diff --git a/README b/README index 3f7830f..2275d0a 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -1,14 +1,14 @@ Starting with an unpacked tarball, try this: ./configure make su make install -Starting with a mercurial working directory, try this: +Starting with a Git working directory, try this: make -f *cvs make -C xml all distclean make distcheck diff --git a/xml/libpst.in b/xml/libpst.in index 6954111..acdf08d 100644 --- a/xml/libpst.in +++ b/xml/libpst.in @@ -1,2055 +1,2055 @@ @PACKAGE@ Utilities - Version @VERSION@ Packages The various source and binary packages are available at http://www.five-ten-sg.com/@PACKAGE@/packages/. The most recent documentation is available at http://www.five-ten-sg.com/@PACKAGE@/. The most recent developer documentation for the shared library is available at http://www.five-ten-sg.com/@PACKAGE@/devel/. A Mercurial source + url="https://git-scm.com/">Git source code repository for this project is available at http://hg.five-ten-sg.com/@PACKAGE@/. This version can now convert both 32 bit Outlook files (pre 2003), and the 64 bit Outlook 2003 pst files. Utilities are supplied to convert email messages to both mbox and MH mailbox formats, and to DII load file format for use with many of the CT Summation products. Contacts can be converted to a simple list, to vcard format, or to ldif format for import to an LDAP server. The libpff project has some excellent documentation of the pst file format. 2017-12-07 readpst 1 readpst @VERSION@ readpst convert PST (MS Outlook Personal Folders) files to mbox and other formats Synopsis readpst 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. -a attachment-extension-list Set the list of acceptable attachment extensions. Any attachment that does not have an extension on this list will be discarded. All attachments are acceptable if the list is empty, or this option is not specified. -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. Appointments go into a file called "calendar", address book entries go into a file called "contacts", and journal entries go into a file called "journal". 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. -8 Output bodies in UTF-8, rather than original encoding, if a UTF-8 version is available. 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. Version @VERSION@ 2016-08-29 lspst 1 lspst @VERSION@ lspst list PST (MS Outlook Personal Folders) file data Synopsis lspst pstfile Options -V Show program version and exit. -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. -f date-format Select the date format for long format listing. Defaults to "%F %T". -l Use long format listing to show the Date, CC and BCC headers. -h Show summary of options and exit. Description lspst is a program that can read an Outlook PST (Personal Folders) file and produce a simple listing of the data (contacts, email subjects, etc). Author lspst was written by Joe Nahmias <joe@nahmias.net> based on readpst. This man page was written by 510 Software Group <carl@five-ten-sg.com>. Copyright Copyright (C) 2004 by Joe Nahmias <joe@nahmias.net>. 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. Version @VERSION@ 2017-12-07 pst2ldif 1 pst2ldif @VERSION@ pst2ldif extract contacts from an MS Outlook .pst file in .ldif format Synopsis pst2ldif pstfilename Options -V Show program version. Subsequent options are then ignored. -b ldap-base Sets the ldap base value used in the dn records. You probably want to use something like "o=organization, c=US". -c class Sets the objectClass values for the contact items. This class needs to be defined in the schema used by your LDAP server, and at a minimum it must contain the ldap attributes given below. This option may be specified multiple times to generate entries with multiple object classes. -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. -l extra-line Specify an extra line to be added to each ldap entry. This option may be specified multiple times to add multiple lines to each ldap entry. -o Use the old ldap schema, rather than the default new ldap schema. The old schema generates multiple postalAddress attributes for a single entry. The new schema generates a single postalAddress (and homePostalAddress when available) attribute with $ delimiters as specified in RFC4517. Using the old schema also generates two extra leading entries, one for "dn:ldap base", and one for "dn: cn=root, ldap base". -h Show summary of options. Subsequent options are then ignored. Description pst2ldif reads the contact information from an MS Outlook .pst file and produces a .ldif file that may be used to import those contacts into an LDAP database. The following ldap attributes are generated for the old ldap schema: cn givenName sn personalTitle company mail postalAddress l st postalCode c homePhone telephoneNumber facsimileTelephoneNumber mobile description The following attributes are generated for the new ldap schema: cn givenName sn title o mail postalAddress homePostalAddress l st postalCode c homePhone telephoneNumber facsimileTelephoneNumber mobile description labeledURI Copyright 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. Version @VERSION@ 2017-12-07 pst2dii 1 pst2dii @VERSION@ pst2dii extract email messages from an MS Outlook .pst file in DII load format Synopsis pst2dii -f ttf-font-file pstfilename Options -B bates-prefix Sets the bates prefix string. The bates sequence number is appended to this