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1 <!DOCTYPE reference PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.1//EN" [
2 <!ENTITY OfflineIMAP "<application>OfflineIMAP</application>">
3 ]>
4 <!-- "file:///usr/share/sgml/docbook/dtd/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> -->
5
6 <reference>
7 <title>OfflineIMAP Manual</title>
8
9 <refentry>
10 <refentryinfo>
11 <address><email>jgoerzen@complete.org</email></address>
12 <author><firstname>John</firstname><surname>Goerzen</surname></author>
13 </refentryinfo>
14
15 <refmeta>
16 <refentrytitle>offlineimap</refentrytitle>
17 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
18 <refmiscinfo>John Goerzen</refmiscinfo>
19 </refmeta>
20
21 <refnamediv>
22 <refname>OfflineIMAP</refname>
23 <refpurpose>Powerful IMAP/Maildir synchronization
24 and reader support</refpurpose>
25 </refnamediv>
26
27 <refsynopsisdiv>
28 <cmdsynopsis>
29 <command>offlineimap</command>
30 <arg>-1</arg>
31 <arg>-P <replaceable>profiledir</replaceable></arg>
32 <arg>-a <replaceable>accountlist</replaceable></arg>
33 <arg>-c <replaceable>configfile</replaceable></arg>
34 <arg>-d <replaceable>debugtype[,...]</replaceable></arg>
35 <arg>-l <replaceable>filename</replaceable></arg>
36 <arg>-o</arg>
37 <arg>-u <replaceable>interface</replaceable></arg>
38 </cmdsynopsis>
39 <cmdsynopsis>
40 <command>offlineimap</command>
41 <group choice="plain"><arg>-h</arg><arg>--help</arg></group>
42 </cmdsynopsis>
43 </refsynopsisdiv>
44
45 <refsect1>
46 <title>Description</title>
47
48 <para>&OfflineIMAP; is a tool to simplify your e-mail
49 reading. With &OfflineIMAP;, you can read the same mailbox
50 from multiple computers. You get a current copy of your
51 messages on each computer, and changes you make one place will be
52 visible on all other systems. For instance, you can delete a message
53 on your home computer, and it will appear deleted on your work
54 computer as well. &OfflineIMAP; is also useful if you want to
55 use a mail reader that does not have IMAP support, has poor IMAP
56 support, or does not provide disconnected operation.
57 </para>
58
59 <para>&OfflineIMAP; is <emphasis>FAST</emphasis>; it synchronizes
60 my two accounts with over 50 folders in 3 seconds. Other
61 similar tools might take over a minute, and achieve a
62 less-reliable result. Some mail readers can take over 10
63 minutes to do the same thing, and some don't even support it
64 at all. Unlike other mail tools, &OfflineIMAP; features a
65 multi-threaded synchronization algorithm that can dramatically
66 speed up performance in many situations by synchronizing
67 several different things simultaneously.
68 </para>
69
70 <para>&OfflineIMAP; is <emphasis>FLEXIBLE</emphasis>; you can
71 customize which folders are synced via regular expressions,
72 lists, or Python expressions; a versatile and comprehensive
73 configuration file is used to control behavior; two user
74 interfaces are built-in; fine-tuning of synchronization
75 performance is possible; internal or external automation is
76 supported; SSL and PREAUTH tunnels are both supported; offline
77 (or "unplugged") reading is supported; and esoteric IMAP
78 features are supported to ensure compatibility with the widest
79 variety of IMAP servers.
80 </para>
81
82 <para>&OfflineIMAP; is <emphasis>SAFE</emphasis>; it uses an
83 algorithm designed to prevent mail loss at all costs. Because
84 of the design of this algorithm, even programming errors
85 should not result in loss of mail. I am so confident in the
86 algorithm that I use my own personal and work accounts for
87 testing of &OfflineIMAP; pre-release, development, and beta
88 releases. Of course, legally speaking, &OfflineIMAP; comes
89 with no warranty, so I am not responsible if this turns out
90 to be wrong.
91 </para>
92
93 <refsect2>
94 <title>Method of Operation</title>
95
96 <para>&OfflineIMAP; traditionally
97 operates by maintaining a hierarchy of
98 mail folders in Maildir format locally. Your own mail
99 reader will read mail from this tree, and need never know
100 that the mail comes from IMAP. &OfflineIMAP; will detect
101 changes to the mail folders on your IMAP server and your own
102 computer and bi-directionally synchronize them, copying,
103 marking, and deleting messages as necessary.
