Click here to Skip to main content
15,880,956 members
Articles / Productivity Apps and Services / Microsoft Office

Reading an Outlook MSG File in C#

Rate me:
Please Sign up or sign in to vote.
4.88/5 (116 votes)
8 Jul 2010CPOL3 min read 1.3M   28.4K   190   290
How to read an Outlook msg file in C# without the Outlook object model
Demo application form

Introduction

This article is going to focus on how to dissect a msg file generated by Outlook. It covers how to read the basic properties of the mail message, attachments and any msg attachments (these need to be handled differently).

Using the Code

The code is pretty simple to use. You construct a new instance of the OutlookStorage.Message class, sending it the path to a msg file or a Stream containing an IStorage. The Stream constructor is provided so that it is easy to integrate with the Outlook drag and drop code in another of my articles and this is shown in the demo application.

C#
private static void main()
{
    //create new Outlook message from file
    OutlookStorage.Message outlookMsg = new OutlookStorage.Message(@"C:\test.msg");
    DisplayMessage(outlookMsg);
}

private static void DisplayMessage(OutlookStorage.Message outlookMsg)
{    
    Console.WriteLine("Subject: {0}", outlookMsg.Subject);
    Console.WriteLine("Body: {0}", outlookMsg.BodyText);
    
    Console.WriteLine("{0} Recipients", outlookMsg.Recipients.Count);    
    foreach (OutlookStorage.Recipient recip in outlookMsg.Recipients)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(" {0}:{1}", recip.Type, recip.Email);
    }
    
    Console.WriteLine("{0} Attachments", outlookMsg.Attachments.Count);
    foreach (OutlookStorage.Attachment attach in outlookMsg.Attachments)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(" {0}, {1}b", attach.Filename, attach.Data.Length);
    }

    Console.WriteLine("{0} Messages", outlookMsg.Messages.Count);
    foreach (OutlookStorage.Message subMessage in outlookMsg.Messages)
    {
        DisplayMessage(subMessage);
    }
}

Save a Msg and All Attachments to the File System

This is an example on how to save a message and all associated attachments to the application path.

C#
private static void main()
{
    //create new Outlook message from file
    OutlookStorage.Message outlookMsg = new OutlookStorage.Message(@"C:\test.msg");
}

private static void SaveMessage(OutlookStorage.Message outlookMsg)
{    
    outlookMsg.Save(outlookMsg.Subject.Replace(":", ""));    

    foreach (OutlookStorage.Attachment attach in outlookMsg.Attachments)
    {
        byte[] attachBytes = attach.Data;
        FileStream attachStream = File.Create(attach.Filename);
        attachStream.Write(attachBytes, 0, attachBytes.Length);
        attachStream.Close();
    }

    foreach (OutlookStorage.Message subMessage in outlookMsg.Messages)
    {
        SaveMessage(subMessage);
    }
}

Understanding the Code

To read the msg file produced by Outlook, there are two concepts to understand. The first is that an msg file is logically a MAPI object with MAPI properties and the second is that phyiscally the MAPI object and its properties are stored in an IStorage. Microsoft has kindly provided a specification on how the MAPI properties are mapped to the IStorage, so at this point I will defer to that and just go over the catches that popped up when figuring out how to save a sub message out of its parent.

Saving a Sub Message

Saving a sub message out of the parent message has a few catches. The property stream header needs to be padded and the name to id mapping storage needs to be copied to the sub message storage.

Fixing the Property Stream

MAPI property values can be stored in a sub storage, a sub stream or in the case of fixed size values (like an integer) a special sub stream called the property stream. The property stream consists of a variable length header and then an array of 16 byte pairs with a property identifier in the first 8 bytes and the property value in the second 8.

It is the variable length header that you should take note of. It is 8 bytes for an attachment or recipient storage, 32 bytes for a top level msg and 24 bytes for a sub msg. This means that if you want to extract a sub message and save it without its parent you need to pad the end of the header with 8 null bytes.

The Name to Id Mapping

The other catch for saving a sub message is the name to id mapping storage which only exists on the top level msg, but contains the mappings for the entire tree. So when saving a sub message, this storage needs to be copied to it before saving for it to be valid.

Conclusion

Everything is encapsulated in the OutlookStorage.cs file as I don't like to release stuff with dependencies and prefer to just be able to drop a CS into my projects to get a particular piece of functionality. There is a region in there under a separate licence for the code to decompress the compressed RTF, but it is clearly marked.

History

  • 8th July, 2010
    • Fixed memory leak
    • Fixed the "COM object that has been separated from its underlying RCW cannot be used" exception
    • Added better determination of attachment file name
  • 28th January, 2009: Original article

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


Written By
Founder Guava Development
Australia Australia
I am the Founder of Guava Development a Software Services Company located in Perth, Western Australia dedicated to improving productivity and reducing costs through the targeted and innovative application of software assisted workflows and packages.