string, and printed on each page. -O dii-output-file Name of the output DII load file. -V Show program version. Subsequent options are then ignored. -b bates-number Starting bates sequence number. The default is zero. -c bates-color Font color for the bates stamp on each page, specified as 6 hex digits as rrggbb values. The default is ff0000 for bright red. -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. -f ttf-font-file Specify name of a true type font file. This should be a fixed pitch font. -h Show summary of options. Subsequent options are then ignored. -o output-directory Specifies the output directory. The directory must already exist. Description pst2dii reads the email messages from an MS Outlook .pst file and produces a DII load file that may be used to import message summaries into a Summation DII system. The DII output file contains references to the image and attachment files in the output directory. Copyright 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. Version @VERSION@ 2017-12-07 outlook.pst 5 outlook.pst format of MS Outlook .pst file Synopsis outlook.pst Overview Low level or primitive items in a .pst file are identified by an I_ID value. Higher level or composite items in a .pst file are identified by a D_ID value. There are two separate b-trees indexed by these I_ID and D_ID values. Starting with Outlook 2003, the file format changed from one with 32 bit pointers, to one with 64 bit pointers. We describe both formats here. 32 bit File Header The 32 bit file header is located at offset 0 in the .pst file. We only support index types 0x0e, 0x0f, 0x15, and 0x17, and encryption types 0x00, 0x01 and 0x02. Index type 0x0e is the older 32 bit Outlook format. Index type 0x0f seems to be rare, and so far the data seems to be identical to that in type 0x0e files. Index type 0x17 is the newer 64 bit Outlook format. Index type 0x15 seems to be rare, and according to the libpff project should have the same format as type 0x17 files. It was found in a 64-bit pst file created by Visual Recovery. It may be that index types less than 0x10 are 32 bit, and index types greater than or equal to 0x10 are 64 bit, and the low order four bits of the index type is some subtype or minor version number. Encryption type 0x00 is no encryption, type 0x01 is "compressible" encryption which is a simple substitution cipher, and type 0x02 is "strong" encryption, which is a simple three rotor Enigma cipher from WWII. offsetIndex1 is the file offset of the root of the index1 b-tree, which contains (I_ID, offset, size, unknown) tuples for each item in the file. backPointer1 is the value that should appear in the parent pointer of that root node. offsetIndex2 is the file offset of the root of the index2 b-tree, which contains (D_ID, DESC-I_ID, TREE-I_ID, PARENT-D_ID) tuples for each item in the file. backPointer2 is the value that should appear in the parent pointer of that root node. 64 bit File Header The 64 bit file header is located at offset 0 in the .pst file. 32 bit Index 1 Node The 32 bit index1 b-tree nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 12 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is non-zero for this style of nodes. The leaf nodes have a different format. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a triple of (I_ID, backPointer, offset) where the offset points to the next deeper node in the tree, the backPointer value must match the backPointer in that deeper node, and I_ID is the lowest I_ID value in the subtree. 64 bit Index 1 Node The 64 bit index1 b-tree nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 24 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is non-zero for this style of nodes. The leaf nodes have a different format. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a triple of (I_ID, backPointer, offset) where the offset points to the next deeper node in the tree, the backPointer value must match the backPointer in that deeper node, and I_ID is the lowest I_ID value in the subtree. 32 bit Index 1 Leaf Node The 32 bit index1 b-tree leaf nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 12 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is zero for these leaf nodes. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a tuple of (I_ID, offset, size, unknown) The two low order bits of the I_ID value seem to be flags. I have never seen a case with bit zero set. Bit one indicates that the item is not encrypted. Note that references to these I_ID values elsewhere may have the low order bit set (and I don't know what that means), but when we do the search in this tree we need to clear that bit so that we can find the correct item. 64 bit Index 1 Leaf Node The 64 bit index1 b-tree leaf nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 24 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is zero for these leaf nodes. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a tuple of (I_ID, offset, size, unknown) The two low order bits of the I_ID value seem to be flags. I have never seen a case with bit zero set. Bit one indicates that the item is not encrypted. Note that references to these I_ID values elsewhere may have the low order bit set (and I don't know what that means), but when we do the search in this tree we need to clear that bit so that we can find the correct item. 32 bit Index 2 Node The 32 bit index2 b-tree nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 12 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is non-zero for this style of nodes. The leaf nodes have a different format. