Chapter 6. Optional Features

Table of Contents

1. General Notes
1.1. Enabling/Disabling Features
1.2. Mutt Patches
1.3. URL Syntax
2. SSL/TLS Support
3. POP3 Support
4. IMAP Support
4.1. The IMAP Folder Browser
4.2. Authentication
5. SMTP Support
6. Managing Multiple Accounts
7. Local Caching
7.1. Header Caching
7.2. Body Caching
7.3. Cache Directories
7.4. Maintenance
8. Exact Address Generation
9. Sending Anonymous Messages via Mixmaster
10. Compressed Folders Patch
10.1. Patch
10.2. Introduction
10.3. Commands
10.4. Muttrc
10.5. See Also
10.6. Known Bugs
10.7. Credits
11. Conditional Dates Patch
11.1. Patch
11.2. Introduction
11.3. Variables
11.4. Muttrc
11.5. See Also
11.6. Known Bugs
11.7. Credits
12. Fmemopen Patch
12.1. Patch
12.2. Introduction
12.3. Muttrc
12.4. See Also
12.5. Known Bugs
12.6. Credits
13. Ifdef Patch
13.1. Patch
13.2. Introduction
13.3. Commands
13.4. Muttrc
13.5. See Also
13.6. Known Bugs
13.7. Credits
14. Index Color Patch
14.1. Patch
14.2. Introduction
14.3. Colors
14.4. Muttrc
14.5. See Also
14.6. Known Bugs
14.7. Credits
15. Initials Expando Patch
15.1. Patch
15.2. Introduction
15.3. Variables
15.4. Muttrc
15.5. See Also
15.6. Known Bugs
15.7. Credits
16. Keywords Patch
16.1. Patch
16.2. Introduction
16.3. Variables
16.4. Functions
16.5. Sort
16.6. Muttrc
16.7. See Also
16.8. Known Bugs
16.9. Credits
17. Limit-Current-Thread Patch
17.1. Patch
17.2. Introduction
17.3. Functions
17.4. Muttrc
17.5. See Also
17.6. Known Bugs
17.7. Credits
18. LMDB Patch
18.1. Patch
18.2. Introduction
18.3. See Also
18.4. Known Bugs
18.5. Credits
19. multiple-fcc Patch
19.1. Patch
19.2. Introduction
19.3. See Also
19.4. Known Bugs
19.5. Credits
20. Nested If Patch
20.1. Patch
20.2. Introduction
20.3. Variables
20.4. Muttrc
20.5. See Also
20.6. Known Bugs
20.7. Credits
21. new-mail Patch
21.1. Patch
21.2. Introduction
21.3. Variables
21.4. Muttrc
21.5. See Also
21.6. Known Bugs
21.7. Credits
22. NNTP Patch
22.1. Patch
22.2. Introduction
22.3. Variables
22.4. Functions
22.5. Muttrc
22.6. See Also
22.7. Known Bugs
22.8. Credits
23. Notmuch Patch
23.1. Patch
23.2. Introduction
23.3. Using NotMuch
23.4. Variables
23.5. Functions
23.6. Commands
23.7. Colors
23.8. Muttrc
23.9. See Also
23.10. Known Bugs
23.11. Credits
24. Progress Bar Patch
24.1. Patch
24.2. Introduction
24.3. Colors
24.4. Muttrc
24.5. See Also
24.6. Known Bugs
24.7. Credits
25. Quasi-Delete Patch
25.1. Patch
25.2. Introduction
25.3. Functions
25.4. Muttrc
25.5. See Also
25.6. Known Bugs
25.7. Credits
26. Sidebar Patch
26.1. Patch
26.2. Introduction
26.3. Variables
26.4. Functions
26.5. Commands
26.6. Colors
26.7. Sort
26.8. Muttrc
26.9. See Also
26.10. Known Bugs
26.11. Credits
27. Skip-Quoted Patch
27.1. Patch
27.2. Introduction
27.3. Variables
27.4. Muttrc
27.5. See Also
27.6. Known Bugs
27.7. Credits
28. smime-encrypt-self Patch
28.1. Patch
28.2. Introduction
28.3. Variables
28.4. Muttrc
28.5. See Also
28.6. Known Bugs
28.7. Credits
29. Status Color Patch
29.1. Patch
29.2. Introduction
29.3. Commands
29.4. Colors
29.5. Muttrc
29.6. See Also
29.7. Known Bugs
29.8. Credits
30. Timeout Patch
30.1. Patch
30.2. Introduction
30.3. Commands
30.4. Muttrc
30.5. See Also
30.6. Known Bugs
30.7. Credits
31. TLS-SNI Patch
31.1. Patch
31.2. Introduction
31.3. Muttrc
31.4. See Also
31.5. Known Bugs
31.6. Credits
32. Trash Folder Patch
32.1. Patch
32.2. Introduction
32.3. Variables
32.4. Functions
32.5. Muttrc
32.6. See Also
32.7. Known Bugs
32.8. Credits
33. Sensible-Browser Patch
33.1. Patch
33.2. Introduction
33.3. Muttrc
33.4. See Also
33.5. Known Bugs
33.6. Credits

1. General Notes

1.1. Enabling/Disabling Features

Mutt supports several of optional features which can be enabled or disabled at compile-time by giving the configure script certain arguments. These are listed in the Optional features section of the configure --help output.

Which features are enabled or disabled can later be determined from the output of mutt -v. If a compile option starts with + it is enabled and disabled if prefixed with -. For example, if Mutt was compiled using GnuTLS for encrypted communication instead of OpenSSL, mutt -v would contain:

-USE_SSL_OPENSSL +USE_SSL_GNUTLS

1.2. Mutt Patches

Mutt may also be patched to support smaller features. These patches should add a free-form string to the end Mutt's version string. Running mutt -v might show:

patch-1.6.2.sidebar.20160709

1.3. URL Syntax

Mutt optionally supports the IMAP, POP3 and SMTP protocols which require to access servers using URLs. The canonical syntax for specifying URLs in Mutt is (an item enclosed in [] means it is optional and may be omitted):

proto[s]://[username[:password]@]server[:port][/path]

proto is the communication protocol: imap for IMAP, pop for POP3 and smtp for SMTP. If s for secure communication is appended, Mutt will attempt to establish an encrypted communication using SSL or TLS.

Since all protocols supported by Mutt support/require authentication, login credentials may be specified in the URL. This has the advantage that multiple IMAP, POP3 or SMTP servers may be specified (which isn't possible using, for example, $imap_user). The username may contain the @ symbol being used by many mail systems as part of the login name. The special characters / (%2F), : (%3A) and % (%25) have to be URL-encoded in usernames using the %-notation.

A password can be given, too but is not recommended if the URL is specified in a configuration file on disk.

If no port number is given, Mutt will use the system's default for the given protocol (usually consulting /etc/services).

The optional path is only relevant for IMAP and ignored elsewhere.

Example 6.1. URLs

pops://host/
imaps://user@host/INBOX/Sent
smtp://user@host:587/

2. SSL/TLS Support

If Mutt is compiled with IMAP, POP3 and/or SMTP support, it can also be compiled with support for SSL or TLS using either OpenSSL or GnuTLS ( by running the configure script with the --enable-ssl=... option for OpenSSL or --enable-gnutls=... for GnuTLS). Mutt can then attempt to encrypt communication with remote servers if these protocols are suffixed with s for secure communication.

3. POP3 Support

If Mutt is compiled with POP3 support (by running the configure script with the --enable-pop flag), it has the ability to work with mailboxes located on a remote POP3 server and fetch mail for local browsing.

Remote POP3 servers can be accessed using URLs with the pop protocol for unencrypted and pops for encrypted communication, see Section 1.3, “URL Syntax” for details.

Polling for new mail is more expensive over POP3 than locally. For this reason the frequency at which Mutt will check for mail remotely can be controlled by the $pop_checkinterval variable, which defaults to every 60 seconds.

POP is read-only which doesn't allow for some features like editing messages or changing flags. However, using Section 7.1, “Header Caching” and Section 7.2, “Body Caching” Mutt simulates the new/old/read flags as well as flagged and replied. Mutt applies some logic on top of remote messages but cannot change them so that modifications of flags are lost when messages are downloaded from the POP server (either by Mutt or other tools).

Another way to access your POP3 mail is the <fetch-mail> function (default: G). It allows to connect to $pop_host, fetch all your new mail and place it in the local $spoolfile. After this point, Mutt runs exactly as if the mail had always been local.

Note

If you only need to fetch all messages to a local mailbox you should consider using a specialized program, such as fetchmail(1), getmail(1) or similar.

4. IMAP Support

If Mutt was compiled with IMAP support (by running the configure script with the --enable-imap flag), it has the ability to work with folders located on a remote IMAP server.