104 </para>
105 <para>
106 With &OfflineIMAP; 4.0, a powerful new ability has been
107 introduced -- the program can now synchronize two IMAP
108 servers with each other, with no need to have a Maildir
109 layer in-between. Many people use this if they use a mail
110 reader on their local machine that does not support
111 Maildirs. People may install an IMAP server on their local
112 machine, and point both &OfflineIMAP; and their mail reader
113 of choice at it. This is often preferable to the mail
114 reader's own IMAP support since &OfflineIMAP; supports many
115 features (offline reading, for one) that most IMAP-aware
116 readers don't. However, this feature is not as time-tested
117 as traditional syncing, so my advice is to stick with normal
118 methods of operation for the time being.
119 </para>
120 </refsect2>
121 </refsect1>
122
123 <refsect1>
124 <title>Quick Start</title>
125 <para>If you have already installed &OfflineIMAP; system-wide,
126 or your system administrator has done that for you, your task
127 for setting up &OfflineIMAP; for the first time is quite
128 simple. You just need to set up your configuration file, make
129 your folder directory, and run it!
130 </para>
131
132 <para>You can quickly set up your configuration file. The distribution
133 includes a file <filename>offlineimap.conf.minimal</filename>
134 (Debian users
135 may find this at
136 <filename>/usr/share/doc/offlineimap/examples/offlineimap.conf.minimal</filename>) that is a basic example of setting of &OfflineIMAP;. You can
137 simply copy this file into your home directory and name it
138 <filename>.offlineimaprc</filename> (note the leading period). A
139 command such as <command>cp offlineimap.conf.minimal ~/.offlineimaprc</command> will do it. Or, if you prefer, you can just copy this text to
140 <filename>~/.offlineimaprc</filename>:
141 </para>
142
143 <PROGRAMLISTING>[general]
144 accounts = Test
145
146 [Account Test]
147 localrepository = Local
148 remoterepository = Remote
149
150 [Repository Local]
151 type = Maildir
152 localfolders = ~/Test
153
154 [Repository Remote]
155 type = IMAP
156 remotehost = examplehost
157 remoteuser = jgoerzen
158 </PROGRAMLISTING>
159
160 <para>Now, edit the <filename>~/.offlineimaprc</filename> file with
161 your favorite editor. All you have to do is specify a directory
162 for your folders to be in (on the <property>localfolders</property>
163 line), the host name of your IMAP server (on the
164 <property>remotehost</property> line), and your login name on
165 the remote (on the <property>remoteuser</property> line). That's
166 it!</para>
167
168 <para>To run &OfflineIMAP;, you just have to say
169 <command>offlineimap</command> -- it will fire up, ask you for
170 a login password if necessary, synchronize your folders, and exit.
171 See? You can just throw away the rest of this finely-crafted,
172 perfectly-honed manual! Of course, if you want to see how you can
173 make &OfflineIMAP; FIVE TIMES FASTER FOR JUST $19.95 (err, well,
174 $0), you have to read on!
175 </para>
176
177 </refsect1>
178
179 <refsect1>
180 <title>Installation</title>
181
182 <para>If you are reading this document via the "man" command, it is
183 likely
184 that you have no installation tasks to perform; your system
185 administrator has already installed it. If you need to install it
186 yourself, you have three options: a system-wide installation with
187 Debian, system-wide installation with other systems, and a single-user
188 installation. You can download the latest version of &OfflineIMAP; from
189 <ulink url="http://software.complete.org/offlineimap/">the &OfflineIMAP;
190 website</ulink>.
191 </para>
192
193 <refsect2>
194 <title>Prerequisites</title>
195
196 <para>In order to use &OfflineIMAP;, you need to have these conditions
197 satisfied:
198 </para>
199
200 <itemizedlist>
201 <listitem>
202 <para>Your mail server must support IMAP. Most Internet Service
203 Providers
204 and corporate networks do, and most operating systems
205 have an IMAP
206 implementation readily available.
207 </para>
208 </listitem>
209 <listitem>
210 <para>
211 You must have Python version 2.4 or above installed.
212 If you are
213 running on Debian GNU/Linux, this requirement will automatically be
214 taken care of for you. If you do not have Python already, check with
215 your system administrator or operating system vendor; or, download it from
216 <ulink url="http://www.python.org/">the Python website</ulink>.
217 If you intend to use the SSL interface, your
218 Python must have been built with SSL support.
219 </para>
220 </listitem>
221 <listitem>
222 <para>
223 Have a mail reader that supports the Maildir mailbox
224 format. Most modern mail readers have this support
225 built-in, so you can choose from a wide variety of mail
226 servers. This format is also known as the "qmail"
227 format, so any mail reader compatible with it will work
228 with &OfflineIMAP;. If you do not have a mail reader
229 that supports Maildir, you can often install a local
230 IMAP server and point both &OfflineIMAP; and your mail
231 reader at it.
