I've run across an instance where Pegasus will not recognize an email as a valid message. It reports that the message contains binary data and cannot be interpreted by Pegasus. The actual instances are email notifications from WalMart of order acceptance or shipping.
According to RFC 2046 "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions(MIME) Part Two:Media Types" on page 19:
Boundary delimiters must not appear within the encapsulated material,
and must be no longer than 70 characters, not counting the two
leading hyphens.
The emails in question have had boundary delimiters of up to 100 characters. Without making any other changes in the emails, if they are edited to shorten the boundary delimiters to less than 70 character, the email is accepted and displayed normally by Pegasus.
Other email programs, e.g., GMail web interface and Thunderbird, accept the messages and display them normally. I know Pegasus is strictly following the rules here but it would be nice if the rules were relaxed somewhat in this case. Fighting with WalMart about correcting the idiocies on their website is a non-productive endeavor.
Comments welcome.
<p>I've run across an instance where Pegasus will not recognize an email as a valid message.&nbsp; It reports that the message contains binary data and cannot be interpreted by Pegasus.&nbsp; The actual instances are email notifications from WalMart of order acceptance or shipping.</p><p>According to RFC 2046 "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions(MIME) Part Two:Media Types" on page 19:</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Boundary delimiters must not appear within the encapsulated material,
&nbsp;&nbsp; and must be no longer than 70 characters, not counting the two
&nbsp;&nbsp; leading hyphens.</p><p>The emails in question have had boundary delimiters of up to 100 characters.&nbsp; Without making any other changes in the emails, if they are edited to shorten the boundary delimiters to less than 70 character, the email is accepted and displayed normally by Pegasus.</p><p>&nbsp;Other email programs, e.g., GMail web interface and Thunderbird, accept the messages and display them normally.&nbsp; I know Pegasus is strictly following the rules here but it would be nice if the rules were relaxed somewhat in this case.&nbsp; Fighting with WalMart about correcting the idiocies on their website is a non-productive endeavor. </p><p>&nbsp;Comments welcome.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>