You can access the remote inbox by selecting the folder by its URL (see Section 1.3, “URL Syntax” for details) using the imap or imaps protocol. Alternatively, a pine-compatible notation is also supported, i.e. {[username@]imapserver[:port][/ssl]}path/to/folder

Note that not all servers use / as the hierarchy separator. Mutt should correctly notice which separator is being used by the server and convert paths accordingly.

When browsing folders on an IMAP server, you can toggle whether to look at only the folders you are subscribed to, or all folders with the toggle-subscribed command. See also the $imap_list_subscribed variable.

Polling for new mail on an IMAP server can cause noticeable delays. So, you'll want to carefully tune the $mail_check and $timeout variables. Reasonable values are:

set mail_check=90
set timeout=15

with relatively good results even over slow modem lines.

Note

Note that if you are using mbox as the mail store on UW servers prior to v12.250, the server has been reported to disconnect a client if another client selects the same folder.

4.1. The IMAP Folder Browser

As of version 1.2, Mutt supports browsing mailboxes on an IMAP server. This is mostly the same as the local file browser, with the following differences:

  • In lieu of file permissions, Mutt displays the string IMAP, possibly followed by the symbol +, indicating that the entry contains both messages and subfolders. On Cyrus-like servers folders will often contain both messages and subfolders.

  • For the case where an entry can contain both messages and subfolders, the selection key (bound to enter by default) will choose to descend into the subfolder view. If you wish to view the messages in that folder, you must use view-file instead (bound to space by default).

  • You can create, delete and rename mailboxes with the <create-mailbox>, <delete-mailbox>, and <rename-mailbox> commands (default bindings: C, d and r, respectively). You may also <subscribe> and <unsubscribe> to mailboxes (normally these are bound to s and u, respectively).

4.2. Authentication

Mutt supports four authentication methods with IMAP servers: SASL, GSSAPI, CRAM-MD5, and LOGIN (there is a patch by Grant Edwards to add NTLM authentication for you poor exchange users out there, but it has yet to be integrated into the main tree). There is also support for the pseudo-protocol ANONYMOUS, which allows you to log in to a public IMAP server without having an account. To use ANONYMOUS, simply make your username blank or anonymous.

SASL is a special super-authenticator, which selects among several protocols (including GSSAPI, CRAM-MD5, ANONYMOUS, and DIGEST-MD5) the most secure method available on your host and the server. Using some of these methods (including DIGEST-MD5 and possibly GSSAPI), your entire session will be encrypted and invisible to those teeming network snoops. It is the best option if you have it. To use it, you must have the Cyrus SASL library installed on your system and compile Mutt with the --with-sasl flag.

Mutt will try whichever methods are compiled in and available on the server, in the following order: SASL, ANONYMOUS, GSSAPI, CRAM-MD5, LOGIN.

There are a few variables which control authentication:

  • $imap_user - controls the username under which you request authentication on the IMAP server, for all authenticators. This is overridden by an explicit username in the mailbox path (i.e. by using a mailbox name of the form {user@host}).

  • $imap_pass - a password which you may preset, used by all authentication methods where a password is needed.

  • $imap_authenticators - a colon-delimited list of IMAP authentication methods to try, in the order you wish to try them. If specified, this overrides Mutt's default (attempt everything, in the order listed above).

5. SMTP Support

Besides supporting traditional mail delivery through a sendmail-compatible program, Mutt supports delivery through SMTP if it was configured and built with --enable-smtp.

If the configuration variable $smtp_url is set, Mutt will contact the given SMTP server to deliver messages; if it is unset, Mutt will use the program specified by $sendmail.

For details on the URL syntax, please see Section 1.3, “URL Syntax”.

The built-in SMTP support supports encryption (the smtps protocol using SSL or TLS) as well as SMTP authentication using SASL. The authentication mechanisms for SASL are specified in $smtp_authenticators defaulting to an empty list which makes Mutt try all available methods from most-secure to least-secure.

6. Managing Multiple Accounts

Usage:

account-hook regexp command

If you happen to have accounts on multiple IMAP, POP and/or SMTP servers, you may find managing all the authentication settings inconvenient and error-prone. The account-hook command may help. This hook works like folder-hook but is invoked whenever Mutt needs to access a remote mailbox (including inside the folder browser), not just when you open the mailbox. This includes (for example) polling for new mail, storing Fcc messages and saving messages to a folder. As a consequence, account-hook should only be used to set connection-related settings such as passwords or tunnel commands but not settings such as sender address or name (because in general it should be considered unpredictable which account-hook was last used).

Some examples:

account-hook . 'unset imap_user; unset imap_pass; unset tunnel'
account-hook imap://host1/ 'set imap_user=me1 imap_pass=foo'
account-hook imap://host2/ 'set tunnel="ssh host2 /usr/libexec/imapd"'
account-hook smtp://user@host3/ 'set tunnel="ssh host3 /usr/libexec/smtpd"'

To manage multiple accounts with, for example, different values of $record or sender addresses, folder-hook has to be be used together with the mailboxes command.

Example 6.2. Managing multiple accounts

mailboxes imap://user@host1/INBOX
folder-hook imap://user@host1/ 'set folder=imap://host1/ ; set record=+INBOX/Sent'

mailboxes imap://user@host2/INBOX
folder-hook imap://user@host2/ 'set folder=imap://host2/ ; set record=+INBOX/Sent'

In example Example 6.2, “Managing multiple accounts” the folders are defined using mailboxes so Mutt polls them for new mail. Each folder-hook triggers when one mailbox below each IMAP account is opened and sets $folder to the account's root folder. Next, it sets $record to the INBOX/Sent folder below the newly set $folder. Please notice that the value the + mailbox shortcut refers to depends on the current value of $folder and therefore has to be set separately per account. Setting other values like $from or $signature is analogous to setting $record.

7. Local Caching

Mutt contains two types of local caching: (1) the so-called header caching and (2) the so-called body caching which are both described in this section.

Header caching is optional as it depends on external libraries, body caching is always enabled if Mutt is compiled with POP and/or IMAP support as these use it (body caching requires no external library).

7.1. Header Caching

Mutt provides optional support for caching message headers for the following types of folders: IMAP, POP, Maildir and MH. Header caching greatly speeds up opening large folders because for remote folders, headers usually only need to be downloaded once. For Maildir and MH, reading the headers from a single file is much faster than looking at possibly thousands of single files (since Maildir and MH use one file per message.)

Header caching can be enabled via the configure script and the --enable-hcache option. It's not turned on by default because external database libraries are required: one of tokyocabinet, qdbm, gdbm or bdb must be present.

If enabled, $header_cache can be used to either point to a file or a directory. If set to point to a file, one database file for all folders will be used (which may result in lower performance), but one file per folder if it points to a directory.

7.2. Body Caching

Both cache methods can be combined using the same directory for storage (and for IMAP/POP even provide meaningful file names) which simplifies manual maintenance tasks.

In addition to caching message headers only, Mutt can also cache whole message bodies. This results in faster display of messages for POP and IMAP folders because messages usually have to be downloaded only once.

For configuration, the variable $message_cachedir must point to a directory. There, Mutt will create a hierarchy of subdirectories named like the account and mailbox path the cache is for.

7.3. Cache Directories

For using both, header and body caching, $header_cache and $message_cachedir can be safely set to the same value.

In a header or body cache directory, Mutt creates a directory hierarchy named like: proto:user@hostname where proto is either pop or imap. Within there, for each folder, Mutt stores messages in single files and header caches in files with the .hcache extension. All files can be removed as needed if the consumed disk space becomes an issue as Mutt will silently fetch missing items again. Pathnames are always stored in UTF-8 encoding.

For Maildir and MH, the header cache files are named after the MD5 checksum of the path.

7.4. Maintenance

Mutt does not (yet) support maintenance features for header cache database files so that files have to be removed in case they grow too big. It depends on the database library used for header caching whether disk space freed by removing messages is re-used.

For body caches, Mutt can keep the local cache in sync with the remote mailbox if the $message_cache_clean variable is set. Cleaning means to remove messages from the cache which are no longer present in the mailbox which only happens when other mail clients or instances of Mutt using a different body cache location delete messages (Mutt itself removes deleted messages from the cache when syncing a mailbox). As cleaning can take a noticeable amount of time, it should not be set in general but only occasionally.

8. Exact Address Generation

Mutt supports the Name <user@host> address syntax for reading and writing messages, the older user@host (Name) syntax is only supported when reading messages. The --enable-exact-address switch can be given to configure to build it with write-support for the latter syntax. EXACT_ADDRESS in the output of mutt -v indicates whether it's supported.

9. Sending Anonymous Messages via Mixmaster

You may also have compiled Mutt to co-operate with Mixmaster, an anonymous remailer. Mixmaster permits you to send your messages anonymously using a chain of remailers. Mixmaster support in Mutt is for mixmaster version 2.04 or later.

To use it, you'll have to obey certain restrictions. Most important, you cannot use the Cc and Bcc headers. To tell Mutt to use mixmaster, you have to select a remailer chain, using the mix function on the compose menu.

