mu-server: update documentation
This commit is contained in:
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man/mu-server.1
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man/mu-server.1
@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
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.TH MU-SERVER 1 "September 2012" "User Manuals"
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.TH MU-SERVER 1 "January 2020" "User Manuals"
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.SH NAME
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@ -10,27 +10,28 @@ mu server \- the mu backend for the mu4e e-mail client
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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\fBmu server\fR starts a simple shell in which one can query and manipulate
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the mu database. The output of the commands is terms of Lisp symbolic
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expressions (s-exps). \fBmu server\fR is not meant for use by humans; instead,
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it is designed specifically for the \fBmu4e\fR e-mail client.
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\fBmu server\fR starts a simple shell in which one can query and manipulate the
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mu database. The output uses s-expressiong. \fBmu server\fR is not meant for use
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by humans, except for debugging purposes. Instead, it is designed specifically
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for the \fBmu4e\fR e-mail client.
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In this man-page, we document the commands \fBmu server\fR accepts, as well as
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their responses. In general, the commands sent to the server are of the form
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their responses. In general, the commands sent to the server are s-expressions
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of the form:
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.nf
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cmd:<command> [<parameters>]*
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(<command-name> :param1 value1 :param2 value2)
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.fi
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where each of the parameters is prefixed by their name and a colon. For
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example, to view a certain message, the command would be:
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For example, to view a certain message, the command would be:
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.nf
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cmd:view docid:12345
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(view :docid 12345)
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.fi
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Parameters can be sent in any order, and parameters not used by a certain
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command are simply ignored.
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Parameters can be sent in any order; they must be of the correct type though.
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See \fBlib/utils/mu-sexp-parser.hh\fR and \fBlib/utils/mu-sexp-parser.hh\fR in
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source-tree for the details.
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.SH OUTPUT FORMAT
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@ -50,223 +51,8 @@ By prefixing the expression with its length, it can be processed more
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efficiently. The \\376 and \\377 were chosen since they never occur in valid
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UTF-8 (in which the s-expressions are encoded).
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.SH COMMAND AND RESPONSE
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.sh COMMANDS
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.TP
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.B add
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Using the \fBadd\fR command, we can add a message to the database.
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.nf
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-> cmd:add path:<path> maildir:<maildir>
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<- (:info add :path <path> :docid <docid>)
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.fi
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.TP
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.B compose
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Using the \fBcompose\fR command, we get the (original) message, and tell what
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to do with it. The user-interface is then expected to pre-process the message,
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e.g. set the subject, sender and recipient for a reply message.
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Messages of type 'new' don't use the docid: parameter, the other ones do.
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.nf
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-> cmd:compose type:<reply|forward|edit|new> [docid:<docid>]
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<- (:compose <reply|forward|edit|new> :original <s-exp> :include (<list-of-attachments))
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.fi
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The <list-of-attachments> is an s-expression describing the attachments to
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include in the message; this currently only applies to message we are
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forwarding. This s-expression looks like:
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.nf
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(:file-name <filename> :mime-type <mime-type> :disposition <disposition>)
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.fi
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.TP
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.B contacts
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Using the \fBcompose\fR command, we can retrieve an s-expression with all known
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contacts (name + e-mail address). For the details, see \fBmu-cfind(1)\fR.
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.nf
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-> cmd:contacts [personal:true|false] [after:<time_t>]
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<- (:contacts ((:name abc :mail foo@example.com ...) ...)
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.fi
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.TP
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.B extract
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Using the \fBextract\fR command we can save and open attachments.
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.nf
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-> cmd:extract action:<save|open|temp> index:<index> [path:<path>] [what:<what> [param:<param>]]
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.fi
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If the action is 'save', the path argument is required; the attachment will
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be saved, and a message
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.nf
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<- (:info save :message "... has been saved")
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.fi
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is sent.
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If the action is 'open', the attachment will saved to a temporary file, after
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which it will be opened with the default handler for this kind of file (see
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\fBmu-extract\fR(1)), and a message
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.nf
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<- (:info open :message "... has been opened")
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.fi
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is sent.
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If the action is 'temp', the arguments 'what' is required. The attachment will
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saved to a temporary file, and the following message is sent:
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.nf
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<- (:temp :what <what> :param <param :docid 12345)
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.fi
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The front-end can then take action on the temp file, based on what :what and
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:param contain. \fBmu4e\fR uses this mechanism e.g. for piping an attachment
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to a shell command.
