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335 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
335 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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#!/usr/bin/env sh
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#
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# by Siddharth Dushantha 2020
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#
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# Dependencies: jq, curl, w3m
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#
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VERSION=1.1.7
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# By default 'tmpmail' uses 'w3m' as it's web browser to render
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# the HTML of the email
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BROWSER="w3m"
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# If the value is set to 'true' tmpmail will convert the HTML email
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# to raw text and send that to stdout
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RAW_TEXT=false
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# Everything related to 'tmpmail' will be stored in /tmp/tmpmail
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# so that the old emails and email addresses get cleared after
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# restarting the computer
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TMPMAIL_DIR="/tmp/tmpmail"
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# TMPMAIL_EMAIL_ADDRESS is where we store the temporary email address
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# that gets generated. This prevents the user from providing
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# the email address everytime they run tmpmail
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TMPMAIL_EMAIL_ADDRESS="$TMPMAIL_DIR/email_address"
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# tmpmail.html is where the email gets stored.
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# Even though the file ends with a .html extension, the raw text version of
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# the email will also be stored in this file so that w3m and other browsers
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# are able to open this file
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TMPMAIL_HTML_EMAIL="$TMPMAIL_DIR/tmpmail.html"
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# Default 1secmail API URL
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TMPMAIL_API_URL="https://www.1secmail.com/api/v1/"
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usage() {
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# Using 'cat << EOF' we can easily output a multiline text. This is much
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# better than using 'echo' for each line or using '\n' to create a new line.
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cat <<EOF
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tmpmail
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tmpmail -h | --version
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tmpmail -g [ADDRESS]
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tmpmail [-t | -b BROWSER] -r | ID
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When called with no option and no argument, tmpmail lists the messages in
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the inbox and their numeric IDs. When called with one argument, tmpmail
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shows the email message with specified ID.
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-b, --browser BROWSER
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Specify BROWSER (default: w3m) that is used to render the HTML of
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the email
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-g, --generate [ADDRESS]
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Generate a new email address, either the specified ADDRESS, or
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randomly create one
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-h, --help
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Show help
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-r, --recent
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View the most recent email message
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-t, --text
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View the email as raw text, where all the HTML tags are removed.
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Without this option, HTML is used.
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--version
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Show version
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EOF
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}
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generate_email_address() {
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# There are 2 ways which this function is called in this script.
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# [1] The user wants to generate a new email and runs 'tmpmail --generate'
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# [2] The user runs 'tmpmail' to check the inbox , but /tmp/tmpmail/email_address
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# is empty or nonexistant. Therefore a new email gets automatically
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# generated before showing the inbox. But of course the inbox will
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# be empty as the newly generated email address has not been
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# sent any emails.
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#
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# When the function 'generate_email_address()' is called with the arguement
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# 'true', it means that the function was called because the user
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# ran 'tmpmail --generate'.
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#
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# We need this variable so we can know whether or not we need to show the user
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# what the email was. <-- More about this can be found further down in this function.
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EXTERNALLY=${1:-false}
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# This variable lets generate_email_address know if the user has provided a custom
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# email address which they want to use. CUSTOM is set to false if $2 has no value.
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CUSTOM=${2:-false}
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# Generate a random email address.
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# This function is called whenever the user wants to generate a new email
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# address by running 'tmpmail --generate' or when the user runs 'tmpmail'
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# but /tmp/tmpmail/email_address is empty or nonexistent.
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#
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# We create a random username by taking the first 10 lines from /dev/random
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# and delete all the characters which are *not* lower case letters from A to Z.
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# So charcters such as dashes, periods, underscore, and numbers are all deleted,
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# giving us a text which only contains lower case letters form A to Z. We then take
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# the first 10 characters, which will be the username of the email address
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USERNAME=$(head /dev/urandom | LC_ALL=C tr -dc "[:alnum:]" | cut -c1-11 | tr "[:upper:]" "[:lower:]")
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DOMAINS="1secmail.com 1secmail.net 1secmail.org esiix.com wwjmp.com"
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# Randomly pick one of the domains mentiond above.