The chain selection screen is divided into two parts. In the (larger) upper part, you get a list of remailers you may use. In the lower part, you see the currently selected chain of remailers.

You can navigate in the chain using the <chain-prev> and <chain-next> functions, which are by default bound to the left and right arrows and to the h and l keys (think vi keyboard bindings). To insert a remailer at the current chain position, use the <insert> function. To append a remailer behind the current chain position, use <select-entry> or <append>. You can also delete entries from the chain, using the corresponding function. Finally, to abandon your changes, leave the menu, or <accept> them pressing (by default) the Return key.

Note that different remailers do have different capabilities, indicated in the %c entry of the remailer menu lines (see $mix_entry_format). Most important is the middleman capability, indicated by a capital M: This means that the remailer in question cannot be used as the final element of a chain, but will only forward messages to other mixmaster remailers. For details on the other capabilities, please have a look at the mixmaster documentation.

10. Compressed Folders Patch

Read from/write to compressed mailboxes

10.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Compress Folders, look for +USE_COMPRESSED in the mutt version. See: Section 1.1, “Enabling/Disabling Features”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch can be disabled by running configure with the option --disable-fmemopen

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

10.2. Introduction

The Compressed Folder patch allows Mutt to read mailbox files that are compressed. But it isn't limited to compressed files. It works well with encrypted files, too. In fact, if you can create a program/script to convert to and from your format, then Mutt can read it.

The patch adds three hooks to Mutt: open-hook, close-hook and append-hook. They define commands to: uncompress a file; compress a file; append messages to an already compressed file.

There are some examples of both compressed and encrypted files, later. For now, the documentation will just concentrate on compressed files.

10.3. Commands

open-hook pattern shell-command
close-hook pattern shell-command
append-hook pattern shell-command

The shell-command must contain two placeholders for filenames: %f and %t. These represent from and to filenames. It's a good idea to put quotes around these placeholders.

If you need the exact string %f or %t in your command, simply double up the % character, e.g. %%f or %%t.

Table 6.1. Not all Hooks are Required

OpenCloseAppendEffectUseful if
Open--Folder is readonlyThe folder is just a backup
OpenClose-Folder is read/write, but the entire folder must be written if anything is changedYour compression format doesn't support appending
OpenCloseAppendFolder is read/write and emails can be efficiently added to the endYour compression format supports appending
Open-AppendFolder is readonly, but can be appended toYou want to store emails, but never change them

Note

The command:

  • should return a non-zero exit status on failure

  • should not delete any files

10.3.1. Read from compressed mailbox

open-hook regexp shell-command

If Mutt is unable to open a file, it then looks for open-hook that matches the filename.

If your compression program doesn't have a well-defined extension, then you can use . as the regexp.

10.3.1.1. Example of open-hook
open-hook '\.gz$' "gzip -cd '%f' > '%t'"
  • Mutt finds a file, example.gz, that it can't read

  • Mutt has an open-hook whose regexp matches the filename: \.gz$

  • Mutt uses the command gzip -cd to create a temporary file that it can read

10.3.2. Write to a compressed mailbox

close-hook regexp shell-command

When Mutt has finished with a compressed mail folder, it will look for a matching close-hook to recompress the file. This hook is optional.

Note

If the folder has not been modifed, the close-hook will not be called.

10.3.2.1. Example of close-hook
close-hook '\.gz$' "gzip -c '%t' > '%f'"
  • Mutt has finished with a folder, example.gz, that it opened with open-hook

  • The folder has been modified

  • Mutt has a close-hook whose regexp matches the filename: \.gz$

  • Mutt uses the command gzip -c to create a new compressed file

10.3.3. Append to a compressed mailbox

append-hook regexp shell-command

When Mutt wants to append an email to a compressed mail folder, it will look for a matching append-hook. This hook is optional.

Using the append-hook will save time, but Mutt won't be able to determine the type of the mail folder inside the compressed file.

Mutt will assume the type to be that of the $mbox_type variable. Mutt also uses this type for temporary files.

Mutt will only use the append-hook for existing files. The close-hook will be used for empty, or missing files.

10.3.3.1. Example of append-hook
append-hook '\.gz$' "gzip -c '%t' >> '%f'"
  • Mutt wants to append an email to a folder, example.gz, that it opened with open-hook

  • Mutt has an append-hook whose regexp matches the filename: \.gz$

  • Mutt knows the mailbox type from the $mbox variable

  • Mutt uses the command gzip -c to append to an existing compressed file

10.3.4. Empty Files

Mutt assumes that an empty file is not compressed. In this situation, unset $save_empty, so that the compressed file will be removed if you delete all of the messages.

10.3.5. Security

Encrypted files are decrypted into temporary files which are stored in the $tmpdir directory. This could be a security risk.

10.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'compressed folders' feature.
 
# This feature adds three hooks to Mutt which allow it to
# work with compressed, or encrypted, mailboxes.
 
# The hooks are of the form:
#       open-hook   regexp "shell-command"
#       close-hook  regexp "shell-command"
#       append-hook regexp "shell-command"
 
# The 'append-hook' is optional.
 
# Hander for gzip compressed mailboxes
open-hook   '\.gz$'  "gzip -cd  '%f' >  '%t'"
close-hook  '\.gz$'  "gzip -c   '%t' >  '%f'"
append-hook '\.gz$'  "gzip -c   '%t' >> '%f'"
 
# Hander for bzip2 compressed mailboxes
open-hook   '\.bz2$' "bzip2 -cd '%f' >  '%t'"
close-hook  '\.bz2$' "bzip2 -c  '%t' >  '%f'"
append-hook '\.bz2$' "bzip2 -c  '%t' >> '%f'"
 
# Hander for xz compressed mailboxes
open-hook   '\.xz$'  "xz    -cd '%f' >  '%t'"
close-hook  '\.xz$'  "xz    -c  '%t' >  '%f'"
append-hook '\.xz$'  "xz    -c  '%t' >> '%f'"
 
# Hander for pgp encrypted mailboxes
# PGP does not support appending to an encrypted file
open-hook   '\.pgp$' "pgp -f < '%f' > '%t'"
close-hook  '\.pgp$' "pgp -fe YourPgpUserIdOrKeyId < '%t' > '%f'"
 
# Hander for gpg encrypted mailboxes
# gpg does not support appending to an encrypted file
open-hook   '\.gpg$' "gpg --decrypt < '%f' > '%t'"
close-hook  '\.gpg$' "gpg --encrypt --recipient YourGpgUserIdOrKeyId < '%t' > '%f'"
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

10.6. Known Bugs

  • The Compressed Folder hooks cannot deal with filenames that contains quotes/apostrophes.

10.7. Credits

11. Conditional Dates Patch

Use rules to choose date format

11.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Conditional Dates, look for patch-cond-date in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

11.2. Introduction

The cond-date patch allows you to construct $index_format expressions based on the age of the email.

Mutt's default $index_format displays email dates in the form: abbreviated-month day-of-month — Jan 14.

The format is configurable but only per-mailbox. This patch allows you to configure the display depending on the age of the email.

Table 6.2. Potential Formatting Scheme

Email SentFormatExample
Today%H:%M13:23
This Month%a %dThu 17
This Year%b %dDec 10
Older than 1 Year%m/%y06/14

For an explanation of the date formatting strings, see strftime(3).

By carefully picking your formats, the dates can remain unambiguous and compact.

Mutt's conditional format strings have the form: (whitespace introduced for clarity)

%? TEST ? TRUE & FALSE ?

The examples below use the test %[ — the date of the message in the local timezone. They will also work with %( — the local time that the message arrived.

The date tests are of the form:

%[nX? TRUE & FALSE ?
  • n is an optional count (defaults to 1 if missing)

  • X is the time period

Table 6.3. Date Formatting Codes

LetterTime Period
yYears
mMonths
wWeeks
dDays
HHours
MMinutes

Table 6.4. Example Date Tests

TestMeaning
%[yThis year
%[1yThis year
%[6mIn the last 6 months
%[wThis week
%[dToday
%[4HIn the last 4 hours

11.2.1. Example 1

We start with a one-condition test.

Table 6.5. Example 1

TestDate RangeFormat StringExample
%[1mThis month%[%b %d]Dec 10
 Older%[%Y-%m-%d]2015-04-23

The $index_format string would contain:

%?[1m?%[%b %d]&%[%Y-%m-%d]?

Reparsed a little, for clarity, you can see the test condition and the two format strings.

%?[1m?        &           ?
      %[%b %d] %[%Y-%m-%d]

11.2.2. Example 2

This example contains three test conditions and four date formats.

Table 6.6. Example 2

TestDate RangeFormat StringExample
%[dToday%[%H:%M ] 12:34
%[mThis month%[%a %d]Thu 12
%[yThis year%[%b %d]Dec 10
 Older%[%m/%y ]06/15

The $index_format string would contain:

%<[y?%<[m?%<[d?%[%H:%M ]&%[%a %d]>&%[%b %d]>&%[%m/%y ]>

Reparsed a little, for clarity, you can see the test conditions and the four format strings.