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.TP
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.B find
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Using the \fBfind\fR command we can search for messages.
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.nf
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-> cmd:find query:"<query>" [threads:true|false] [sortfield:<sortfield>]
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[reverse:true|false] [maxnum:<maxnum>]
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.fi
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The \fBquery\fR-parameter provides the search query; the
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\fBthreads\fR-parameter determines whether the results will be returned in
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threaded fashion or not; the \fBsortfield\fR-parameter (a string, "to",
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"from", "subject", "date", "size", "prio") sets the search field, the
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\fBreverse\fR-parameter, if true, set the sorting order Z->A and, finally, the
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\fBmaxnum\fR-parameter limits the number of results to return (<= 0
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means 'unlimited').
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First, this will return an 'erase'-sexp, to clear the buffer from possible
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results from a previous query.
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.nf
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<- (:erase t)
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.fi
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This will return a series of 0 up to <maxnum> s-expression corresponding to
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each message found (if there's no maxnum, all results will be returned). The
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information message s-exps this function returns do not contain the message
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body; the \fBview\fR command is for that.
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.nf
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<- (...)
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.fi
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and finally, we receive:
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.nf
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<- (:found <number-of-matches>)
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.fi
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.TP
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.B guile
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The \fBguile\fR command is reserved for future use.
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.TP
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.B index
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Using the \fBindex\fR command, we can (re)index the database, similar to what
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\fBmu find\fR does. The \fBmy-addresses\fR parameter (optionally)
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registers 'my' email addresses; see the documentation for
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\fBmu_store_set_my_addresses\fR.
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.nf
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-> cmd:index path:<path> [my-addresses:<comma-separated-list-of-email-addresses>]
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.fi
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As a response, it will send (for each 1000 messages):
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.nf
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(:info index :status running :processed <processed> :updated <updated>)
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.fi
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and finally:
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.nf
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(:info index :status complete :processed <processed :updated <updated>
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:cleaned-up <cleaned-up>)
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.fi
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.TP
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.B mkdir
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Using the \fBmkdir\fR command, we can create a new maildir.
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.nf
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-> cmd:mkdir path:<path>
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<- (:info mkdir :message "<maildir> has been created")
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.fi
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.TP
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.B move
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Using the \fBmove\fR command, we can move messages to another maildir or
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change its flags (which ultimately means it is being move to a different
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filename), and update the database correspondingly. The function returns an
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s-exp describing the updated message, so that it can be updated in the user
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interface.
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.nf
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-> cmd:move docid:<docid>|msgid:<msgid> [maildir:<maildir>] [flags:<flags>]
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<- (:update <s-exp> :move t)
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.fi
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One of docid and msgid must be specified to identify the message. At least one
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of maildir and flags must be specified.
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.TP
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.B ping
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The \fBping\fR command provokes a \fBpong\fR response. It is used for the initial
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handshake between \fBmu4e\fR and \fBmu server\fR.
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.nf
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-> cmd:ping
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<- (:pong "mu" :version <version> :doccount <doccount>)
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.fi
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.TP
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.B remove
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Using the \fBremove\fR command, we can remove the message from disk, and
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update the database accordingly.
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.nf
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-> cmd:remove docid:<docid>
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<- (:remove <docid>)
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.fi
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.TP
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.B view
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Using the \fBview\fR command, we can retrieve all information (including the
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body) of a particular e-mail message.
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If the optional parameter \fBextract-images\fR is \fBtrue\fR, extract images
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to temp files, and include links to them in the returned s-exp.
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If the optional parameter \fBuse-agent\fR is \fBtrue\fR, try to use
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\fBgpg-agent\fR when verifying PGP/GPG message parts.
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If the optional parameter \fBauto-retrieve-key\fR is \fBtrue\fR, attempt to
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retrieve public keys online automatically.
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.nf
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-> cmd:view docid:<docid>|msgid:<msgid> [extract-images:true] [use-agent:false] [auto-retrieve-key:false]
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<- (:view <s-exp>)
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.fi
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or, alternatively:
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.nf
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-> cmd:view path:<path-to-msg> [extract-images:true] [use-agent:false] [auto-retrieve-key:false]
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<- (:view <s-exp>)
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.fi
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.SH AUTHOR
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Dirk-Jan C. Binnema <djcb@djcbsoftware.nl>
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101
mu4e/mu4e.texi
101
mu4e/mu4e.texi
@ -4568,22 +4568,23 @@ them. @t{mu} can run in a special @t{server}-mode, where it provides services
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@node mu server
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@section @t{mu server}
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@t{mu4e} is based on the @t{mu} e-mail searching/indexer. The latter is a
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C-program; there are different ways to communicate with a client that is
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emacs-based.
