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137 lines
4.1 KiB
Groff
137 lines
4.1 KiB
Groff
.TH MU CFIND 1 "May 2013" "User Manuals"
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.SH NAME
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\fBmu cfind\fR is the \fBmu\fR command to find contacts in the \fBmu\fR
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database and export them for use in other programs.
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B mu cfind [options] [<pattern>]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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\fBmu cfind\fR is the \fBmu\fR command for finding \fIcontacts\fR (name and
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e-mail address of people who were either an e-mail's sender or
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receiver). There are different output formats available, for importing the
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contacts into other programs.
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.SH SEARCHING CONTACTS
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When you index your messages (see \fBmu index\fR), \fBmu\fR creates a list of
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unique e-mail addresses found and the accompanying name, and caches this
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list. In case the same e-mail address is used with different names, the most
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recent non-empty name is used.
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\fBmu cfind\fR starts a search for contacts that match a \fIregular
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expression\fR. For example:
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.nf
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$ mu cfind '@gmail\.com'
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.fi
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would find all contacts with a gmail-address, while
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.nf
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$ mu cfind Mary
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.fi
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lists all contacts with Mary in either name or e-mail address.
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If you do not specify a search expression, \fBmu cfind\fR returns the full
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list of contacts. Note, \fBmu cfind\fR does not use the
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database, but uses a cache file with e-mail addresses, which is populated
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during the indexing process.
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The regular expressions are Perl-compatible (as per the PCRE-library used by
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GRegex).
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.SH OPTIONS
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.TP
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\fB\-\-format\fR=\fIplain|mutt-alias|mutt-ab|wl|org-contact|bbdb|csv\fR
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sets the output format to the given value. The following are available:
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.nf
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| --format= | description |
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|-------------+-----------------------------------|
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| plain | default, simple list |
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| mutt-alias | mutt alias-format |
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| mutt-ab | mutt external address book format |
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| wl | wanderlust addressbook format |
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| org-contact | org-mode org-contact format |
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| bbdb | BBDB format |
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| csv | comma-separated values (*) |
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.fi
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(*) CSV is not really standardized, but \fBmu cfind\fR follows some common
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practices: any double-quote is replaced by a double-double quote (thus,
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"hello" become ""hello"", and fields with commas are put in
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double-quotes. Normally, this should only apply to name fields.
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.TP
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\fB\-\-personal\fR only show addresses seen in messages where one of 'my'
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e-mail addresses was seen in one of the address fields; this is to exclude
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addresses only seen in mailing-list messages. See the \fB\-\-my-address\fR
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parameter in \fBmu index\fR.
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.TP
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\fB\-\-after=\fR\fI<timestamp>\fR only show addresses last seen after
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\fI<timestamp>\fR. \fI<timestamp>\fR is a UNIX \fBtime_t\fR value, the number
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of seconds since 1970-01-01 (in UTC).
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From the command line, you can use the \fBdate\fR command to get this
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value. For example, only consider addresses last seen after 2009-06-01, you
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could specify
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.nf
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--after=`date +%s --date='2009-06-01'`
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.fi
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.SH RETURN VALUE
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\fBmu cfind\fR returns 0 upon successful completion -- that is, at least one
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contact was found. Anything else leads to a non-zero return value:
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.nf
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| code | meaning |
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|------+--------------------------------|
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| 0 | ok |
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| 1 | general error |
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| 2 | no matches (for 'mu cfind') |
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.fi
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.SH INTEGRATION WITH MUTT
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You can use \fBmu cfind\fR as an external address book server for
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\fBmutt\fR. For this to work, add the following to your \fImuttrc\fR:
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.nf
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set query_command = "mu cfind --format=mutt-ab '%s'"
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.fi
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Now, in mutt, you can easily search for e-mail addresses using the
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\fBquery\fR-command, which is (by default) accessible by pressing \fBQ\fR.
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.SH ENCODING
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\fBmu cfind\fR output is encoded according to the current locale except for
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\fI--format=bbdb\fR. This is hard-coded to UTF-8, and as such specified in the
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output-file, so emacs/bbdb can handle things correctly, without guessing.
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.SH BUGS
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Please report bugs if you find them at
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\fBhttp://code.google.com/p/mu0/issues/list\fR.
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.SH AUTHOR
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Dirk-Jan C. Binnema <djcb@djcbsoftware.nl>
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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.BR mu(1)
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.BR mu-index(1)
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.BR mu-find(1)
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.BR pcrepattern(3)
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