From e7cba3733bf8295cb944a7ca0c6ad97c903e78e3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "W. Trevor King" Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2012 15:05:55 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] posts:mutt: assorted editing. no major changes. --- posts/Mutt.mdwn | 68 +++++++++++++++++++++++-------------------------- 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+), 36 deletions(-) diff --git a/posts/Mutt.mdwn b/posts/Mutt.mdwn index 2604086..2cd42f6 100644 --- a/posts/Mutt.mdwn +++ b/posts/Mutt.mdwn @@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ and msmpt with $ apt-get install mutt msmtp -Configure -========= +Single IMAP account +=================== You configure Mutt with the file `~/.muttrc`. To set it up with the Drexel email system, I looked up the server addresses, and created the @@ -92,15 +92,10 @@ Usage There's list of basic shortcuts across the top of the Mutt screen. Most importantly, `?:Help`, which will give a list of all the current -shortcuts. +shortcuts. An excellent tutorial page is [my first mutt][mfm]. -Tutorial -======== - -An excellent tutorial page is [my first mutt][mfm]. - -Multiple accounts -================= +Multiple IMAP accounts +====================== I finally had some time to play around and get Drexel mail and Gmail working at the same time. The basic setup is the same as above, using @@ -122,8 +117,8 @@ First configure msmtp with: user password tls on - #tls_trust_file /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt - tls_trust_file /etc/pki/tls/cert.pem + tls_trust_file /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt + #tls_trust_file /etc/pki/tls/cert.pem account gmail host smtp.gmail.com @@ -142,13 +137,13 @@ server. `` is your username (`abc123`), `` can be the same as ``, but you can use any address you've set up as an alias. `@gmail.com` is your full gmail email address. The -`tls_trust_file` line depends on your distribution. For Debian-based -distributions, use the `ca-certificates.crt` line; and for Red -Hat-based distributions, use the `cert.pem` line. I don't know where -the certificate information is stored for other distributions, but -googling about should find it. +`tls_trust_file` line depends on your distribution. For Gentoo and +Debian-based distributions, use the `ca-certificates.crt` line; and +for Red Hat-based distributions, use the `cert.pem` line. I don't +know where the certificate information is stored for other +distributions, but googling about should find it. -Then configure mutt with +Configure mutt with # ~/.muttrc @@ -180,8 +175,8 @@ Then configure mutt with set use_from=yes # required so msmtp knows which account to use to send mails -This sets up your two mailboxes (drexel and gmail) where you can -recieve mail. It also sets up methods for switching between the two +This sets up your two mailboxes (`drexel` and `gmail`) where you can +receive mail. It also sets up methods for switching between the two accounts. To ease in configuring the two accounts, we split most of the configuration details into `~/.mutt/common`, `~/.mutt/drexel`, and `~/.mutt/gmail`. Sourcing common brings in some configuration @@ -199,20 +194,20 @@ behaving much more intuitively. The specific configuration files are: -The common configuration (these are all optional). +The common configuration (these are all optional): #~/.mutt/common set realname="" - set move=no # stop asking to "move read messages to mbox" + set move=no # stop asking to "move read messages to mbox" set mail_check=600 # check for new mail every 10 minutes when user is active - set timeout=600 # check for new mail every 10 minutes when user is not active + set timeout=600 # check for new mail every 10 minutes when user is not active set editor="/usr/bin/emacs -nw" # use emacs as the editor set edit_headers # editable headers -The Drexel setup +The Drexel setup: #~/.mutt/drexel # Drexel information @@ -233,7 +228,7 @@ The Drexel setup set from="@drexel.edu" -And the Gmail setup +The Gmail setup: # Gmail information @@ -258,9 +253,9 @@ accounts with `c TAB TAB`. The first tab lists all the mailboxes in your Drexel account, and the second lists all of your available accounts (mailboxes). -Strangely (I haven't figured out why yet), `c TAB` from gmail also +Strangely (I haven't figured out why yet), `c TAB` from `gmail` also lists the *drexel* directories. No problem though, you can get a list -of gmail directories with `c +TAB TAB TAB` from gmail (I also don't +of gmail directories with `c +TAB TAB TAB` from `gmail` (I also don't understand what the second `TAB` does). Anyhow, that should get people started. @@ -329,12 +324,12 @@ Once you've got a key set up, determine the key ID for your pair with pub 1024D/0xFC29BDCDF15F5BE8 2008-08-09 [expires: 2009-08-09] … -Where `0xFC29BDCDF15F5BE8` is my long key ID (I don't understand the -difference between the long and short keys, but I figure the longer -one must be more specific, and since I only have to enter it once for -Mutt, I chose the longer key.) +Where `0xFC29BDCDF15F5BE8` is my long key ID (long IDs are short IDs +prefixed with additional fingerprint information). I use the long ID +here because it is more specific and I only have to enter it once for +Mutt. -Then, tell Mutt how to use `gpg`, adding +Tell Mutt how to use `gpg` by adding source ~/.mutt/pgp @@ -372,10 +367,10 @@ new e-mail; thank, you [Chad Perrin][compose-view-p]). Browsing email with links ========================= -Usually mutt is pretty good about handling HTML in emails. When you +Usually Mutt is pretty good about handling HTML in emails. When you get emails that are obviously HTML, `v` will take you to the attachment list (which should show the email as type `text/html`), and -enter will open the email in your browser ([[w3m]], right?). +enter will open the email in your browser (via [[mailcap]]). Sometimes you get `text/plain` emails with URLs in them, or maybe the above procedure just isn't working. In that case, add @@ -384,8 +379,8 @@ above procedure just isn't working. In that case, add somewhere in your mutt configuration files (thank you, [Bruno Postle][links]). Then pressing `Ctrl-b` will pipe the email you're -looking at into w3m. Pressing `:` in w3m will scan the document for -URL-like strings and make them browsable. +looking at into [w3m][]. Pressing `:` in w3m will scan the document +for URL-like strings and make them browsable. Folder size in status bar ========================= @@ -403,5 +398,6 @@ Add the folder size to the status bar by adding `%l` or `%L` to [GnuPG]: http://www.gnupg.org/ [compose-view-p]: http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/security/?p=413 [links]: http://mutt.blackfish.org.uk/following-links/ +[w3m]: http://w3m.sourceforge.net/ [[!tag tags/tools]] -- 2.26.2