%<[y?                                       &%[%m/%y ]>  Older
     %<[m?                        &%[%b %d]>             This year
          %<[d?         &%[%a %d]>                       This month
               %[%H:%M ]                                 Today

This a another view of the same example, with some whitespace for clarity.

%<[y? %<[m? %<[d? AAA & BBB > & CCC > & DDD >


AAA = %[%H:%M ]
BBB = %[%a %d]
CCC = %[%b %d]
DDD = %[%m/%y ]
      

11.3. Variables

The cond-date patch doesn't have any config of its own. It modifies the behavior of the format strings.

11.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'cond-date' feature.
#
# The default index_format is:
#       '%4C %Z %{%b %d} %-15.15L (%?l?%4l&%4c?) %s'
#
# We replace the date field '%{%b %d}', giving:
set index_format='%4C %Z %<[y?%<[m?%<[d?%[%H:%M ]&%[%a %d]>&%[%b %d]>&%[%m/%y ]> %-15.15L (%?l?%4l&%4c?) %s'
 
# Test  Date Range  Format String  Example
# --------------------------------------------
# %[d   Today       %[%H:%M ]      12:34
# %[m   This month  %[%a %d]       Thu 12
# %[y   This year   %[%b %d]       Dec 10
# -     Older       %[%m/%y ]      06/15
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

11.6. Known Bugs

Date parsing doesn't quite do what you expect. 1w doesn't mean the in the last 7 days, but this week. This doesn't match the normal Mutt behaviour: for example ~d>1w means emails dated in the last 7 days.

11.7. Credits

12. Fmemopen Patch

Replace some temporary files with memory buffers

12.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports fmemopen, look for patch-fmemopen in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

  • open_memstream(), fmemopen() from glibc

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

12.2. Introduction

The fmemopen patch speeds up some searches.

This patch changes a few places where Mutt creates temporary files. It replaces them with in-memory buffers. This should improve the performance when searching the header or body using the $thorough_search option.

There are no user-configurable parts.

This patch depends on open_memstream() and fmemopen(). They are provided by glibc. Without them, Mutt will simply create temporary files.

12.3. Muttrc

None

12.4. See Also

12.5. Known Bugs

None

12.6. Credits

13. Ifdef Patch

Conditional config options

13.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports ifdef, look for patch-ifdef in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

13.2. Introduction

The ifdef patch introduces three new commands to Mutt and allow you to share one config file between versions of Mutt that may have different features compiled in.

ifdef  symbol config-command [args...]  # If a symbol is defined
ifndef symbol config-command [args...]  # If a symbol is not defined
finish                                  # Finish reading the current file

Here a symbol can be a $variable, <function>, command or compile-time symbol, such as USE_IMAP.

finish is particularly useful when combined with ifndef. e.g.

# Sidebar config file
ifndef USE_SIDEBAR finish

13.3. Commands

ifdef symbol "config-command [args]"
ifndef symbol "config-command [args]"
finish

13.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'ifdef' feature.
 
# This feature introduces three useful commands which allow you to share
# one config file between versions of Mutt that may have different
# features compiled in.
 
#     ifdef  symbol config-command [args...]
#     ifndef symbol config-command [args...]
#     finish
 
# The 'ifdef' command tests whether Mutt understands the name of
# a variable, function, command or compile-time symbol.
# If it does, then it executes a config command.
 
# The 'ifndef' command tests whether a symbol does NOT exist.
 
# The 'finish' command tells Mutt to stop reading current config file.
 
# If the 'trash' variable exists, set it.
ifdef trash 'set trash=~/Mail/trash'
 
# If the 'tag-pattern' function exists, bind a key to it.
ifdef tag-pattern 'bind index <F6> tag-pattern'
 
# If the 'imap-fetch-mail' command exists, read my IMAP config.
ifdef imap-fetch-mail 'source ~/.mutt/imap.rc'
 
# If the compile-time symbol 'USE_SIDEBAR' does not exist, then
# stop reading the current config file.
ifndef USE_SIDEBAR finish
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

13.5. See Also

13.6. Known Bugs

None

13.7. Credits

14. Index Color Patch

Custom rules for theming the email index

14.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Index Color, look for patch-index-color in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

14.2. Introduction

The index-color patch allows you to specify colors for individual parts of the email index. e.g. Subject, Author, Flags.

First choose which part of the index you'd like to color. Then, if needed, pick a pattern to match.

Note: The pattern does not have to refer to the object you wish to color. e.g.

color index_author red default "~smutt"

The author appears red when the subject (~s) contains mutt.

14.3. Colors

All the colors default to default, i.e. unset.

The index objects can be themed using the color command. Some objects require a pattern.

color index-object foreground background
color index-object foreground background pattern

Table 6.7. Index Colors

ObjectPatternHighlights
indexyesEntire index line
index_authoryesAuthor name, %A %a %F %L %n
index_collapsednoNumber of messages in a collapsed thread, %M
index_datenoDate field
index_flagsyesMessage flags, %S %Z
index_labelnoMessage label, %y %Y
index_numbernoMessage number, %C
index_sizenoMessage size, %c %l
index_subjectyesSubject, %s

14.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'index-color' feature.
 
# Entire index line
color index white black '.*'
 
# Author name, %A %a %F %L %n
 
# Give the author column a dark grey background
color index_author default color234 '.*'
 
# Highlight a particular from (~f)
color index_author brightyellow color234 '~fRay Charles'
 
# Message flags, %S %Z
# Highlight the flags for flagged (~F) emails
color index_flags default red '~F'
 
# Subject, %s
# Look for a particular subject (~s)
color index_subject brightcyan default '~s\(closes #[0-9]+\)'
 
# Number of messages in a collapsed thread, %M
color index_collapsed default brightblue
 
# Date field
color index_date green default
 
# Message label, %y %Y
color index_label default brightgreen
 
# Message number, %C
color index_number red default
 
# Message size, %c %l
color index_size cyan default
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

14.6. Known Bugs

None

14.7. Credits

15. Initials Expando Patch

Expando for author's initials

15.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Initials, look for patch-initials in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

15.2. Introduction

The initials patch adds an expando (%I) for an author's initials.

The index panel displays a list of emails. Its layout is controlled by the $index_format variable. Using this expando saves space in the index panel. This can be useful if you are regularly working with a small set of people.

15.3. Variables

This patch has no config of its own. It adds an expando which can be used in the $index_format variable.

15.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'initials' patch.
 
# The 'initials' patch has no config of its own.
# It adds an expando for an author's initials,
# which can be used in the 'index_format' variable.
 
# The default 'index_format' is:
set index_format='%4C %Z %{%b %d} %-15.15L (%?l?%4l&%4c?) %s'
 
# Where %L represents the author/recipient
 
# This might look like:
#       1   + Nov 17 David Bowie   Changesbowie    ( 689)
#       2   ! Nov 17 Stevie Nicks  Rumours         ( 555)
#       3   + Nov 16 Jimi Hendrix  Voodoo Child    ( 263)
#       4   + Nov 16 Debbie Harry  Parallel Lines  ( 540)
 
# Using the %I expando:
set index_format='%4C %Z %{%b %d} %I (%?l?%4l&%4c?) %s'
 
# This might look like:
#       1   + Nov 17 DB Changesbowie    ( 689)
#       2   ! Nov 17 SN Rumours         ( 555)
#       3   + Nov 16 JH Voodoo Child    ( 263)
#       4   + Nov 16 DH Parallel Lines  ( 540)
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

15.6. Known Bugs

None

15.7. Credits

16. Keywords Patch

Labels/Tagging for emails

16.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Keywords, look for patch-keywords in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

16.2. Introduction

Unify label/keyword handling.

Since x-labels were added to mutt in 2000, a number of other approaches to what we now call tagging have also emerged. One of them was even made standard in RFC 2822. This update unifies the handling of all these strategies.

We start by changing mutt's internal keyword storage from a single string which may contain whitespace to a list of discrete keywords. This has advantages for keyword completion as well as for portabilty among varying "standards" for keyword storage. This may represent a significant change for existing mutt users who have set x-labels containing spaces, and should be regarded with suspicion. The advantages are significant, though.

Next we allow mutt to parse keywords into this internal list from any of the following headers: X-Label (freeform), X-Keywords (space-delimited), X-Mozilla-Keys (space-delimited), and Keywords (RFC 2822, comma-space-delimited). Mutt remembers which headers it sourced keywords from, and can rewrite those headers when saving messages for compatibility with the mailer of origin.

(X-Label was specified as freeform text by mutt, its only known implementation. X-Labels have been used both as a tagging device, probably with space delimiting, and as a memo field, where space-delimited parsing would ruin the semantics of the memo. By default mutt will not split X-Labels at all. Set $xlabel_delimiter if your needs vary.)