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@t{mu4e} is based on the @t{mu} e-mail searching/indexer. The latter
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is a C++-program; there are different ways to communicate with a
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client that is emacs-based.
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One way to implement this, would be to call the @t{mu} command-line tool with
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some parameters and then parse the output. In fact, that was the first
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approach --- @t{mu4e} would invoke e.g., @t{mu find} and process the output in
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@command{emacs}.
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One way to implement this, would be to call the @t{mu} command-line
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tool with some parameters and then parse the output. In fact, that was
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the first approach --- @t{mu4e} would invoke e.g., @t{mu find} and
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process the output in @command{emacs}.
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However, with this approach, we need to load the entire e-mail @emph{Xapian}
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database (in which the message is stored) for each invocation. Wouldn't it be
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nicer to keep a running @t{mu} instance around? Indeed, it would --- and thus,
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the @t{mu server} sub-command was born. Running @t{mu server} starts a simple
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shell, in which you can give commands to @command{mu}, which then spits out
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the results/errors. @command{mu server} is not meant for humans, but it can be
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used manually, which is great for debugging.
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However, with this approach, we need to load the entire e-mail
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@emph{Xapian} database (in which the message is stored) for each
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invocation. Wouldn't it be nicer to keep a running @t{mu} instance
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around? Indeed, it would --- and thus, the @t{mu server} sub-command
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was born. Running @t{mu server} starts a simple shell, in which you
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can give commands to @command{mu}, which then spits out the
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results/errors. @command{mu server} is not meant for humans, but it
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can be used manually, which is great for debugging.
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@node Reading from the server
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@section Reading from the server
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@ -4610,10 +4611,11 @@ invoked whenever the process has some data for us. Something like:
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(set-process-sentinel proc 'my-process-sentinel))
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@end lisp
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Note, the process sentinel is invoked when the process is terminated --- so
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there you can clean things up. The function @code{my-process-filter} is a
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user-defined function that takes the process and the chunk of output as
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arguments; in @t{mu4e} it looks something like (pseudo-lisp):
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Note, the process sentinel is invoked when the process is terminated
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--- so there you can clean things up. The function
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@code{my-process-filter} is a user-defined function that takes the
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process and the chunk of output as arguments; in @t{mu4e} it looks
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something like (pseudo-lisp):
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@lisp
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(defun my-process-filter (proc str)
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@ -4625,16 +4627,19 @@ arguments; in @t{mu4e} it looks something like (pseudo-lisp):
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<evaluate-expression>))
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@end lisp
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@code{<evaluate-expression>} de-multiplexes the s-expression we got. For
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example, if the s-expression looks like an e-mail message header, it is
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processed by the header-handling function, which appends it to the header
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list. If the s-expression looks like an error message, it is reported to the
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user. And so on.
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@code{<evaluate-expression>} de-multiplexes the s-expression we got.
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For example, if the s-expression looks like an e-mail message header,
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it is processed by the header-handling function, which appends it to
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the header list. If the s-expression looks like an error message, it
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is reported to the user. And so on.
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The language between frontend and backend is documented in the @t{mu-server}
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man-page. @t{mu4e} can log these communications; you can use @kbd{M-x
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mu4e-toggle-logging} to turn logging on and off, and you can view the log
|
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using @kbd{M-x mu4e-show-log} (@key{$}).
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The language between frontend and backend is documented partly in the
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@t{mu-server} man-page and more completely in the output of @t{mu
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server --commands}.
|
||||
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||||
@t{mu4e} can log these communications; you can use @kbd{M-x
|
||||
mu4e-toggle-logging} to turn logging on and off, and you can view the
|
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log using @kbd{M-x mu4e-show-log} (@key{$}).
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||||
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@node The message s-expression
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@section The message s-expression
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||||
@ -4680,8 +4685,9 @@ Some notes on the format:
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where @t{name} can be @t{nil}.
