Zoeken in Support

Vermijd ondersteuningsscams. We zullen u nooit vragen een telefoonnummer te bellen, er een sms naar te sturen of persoonlijke gegevens te delen. Meld verdachte activiteit met de optie ‘Misbruik melden’.

Meer info

Deze conversatie is gearchiveerd. Stel een nieuwe vraag als u hulp nodig hebt.

When I receive an email as a file attached to an email TB renames it "ForwardedMessage.eml". Why does it do this and can I prevent it happening?.

  • 5 antwoorden
  • 1 heeft dit probleem
  • 5 weergaven
  • Laatste antwoord van Godfreyp

more options

As an example the email my colleague sent me from Outlook included two attachments that were emails. In the attached partial screenshot (from Squirrelmail) the files start 04.a RE: Draft and 05. AW:FW:ISAP. When I look at this email in TB both attachments have the name "ForwardedMessage.eml". Is there anything I can do to correct this?

As an example the email my colleague sent me from Outlook included two attachments that were emails. In the attached partial screenshot (from Squirrelmail) the files start 04.a RE: Draft and 05. AW:FW:ISAP. When I look at this email in TB both attachments have the name "ForwardedMessage.eml". Is there anything I can do to correct this?

Gekozen oplossing

If the source is Outlook, it will be the way Outlook encodes the information. Check the mime type of the attached files in the message source and that the information is complete and correct. Microsoft have a nasty habit of transmitting everything as Content-Type: application/octet-stream; instead of more specific and accurate mime types eg Content-Type: application/pdf and expecting the rest of the world to code around their sloppiness.

Dit antwoord in context lezen 👍 1

Alle antwoorden (5)

more options

Which part of this is the concern? The renaming, or the .eml filetype?

more options

The renaming. It deletes the original file name (which is not helpful) and results in multiple "ForwardedMessage.eml file leading to name conflicts.

I have added the screenshot I could not add originally.

more options

Gekozen oplossing

If the source is Outlook, it will be the way Outlook encodes the information. Check the mime type of the attached files in the message source and that the information is complete and correct. Microsoft have a nasty habit of transmitting everything as Content-Type: application/octet-stream; instead of more specific and accurate mime types eg Content-Type: application/pdf and expecting the rest of the world to code around their sloppiness.

more options

Thanks Matt

more options

Thanks Matt (Erroneous duplicate that I do not appear to be able to delete).

Bewerkt door Godfreyp op