Finally we add two booleans: $keywords_legacy=true and $keywords_standard=FALSE. When $keywords_legacy is true, mutt will always save keyword to whatever original header it came from. When $keywords_standard=true, mutt will save to the Keywords: header. If both are true mutt saves to both; if neither is true, mutt saves only to legacy headers to avoid complete loss of keywords.

Overall this represents convergence path for all competing labelling/tagging/keywording systems toward one that is specified by RFC.

You can change or delete the X-Label: field within Mutt using the edit-label command. This works for tagged messages, too.

16.3. Variables

Table 6.8. Keywords Variables

NameTypeDefault
keywords_legacybooleanyes
keywords_standardbooleanno
xlabel_delimiterstring(empty)

16.4. Functions

Keywords adds the following function to Mutt. By default, it is not bound to a key.

Table 6.9. Keyword Functions

MenusFunctionDescription
index,pager<edit-label>add, change, or delete a message's label

16.5. Sort

Table 6.10. Keywords Sort

SortDescription
labelSort by label

16.6. Muttrc

# This is a complete list of keywords-related configuration.
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VARIABLES - shown with their default values
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# Should Mutt save the keywords to whatever keyword it came from?
set keywords_legacy = yes
 
# Should Mutt use the "Keywords:" header?
set keywords_standard = no
 
# How should the keywords be separated?
set xlabel_delimiter = ""
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# FUNCTIONS - shown with an example mapping
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# Bind 'y' to edit labels/keywords
bind index,pager y edit-label
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

16.8. Known Bugs

None

16.9. Credits

17. Limit-Current-Thread Patch

Focus on one Email Thread

17.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports limit-current-thread, look for patch-limit-current-thread in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

17.2. Introduction

This patch adds a new way of using the Limit Command. The <limit-current-thread> function restricts the view to just the current thread. Setting the limit (the l key) to all will restore the full email list.

17.3. Functions

Limit-current-thread adds the following function to Mutt. By default, it is not bound to a key.

Table 6.11. Limit-Current-Thread Functions

MenusFunctionDescription
index<limit-current-thread>Limit view to current thread

17.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'limit-current-thread' patch.
 
# Limit view to current thread
bind index <esc>L limit-current-thread
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

17.5. See Also

17.6. Known Bugs

None

17.7. Credits

18. LMDB Patch

LMDB backend for the header cache

18.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports lmdb, look for patch-lmdb in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

18.2. Introduction

This patch adds support for using LMDB as a storage backend for Mutt's header cache (hcache). It is enabled at configure time with the --with-lmdb=<path> switch.

18.4. Known Bugs

None

18.5. Credits

19. multiple-fcc Patch

Save multiple copies of outgoing mail

19.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports multiple-fcc, look for patch-multiple-fcc in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

19.2. Introduction

This patch allows the user to save outgoing emails in multiple folders.

Folders should be listed separated by commas, but no spaces.

The fcc field of an email can be set in two ways:

  • The <edit-fcc> command in the compose menu (default key: f)

  • Creating a fcc-hook in your .muttrc

19.4. Known Bugs

None

19.5. Credits

20. Nested If Patch

Allow complex nested conditions in format strings

20.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Nested If, look for patch-nested-if in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

20.2. Introduction

Mutt's format strings can contain embedded if-then-else conditions. They are of the form:

%?VAR?TRUE&FALSE?

If the variable VAR has a value greater than zero, print the TRUE string, otherwise print the FALSE string.

e.g. %?S?Size: %S&Empty?

Which can be read as:


if (%S > 0) {
    print "Size: %S"
} else {
    print "Empty"
}
    

These conditions are useful, but in Mutt they cannot be nested within one another. This patch uses the notation %<VAR?TRUE&FALSE> and allows them to be nested.

The %<...> notation was used to format the current local time. but that's not really very useful since mutt has no means of refreshing the screen periodically.

A simple nested condition might be: (Some whitespace has been introduced for clarity)

%<x? %<y? XY & X > & %<y? Y & NONE > >  Conditions
     %<y? XY & X >                      x>0
          XY                            x>0,y>0
               X                        x>0,y=0
%<x? %<y? XY & X > & %<y? Y & NONE > >  Conditions
                      %<y? Y & NONE >    x=0
                          Y             x=0,y>0
                              NONE      x=0,y=0

Equivalent to:


if (x > 0) {
    if (y > 0) {
        print 'XY'
    } else {
        print 'X'
    }
} else {
    if (y > 0) {
        print 'Y'
    } else {
        print 'NONE'
    }
}
    

Examples:

set index_format='%4C %Z %{%b %d} %-25.25n %s%> %<M?%M Msgs &%<l?%l Lines&%c Bytes>>'


if a thread is folded
    display the number of messages (%M)
else if we know how many lines in the message
    display lines in message (%l)
else
    display the size of the message in bytes (%c)
    

set index_format='%4C %Z %{%b %d} %-25.25n %<M?[%M] %s&%s%* %<l?%l&%c>>'


if a thread is folded
    display the number of messages (%M)
    display the subject (%s)
else if we know how many lines in the message
    display lines in message (%l)
else
    display the size of the message in bytes (%c)
    

20.3. Variables

The nested-if patch doesn't have any config of its own. It modifies the behavior of the format strings.

20.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'nested-if' feature.
 
# This patch uses the format: '%<VAR?TRUE&FALSE>' for conditional
# format strings that can be nested.
 
# Example 1
# if a thread is folded
#       display the number of messages (%M)
# else if we know how many lines in the message
#       display lines in message (%l)
# else display the size of the message in bytes (%c)
set index_format='%4C %Z %{%b %d} %-25.25n %s%> %<M?%M Msgs &%<l?%l Lines&%c Bytes>>'
 
# Example 2
# if a thread is folded
#       display the number of messages (%M)
#       display the subject (%s)
# else if we know how many lines in the message
#       display lines in message (%l)
# else
#       display the size of the message in bytes (%c)
set index_format='%4C %Z %{%b %d} %-25.25n %<M?[%M] %s&%s%* %<l?%l&%c>>'
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

20.6. Known Bugs

Patch overwrites $<fmt> handler in $index_format

20.7. Credits

21. new-mail Patch

Execute a command upon the receipt of new mail.

21.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports new-mail, look for patch-new-mail in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

21.2. Introduction

This patch enables the new_mail_command setting, which can be used to execute a custom script (e.g., a notification handler) upon receiving a new mail.

The command string can contain expandos, such as %f for the folder name. For a complete list, see: $status_format.

For example in Linux you can use (most distributions already provide notify-send):

set new_mail_command="notify-send --icon='/home/santiago/Pictures/mutt.png' 'New Email in %f' '%n new messages, %u unread.' &"

And in OS X you will need to install a command line interface for Notification Center, for example terminal-notifier:

set new_mail_command="terminal-notifier -title '%v' -subtitle 'New Mail in %f' -message '%n new messages, %u unread.' -activate 'com.apple.Terminal'"

21.3. Variables

Table 6.12. New Mail Command Variables

NameTypeDefault
new_mail_commandstring(empty)

21.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'new-mail-command' patch.
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VARIABLES - shown with their default values
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# Set the command you want mutt to execute upon the receipt of a new email
set new_mail_command = ""
 
# Linux example:
# set new_command="notify-send --icon='/home/santiago/Pictures/mutt.png' 'New Email in %f' '%n new messages, %u unread.' &"
 
# OS X example:
# set new_mail_command="terminal-notifier -title '%v' -subtitle 'New Mail in %f' -message '%n new messages, %u unread.' -activate 'com.apple.Terminal'"

# --------------------------------------------------------------------------

# vim: syntax=muttrc

21.6. Known Bugs

  • Notifies about spurious new email when an email is saved, see Issue #20

  • Will not notify about new e-mail if the pager is open, see Issue #19

21.7. Credits

22. NNTP Patch

Talk to a Usenet news server

22.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports NNTP, look for +USE_NNTP in the mutt version. See: Section 1.1, “Enabling/Disabling Features”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

22.2. Introduction

Reading news via NNTP

If compiled with --enable-nntp option, Mutt can read news from news server via NNTP. You can open a newsgroup with function ``change-newsgroup'' (default: ``i''). Default news server can be obtained from $NNTPSERVER environment variable or from /etc/nntpserver file. Like other news readers, info about subscribed newsgroups is saved in file by $newsrc variable. The variable $news_cache_dir can be used to point to a directory. Mutt will create a hierarchy of subdirectories named like the account and newsgroup the cache is for. Also the hierarchy is used to store header cache if Mutt was compiled with header cache support.