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DOMAIN=$(printf "%b" "$DOMAINS" | tr " " "\n" | randomize | tail -1)
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EMAIL_ADDRESS="$USERNAME@$DOMAIN"
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# If the user provided a custom email address then use that email address
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if [ "$CUSTOM" != false ]; then
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EMAIL_ADDRESS=$CUSTOM
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# Do a regex check to see if the email address provided by the user is a
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# valid email address
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REGEXP="[a-z0-9]+@(1secmail\.(com|net|org)|esiix.co|wwjmp.com)"
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if ! printf %b "$EMAIL_ADDRESS" | grep -Eq "$REGEXP"; then
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print_error "Provided email is invalid. Must match $REGEXP"
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fi
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fi
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# Save the generated email address to the $TMPMAIL_EMAIL_ADDRESS file
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# so that it can be whenever 'tmpmail' is run
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printf %s "$EMAIL_ADDRESS" >"$TMPMAIL_EMAIL_ADDRESS"
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# If this function was called because the user wanted to generate a new
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# email address, show them the email address
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[ "$EXTERNALLY" = true ] && cat "$TMPMAIL_EMAIL_ADDRESS" && printf "\n"
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}
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get_email_address() {
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# This function is only called once and that is when this script
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# get executed. The output of this function gets stored in $EMAIL_ADDRESS
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#
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# If the file that contains the email address is empty,
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# that means we do not have an email address, so generate one.
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[ ! -s "$TMPMAIL_EMAIL_ADDRESS" ] && generate_email_address
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# Output the email address by getting the first line of $TMPMAIL_EMAIL
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head -n 1 "$TMPMAIL_EMAIL_ADDRESS"
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}
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list_emails() {
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# List all the received emails in a nicely formatted order
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#
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# Fetch the email data using 1secmail's API
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DATA=$(curl -sL "$TMPMAIL_API_URL?action=getMessages&login=$USERNAME&domain=$DOMAIN")
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# Using 'jq' we get the length of the JSON data. From this we can determine whether or not
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# the email address has gotten any emails
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DATA_LENGTH=$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq length)
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# We are showing what email address is currently being used
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# in case the user has forgotten what the email address was.
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printf "[ Inbox for %s ]\n\n" "$EMAIL_ADDRESS"
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# If the length of the data we got is 0, that means the email address
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# has not received any emails yet.
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[ "$DATA_LENGTH" -eq 0 ] && echo "No new mail" && exit
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# This is where we store all of our emails, which is then
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# displayed using 'column'
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INBOX=""
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# Go through each mail that has been received
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index=1
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while [ $index -le "${DATA_LENGTH}" ]; do
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# Since arrays in JSON data start at 0, we must subtract
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# the value of $index by 1 so that we dont miss one of the
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# emails in the array
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MAIL_DATA=$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq -r ".[$index-1]")
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ID=$(printf %s "$MAIL_DATA" | jq -r ".id")
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FROM=$(printf %s "$MAIL_DATA" | jq -r ".from")
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SUBJECT=$(printf %s "$MAIL_DATA" | jq -r ".subject")
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# The '||' are used as a divideder for 'column'. 'column' will use this divider as
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# a point of reference to create the division. By default 'column' uses a blank space
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# but that would not work in our case as the email subject could have multiple white spaces
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# and 'column' would split the words that are seperated by white space, in different columns.
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INBOX="$INBOX$ID ||$FROM ||$SUBJECT\n"
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index=$((index + 1))
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done
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# Show the emails cleanly
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printf "%b" "$INBOX" | column -t -s "||"
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}
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randomize() {
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# We could use 'shuf' and 'sort -R' but they are not a part of POSIX
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awk 'BEGIN {srand();} {print rand(), $0}' | \
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sort -n -k1 | cut -d' ' -f2
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}
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view_email() {
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# View an email by providing it's ID
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#
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# The first argument provided to this function will be the ID of the email
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# that has been received
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EMAIL_ID="$1"
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DATA=$(curl -sL "${TMPMAIL_API_URL}?action=readMessage&login=$USERNAME&domain=$DOMAIN&id=$EMAIL_ID")
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# After the data is retrieved using the API, we have to check if we got any emails.
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# Luckly 1secmail's API is not complicated and returns 'Message not found' as plain text
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# if our email address as not received any emails.