232 </para>
233 </listitem>
234 </itemizedlist>
235 </refsect2>
236
237 <refsect2>
238 <title>System-Wide Installation, Debian</title>
239 <para>
240 If you are tracking Debian unstable, you may install
241 &OfflineIMAP; by simply running the following command as root:
242 </para>
243 <para>
244 <command>apt-get install offlineimap</command>
245 </para>
246 <para>
247 If you are not tracking Debian unstable, download the Debian .deb
248 package from the <ulink url="http://software.complete.org/offlineimap/">&OfflineIMAP; website</ulink>
249 and then run <command>dpkg -i</command> to install the downloaded
250 package. Then, skip to <xref linkend="configuration" endterm="configuration-title"> below. You will type <command>offlineimap</command> to
251 invoke the program.
252 </para>
253 </refsect2>
254
255 <refsect2>
256 <title>System-Wide Installation, Other</title>
257 <para>
258 Download the tar.gz version of the package from the
259 <ulink url="http://software.complete.org/offlineimap/">website</ulink>.
260 Then run
261 these commands, making sure that you are the "root" user first:
262 </para>
263
264 <ProgramListing>tar -zxvf offlineimap_x.y.z.tar.gz
265 cd offlineimap-x.y.z
266 python2.2 setup.py install</ProgramListing>
267 <para>On some systems, you will need to use
268 <command>python</command> instead of <command>python2.2</command>.
269 Next, proceed to <xref linkend="configuration" endterm="configuration-title"> below. You will type <command>offlineimap</command> to
270 invoke the program.
271 </para>
272 </refsect2>
273
274 <refsect2>
275 <title>Single-Account Installation</title>
276 <para>
277 Download the tar.gz version of the package from the
278 <ulink url="http://software.complete.org/offlineimap/">website</ulink>.
279 Then run these commands:
280 </para>
281
282 <ProgramListing>tar -zxvf offlineimap_x.y.z.tar.gz
283 cd offlineimap-x.y.z</ProgramListing>
284
285 <para>When you want to run &OfflineIMAP;, you will issue the
286 <command>cd</command> command as above and then type
287 <command>./offlineimap.py</command>; there is no installation
288 step necessary.
289 </para>
290 </refsect2>
291 </refsect1>
292
293 <refsect1 id="configuration">
294 <title id="configuration-title">Configuration</title>
295 <para>
296 &OfflineIMAP; is regulated by a configuration file that is normally
297 stored in <filename>~/.offlineimaprc</filename>. &OfflineIMAP;
298 ships with a file named <filename>offlineimap.conf</filename>
299 that you should copy to that location and then edit. This file is
300 vital to proper operation of the system; it sets everything you need
301 to run &OfflineIMAP;. Full documentation for the configuration file
302 is included within the sample file.
303 </para>
304 <para>
305 &OfflineIMAP; also ships a file named
306 <filename>offlineimap.conf.minimal</filename> that you can also try.
307 It's useful if you want to get started with
308 the most basic feature set, and you can read about other features
309 later with <filename>offlineimap.conf</filename>.
310 </para>
311 </refsect1>
312
313 <refsect1>
314 <title>Options</title>
315 <para>
316 Most configuration is done via the configuration file. Nevertheless,
317 there are a few command-line options that you may set for
318 &OfflineIMAP;.
319 </para>
320
321 <variablelist>
322 <varlistentry><term>-1</term>
323 <listitem><para>Disable most multithreading operations and use
324 solely a single-connection
325 sync. This effectively sets the
326 <property>maxsyncaccounts</property>
327 and all <property>maxconnections</property> configuration file
328 variables to 1.
329 </para></listitem>
330 </varlistentry>
331 <varlistentry><term>-P <replaceable>profiledir</replaceable></term>
332 <listitem><para>Sets &OfflineIMAP; into profile mode. The program
333 will create <replaceable>profiledir</replaceable>
334 (it must not already exist). As it runs, Python profiling
335 information
336 about each thread is logged into profiledir. Please note: This option
337 is present for debugging and optimization only, and should NOT be used
338 unless you have a specific reason to do so. It will significantly
339 slow program performance, may reduce reliability, and can generate
340 huge amounts of data. You must use the <option>-1</option> option when
341 you use <option>-P</option>.
342 </para></listitem>
343 </varlistentry>
344 <varlistentry><term>-a <replaceable>accountlist</replaceable></term>
345 <listitem><para>Overrides the <property>accounts</property> option
346 in the <property>general</property> section of the configuration
347 file. You might use this to exclude certain accounts, or to sync
348 some accounts that you normally prefer not to. Separate the
349 accounts by commas, and use no embedded spaces.
350 </para></listitem>
351 </varlistentry>
352 <varlistentry><term>-c <replaceable>configfile</replaceable></term>
353 <listitem><para>Specifies a configuration file to use in lieu of
354 the default, <filename>~/.offlineimaprc</filename>.