22.3. Variables

Table 6.13. NNTP Variables

NameTypeDefault
ask_follow_upbooleanno
ask_x_comment_tobooleanno
catchup_newsgroupquadask-yes
followup_to_posterquadask-yes
group_index_formatstring%4C %M%N %5s %-45.45f %d
inewsstring(empty)
mime_subjectbooleanyes
newsgroups_charsetstringutf-8
newsrcstring~/.newsrc
news_cache_dirstring~/.mutt
news_serverstring(empty)
nntp_authenticatorsstring(empty)
nntp_contextnumber1000
nntp_listgroupbooleanyes
nntp_load_descriptionbooleanyes
nntp_passstring(empty)
nntp_pollnumber60
nntp_userstring(empty)
post_moderatedquadask-yes
save_unsubscribedbooleanno
show_new_newsbooleanyes
show_only_unreadbooleanno
x_comment_tobooleanno

22.4. Functions

NNTP adds the following functions to Mutt. By default, none of them are bound to keys.

Table 6.14. NNTP Functions

MenusFunctionDescription
browser,index<catchup>mark all articles in newsgroup as read
index,pager<change-newsgroup>open a different newsgroup
pager<change-vfolder>open a different virtual folder
compose<edit-followup-to>edit the Followup-To field
compose<edit-newsgroups>edit the newsgroups list
compose<edit-x-comment-to>edit the X-Comment-To field
pager<entire-thread>read entire thread of the current message
attachment,index,pager<followup-message>followup to newsgroup
pager<modify-labels>modify (notmuch) tags
index,pager<post-message>post message to newsgroup
browser<reload-active>load list of all newsgroups from NNTP server
browser<subscribe>subscribe to current mbox (IMAP/NNTP only)
browser<subscribe-pattern>subscribe to newsgroups matching a pattern
browser<uncatchup>mark all articles in newsgroup as unread
browser<unsubscribe>unsubscribe from current mbox (IMAP/NNTP only)
browser<unsubscribe-pattern>unsubscribe from newsgroups matching a pattern
index,pager<change-newsgroup-readonly>open a different newsgroup in read only mode
attachment,index,pager<forward-to-group>forward to newsgroup
index<get-children>get all children of the current message
index<get-parent>get parent of the current message
index,pager<imap-fetch-mail>force retrieval of mail from IMAP server
index,pager<imap-logout-all>logout from all IMAP servers
pager<modify-labels-then-hide>modify labeld and then hide message
index<reconstruct-thread>reconstruct thread containing current message
pager<vfolder-from-query>generate virtual folder from query
index<get-message>get message with Message-Id

22.5. Muttrc

# This is a complete list of nntp configuration.

# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VARIABLES - shown with their default values
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------

set ask_follow_up = no
set ask_x_comment_to = no
set catchup_newsgroup = ask-yes
set followup_to_poster = ask-yes
set group_index_format = '%4C %M%N %5s  %-45.45f %d'
set inews = ''
set mime_subject = yes
set newsgroups_charset = utf-8
set newsrc = '~/.newsrc'
set news_cache_dir = '~/.mutt'
set news_server = ''
set nntp_authenticators = ''
set nntp_context = 1000
set nntp_listgroup = yes
set nntp_load_description = yes
set nntp_pass = ''
set nntp_poll = 60
set nntp_user = ''
set post_moderated = ask-yes
set save_unsubscribed = no
set show_new_news = yes
set show_only_unread = no
set x_comment_to = no

# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# FUNCTIONS - shown with an example mapping
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------

# mark all articles in newsgroup as read
bind browser,index y catchup 

# open a different newsgroup
bind index,pager i change-newsgroup 

# open a different virtual folder
bind pager X change-vfolder 

# edit the Followup-To field
bind compose o edit-followup-to 

# edit the newsgroups list
bind compose N edit-newsgroups 

# edit the X-Comment-To field
bind compose x edit-x-comment-to 

# read entire thread of the current message
bind pager + entire-thread 

# followup to newsgroup
bind attachment,index,pager F followup-message 

# modify (notmuch) tags
bind pager ` modify-labels 

# post message to newsgroup
bind index,pager P post-message 

# load list of all newsgroups from NNTP server
bind browser g reload-active 

# subscribe to current mbox (IMAP/NNTP only)
bind browser s subscribe 

# subscribe to newsgroups matching a pattern
bind browser S subscribe-pattern 

# mark all articles in newsgroup as unread
bind browser Y uncatchup 

# unsubscribe from current mbox (IMAP/NNTP only)
bind browser u unsubscribe 

# unsubscribe from newsgroups matching a pattern
bind browser U unsubscribe-pattern 

# open a different newsgroup in read only mode
bind index,pager \ei change-newsgroup-readonly 

# forward to newsgroup
bind attachment,index,pager \eF forward-to-group 

# get all children of the current message
# bind index ??? get-children 

# get parent of the current message
bind index \eG get-parent 

# force retrieval of mail from IMAP server
# bind index,pager ??? imap-fetch-mail 

# logout from all IMAP servers
# bind index,pager ??? imap-logout-all 

# modify labeld and then hide message
# bind pager ??? modify-labels-then-hide 

# reconstruct thread containing current message
# bind index ??? reconstruct-thread 

# generate virtual folder from query
bind pager \eX vfolder-from-query 

# get message with Message-Id
bind index \CG get-message 

# --------------------------------------------------------------------------

# vim: syntax=muttrc

22.7. Known Bugs

None

22.8. Credits

23. Notmuch Patch

Email search engine

23.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Notmuch, look for +USE_NOTMUCH in the mutt version. See: Section 1.1, “Enabling/Disabling Features”.

Dependencies:

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

23.2. Introduction

Notmuch is an email fulltext indexing and tagging engine.

23.3. Using NotMuch

23.3.1. Folders URI

notmuch://[<path>][?<item>=<name>[& ...]]

The <path> is an absolute path to the directory where the notmuch database is found as returned by notmuch config get database.path command. Note that the <path> should NOT include .notmuch directory name.

If the "<path>" is not defined then $nm_default_uri or $folder is used, for example:

set nm_default_uri = "notmuch:///home/foo/maildir"
virtual-mailboxes "My INBOX" "notmuch://?query=tag:inbox"

23.3.2. Items

query=<string>

See SEARCH SYNTAX in notmuch man page. Don't forget to use and and or operators in your queries.

Note that proper URI should not contain blank space and all bad chars should be encoded, for example

tag:AAA and tag:BBB --encoding-> tag:AAA%20and%20tag:BBB

but mutt config file parser is smart enough to accept space in quoted strings. It means that you can use

notmuch:///foo?query=tag:AAA and tag:BBB

in your config files to keep things readable.

For more details about Xapian queries, see: http://xapian.org/docs/queryparser.html

limit=<number>

Restricts number of messages/threads in the result. The default limit is nm_db_limit.

type=<threads|messages>

Reads all matching messages or whole-threads. The default is 'messages' or nm_query_type.

23.4. Variables

Table 6.15. Notmuch Variables

NameTypeDefault
nm_db_limitnumber0
nm_default_uristring(empty)
nm_exclude_tagsstring(empty)
nm_hidden_tagsstringunread,draft,flagged,passed,replied,attachment,signed,encrypted
nm_open_timeoutnumber5
nm_query_typestringmessages
nm_recordbooleanno
nm_record_tagsstring(empty)
nm_unread_tagstringunread
vfolder_formatstring%6n(%6N) %f
virtual_spoolfilebooleanno

23.5. Functions

Notmuch adds the following functions to Mutt. By default, none of them are bound to keys.

Table 6.16. Notmuch Functions

MenusFunctionDescription
index,pager<change-vfolder>open a different virtual folder
index,pager<entire-thread>read entire thread of the current message
index,pager<modify-labels>modify (notmuch) tags
index,pager<modify-labels-then-hide>modify labels and then hide message
index,pager<sidebar-toggle-virtual>toggle between mailboxes and virtual mailboxes
index,pager<vfolder-from-query>generate virtual folder from query

23.6. Commands

virtual-mailboxes description notmuch-URI { description notmuch-URI ...}
tag-transforms tag transformed-string { tag transformed-string ...}
tag-formats tag format-string { tag format-string ...}

23.7. Colors

Adds these to index-color patch:

Table 6.17. Index Colors

ObjectPatternHighlights
index_tagyesan individual message tag, %G, uses tag name
index_tagsnothe transformed message tags, %g

23.8. Muttrc

# This is a complete list of notmuch-related configuration.
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VARIABLES - shown with their default values
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# This variable specifies notmuch query limit.
set nm_db_limit = 0
 
# This variable specifies the default Notmuch database in format:
# notmuch://<absolute path>
set nm_default_uri = ""
 
# The messages tagged with these tags are excluded and not loaded
# from notmuch DB to mutt unless specified explicitly.
set nm_exclude_tags = ""
 
# This variable specifies private notmuch tags which should not be printed
# on screen (index, pager).
set nm_hidden_tags = "unread,draft,flagged,passed,replied,attachment,signed,encrypted"
 
