result.forwarded);
// true

API

Parse a forwarded email

read(body, subject) checks whether an email was forwarded or not, and parses its original content (From, To, Cc, Subject, Date and Body):

  • body must be a string representing the email body (as returned by mailparser, for example)
  • subject must be a string representing the email subject. This parameter is optional, but recommended to improve the detection for some email clients (especially New Outlook 2019)
const EmailForwardParser = require("email-forward-parser");

const result = new EmailForwardParser().read(MY_EMAIL_STRING, MY_SUBJECT_STRING);

console.log(result);
// {
//   forwarded: true,
//
//   message: "Praesent suscipit egestas hendrerit.",
//
//   email: {
//     body: "Aenean quis diam urna.",
//
//     from: {
//       address: "[email protected]",
//       name: "John Doe"
//     },
//     to: [{
//       address: "[email protected]",
//       name: "Bessie Berry"
//     }],
//     cc: [{
//       address: "[email protected]",
//       name: "Walter Sheltan"
//     }],
//
//     subject: "Integer consequat non purus",
//     date: "25 October 2021 at 11:17:21 EEST"
//   }
// }

How does it work?

Email forwarding (i.e. when you manually forward a copy of an email by clicking the "Forward" button in your email client) is not standardized by any RFC. Meaning that email clients are free to format the forwarded email the way they want.

There is no magic bullet to handle such disparities. The only viable solution is to rely on regular expressions (a lot!), to account for each email client's specificities:

Client Detectable via subject Detectable via separator Subject localized Separator localized All original information available Original information localized Other specificities
Apple Mail Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --
Gmail Yes Yes No No Yes Only some parts --
Outlook Live / 365 Yes Yes Yes No Yes No --
Outlook 2013 Yes No ? -- ? ? --
Outlook 2019 Yes Yes No Yes No Yes The From and Date parts (only original information available) are embedded in the separator, rather than the body itself
New Outlook 2019 Yes No Yes -- Yes Yes --
Yahoo Mail Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes The original information are all stuck to each other, without line breaks
Thunderbird Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes --
Missive Yes Yes No No Yes No --
HubSpot Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --
IONOS by 1 & 1 ? Yes ? ? Yes ? --
MailMate Yes Yes ? ? Yes ? --

Contributing

Feel free to fork this project and submit fixes. We may adapt your code to fit the codebase.

You can run unit tests using:

npm test

License

email-forward-parser is released under the MIT License. See the bundled LICENSE file for details.

About

๐Ÿ› Parses forwarded emails and extracts original content.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%