355 </para></listitem>
356 </varlistentry>
357 <varlistentry><term>-d <replaceable>debugtype[,...]</replaceable></term>
358 <listitem><para>Enables debugging for OfflineIMAP. This is useful if
359 you are trying to track down a malfunction or figure out what is going
360 on under the hood. I suggest that you use this with
361 <option>-1</option> to make the results more sensible.</para>
362
363 <para><option>-d</option> requires one or more debugtypes,
364 separated by commas. These define what exactly will be
365 debugged, and include three options: <property>imap</property>,
366 <property>maildir</property>, and <property>thread</property>.
367 The <property>imap</property>
368 option will enable IMAP protocol stream and parsing debugging. Note
369 that the output may contain passwords, so take care to remove that
370 from the debugging output before sending it to anyone else. The
371 <property>maildir</property> option will enable debugging for
372 certain Maildir operations. And <property>thread</property>
373 will debug the threading model.
374 </para></listitem>
375 </varlistentry>
376 <varlistentry><term>-l
377 <replaceable>filename</replaceable></term>
378 <listitem><para>
379 Enables logging to filename. This will log everything
380 that goes to the screen to the specified file.
381 Additionally, if any debugging is specified with -d,
382 then debug messages will not go to the screen, but
383 instead to the logfile only.</para>
384 </listitem>
385 </varlistentry>
386 <varlistentry><term>-o</term>
387 <listitem><para>Run only once, ignoring all
388 <property>autorefresh</property> settings in the configuration
389 file.</para>
390 </listitem>
391 </varlistentry>
392 <varlistentry><term>-h</term> <term>--help</term>
393 <listitem><para>Show summary of options.</para></listitem>
394 </varlistentry>
395 <varlistentry><term>-u <replaceable>interface</replaceable></term>
396 <listitem><para>Specifies an alternative user interface module
397 to use. This overrides the default specified in the
398 configuration file. The pre-defined options are listed in
399 the User Interfaces section.</para>
400 </listitem>
401 </varlistentry>
402 </variablelist>
403 </refsect1>
404 <refsect1>
405 <title>User Interfaces</title>
406 <para>&OfflineIMAP; has a pluggable user interface system that lets you choose how the
407 program communicates information to you. There are two graphical
408 interfaces, two terminal interfaces, and two noninteractive interfaces
409 suitable for scripting or logging purposes. The
410 <property>ui</property> option in the configuration file specifies
411 user interface preferences. The <option>-u</option> command-line
412 option can override the configuration file setting. The available
413 values for the configuration file or command-line are described
414 in this section.</para>
415
416 <refsect2>
417 <title>Curses.Blinkenlights</title>
418 <para>
419 Curses.Blinkenlights is an interface designed to be sleek, fun to watch, and
420 informative of the overall picture of what &OfflineIMAP;
421 is doing. I consider it to be the best general-purpose interface in
422 &OfflineIMAP;.
423 </para>
424 <para>
425 Curses.Blinkenlights contains a row of
426 "LEDs" with command buttons and a log.
427 The log shows more
428 detail about what is happening and is color-coded to match the color
429 of the lights.
430 </para>
431 <para>
432 Each light in the Blinkenlights interface represents a thread
433 of execution -- that is, a particular task that &OfflineIMAP;
434 is performing right now. The colors indicate what task
435 the particular thread is performing, and are as follows:
436 </para>
437 <variablelist>
438 <varlistentry>
439 <term>Black</term>
440 <listitem><para>indicates that this light's thread has terminated; it will light up
441 again later when new threads start up. So, black indicates no
442 activity.
443 </para></listitem>
444 </varlistentry>
445 <varlistentry>
446 <term>Red (Meaning 1)</term>
447 <listitem><para>is the color of the main program's thread, which basically does
448 nothing but monitor the others. It might remind you of HAL 9000 in
449 <citation>2001</citation>.
450 </para></listitem>
451 </varlistentry>
452 <varlistentry>
453 <term>Gray</term>
454 <listitem><para>indicates that the thread is establishing a new connection to the IMAP
455 server.
456 </para></listitem>
457 </varlistentry>
458 <varlistentry>
459 <term>Purple</term>
460 <listitem><para>is the color of an account synchronization thread that is monitoring
461 the progress of the folders in that account (not generating any I/O).
462 </para></listitem>
463 </varlistentry>
464 <varlistentry>
465 <term>Cyan</term>
466 <listitem><para>indicates that the thread is syncing a folder.
467 </para></listitem>
468 </varlistentry>
469 <varlistentry>
470 <term>Green</term>
471 <listitem><para>means that a folder's message list is being loaded.
472 </para></listitem>
473 </varlistentry>
474 <varlistentry>
475 <term>Blue</term>
476 <listitem><para>is the color of a message synchronization controller thread.
477 </para></listitem>
478 </varlistentry>
479 <varlistentry>
480 <term>Orange</term>
481 <listitem><para>indicates that an actual message is being copied.