I have been working in the industry for 10 years. My day job usually involves programming with C# but I have been known to mess around with just about everything.

Comments and Discussions

 
GeneralRe: How to get Start time/End time?? Pin
David Ewen15-Jan-14 13:53
professionalDavid Ewen15-Jan-14 13:53 
GeneralRe: How to get Start time/End time?? Pin
Kees van Spelde22-Mar-14 8:04
professionalKees van Spelde22-Mar-14 8:04 
GeneralRe: How to get Start time/End time?? Pin
Kees van Spelde15-Jan-14 19:16
professionalKees van Spelde15-Jan-14 19:16 
GeneralRe: How to get Start time/End time?? Pin
Kees van Spelde21-Apr-14 1:37
professionalKees van Spelde21-Apr-14 1:37 
QuestionMSG .NET Pin
paris paris13-Dec-13 19:50
paris paris13-Dec-13 19:50 
AnswerRe: MSG .NET Pin
Kees van Spelde16-Dec-13 0:22
professionalKees van Spelde16-Dec-13 0:22 
GeneralWorks great! Pin
John McCullough27-Nov-13 4:07
John McCullough27-Nov-13 4:07 
GeneralRe: Works great! Pin
Kees van Spelde27-Nov-13 7:34
professionalKees van Spelde27-Nov-13 7:34 
Hi,

I modified this great project a lot and fixed most of the issues people did mention here.
I use this project to read MSG files and save the body and the attachments to disk.

http://www.codeproject.com/script/Articles/ArticleVersion.aspx?waid=106684&aid=702930[^]

It also includes an EML header parser and RTF reader. The header parser can be used to parse EML headers when they are available and the RTF parser can be used to get the HTML part of the MSG file when this is embedded into RTF.

I simplified the project to my needs so that I also could call it from a COM language like VBScript, if you need something else you have to make it yourself.

C#
var msgReader = new DocumentServices.Modules.Readers.MsgReader.Reader();
msgReader.ExtractToFolder("<inputfile>.msg", "<outputfolder>");


modified 16-Jan-14 14:32pm.

GeneralRe: Works great! Pin
andycwk15-Jan-14 11:03
andycwk15-Jan-14 11:03 
GeneralRe: Works great! Pin
Kees van Spelde15-Jan-14 19:12
professionalKees van Spelde15-Jan-14 19:12 
QuestionHow can I get HTML Body Text Pin
xieyijun14-Nov-13 20:58
xieyijun14-Nov-13 20:58 
AnswerRe: How can I get HTML Body Text Pin
Kees van Spelde29-Mar-14 9:33
professionalKees van Spelde29-Mar-14 9:33 
Questionoutlook message as attachment Pin
Jaleelali16-Oct-13 11:20
Jaleelali16-Oct-13 11:20 
AnswerRe: outlook message as attachment Pin
Kees van Spelde21-Apr-14 1:38
professionalKees van Spelde21-Apr-14 1:38 
GeneralGreat, useful, smart solution Pin
ViktornLiu23-Jul-13 3:41
ViktornLiu23-Jul-13 3:41 
QuestionHow about ReceiveTime and SentOn? Pin
xidongzhang22-Jun-13 11:29
xidongzhang22-Jun-13 11:29 
AnswerRe: How about ReceiveTime and SentOn? Pin
d0njudd8-Aug-13 10:24
d0njudd8-Aug-13 10:24 
GeneralRe: How about ReceiveTime and SentOn? Pin
xidongzhang8-Aug-13 16:41
xidongzhang8-Aug-13 16:41 
GeneralRe: How about ReceiveTime and SentOn? Pin
yrk222922-Sep-13 16:15
yrk222922-Sep-13 16:15 
GeneralRe: How about ReceiveTime and SentOn? Pin
xidongzhang13-Nov-13 4:51
xidongzhang13-Nov-13 4:51 
GeneralRe: How about ReceiveTime and SentOn? Pin
Jamie McAllister19-Dec-13 4:24
Jamie McAllister19-Dec-13 4:24 
QuestionEncoding Problem Pin
arvelius1-May-13 22:44
arvelius1-May-13 22:44 
AnswerRe: Encoding Problem Pin
Kees van Spelde29-Mar-14 9:33
professionalKees van Spelde29-Mar-14 9:33 
GeneralRe: Encoding Problem Pin
Mark Cranness1-Jan-18 16:16
Mark Cranness1-Jan-18 16:16 
QuestionAttached vs Embedded Pin
Sharpi90098-Feb-13 5:33
Sharpi90098-Feb-13 5:33 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.