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a triple of (D_ID, backPointer, offset) where the offset points to the next deeper node in the tree, the backPointer value must match the backPointer in that deeper node, and D_ID is the lowest D_ID value in the subtree. 64 bit Index 2 Node The 64 bit index2 b-tree nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 24 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is non-zero for this style of nodes. The leaf nodes have a different format. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a triple of (D_ID, backPointer, offset) where the offset points to the next deeper node in the tree, the backPointer value must match the backPointer in that deeper node, and D_ID is the lowest D_ID value in the subtree. 32 bit Index 2 Leaf Node The 32 bit index2 b-tree leaf nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 16 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is zero for these leaf nodes. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a tuple of (D_ID, DESC-I_ID, TREE-I_ID, PARENT-D_ID) The DESC-I_ID points to the main data for this item (Associated Descriptor Items 0x7cec, 0xbcec, or 0x0101) via the index1 tree. The TREE-I_ID is zero or points to an Associated Tree Item 0x0002 via the index1 tree. The PARENT-D_ID points to the parent of this item in this index2 tree. 64 bit Index 2 Leaf Node The 64 bit index2 b-tree leaf nodes are 512 byte blocks with the following format. The itemCount specifies the number of 32 byte records that are active. The nodeLevel is zero for these leaf nodes. The backPointer must match the backPointer from the triple that pointed to this node. Each item in this node is a tuple of (D_ID, DESC-I_ID, TREE-I_ID, PARENT-D_ID) The DESC-I_ID points to the main data for this item (Associated Descriptor Items 0x7cec, 0xbcec, or 0x0101) via the index1 tree. The TREE-I_ID is zero or points to an Associated Tree Item 0x0002 via the index1 tree. The PARENT-D_ID points to the parent of this item in this index2 tree. 32 bit Associated Tree Item 0x0002 A D_ID value may point to an entry in the index2 tree with a non-zero TREE-I_ID which points to this descriptor block via the index1 tree. It maps local ID2 values (referenced in the main data for the original D_ID item) to I_ID values. This descriptor block contains triples of (ID2, I_ID, CHILD-I_ID) where the local ID2 data can be found via I_ID, and CHILD-I_ID is either zero or it points to another Associated Tree Item via the index1 tree. In the above 32 bit leaf node, we have a tuple of (0x61, 0x02a82c, 0x02a836, 0) 0x02a836 is the I_ID of the associated tree, and we can lookup that I_ID value in the index1 b-tree to find the (offset,size) of the data in the .pst file. 64 bit Associated Tree Item 0x0002 This descriptor block contains a tree that maps local ID2 values to I_ID entries, similar to the 32 bit version described above. Associated Descriptor Item 0xbcec Contains information about the item, which may be email, contact, or other outlook types. In the above leaf node, we have a tuple of (0x21, 0x00e638, 0, 0) 0x00e638 is the I_ID of the associated descriptor, and we can lookup that I_ID value in the index1 b-tree to find the (offset,size) of the data in the .pst file. This descriptor is eventually decoded to a list of MAPI elements. Note the signature of 0xbcec. There are other descriptor block formats with other signatures. Note the indexOffset of 0x013c - starting at that position in the descriptor block, we have an array of two byte integers. The first integer (0x000b) is a (count-1) of the number of overlapping pairs following the count. The first pair is (0, 0xc), the next pair is (0xc, 0x14) and the last (12th) pair is (0x123, 0x13b). These pairs are (start,end+1) offsets of items in this block. So we have count+2 integers following the count value. Note the b5offset of 0x0020, which is a type that I will call an index reference. Such index references have at least two different forms, and may point to data either in this block, or in some other block. External pointer references have the low order 4 bits all set, and are ID2 values that can be used to fetch data. This value of 0x0020 is an internal pointer reference, which needs to be right shifted by 4 bits to become 0x0002, which is then a byte offset to be added to the above indexOffset plus two (to skip the count), so it points to the (0xc, 0x14) pair. So far we have only described internal index references where the high order 16 bits are zero. That suffices for single descriptor blocks. But in the case of the type 0x0101 descriptor block, we have an array of subblocks. In this case, the high order 16 bits of an internal index reference are used to select the subblock. Each subblock starts with a 16 bit indexOffset which points to the count and array of 16 bit integer pairs which are offsets in the current subblock. Finally, we have the offset and size of the "b5" block located at offset 0xc with a size of 8 bytes in this descriptor block. The "b5" block has the following format: Note the descoffset of 0x0040, which again is an index reference. In this case, it is an internal pointer reference, which needs to be right shifted by 4 bits to become 0x0004, which is then