482 (We use fuchsia for fake messages.)
483 </para></listitem>
484 </varlistentry>
485 <varlistentry>
486 <term>Red (meaning 2)</term>
487 <listitem><para>indicates that a message is being deleted.
488 </para></listitem>
489 </varlistentry>
490 <varlistentry>
491 <term>Yellow / bright orange</term>
492 <listitem><para>indicates that message flags are being added.
493 </para></listitem>
494 </varlistentry>
495 <varlistentry>
496 <term>Pink / bright red</term>
497 <listitem><para>indicates that message flags are being removed.
498 </para></listitem>
499 </varlistentry>
500 <varlistentry>
501 <term>Red / Black Flashing</term>
502 <listitem><para>corresponds to the countdown timer that runs between
503 synchronizations.
504 </para></listitem>
505 </varlistentry>
506 </variablelist>
507 <para>The name of this interfaces derives from a bit of computer
508 history. Eric Raymond's <citation>Jargon File</citation> defines
509 <firstterm>blinkenlights</firstterm>, in part, as:
510 </para>
511 <blockquote>
512 <para>Front-panel diagnostic
513 lights on a computer, esp. a dinosaur. Now that dinosaurs are rare,
514 this term usually refers to status lights on a modem, network hub, or
515 the like.
516 </para>
517 <para>
518 This term derives from the last word of the famous blackletter-Gothic
519 sign in mangled pseudo-German that once graced about half the computer
520 rooms in the English-speaking world. One version ran in its entirety as
521 follows:
522 </para>
523 <para>
524 <emphasis>ACHTUNG! ALLES LOOKENSPEEPERS!</emphasis>
525 </para>
526 <para>
527 Das computermachine ist nicht fuer gefingerpoken und mittengrabben.
528 Ist easy schnappen der springenwerk, blowenfusen und poppencorken
529 mit spitzensparken. Ist nicht fuer gewerken bei das dumpkopfen.
530 Das rubbernecken sichtseeren keepen das cotten-pickenen hans in das
531 pockets muss; relaxen und watchen das blinkenlichten.
532 </para>
533 </blockquote>
534 </refsect2>
535
536 <refsect2>
537 <title>TTY.TTYUI</title>
538 <para>
539 TTY.TTYUI interface is for people running in basic, non-color terminals. It
540 prints out basic status messages and is generally friendly to use on a console
541 or xterm.
542 </para>
543 </refsect2>
544
545 <refsect2>
546 <title>Noninteractive.Basic</title>
547 <para>
548 Noninteractive.Basic is designed for situations in which &OfflineIMAP;
549 will be run non-attended and the status of its execution will be
550 logged. You might use it, for instance, to have the system run
551 automatically and
552 e-mail you the results of the synchronization. This user interface
553 is not capable of reading a password from the keyboard; account
554 passwords must be specified using one of the configuration file options.
555 </para>
556 </refsect2>
557
558 <refsect2>
559 <title>Noninteractive.Quiet</title>
560 <para>
561 Noninteractive.Quiet is designed for non-attended running in situations
562 where normal status messages are not desired. It will output nothing
563 except errors and serious warnings. Like Noninteractive.Basic,
564 this user interface
565 is not capable of reading a password from the keyboard; account
566 passwords must be specified using one of the configuration file options.
567 </para>
568 </refsect2>
569
570 <refsect2>
571 <title>Machine.MachineUI</title>
572 <para>
573 Machine.MachineUI generates output in a machine-parsable format.
574 It is designed for other programs that will interface
575 to OfflineIMAP.
576 </para>
577 </refsect2>
578
579 </refsect1>
580
581 <refsect1>
582 <title>Examples</title>
583 <para>Here are some example configurations for various situations.
584 Please e-mail any other examples you have that may be useful to
585 me.
586 </para>
587
588 <refsect2>
589 <title>Multiple Accounts with Mutt</title>
590 <para>
591 This example shows you how to set up &OfflineIMAP; to
592 synchronize multiple accounts with the mutt mail reader.
593 </para>
594 <para>
595 Start by creating a directory to hold your folders by running
596 <command>mkdir ~/Mail</command>. Then, in your
597 <filename>~/.offlineimaprc</filename>, specify:
598 </para>
599 <programlisting>accounts = Personal, Work</programlisting>
600 <para>
601 Make sure that you have both an
602 <property>[Account Personal]</property>
603 and an <property>[Account Work]</property> section. The
604 local repository for each account must have different
605 <property>localfolder</> path names.
606 Also, make sure
607 to enable <property>[mbnames]</property>.
