mu/man/mu-cfind.1.org

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#+TITLE: MU CFIND
#+MAN_CLASS_OPTIONS: :section-id "@SECTION_ID@" :date "@MAN_DATE@"
* NAME
mu-cfind - find contacts in the *mu* database and export them
for use in other programs.
* SYNOPSIS
*mu [common-options] cfind [options] [<pattern>]*
* DESCRIPTION
*mu cfind* is the *mu* command for finding =contacts= (name and e-mail address of
people who were either an e-mail's sender or receiver). There are different
output formats available, for importing the contacts into other programs.
* SEARCHING CONTACTS
When you index your messages (see *mu index*), *mu* creates a list of unique e-mail
addresses found and the accompanying name, and caches this list. In case the
same e-mail address is used with different names, the most recent non-empty name
is used.
*mu cfind* starts a search for contacts that match a =regular expression=. For
example:
#+begin_example
$ mu cfind '@gmail\.com'
#+end_example
would find all contacts with a gmail-address, while
#+begin_example
$ mu cfind Mary
#+end_example
lists all contacts with Mary in either name or e-mail address.
If you do not specify a search expression, *mu cfind* returns the full list of
contacts. Note, *mu cfind* uses a cache with the e-mail information, which is
populated during the indexing process.
The regular expressions are basic case-insensitive PCRE, see *pcre(3)*.
* CFIND OPTIONS
** --format=plain|mutt-alias|mutt-ab|wl|org-contact|bbdb|csv
sets the output format to the given value. The following are available:
#+ATTR_MAN: :disable-caption t
| --format= | description |
|-------------+-----------------------------------|
| plain | default, simple list |
| mutt-alias | mutt alias-format |
| mutt-ab | mutt external address book format |
| wl | wanderlust addressbook format |
| org-contact | org-mode org-contact format |
| bbdb | BBDB format |
| csv | comma-separated values [1] |
| json | JSON format |
[1] *CSV* is not fully standardized, but *mu cfind* follows some common practices:
any double-quote is replaced by a double-double quote (thus, "hello" become
""hello"", and fields with commas are put in double-quotes. Normally, this
should only apply to name fields.
man: change quoting style The man-page sources use single quotes to quote text. However, this can be problematic in man-pages because if a single quote appears at the beginning of a line the following word is interpreted by troff as a macro. For example, this paragraph in mu-easy.7: What if we want to see some of the body of the message? You can get a 'summary' of the first lines of the message using the \fI\-\-summary\-len\fP option, which will 'summarize' the first \fIn\fP lines of the message: elicits this warning: $ man --warnings obj-x86_64-linux-gnu/man/mu-easy.7 >/dev/null troff:<standard input>:166: warning: macro 'summarize'' not defined and gets truncated: What if we want to see some of the body of the message? You can get a 'summary' of the first lines of the message using the --summary-len op‐ tion, which will One could adjust the line-wrapping to move the quoted text away from the beginning of the line, but that is fragile. Another possibility would be to use the troff escape-sequences for open and close quotes (`\(oq` and `\(cq` respectively), but ox-man is being used precisely to avoid having to handle troff directly. Instead use back-ticks for left quotes. Thus: What if we want to see some of the body of the message? You can get a `summary' of the first lines of the message using the \fI\-\-summary\-len\fP option, which will `summarize' the first \fIn\fP lines of the message: which is rendered correctly: What if we want to see some of the body of the message? You can get a `summary' of the first lines of the message using the --summary-len op- tion, which will `summarize' the first n lines of the message: Signed-off-by: Jeremy Sowden <azazel@debian.org>
2024-03-02 14:25:56 +01:00
** --personal,-p only show addresses seen in messages where one of `my' e-mail
addresses was seen in one of the address fields; this is to exclude addresses
only seen in mailing-list messages. See the ~--my-address~ parameter to *mu init*.
** --after=<timestamp> only show addresses last seen after
=<timestamp>=. =<timestamp>= is a UNIX *time_t* value, the number of
seconds since 1970-01-01 (in UTC).
From the command line, you can use the *date* command to get this value. For
example, only consider addresses last seen after 2020-06-01, you could specify
#+begin_example
--after=`date +%s --date='2020-06-01'`
#+end_example
#+include: "muhome.inc" :minlevel 2
#+include: "common-options.inc" :minlevel 1
* JSON FORMAT
With ~--format=json~, the matching contacts come out as a JSON array, e.g.,
#+begin_example
[
{
"email" : "syb@example.com",
"name" : "Sybil Gerard",
"display" : "Sybil Gerard <syb@example.com>",
"last-seen" : 1075982687,
"last-seen-iso" : "2004-02-05T14:04:47Z",
"personal" : false,
"frequency" : 14
},
{
"email" : "ed@example.com",
"name" : "Mallory, Edward",
"display" : "\"Mallory, Edward\" <ed@example.com>",
"last-seen" : 1425991805,
"last-seen-iso" : "2015-03-10T14:50:05Z",
"personal" : true,
"frequency" : 2
}
]
#+end_example
Each contact has the following fields:
#+ATTR_MAN: :disable-caption t
| property | description |
|---------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| ~email~ | the email-address |
| ~name~ | the name (or ~none~) |
| ~display~ | the combination name and e-mail address for display purposes |
| ~last-seen~ | date of most recent message with this contact (Unix time) |
| ~last-seen-iso~ | ~last-seen~ represented as an ISO-8601 timestamp |
| ~personal~ | whether the email was seen in a message together with a personal address |
| ~frequency~ | approximation of the number of times this contact was seen in messages |
The JSON format is useful for further processing, e.g. using the *jq(1)* tool:
List display names, sorted by their last-seen date:
#+begin_example
$ mu cfind --format=json --personal | jq -r '.[] | ."last-seen-iso" + " " + .display' | sort
#+end_example
* INTEGRATION WITH MUTT
You can use *mu cfind* as an external address book server for *mutt*.
For this to work, add the following to your =muttrc=:
#+begin_example
set query_command = "mu cfind --format=mutt-ab '%s'"
#+end_example
Now, in mutt, you can search for e-mail addresses using the *query*-command,
which is (by default) accessible by pressing *Q*.
* ENCODING
*mu cfind* output is encoded according to the current locale except for
=--format=bbdb=. This is hard-coded to UTF-8, and as such specified in the
output-file, so emacs/bbdb can handle things correctly, without guessing.
2023-01-29 14:38:06 +01:00
#+include: "exit-code.inc" :minlevel 1
#+include: "bugs.inc" :minlevel 1
#+include: "author.inc" :minlevel 1
#+include: "copyright.inc" :minlevel 1
* SEE ALSO
*mu(1)*, *mu-index(1)*, *mu-find(1)*, *pcre(3)*, *jq(1)*