mu/man/mu-server.1

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.TH MU-SERVER 1 "September 2012" "User Manuals"
.SH NAME
mu server \- the mu backend for the mu4e e-mail client
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B mu server [options]
.SH DESCRIPTION
\fBmu server\fR starts a simple shell in which one can query and manipulate
the mu database. The output of the commands is terms of Lisp symbolic
expressions (s-exps). \fBmu server\fR is not meant for use by humans; instead,
it is designed specifically for the \fBmu4e\fR e-mail client.
In this man-page, we document the commands \fBmu server\fR accepts, as well as
their responses. In general, the commands sent to the server are of the form
.nf
cmd:<command> [<parameters>]*
.fi
where each of the parameters is prefixed by their name and a colon. For
example, to view a certain message, the command would be:
.nf
cmd:view docid:12345
.fi
Parameters can be sent in any order, and parameters not used by a certain
command are simply ignored.
.SH OUTPUT FORMAT
\fBmu server\fR accepts a number of commands, and delivers its results in
the form:
.nf
\\376<length>\\377<s-expr>
.fi
\\376 (one byte 0xfe), followed by the length of the s-expression expressed as
an hexadecimal number, followed by another \\377 (one byte 0xff), followed by
the actual s-expression.
By prefixing the expression with its length, it can be processed more
efficiently. The \\376 and \\377 were chosen since they never occur in valid
UTF-8 (in which the s-expressions are encoded).
.SH COMMAND AND RESPONSE
.TP
.B add
Using the \fBadd\fR command, we can add a message to the database.
.nf
-> cmd:add path:<path> maildir:<maildir>
<- (:info add :path <path> :docid <docid>)
.fi
.TP
.B compose
Using the \fBcompose\fR command, we get the (original) message, and tell what
to do with it. The user-interface is then expected to pre-process the message,
e.g. set the subject, sender and recipient for a reply message.
Messages of type 'new' don't use the docid: parameter, the other ones do.
.nf
-> cmd:compose type:<reply|forward|edit|new> [docid:<docid>]
<- (:compose <reply|forward|edit|new> :original <s-exp> :include (<list-of-attachments))
.fi
The <list-of-attachments> is an s-expression describing the attachments to
include in the message; this currently only applies to message we are
forwarding. This s-expression looks like:
.nf
(:file-name <filename> :mime-type <mime-type> :disposition <disposition>)
.fi
.TP
.B contacts
Using the \fBcompose\fR command, we can retrieve an s-expression with all known
contacts (name + e-mail address). For the details, see \fBmu-cfind(1)\fR.
.nf
-> cmd:contacts [personal:true|false] [after:<time_t>]
<- (:contacts ((:name abc :mail foo@example.com ...) ...)
.fi
.TP
.B extract
Using the \fBextract\fR command we can save and open attachments.
.nf
-> cmd:extract action:<save|open|temp> index:<index> [path:<path>] [what:<what> [param:<param>]]
.fi
If the action is 'save', the path argument is required; the attachment will
be saved, and a message
.nf
<- (:info save :message "... has been saved")
.fi
is sent.
If the action is 'open', the attachment will saved to a temporary file, after
which it will be opened with the default handler for this kind of file (see
\fBmu-extract\fR(1)), and a message
.nf
<- (:info open :message "... has been opened")
.fi
is sent.
If the action is 'temp', the arguments 'what' is required. The attachment will
saved to a temporary file, and the following message is sent:
.nf
<- (:temp :what <what> :param <param :docid 12345)
.fi
The front-end can then take action on the temp file, based on what :what and
:param contain. \fBmu4e\fR uses this mechanism e.g. for piping an attachment
to a shell command.
.TP
.B find
Using the \fBfind\fR command we can search for messages.
.nf
-> cmd:find query:"<query>" [threads:true|false] [sortfield:<sortfield>]
[reverse:true|false] [maxnum:<maxnum>]
.fi
The \fBquery\fR-parameter provides the search query; the
\fBthreads\fR-parameter determines whether the results will be returned in
threaded fashion or not; the \fBsortfield\fR-parameter (a string, "to",
"from", "subject", "date", "size", "prio") sets the search field, the
\fBreverse\fR-parameter, if true, set the sorting order Z->A and, finally, the
\fBmaxnum\fR-parameter limits the number of results to return (<= 0
means 'unlimited').
First, this will return an 'erase'-sexp, to clear the buffer from possible
results from a previous query.
.nf
<- (:erase t)
.fi
This will return a series of 0 up to <maxnum> s-expression corresponding to
each message found (if there's no maxnum, all results will be returned). The
information message s-exps this function returns do not contain the message
body; the \fBview\fR command is for that.
.nf
<- (...)
.fi
and finally, we receive:
.nf
<- (:found <number-of-matches>)
.fi
.TP
.B guile
The \fBguile\fR command is reserved for future use.
.TP
.B index
Using the \fBindex\fR command, we can (re)index the database, similar to what
\fBmu find\fR does. The \fBmy-addresses\fR parameter (optionally)
registers 'my' email addresses; see the documentation for
\fBmu_store_set_my_addresses\fR.
.nf
-> cmd:index path:<path> [my-addresses:<comma-separated-list-of-email-addresses>]
.fi
As a response, it will send (for each 1000 messages):
.nf
(:info index :status running :processed <processed> :updated <updated>)
.fi
and finally:
.nf
(:info index :status complete :processed <processed :updated <updated>
:cleaned-up <cleaned-up>)
.fi
.TP
.B mkdir
Using the \fBmkdir\fR command, we can create a new maildir.
.nf
-> cmd:mkdir path:<path>
<- (:info mkdir :message "<maildir> has been created")
.fi
.TP
.B move
Using the \fBmove\fR command, we can move messages to another maildir or
change its flags (which ultimately means it is being move to a different
filename), and update the database correspondingly. The function returns an
s-exp describing the updated message, so that it can be updated in the user
interface.
.nf
-> cmd:move docid:<docid>|msgid:<msgid> [maildir:<maildir>] [flags:<flags>]
<- (:update <s-exp> :move t)
.fi
One of docid and msgid must be specified to identify the message. At least one
of maildir and flags must be specified.
.TP
.B ping
The \fBping\fR command provokes a \fBpong\fR response. It is used for the initial
handshake between \fBmu4e\fR and \fBmu server\fR.
.nf
-> cmd:ping
<- (:pong "mu" :version <version> :doccount <doccount>)
.fi
.TP
.B remove
Using the \fBremove\fR command, we can remove the message from disk, and
update the database accordingly.
.nf
-> cmd:remove docid:<docid>
<- (:remove <docid>)
.fi
.TP
.B view
Using the \fBview\fR command, we can retrieve all information (including the
body) of a particular e-mail message.
If the optional parameter \fBextract-images\fR is \fBtrue\fR, extract images
to temp files, and include links to them in the returned s-exp.
If the optional parameter \fBuse-agent\fR is \fBtrue\fR, try to use
\fBgpg-agent\fR when verifying PGP/GPG message parts.
If the optional parameter \fBauto-retrieve-key\fR is \fBtrue\fR, attempt to
retrieve public keys online automatically.
.nf
-> cmd:view docid:<docid>|msgid:<msgid> [extract-images:true] [use-agent:false] [auto-retrieve-key:false]
<- (:view <s-exp>)
.fi
or, alternatively:
.nf
-> cmd:view path:<path-to-msg> [extract-images:true] [use-agent:false] [auto-retrieve-key:false]
<- (:view <s-exp>)
.fi
.SH AUTHOR
Dirk-Jan C. Binnema <djcb@djcbsoftware.nl>
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR mu (1)