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# If we received the error message from the API just quit because there is nothing to do
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[ "$DATA" = "Message not found" ] && print_error "Message not found"
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# We pass the $DATA to 'jq' which extracts the values
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FROM=$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq -r ".from")
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SUBJECT=$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq -r ".subject")
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HTML_BODY=$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq -r ".htmlBody")
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ATTACHMENTS=$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq -r ".attachments | length")
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# If you get an email that is in pure text, the .htmlBody field will be empty and
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# we will need to get the content from .textBody instead
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[ -z "$HTML_BODY" ] && HTML_BODY="<pre>$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq -r ".textBody")</pre>"
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# Create the HTML with all the information that is relevant and then
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# assigning that HTML to the variable HTML_MAIL. This is the best method
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# to create a multiline variable
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HTML_MAIL=$(cat <<EOF
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<pre><b>To: </b>$EMAIL_ADDRESS
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<b>From: </b>$FROM
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<b>Subject: </b>$SUBJECT</pre>
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$HTML_BODY
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EOF
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)
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if [ ! "$ATTACHMENTS" = "0" ]; then
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HTML_MAIL="$HTML_MAIL<br><b>[Attachments]</b><br>"
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index=1
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while [ "$index" -le "$ATTACHMENTS" ]; do
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FILENAME=$(printf %s "$DATA" | jq -r ".attachments | .[$index-1] | .filename")
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LINK="$TMPMAIL_API_URL?action=download&login=$USERNAME&domain=$DOMAIN&id=$EMAIL_ID&file=$FILENAME"
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HTML_LINK="<a href=$LINK download=$FILENAME>$FILENAME</a><br>"
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if [ "$RAW_TEXT" = true ]; then
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# The actual url is way too long and does not look so nice in STDOUT.
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# Therefore we will shortening it using is.gd so that it looks nicer.
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LINK=$(curl -s -F"url=$LINK" "https://is.gd/create.php?format=simple")
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HTML_MAIL="$HTML_MAIL$LINK [$FILENAME]<br>"
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else
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HTML_MAIL="$HTML_MAIL$HTML_LINK"
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fi
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index=$((index + 1))
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done
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fi
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# Save the $HTML_MAIL into $TMPMAIL_HTML_EMAIL
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printf %s "$HTML_MAIL" >"$TMPMAIL_HTML_EMAIL"
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# If the '--text' flag is used, then use 'w3m' to convert the HTML of
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# the email to pure text by removing all the HTML tags
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[ "$RAW_TEXT" = true ] && w3m -dump "$TMPMAIL_HTML_EMAIL" && exit
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# Open up the HTML file using $BROWSER. By default,
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# this will be 'w3m'.
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$BROWSER "$TMPMAIL_HTML_EMAIL"
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}
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view_recent_email() {
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# View the most recent email.
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#
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# This is done by listing all the received email like you
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# normally see on the terminal when running 'tmpmail'.
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# We then grab the ID of the most recent
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# email, which the first line.
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MAIL_ID=$(list_emails | head -3 | tail -1 | cut -d' ' -f 1)
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view_email "$MAIL_ID"
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}
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print_error() {
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# Print error message
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#
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# The first argument provided to this function will be the error message.
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# Script will exit after printing the error message.
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printf "%s\n" "Error: $1" >&2
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exit 1
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}
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main() {
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# Iterate of the array of dependencies and check if the user has them installed.
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# We are checking if $BROWSER is installed instead of checking for 'w3m'. By doing
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# this, it allows the user to not have to install 'w3m' if they are using another
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# browser to view the HTML
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for dependency in jq $BROWSER curl; do
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if ! command -v "$dependency" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
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print_error "Could not find '$dependency', is it installed?"
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fi
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done
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# Create the $TMPMAIL_DIR directory and dont throw any errors
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# if it already exists
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mkdir -p "$TMPMAIL_DIR"
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# Get the email address and save the value to the EMAIL_ADDRESS variable
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EMAIL_ADDRESS="$(get_email_address)"
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# ${VAR#PATTERN} Removes shortest match of pattern from start of a string.
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# In this case, it takes the EMAIL_ADDRESS and removed everything after
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# the '@' symbol which gives us the username.
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USERNAME=${EMAIL_ADDRESS%@*}
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# ${VAR%PATTERN} Remove shortest match of pattern from end of a string.
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# In this case, it takes the EMAIL_ADDRESS and removes everything until the
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# period '.' which gives us the domain
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DOMAIN=${EMAIL_ADDRESS#*@}
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# If no arguments are provided just the emails
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[ $# -eq 0 ] && list_emails && exit
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while [ "$1" ]; do
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case "$1" in
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--help | -h) usage && exit ;;
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--generate | -g) generate_email_address true "$2" && exit ;;
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--browser | -b) BROWSER="$2" ;;
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--text | -t) RAW_TEXT=true ;;
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--version) echo "$VERSION" && exit ;;
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--recent | -r) view_recent_email && exit ;;
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*[0-9]*)
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# If the user provides number as an argument,
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# assume its the ID of an email and try getting
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# the email that belongs to the ID
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view_email "$1" && exit
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;;
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-*) print_error "option '$1' does not exist" ;;
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esac
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shift
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done
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}
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main "$@"
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