608 </para>
609 <para>
610 In each local repository section, write something like this:
611 </para>
612 <programlisting>localfolders = ~/Mail/Personal</programlisting>
613 <para>
614 Finally, add these lines to your <filename>~/.muttrc</filename>:
615 </para>
616 <programlisting>source ~/path-to-mbnames-muttrc-mailboxes
617 folder-hook Personal set from="youremail@personal.com"
618 folder-hook Work set from="youremail@work.com"
619 set mbox_type=Maildir
620 set folder=$HOME/Mail
621 spoolfile=+Personal/INBOX</programlisting>
622 <para>
623 That's it!
624 </para>
625 </refsect2>
626
627 <refsect2>
628 <title>UW-IMAPD and References</title>
629 <para>Some users with a UW-IMAPD server need to use &OfflineIMAP;'s
630 "reference" feature to get at their mailboxes, specifying a reference
631 of "~/Mail" or "#mh/" depending on the configuration. The below
632 configuration from (originally from docwhat@gerf.org)
633 shows using a <property>reference</property> of Mail, a <property>nametrans</property>
634 that strips
635 the leading Mail/ off incoming folder names, and a
636 <property>folderfilter</property> that
637 limits the folders synced to just three.
638 </para>
639 <programlisting>[Account Gerf]
640 localrepository = GerfLocal
641 remoterepository = GerfRemote
642
643 [Repository GerfLocal]
644 type = Maildir
645 localfolders = ~/Mail
646
647 [Repository GerfRemote]
648 type = IMAP
649 remotehost = gerf.org
650 ssl = yes
651 remoteuser = docwhat
652 reference = Mail
653 # Trims off the preceeding Mail on all the folder names.
654 nametrans = lambda foldername: \
655 re.sub('^Mail/', '', foldername)
656 # Yeah, you have to mention the Mail dir, even though it
657 # would seem intuitive that reference would trim it.
658 folderfilter = lambda foldername: foldername in [
659 'Mail/INBOX',
660 'Mail/list/zaurus-general',
661 'Mail/list/zaurus-dev',
662 ]
663 maxconnections = 1
664 holdconnectionopen = no</programlisting>
665 </refsect2>
666
667 <refsect2>
668 <title>pythonfile Configuration File Option</title>
669 <para>You can have &OfflineIMAP;
670 load up a Python file before evaluating the
671 configuration file options that are Python expressions. This example
672 is based on one supplied by Tommi Virtanen for this feature.
673 </para>
674 <para>
675 In <filename>~/.offlineimap.rc</filename>, he adds these options:
676 </para>
677 <programlisting>[general]
678 pythonfile=~/.offlineimap.py
679 [Repository foo]
680 foldersort=mycmp</programlisting>
681 <para>
682 Then, the <filename>~/.offlineimap.py</filename> file will
683 contain:
684 </para>
685 <programlisting>prioritized = ['INBOX', 'personal', 'announce', 'list']
686
687 def mycmp(x, y):
688 for prefix in prioritized:
689 xsw = x.startswith(prefix)
690 ysw = y.startswith(prefix)
691 if xsw and ysw:
692 return cmp(x, y)
693 elif xsw:
694 return -1
695 elif ysw:
696 return +1
697 return cmp(x, y)
698
699 def test_mycmp():
700 import os, os.path
701 folders=os.listdir(os.path.expanduser('~/data/mail/tv@hq.yok.utu.fi'))
702 folders.sort(mycmp)
703 print folders</programlisting>
704 <para>
705 This code snippet illustrates how the <property>foldersort</property>
706 option can be customized with a Python function from the
707 <property>pythonfile</property> to always synchronize certain
708 folders first.
709 </para>
710 </refsect2>
711 </refsect1>
712
713 <refsect1>
714 <title>Signals</title>
715 <para>
716 OfflineIMAP writes its current PID into
717 <filename>~/.offlineimap/pid</filename> when it is
718 running. It is not guaranteed that this file will
719 not exist when OfflineIMAP is not running.
720 </para>
721 <!-- not done yet
722 <para>
723 You can send SIGINT to OfflineIMAP using this file to
724 kill it. SIGUSR1 will force an immediate resync of
725 all accounts. This will be ignored for all accounts
726 for which a resync is already in progress.
727 </para>
728 -->
729 </refsect1>
730
731 <refsect1>
732 <title>Errors</title>
733 <para>
734 If you get one of some frequently-encountered or confusing errors,
735 please check this section.
736 </para>
737
738 <refsect2>
739 <title>UID validity problem for folder</title>
740 <para>IMAP servers use a unique ID (UID) to refer to a specific message.
741 This number is guaranteed to be unique to a particular message
742 <emphasis>forever</emphasis>.
743 No other message in the same folder will ever get the same
744 UID. UIDs are an integral part of &OfflineIMAP;'s synchronization
745 scheme; they are used to match up messages on your computer to
746 messages on the server.