# This option specifies timeout for Notmuch database. Default is 5 seconds.
set nm_open_timeout = 5
 
# This variable specifies notmuch query type, supported types: 'threads' and
# 'messages'.
set nm_query_type = messages
 
# Add messages stored to the mutt record (see $record in the mutt docs)
# also to notmuch DB.
set nm_record = no
 
# Tags that should be removed or added to the to the messages stored in the mutt record.
set nm_record_tags = ""
 
# This variable specifies notmuch tag which is used for unread messages.
set nm_unread_tag = unread
 
# This variable allows you to customize the file browser display for virtual
# folders to your personal taste.
set vfolder_format = "%6n(%6N) %f"
 
# When set, mutt will use the first virtual mailbox (see virtual-mailboxes)
# as a spoolfile.
set virtual_spoolfile = no
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# FUNCTIONS - shown with an example mapping
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# open a different virtual folder
bind index,pager X change-vfolder 
 
# read entire thread of the current message
bind index,pager + entire-thread 
 
# modify (notmuch) tags
bind index,pager ` modify-labels 
 
# generate virtual folder from query
bind index,pager \eX vfolder-from-query 
 
# modify labels and then hide message
# bind index,pager ??? modify-labels-then-hide 
 
# toggle between mailboxes and virtual mailboxes
# bind index,pager ??? sidebar-toggle-virtual 
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# COMMANDS - shown with an example
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# virtual-mailboxes description notmuch-URI { description notmuch-URI ...}
# virtual-mailboxes "Climbing" "notmuch://?query=climbing"
 
# Replace some tags with icons
# tag-transforms tag transformed-string { tag transformed-string ...}
# tag-transforms "inbox"   "i"   \
#                "unread"  "u"   \
#                "replied" "↻ "  \
#                "sent"    "➥ "  \
#                "todo"    "T"   \
#                "deleted" "DEL" \
#                "invites" "CAL"
 
# See README.notmuch for an explanation
# tag-formats tag format-string { tag format-string ...}
# tag-formats "inbox"   "GI" \
#              "unread"  "GU" \
#              "replied" "GR" \
#              "sent"    "GS" \
#              "todo"    "Gt" \
#              "deleted" "GD" \
#              "invites" "Gi"
 
# set index_format='4C %S %[%y.%m.%d] %-18.18n %?GU?%GU& ? %?GR?%GR& ? %?GI?%GI& ? %s'
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# COLORS - some unpleasant examples are given
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# These symbols are added to the index-color patch:
 
# an individual message tag, %G, uses tag name
# this symbol uses a pattern
color index_tag red white "inbox"
 
# the transformed message tags, %g
# this symbol does not use a pattern
color index_tags green default
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

23.10. Known Bugs

None

23.11. Credits

24. Progress Bar Patch

Show a visual progress bar on slow operations

24.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Progress Bar, look for patch-progress in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

24.2. Introduction

The progress patch shows a visual progress bar on slow tasks, such as indexing a large folder over the net.

24.3. Colors

Table 6.18. Progress Colors

NameDefault ColorDescription
progressdefaultVisual progress bar

24.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'progress' patch.
 
# The 'progress' patch provides clear visual feedback for
# slow tasks, such as indexing a large folder over the net.
 
# Set the color of the progress bar
# White text on a red background
color progress white red
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

24.6. Known Bugs

None

24.7. Credits

25. Quasi-Delete Patch

Mark emails that should be hidden, but not deleted

25.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Quasi-Delete, look for patch-quasi-delete in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

25.2. Introduction

The quasi-delete function marks an email that should be hidden from the index, but NOT deleted.

On its own, this patch isn't very useful. It forms a useful part of the notmuch plugin.

25.3. Functions

Table 6.19. Quasi-Delete Functions

MenusDefault KeyFunctionDescription
index,pager(none)<quasi-delete>delete from mutt, don't touch on disk

25.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'quasi-delete' feature.
 
# The 'quasi-delete' function marks an email that should be hidden
# from the index, but NOT deleted.
bind index,pager Q quasi-delete
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

25.6. Known Bugs

None

25.7. Credits

26. Sidebar Patch

Overview of mailboxes

26.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Sidebar, look for +USE_SIDEBAR in the mutt version. See: Section 1.1, “Enabling/Disabling Features”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

26.2. Introduction

The Sidebar shows a list of all your mailboxes. The list can be turned on and off, it can be themed and the list style can be configured.

This part of the manual is a reference guide. If you want a simple introduction with examples see the Sidebar Howto. If you just want to get started, you could use the sample Sidebar muttrc.

26.3. Variables

Table 6.20. Sidebar Variables

NameTypeDefault
sidebar_delim_charsstring/.
sidebar_divider_charstring|
sidebar_folder_indentbooleanno
sidebar_formatstring%B%* %n
sidebar_indent_stringstring   (two spaces)
sidebar_new_mail_onlybooleanno
sidebar_next_new_wrapbooleanno
sidebar_short_pathbooleanno
sidebar_sort_methodenumunsorted
sidebar_visiblebooleanno
sidebar_whitelistlist(empty)
sidebar_widthnumber20

For more details, and examples, about the $sidebar_format, see the Sidebar Intro.

26.4. Functions

Sidebar adds the following functions to Mutt. By default, none of them are bound to keys.

Table 6.21. Sidebar Functions

MenusFunctionDescription
index,pager<sidebar-next>Move the highlight to next mailbox
index,pager<sidebar-next-new>Move the highlight to next mailbox with new mail
index,pager<sidebar-open>Open highlighted mailbox
index,pager<sidebar-page-down>Scroll the Sidebar down 1 page
index,pager<sidebar-page-up>Scroll the Sidebar up 1 page
index,pager<sidebar-prev>Move the highlight to previous mailbox
index,pager<sidebar-prev-new>Move the highlight to previous mailbox with new mail
index,pager<sidebar-toggle-visible>Make the Sidebar (in)visible

26.5. Commands

sidebar_whitelist mailbox [ mailbox ...]

26.6. Colors

Table 6.22. Sidebar Colors

NameDefault ColorDescription
sidebar_dividerdefaultThe dividing line between the Sidebar and the Index/Pager panels
sidebar_flaggeddefaultMailboxes containing flagged mail
sidebar_highlightunderlineCursor to select a mailbox
sidebar_indicatormutt indicatorThe mailbox open in the Index panel
sidebar_newdefaultMailboxes containing new mail
sidebar_spoolfiledefaultMailbox that receives incoming mail

If the sidebar_indicator color isn't set, then the default Mutt indicator color will be used (the color used in the index panel).

26.7. Sort

Table 6.23. Sidebar Sort

SortDescription
alphaAlphabetically by path
countTotal number of messages
flaggedNumber of flagged messages
nameAlphabetically by path
newNumber of new messages
pathAlphabetically by path
unsortedOrder of the mailboxes command

26.8. Muttrc

# This is a complete list of sidebar-related configuration.
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VARIABLES - shown with their default values
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# Should the Sidebar be shown?
set sidebar_visible = no
 
# How wide should the Sidebar be in screen columns?
# Note: Some characters, e.g. Chinese, take up two columns each.
set sidebar_width = 20
 
# Should the mailbox paths be abbreviated?
set sidebar_short_path = no
 
# When abbreviating mailbox path names, use any of these characters as path
# separators.  Only the part after the last separators will be shown.
# For file folders '/' is good.  For IMAP folders, often '.' is useful.
set sidebar_delim_chars = '/.'
 
# If the mailbox path is abbreviated, should it be indented?
set sidebar_folder_indent = no
 
# Indent mailbox paths with this string.
set sidebar_indent_string = '  '
 
# Make the Sidebar only display mailboxes that contain new, or flagged,
# mail.
set sidebar_new_mail_only = no
 
# Any mailboxes that are whitelisted will always be visible, even if the
# sidebar_new_mail_only option is enabled.
sidebar_whitelist '/home/user/mailbox1'
sidebar_whitelist '/home/user/mailbox2'
 
# When searching for mailboxes containing new mail, should the search wrap
# around when it reaches the end of the list?
set sidebar_next_new_wrap = no
 
# The character to use as the divider between the Sidebar and the other Mutt
# panels.
# Note: Only the first character of this string is used.
set sidebar_divider_char = '|'
 
# Display the Sidebar mailboxes using this format string.
set sidebar_format = '%B%*  %n'
 
# If you want to display more information, this is a useful format:
set mail_check_stats
set sidebar_format = '%B%?F? [%F]?%* %?N?%N/?%S'
 
# Sort the mailboxes in the Sidebar using this method:
#       count    - total number of messages
#       flagged  - number of flagged messages
#       new      - number of new messages
#       path     - mailbox path
#       unsorted - order of the mailboxes command
set sidebar_sort_method = 'unsorted'
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# FUNCTIONS - shown with an example mapping
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# Move the highlight to the previous mailbox
bind index,pager \Cp sidebar-prev
 
# Move the highlight to the next mailbox
bind index,pager \Cn sidebar-next
 
# Open the highlighted mailbox
bind index,pager \Co sidebar-open
 
# Move the highlight to the previous page
# This is useful if you have a LOT of mailboxes.
bind index,pager <F3> sidebar-page-up
 
