README 6.14 KB
README for GNU Mailutils implementation of MH 

The primary aim of this implementation is to provide an interface
between Mailutils and Emacs using mh-e module. 

To use Mailutils MH with Emacs, add the following line to your
site-start.el or .emacs file:

(load "mailutils-mh")

Refer to the file TODO in this directory for information about the
current state of Mailutils MH implementation.


The list of differences between Mailutils and the RAND implementation of MH:

* All programs use usual GNU long options. The support for MH single-dash
options is provided for backward compatibility.

* UUCP addresses are not supported

* Format specifications

** New functions

*** package
Argument: none
Return: string

Returns package name (string "mailutils").

*** package_string
Argument: none
Return: string

Returns full package string (e.g. "GNU Mailutils 2.1")

*** version
Argument: none
Return: string

Returns mailutils version.

*** unre
Argument: string
Return: string

The function removes any leading whitespace and eventual "Re:" prefix
from its argument. Useful for creating subjects in reply messages:

	%<{subject}Subject: Re: %(unre{subject})\\n%>

*** rcpt
Argument: string, one of "to", "cc", "me", "all"
Return: boolean

This function returns true if the given element is present in the
recipient mask (as modified by any --cc and --nocc options) and
false otherwise. It is used in default formats for repl and comp, e.g.:

	%(lit)%<(rcpt to)%(formataddr{to})%>

Notice that this means that usual replcomps file will be ignoring
--cc and --nocc options, unless it has been modified as shown above.

*** concat
Argument: string
Return: none

Appends whitespace + arg to string register.

*** printhdr
Argument: string
Return: none

Prints the value of string register, prefixed by the given
argument. The output is formatted as RFC 822 header, i.e.
it is split at whitespace characters nearest to the width boundary
and each subsequent segment is prefixed with horizontal tabulation.


*** in_reply_to
Argument: none
Return: string

Generates the value for the In-reply-to: header according to RFC 2822.

*** references
Argument: none
Return: string

Generates the value for the References: header according to RFC 2822.

* rmm

** Different behaviour if one of the messages in the list does not exist.

Mailutils rmm does not delete any messages. Standard rmm in this case
deletes all messages preceeding the non-existent one.

** The rmmproc: profile component is not used.

* fmtdump command is not provided. Use fmtcheck instead.

* repl

Understands --use option. Disposition shell provides 'use' command.

* comp

Understands --build option.

* mhl

If the argument to 'ignores' contains more than one component name
it must be enclosed in double-quotes. Dangling equal sign is an error,
to set a string variable to the empty value use = "", e.g.:
overflowtext="" (see the supplied mhl.format file).

Ineractive prompting is not yet implemented.

* pick

** The non-standard command line syntax `--FIELD STRING' where `FIELD' is
any string is deprecated. It is recognized only if pick is called from
within another program, so that existing application continue to work.
Please use the following syntax instead: `--component FIELD --pattern STRING'

** New command line option --cflags allows to control the type of 
regular expressions used. The option must occur right before --pattern
or --component option (or one of its aliases, like --cc, --from, etc.)
The argument to this option is a string of type specifications:

    B	     Use basic regular expressions
    E	     Use extended regular expressions
    I	     Ignore case
    C	     Case sensitive.

Default is "EI".

The flags remain in effect until the next occurrence of --cflags
option.

Sample usage:

       pick --cflag BC --subject '*a string' 

** The date comparisons (the options --before and --after) are not yet
supported.

* refile

** Linking messages between folders goes against the logic of Mailutils,
so refile never makes links even if called with --link option. The
latter is actually a synonym for --copy, which preserves the original
message.

** --preserve option is not implemented. It is retained for backward
compatibility only.

** Message specs and folder names may be interspersed.

* sortm

** New option --numfield specifies numeric comparison for the given field.

** Any number of --datefield, --textfield and --numfield options may be
given, thus allowing to build sort criteria of arbitrary complexity.

** The order of --.*field arguments sets the ordering priority. This
differs from the behaviour of the standard sortm, which always orders
datefield-major, textfield-minor.

** Apart from sorting the mailfolder the following actions may be
specified:
 --list     list the ordered messages using a format string given
	    by --form or --format option.
 --dry-run  do not actually sort messages, rather print what would
            have been done. This is useful for debugging purposes.

* mhn

** New option --compose forces mhn editing mode. This is also the default
mode. This differs from the standard mhn, which switches to the
editing mode only if no other options were given and the input file
name coincides with the value of "mhdraft" environment variable. 

** Show mode (--show)
*** If an appropriate mhn-show-type[/subtype] was not found, GNU mhn
prints the decoded message content using moreproc. Standard mhn in
this case used to print "don't know how to display content" diagnostic.

*** The default behaviour is to pipe the content to the standard input
of the mhn-show-type[/subtype] command. This is altered to using a
temporary file if the command contains %f or %F escapes.

** Store mode (--store)
*** If the Content-Disposition header contains "filename=", and mhn
is invoked with --auto switch, it transforms the filename into
the absolute notation and uses it only if it lies below the
current mhn-storage directory. Standard mhn only requires that the
filename do not begin with '/'

*** Before saving a message part, GNU mhn checks if the file already
exists. If so it asks whether the user wishes to rewrite it. This
behaviour is disabled when --quiet option was given.


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