a byte offset to be added to the above indexOffset plus two (to skip the count), so it points to the (0x14, 0x7c) pair. The datasize (6) plus the b5 code (02) gives the size of the entries, in this case 8 bytes. We now have the offset 0x14 of the descriptor array, composed of 8 byte entries that describe MAPI elements. Each descriptor entry has the following format: For some reference types (2, 3, 0xb) the value is used directly. Otherwise, the value is an index reference, which is either an ID2 value, or an offset, to be right shifted by 4 bits and used to fetch a pair from the index table to find the offset and size of the item in this descriptor block. The following reference types are known, but not all of these are implemented in the code yet. The following item types are known, but not all of these are implemented in the code yet. Associated Descriptor Item 0x7cec This style of descriptor block is similar to the 0xbcec format. This descriptor is also eventually decoded to a list of MAPI elements. Note the signature of 0x7cec. There are other descriptor block formats with other signatures. Note the indexOffset of 0x017a - starting at that position in the descriptor block, we have an array of two byte integers. The first integer (0x0006) is a (count-1) of the number of overlapping pairs following the count. The first pair is (0, 0xc), the next pair is (0xc, 0x14) and the last (7th) pair is (0x160, 0x179). These pairs are (start,end+1) offsets of items in this block. So we have count+2 integers following the count value. Note the 7coffset of 0x0040, which is an index reference. In this case, it is an internal reference pointer, which needs to be right shifted by 4 bits to become 0x0004, which is then a byte offset to be added to the above indexOffset plus two (to skip the count), so it points to the (0x14, 0xea) pair. We have the offset and size of the "7c" block located at offset 0x14 with a size of 214 bytes in this case. The "7c" block starts with a header with the following format: Note the b5Offset of 0x0020, which is an index reference. In this case, it is an internal reference pointer, which needs to be right shifted by 4 bits to become 0x0002, which is then a byte offset to be added to the above indexOffset plus two (to skip the count), so it points to the (0xc, 0x14) pair. Finally, we have the offset and size of the "b5" block located at offset 0xc with a size of 8 bytes in this descriptor block. The "b5" block has the following format: Note the descoffset of 0x0060, which again is an index reference. In this case, it is an internal pointer reference, which needs to be right shifted by 4 bits to become 0x0006, which is then a byte offset to be added to the above indexOffset plus two (to skip the count), so it points to the (0xea, 0xf0) pair. The datasize (2) plus the b5 code (04) gives the size of the entries, in this case 6 bytes. We now have the offset 0xea of an unused block of data in an unknown format, composed of 6 byte entries. That gives us (0xf0 - 0xea)/6 = 1, so we have a recordCount of one. We have seen cases where the descoffset in the b5 block is zero, and the index2Offset in the 7c block is zero. This has been seen for objects that seem to be attachments on messages that have been read. Before the message was read, it did not have any attachments. Note the index2Offset above of 0x0080, which again is an index reference. In this case, it is an internal pointer reference, which needs to be right shifted by 4 bits to become 0x0008, which is then a byte offset to be added to the above indexOffset plus two (to skip the count), so it points to the (0xf0, 0x155) pair. This is an array of tables of four byte integers. We will call these the IND2 tables. The size of each of these tables is specified by the recordSize field of the "7c" header. The number of these tables is the above recordCount value derived from the "b5" block. Now the remaining data in the "7c" block after the header starts at offset 0x2a. There should be itemCount 8 byte items here, with the following format: The ind2Offset is a byte offset into the current IND2 table of some value. If that is a four byte integer value, then once we fetch that, we have the same triple (item type, reference type, value) as we find in the 0xbcec style descriptor blocks. If not, then this value is used directly. These 8 byte descriptors are processed recordCount times, each time using the next IND2 table. The item and reference types are as described above for the 0xbcec format descriptor block. 32 bit Associated Descriptor Item 0x0101 This descriptor block contains a list of I_ID values. It is used when an I_ID (that would normally point to a type 0x7cec or 0xbcec descriptor block) contains more data than can fit in any single descriptor of those types. In this case, it points to a type 0x0101 block, which contains a list of I_ID values that themselves point to the actual descriptor blocks. The total length value in the 0x0101 header is the sum of the lengths of the blocks pointed to by the list of I_ID values. The result is an array of subblocks, that may contain index references where the high order 16 bits specify which descriptor subblock to use. Only the first descriptor subblock contains the signature (0xbcec or 0x7cec). 64 bit Associated Descriptor Item 0x0101 This descriptor block contains a list of I_ID values, similar to the 32 bit version described above.