#+style: #+html: #+title: Mu Cheatsheet * Mu Cheatsheet Here are some tips for using =mu=. If you want to know more, please refer to the =mu= man pages. For a quick warm-up, there's the =mu-easy= man-page. ** Indexing your mail You can index your mail with: #+html: $ mu index If =mu= did not guess the right Maildir, you can set it explicitly: #+html: $ mu index --maildir=~/MyMaildir *** Excluding directories from indexing If you want to exclude certain directories from being indexed (for example, directories with spam-messages), put a file called =.noindex= in the directory to exlude, and it will be ignored when indexing (including its children) ** Finding messages After you have indexed your messages, you can search them. Here are some examples. *** messages about Helsinki (in message body, subject, sender, ...) #+html: $ mu find Helsinki *** messages to Jack with subject jellyfish containing the word tumbleweed #+html: $ mu find to:Jack subject:jellyfish tumbleweed *** messages between 2 kilobytes and a 2Mb, written in December 2009 with an attachment from Bill #+example $ mu find size:2k..2m date:20091201..20093112 flag:attach from:bill *** unread messages about soccer or socrates or ... #+html: $ mu find 'subject:soc*' flag:unread ** Finding contacts Contacts (names + email addresses) are cached separately, and can be searched with =mu cfind= (after your messages have been indexed): *** all contacts with 'john' in either name or e-mail address #+html: $ mu cfind john =mu cfind= takes a regular expression for matching. You can export the contact information to a number of formats for use in e-mail clients. For examples: *** export /all/ your contacts to the =mutt= addressbook format #+html: $ mu cfind --format=mutt-alias Other formats are: =plain=, =mutt-ab=, =wl= (Wanderlust), =org-contact=, =bbdb= and =csv= (comma-separated values). ** Retrieving attachments from messages You can retrieve attachments from messages using =mu extract=, which takes a message file as an argument. Without any other arguments, it displays the MIME-parts of the message. You can then get specific attachments: #+html: $ mu extract --parts=3,4 my-msg-file will get you parts 3 and 4. You can also extract files based on their name: #+html: $ mu extract my-msg-file '.*\.jpg' The second argument is a case-insensitive regular expression, and the command will extract any files matching the pattern -- in the example, all =.jpg=-files. Do not confuse the '.*' regular expression in =mu extract= (and =mu cfind= with the '*' wildcard in =mu find=. ** Getting more colorful output Some of the =mu= commands, such as =mu find=, =mu cfind= and =mu view= support colorized output. By default this is turned off, but you can enable it with =--color=, or setting the =MU_COLORS= environment variable to non-empty. #+html: $ mu find --color capibara (since =mu= version 0.9.6) ** Further processing of matched messages If you need to process the results of your queries with some other program, you can return the results as a list of absolute paths to the messages found: For example, to get the number of lines in all your messages mentioning /banana/, you could use something like: #+html: $ mu find --fields="'l'" banana | xargs wc -l Note that we use ='l'=, so the returned message paths will be quoted. This is useful if you have maildirs with spaces in their names. For further processing, also the ~--format=(xml|json|sexp)~ can be useful. For example, #+html: $ mu find --format=xml pancake will give you a list of pancake-related messages in XML-format. ** Integration with mail clients The =mu-find= man page contains examples for =mutt= and =wanderlust=. #+html:
© 2011 Dirk-Jan C. Binnema
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