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@item The date is in format @command{emacs} uses (for example in
|
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@code{current-time}).@footnote{Emacs 32-bit integers have only 29 bits
|
||||
available for the actual number; the other bits are use by @command{emacs} for
|
||||
internal purposes. Therefore, we need to split @t{time_t} in two numbers.}
|
||||
available for the actual number; the other bits are use by
|
||||
@command{emacs} for internal purposes. Therefore, we need to split
|
||||
@t{time_t} in two numbers.}
|
||||
@item Attachments are a list of elements with fields @t{:index} (the number of
|
||||
the MIME-part), @t{:name} (the file name, if any), @t{:mime-type} (the
|
||||
MIME-type, if any) and @t{:size} (the size in bytes, if any).
|
||||
@ -4692,24 +4698,26 @@ MIME-type, if any) and @t{:size} (the size in bytes, if any).
|
||||
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||||
@subsection Example: ping-pong
|
||||
|
||||
As an example of the communication between @t{mu4e} and @command{mu}, let's
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||||
look at the @t{ping-pong}-sequence. When @t{mu4e} starts, it sends a command
|
||||
@t{ping} to the @t{mu server} backend, to learn about its version. @t{mu
|
||||
server} then responds with a @t{pong} s-expression to provide this information
|
||||
(this is implemented in @file{mu-cmd-server.c}).
|
||||
As an example of the communication between @t{mu4e} and @command{mu},
|
||||
let's look at the @t{ping-pong}-sequence. When @t{mu4e} starts, it
|
||||
sends a command @t{ping} to the @t{mu server} backend, to learn about
|
||||
its version. @t{mu server} then responds with a @t{pong} s-expression
|
||||
to provide this information (this is implemented in
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||||
@file{mu-cmd-server.c}).
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||||
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||||
We start this sequence when @t{mu4e} is invoked (when the program is
|
||||
started). It calls @t{mu4e-proc-ping}, and registers a (lambda) function for
|
||||
@t{mu4e-proc-pong-func}, to handle the response.
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||||
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||||
@verbatim
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||||
-> cmd:ping
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||||
<- (pong "mu" :version "x.x.x" :doccount 10000)
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-> (ping)
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||||
<-<prefix>(:pong "mu" :props (:version "x.x.x" :doccount 78545))
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||||
@end verbatim
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||||
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||||
When we receive such a @t{pong} (in @file{mu4e-proc.el}), the lambda function
|
||||
we registered is called, and it compares the version we got from the @t{pong}
|
||||
with the version we expected, and raises an error if they differ.
|
||||
When we receive such a @t{pong} (in @file{mu4e-proc.el}), the lambda
|
||||
function we registered is called, and it compares the version we got
|
||||
from the @t{pong} with the version we expected, and raises an error if
|
||||
they differ.
|
||||
|
||||
@node Debugging
|
||||
@appendix Debugging
|
||||
@ -4717,14 +4725,15 @@ with the version we expected, and raises an error if they differ.
|
||||
As explained in @ref{How it works}, @t{mu4e} communicates with its backend
|
||||
(@t{mu server}) by sending commands and receiving responses (s-expressions).
|
||||
|
||||
For debugging purposes, it can be very useful to see this data. For this
|
||||
reason, @t{mu4e} can log all these messages. Note that the `protocol' is
|
||||
documented to some extent in the @t{mu-server} manpage.
|
||||
For debugging purposes, it can be very useful to see this data. For
|
||||
this reason, @t{mu4e} can log all these messages. Note that the
|
||||
`protocol' is documented to some extent in the @t{mu-server} manpage.
|
||||
|
||||
You can enable (and disable) logging with @kbd{M-x mu4e-toggle-logging}. The
|
||||
log-buffer is called @t{*mu4e-log*}, and in the @ref{Main view}, @ref{Headers
|
||||
view} and @ref{Message view}, there's a keybinding @key{$} that takes you
|
||||
there. You can quit it by pressing @key{q}.
|
||||
You can enable (and disable) logging with @kbd{M-x
|
||||
mu4e-toggle-logging}. The log-buffer is called @t{*mu4e-log*}, and in
|
||||
the @ref{Main view}, @ref{Headers view} and @ref{Message view},
|
||||
there's a keybinding @key{$} that takes you there. You can quit it by
|
||||
pressing @key{q}.
|
||||
|
||||
Logging can be a bit resource-intensive, so you may not want to leave
|
||||
it on all the time. By default, the log only maintains the most recent
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user