Difference between revisions of "Mutt"
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− | I use Mutt to read | + | I use Mutt to read email. It's a command-line email client. It's super fast and works anywhere I can get to a shell. |
It's like Vim for email. It takes a little bit more effort to begin with, but after a while I much prefer it to | It's like Vim for email. It takes a little bit more effort to begin with, but after a while I much prefer it to | ||
− | anything " | + | anything "modern". I started using Mutt because I got tired of slow email clients like Outlook and Thunderbird. |
Mutt is text-only so it can make modern mail seem a little tricky sometimes, but | Mutt is text-only so it can make modern mail seem a little tricky sometimes, but | ||
− | it handles MIME attachments and HTML quite well. | + | it handles MIME attachments and HTML quite well. It can even read Word and PDF documents in Mutt without any trouble. |
− | |||
Below I document my Mutt configuration. I configured it so that the key bindings are a little closer to Vim. | Below I document my Mutt configuration. I configured it so that the key bindings are a little closer to Vim. |
Revision as of 13:12, 4 June 2007
I use Mutt to read email. It's a command-line email client. It's super fast and works anywhere I can get to a shell.
It's like Vim for email. It takes a little bit more effort to begin with, but after a while I much prefer it to
anything "modern". I started using Mutt because I got tired of slow email clients like Outlook and Thunderbird.
Mutt is text-only so it can make modern mail seem a little tricky sometimes, but it handles MIME attachments and HTML quite well. It can even read Word and PDF documents in Mutt without any trouble.
Below I document my Mutt configuration. I configured it so that the key bindings are a little closer to Vim.
Building Mutt
They finally added built-in SMTP support in version 1.5.15.
apt-get install libncurses5-dev ./configure --enable-pop --enable-imap --enable-smtp --enable-hcache --with-ssl make make install
Mutt error
If you get an error like this then you forgot to use --enable-ssl in your configure step.
Error in /home/user/.mutt/muttrc, line 23: certificate_file: unknown variable
The configure help doesn't show this option, but certificates wouldn't work without it for me.
Basic .muttrc or ~/.mutt/muttrc
This is a .muttrc. This is nothing fancy. This seems to be the minimum to get Mutt working with IMAP. For more documentation go to Mutt documentation.
set mbox_type=maildir set editor="vim" # I like to see all my mail headers in my editor: set edit_headers=yes # don't wait for sendmail to finish (this runs sendmail in the background) set sendmail_wait=-1 # this prevents Mutt from endlessly asking when you quit: # "Move read messages to ~/mbox? ([no]/yes):" set move=no # this prevents Mutt from endlessly asking: # "~/Mail does not exist. Create it? ([yes]/no):" set folder="" # if you use virtual mail hosts then Maildir might not # be in the default location... try looking in: # /home/vpopmail/domains/example.com/$USER/Maildir/ set spoolfile=~/Maildir/ # IMAP # For IMAP connections use the following settings. # Some settings replace those used above for folder and spoolfile. # Note that the full mail username is "username@example.com" and # the server name is "localhost". If you wanted to connect to a # remote server the full URL might be something like: # imap://username@example.com@example.com set folder="imaps://username@example.com@localhost" set spoolfile="imaps://username@example.com@localhost/INBOX" set imap_pass="my_stupid_password" set certificate_file=".mutt_known_hosts"
My real muttrc file
I actually use a more complicated ~/.mutt/muttrc file that tweaks usability to make it more Vim-like. Mutt key bindings are already pretty close to Vim. See my dotfiles page.
<include src="http://www.noah.org/engineering/dotfiles/.mutt/muttrc" />