747 </para>
748
749 <para>
750 Sometimes, the UIDs on the server might get reset. Usually this will
751 happen if you delete and then recreate a folder. When you create a
752 folder, the server will often start the UID back from 1. But
753 &OfflineIMAP; might still have the UIDs from the previous folder by the
754 same name stored. &OfflineIMAP; will detect this condition and skip the
755 folder. This is GOOD, because it prevents data loss.
756 </para>
757
758 <para>
759 You can fix it by removing your local folder and cache data. For
760 instance, if your folders are under <filename>~/Folders</filename>
761 and the folder with the problem is INBOX, you'd type this:
762 </para>
763
764 <programlisting>rm -r ~/Folders/INBOX
765 rm -r ~/.offlineimap/Account-<replaceable>AccountName</>
766 rm -r ~/.offlineimap/Repository-<replaceable>RepositoryName</></programlisting>
767
768 <para>
769 (Of course, replace AccountName and RepositoryName
770 with the names as specified
771 in <filename>~/.offlineimaprc</filename>).
772 </para>
773
774 <para>Next time you run &OfflineIMAP;, it will re-download
775 the folder with the
776 new UIDs. Note that the procedure specified above will lose any local
777 changes made to the folder.
778 </para>
779
780 <para>
781 Some IMAP servers are broken and do not support UIDs properly. If you
782 continue to get this error for all your folders even after performing
783 the above procedure, it is likely that your IMAP server falls into
784 this category. &OfflineIMAP; is incompatible with such servers.
785 Using &OfflineIMAP; with them will not destroy any mail, but at the same time,
786 it will not actually synchronize it either. (&OfflineIMAP; will detect
787 this condition and abort prior to synchronization.)
788 </para>
789 <para>
790 This question comes up frequently on the
791 <ulink
792 url="http://lists.complete.org/offlineimap@complete.org/">&OfflineIMAP;
793 mailing list</ulink>. You can find a
794 <ulink
795 url="http://lists.complete.org/offlineimap@complete.org/2003/04/msg00012.html.gz">detailed
796 discussion</ulink> of the problem there.
797 </para>
798 </refsect2>
799 </refsect1>
800 <refsect1>
801 <title>Conforming To</title>
802 <itemizedlist>
803 <listitem><para>Internet Message Access Protocol version 4rev1 (IMAP 4rev1) as
804 specified in RFC2060 and RFC3501</para></listitem>
805 <listitem><para>CRAM-MD5 as specified in RFC2195</para></listitem>
806 <listitem><para>Maildir as specified in
807 <ulink url="http://www.qmail.org/qmail-manual-html/man5/maildir.html">the Maildir manpage</ulink> and
808 <ulink url="http://cr.yp.to/proto/maildir.html">the qmail website</ulink>.</para></listitem>
809 <listitem><para>Standard Python 2.2.1 as implemented on POSIX-compliant systems.</para></listitem>
810 </itemizedlist>
811 </refsect1>
812
813 <refsect1>
814 <title>Notes</title>
815 <refsect2>
816 <title>Deleting Local Folders</title>
817 <para>&OfflineIMAP; does a two-way synchronization. That is, if you
818 make a change to the mail on the server, it will be propagated to your
819 local copy, and vise-versa. Some people might think that it would be
820 wise to just delete all their local mail folders periodically. If you
821 do this with &OfflineIMAP;, remember to also remove your local status
822 cache (<filename>~/.offlineimap</filename> by default). Otherwise, &OfflineIMAP; will take
823 this as an intentional deletion of many messages and will interpret
824 your action as requesting them to be deleted from the server as well.
825 (If you don't understand this, don't worry; you probably won't
826 encounter this situation)
827 </para>
828 </refsect2>
829
830 <refsect2>
831 <title>Multiple Instances</title>
832 <para>&OfflineIMAP; is not designed to have several instances (for instance, a cron job and an interactive invocation) run over the same
833 mailbox simultaneously. It will perform a check on startup and
834 abort if another &OfflineIMAP; is already running. If you need
835 to schedule synchronizations, you'll probably find
836 <property>autorefresh</property> settings more convenient than cron.
837 Alternatively, you can set a separate <property>metadata</property>
838 directory for each instance.
839 </para>
840 </refsect2>
841
842 <refsect2>
843 <title>Copying Messages Between Folders</title>
844 <para>
845 Normally, when you copy a message between folders or add a new message
846 to a folder locally, &OfflineIMAP;
847 will just do the right thing. However, sometimes this can be tricky
848 -- if your IMAP server does not provide the SEARCH command, or does
849 not return something useful, &OfflineIMAP;
850 cannot determine the new UID of the message. So, in these rare
851 instances, OfflineIMAP will upload the message to the IMAP server and
852 delete it from your local folder. Then, on your next sync, the
853 message will be re-downloaded with the proper UID.