# Move the highlight to the next page
# This is useful if you have a LOT of mailboxes.
bind index,pager <F4> sidebar-page-down
 
# Move the highlight to the previous mailbox containing new, or flagged,
# mail.
bind index,pager <F5> sidebar-prev-new
 
# Move the highlight to the next mailbox containing new, or flagged, mail.
bind index,pager <F6> sidebar-next-new
 
# Toggle the visibility of the Sidebar.
bind index,pager B sidebar-toggle-visible
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# COLORS - some unpleasant examples are given
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Note: All color operations are of the form:
#       color OBJECT FOREGROUND BACKGROUND
 
# Color of the current, open, mailbox
# Note: This is a general Mutt option which colors all selected items.
color indicator cyan black
 
# Color of the highlighted, but not open, mailbox.
color sidebar_highlight black color8
 
# Color of the divider separating the Sidebar from Mutt panels
color sidebar_divider color8 black
 
# Color to give mailboxes containing flagged mail
color sidebar_flagged red black
 
# Color to give mailboxes containing new mail
color sidebar_new green black
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

26.10. Known Bugs

None

26.11. Credits

27. Skip-Quoted Patch

Leave some context visible

27.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports skip-quoted, look for patch-skip-quoted in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

27.2. Introduction

When viewing an email, the <skip-to-quoted> function (by default the S key) will scroll past any quoted text. Sometimes, a little context is useful.

By setting the $skip_quoted_offset variable, you can select how much of the quoted text is left visible.

27.3. Variables

Table 6.24. Skip-Quoted Variables

NameTypeDefault
skip_quoted_offsetnumber0

27.4. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'skip-quoted' patch.
 
# The 'S' (skip-quoted) command scrolls the pager past the quoted text (usually
# indented with '> '.  Setting 'skip_quoted_offset' leaves some lines of quoted
# text on screen for context.
 
# Show three quoted lines before the reply
set skip_quoted_offset = 3
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

27.5. See Also

27.6. Known Bugs

None

27.7. Credits

28. smime-encrypt-self Patch

Save an self-encrypted copy of emails

28.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports smime-encrypt-self, look for patch-smime-encrypt-self in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

28.2. Introduction

Once you encrypt an email to someone you cannot read it. This is good for security, but bad for record-keeping. If you wanted to keep a copy of an encrypted email you could set $fcc_clear.

A better option is to enable $smime_encrypt_self, then set $smime_default_key to your personal S/MIME key id.

set smime_encrypt_self = yes
set smime_default_key  = bb345e23.0

28.3. Variables

Table 6.25. smime-encrypt-self Variables

NameTypeDefault
smime_encrypt_selfquadNo

28.4. Muttrc

# This is a complete list of smime-encrypt-self-related configuration.
 
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VARIABLES - shown with their default values
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
# Save a copy of outgoing email, encrypted to yourself
set smime_encrypt_self = "no"
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

28.5. See Also

28.6. Known Bugs

None

28.7. Credits

29. Status Color Patch

Custom rules for theming the status bar

29.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Status Color, look for patch-status-color in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

29.2. Introduction

The status-color patch allows you to theme different parts of the status bar (also when it's used by the index).

Unlike normal color commands, color status can now take up to 2 extra parameters (regex, num).

29.3. Commands

color status foreground background [ regex [ num ]]

With zero parameters, Mutt will set the default color for the entire status bar.

With one parameter, Mutt will only color the parts matching the regex.

With two parameters, Mutt will only color the num'th sub-match of the regex.

29.4. Colors

Table 6.26. Status Colors

NameDefault ColorDescription
statusreverseStatus bar

29.5. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'status-color' patch.
 
# The 'status-color' patch allows you to theme different parts of
# the status bar (also when it's used by the index).
 
# For the examples below, set some defaults
set status_format='-%r-Mutt: %f [Msgs:%?M?%M/?%m%?n? New:%n?%?o? Old:%o?%?d? Del:%d?%?F? Flag:%F?%?t? Tag:%t?%?p? Post:%p?%?b? Inc:%b?%?l? %l?]---(%s/%S)-%>-(%P)---'
set index_format='%4C %Z %{%b %d} %-15.15L (%?l?%4l&%4c?) %s'
set sort=threads
set sort_aux=last-date-received
 
# 'status color' can take up to 2 extra parameters
 
# color status foreground background [ regex [ num ]]
 
# 0 extra parameters
# Set the default color for the entire status line
color status blue white
 
# 1 extra parameter
# Set the color for a matching pattern
# color status foreground background regexp
 
# Highlight New, Deleted, or Flagged emails
color status brightred white '(New|Del|Flag):[0-9]+'
 
# Highlight mailbox ordering if it's different from the default
# First, highlight anything (*/*)
color status brightred default '\([^)]+/[^)]+\)'
 
# Then override the color for one specfic case
color status default   default '\(threads/last-date-received\)'
 
# 2 extra parameters
# Set the color for the nth submatch of a pattern
# color status foreground background regexp num
 
# Highlight the contents of the []s but not the [] themselves
color status red default '\[([^]]+)\]' 1
 
# The '1' refers to the first regex submatch, which is the inner
# part in ()s
 
# Highlight the mailbox
color status brightwhite default 'Mutt: ([^ ]+)' 1
 
# Search for 'Mutt: ' but only highlight what comes after it
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

29.7. Known Bugs

None

29.8. Credits

30. Timeout Patch

Run a command periodically

30.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports timeout, look for patch-timeout in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

30.2. Introduction

This patch implements a new hook that is called periodically when Mutt checks for new mail. This hook is called every $timeout seconds.

30.3. Commands

timeout-hook . MUTT-COMMAND

30.4. Muttrc

# This is a complete list of timeout configuration.

# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# COMMANDS - shown with an example arguments
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------

# After $timeout seconds of inactivity, run this mutt command
timeout-hook . 'exec sync-mailbox'

# vim: syntax=muttrc

30.6. Known Bugs

None

30.7. Credits

31. TLS-SNI Patch

Negotiate with a server for a TSL/SSL certificate

31.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports TLS-SNI, look for patch-tls-sni in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

  • OpenSSL

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

31.2. Introduction

The TLS-SNI patch adds support for TLS virtual hosting. If your mail server doesn't support this everything will still work normally.

TLS supports sending the expected server hostname during the handshake, via the SNI extension. This can be used to select a server certificate to issue to the client, permitting virtual-hosting without requiring multiple IP addresses.

This has been tested against Exim 4.80, which optionally logs SNI and can perform vhosting.

To verify TLS SNI support by a server, you can use:

openssl s_client -host <imap server> -port <port> -tls1 -servername <imap server>

31.3. Muttrc

None

31.4. See Also

31.5. Known Bugs

None

31.6. Credits

32. Trash Folder Patch

Automatically move deleted emails to a trash bin

32.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports Trash Folder, look for patch-trash in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

If IMAP is enabled, this patch will use it

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.6.2

  • IMAP support

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

32.2. Introduction

In Mutt, when you delete an email it is first marked deleted. The email isn't really gone until <sync-mailbox> is called. This happens when the user leaves the folder, or the function is called manually.

After <sync-mailbox> has been called the email is gone forever.

The $trash variable defines a folder in which to keep old emails. As before, first you mark emails for deletion. When <sync-mailbox> is called the emails are moved to the trash folder.

The $trash path can be either a full directory, or be relative to the $folder variable, like the mailboxes command.

Note

Emails deleted from the trash folder are gone forever.

32.3. Variables

Table 6.27. Trash Variables

NameTypeDefault
trashstring(none)

32.4. Functions

Table 6.28. Trash Functions

MenusDefault KeyFunctionDescription
index,pager(none)<purge-message>really delete the current entry, bypassing the trash folder

32.5. Muttrc

# Example Mutt config file for the 'trash' feature.
 
# This feature defines a new 'trash' folder.
# When mail is deleted it will be moved to this folder.
 
# Folder in which to put deleted emails
set trash='+Trash'
set trash='/home/flatcap/Mail/Trash'
 
# The default delete key 'd' will move an email to the 'trash' folder
# Bind 'D' to REALLY delete an email
bind index D purge-message
 
# Note: Deleting emails from the 'trash' folder will REALLY delete them.
 
# vim: syntax=muttrc

32.7. Known Bugs

None

32.8. Credits

33. Sensible-Browser Patch

Make the file browser behave

33.1. Patch

To check if Mutt supports sensible-browser, look for patch-sensible-browser in the mutt version. See: Section 1.2, “Mutt Patches”.

Dependencies:

  • mutt-1.5.24

This patch is part of the NeoMutt Project.

33.2. Introduction

When using the file/folder browser, the selection isn't always where you would expect. When you navigate to '..' (parent folder), the selection should show the folder you used to be in.

33.3. Muttrc

None

33.4. See Also

33.5. Known Bugs

  • Limited to IMAP folders

  • Always on

  • Should only select folder when folder is sorted alphabetically

33.6. Credits