Let's examine the header in more detail.
From [email protected] Fri Dec 13 08:11:44 1996 Received: (from you@localhost) by Here.US.EDU (8.8.4/8.8.4) id AA04599 for you; Fri, 13 Dec 96 08:11:44 -0700 Date: Fri, 13 Dec 96 08:11:43 From: [email protected] (Your Full Name) Message-Id: <[email protected]> To: you may be something else (see Section 34.8.43, NoRecipientAction )
Notice that most header lines start with a word followed by a colon. Each word tells what kind of information the rest of the line contains. There are many types of header lines that can appear in a mail message. Some are mandatory, some are optional, and some may appear many times. Those that appeared in the message that you mailed to yourself were all mandatory. That's why
sendmail
added them to your message.
The line starting with the five characters "
From
" (the fifth character is a space) is added by some programs (such as
/bin/mail
) but not by others (such as
mh
).
A
Received:
line is added each time a machine receives the mail message. (If there are too many such lines, the mail message will
bounce
and be returned to the sender as failed mail.) The indented line is a continuation of the line above, the
Received:
line.
The
Date:
line gives the date and time when the message was originally sent. The
From:
line lists the email address and the full name of the sender.
The
Message-ID:
line is like a serial number in that it is guaranteed to uniquely identify the mail message. And the
To:
[2] line shows a list of one or more recipients. (Multiple recipients would be separated with commas.)
[2] Depending on how the
NoRecipientAction
option was set, this could be anApparently-To:
header, aBcc:
header, or even aTo:
header followed by an "undisclosed-recipients:;
" (see Section 34.8.43 ).
A complete list of all header lines that are of importance to sendmail is presented in Chapter 35, Headers . The important concept here is that the header precedes, and is separate from, the body in all mail messages.