854 &OfflineIMAP; makes sure that the message was properly uploaded before deleting it,
855 so there should be no risk of data loss.
856 </para>
857 </refsect2>
858
859
860 <refsect2>
861 <title>Mailing List</title>
862 <para>There is an OfflineIMAP mailing list available.
863 To subscribe, send the text "Subscribe" in the subject of a mail to
864 offlineimap-request@complete.org. To post, send the message to
865 offlineimap@complete.org. Archives are available at
866 <ulink url="http://lists.complete.org/offlineimap@complete.org/"></>.
867 </para>
868 </refsect2>
869
870 <refsect2>
871 <title>Bugs</title>
872 <para>
873 Reports of bugs should be reported online at the
874 &OfflineIMAP; homepage.
875 Debian users are encouraged to instead use the
876 Debian
877 bug-tracking system.
878 </para>
879 </refsect2>
880 </refsect1>
881
882 <refsect1 id="upgrading.4.0">
883 <title>Upgrading to 4.0</title>
884 <para>
885 If you are upgrading from a version of &OfflineIMAP; prior to
886 3.99.12, you will find that you will get errors when
887 &OfflineIMAP; starts up (relating to ConfigParser or
888 AccountHashGenerator) and the
889 configuration file. This is because the config file format
890 had to change to accommodate new features in 4.0. Fortunately,
891 it's not difficult to adjust it to suit.
892 </para>
893 <para>
894 First thing you need to do is stop any running &OfflineIMAP;
895 instance, making sure first that it's synced all your mail.
896 Then, modify your
897 <filename>~/.offlineimaprc</filename> file. You'll need to
898 split up each account section (make sure that it now starts
899 with "Account ") into two Repository sections (one for the
900 local side and another for the remote side.) See the files
901 <filename>offlineimap.conf.minimal</filename> and
902 <filename>offlineimap.conf</filename> in the distribution if
903 you need more assistance.
904 </para>
905 <para>
906 &OfflineIMAP;'s status directory area has also changed.
907 Therefore, you should delete everything in ~/.offlineimap as
908 well as your local mail folders.
909 </para>
910 <para>
911 When you start up &OfflineIMAP; 4.0, it will re-download all
912 your mail from the server and then you can continue using it
913 like normal.
914 </para>
915 </refsect1>
916
917
918 <refsect1>
919 <title>Copyright</title>
920 <para>OfflineIMAP, and this manual, are Copyright &copy; 2002 - 2006 John Goerzen.</para>
921
922 <para>
923 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
924 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
925 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
926 (at your option) any later version.
927 </para>
928
929 <para>
930 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
931 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
932 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
933 GNU General Public License for more details.
934 </para>
935
936 <para>
937 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
938 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
939 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA</para>
940
941 <para>imaplib.py comes from the Python dev tree and is licensed under
942 the GPL-compatible PSF license as stated in the file
943 <filename>COPYRIGHT</filename> in the &OfflineIMAP;
944 distribution.
945 </para>
946 </refsect1>
947
948 <refsect1>
949 <title>Author</title>
950 <para>&OfflineIMAP;, its libraries, documentation, and all included files, except where
951 noted, was written by John Goerzen <email>jgoerzen@complete.org</email> and
952 copyright is held as stated in the COPYRIGHT section.
953 </para>
954
955 <para>
956 &OfflineIMAP; may be downloaded, and information found, from its
957 <ulink url="http://software.complete.org/offlineimap">homepage</ulink>.
958 </para>
959
960 </refsect1>
961
962 <refsect1>
963 <title>See Also</title>
964 <para><application>mutt</application>(1),
965 <application>python</application>(1)
966 </para>
967 </refsect1>
968
969 <refsect1>
970 <title>History</title>
971 <para>
972 Detailed history may be found in the file ChangeLog in the
973 &OfflineIMAP; distribution. Feature and bug histories may be
974 found in the file debian/changelog which, despite its name, is
975 not really Debian-specific. This section provides a large
976 overview.
977 </para>
978 <para>
979 Development on &OfflineIMAP; began on June 18, 2002. Version
980 1.0.0 was released three days later on June 21, 2002. Point
981 releases followed, including speed optimizations and some
982 compatibility fixes.
983 </para>
984 <para>Version 2.0.0 was released on July 3, 2002, and
985 represented the first time the synchronization became
986 multithreaded and, to the best of my knowledge, the first
987 multithreaded IMAP syncrhonizing application in existance.
988 The last 2.0.x release, 2.0.8, was made on July 9.
989 </para>
990 <para>
991 Version 3.0.0 was released on July 11, 2002, and introduced
992 modular user interfaces and the first GUI interface for
993 &OfflineIMAP;. This manual also was introduced with 3.0.0,
994 along with many command-line options. Version 3.1.0 was
995 released on July 21, adding the Noninteractive user
996 interfaces, profiling support, and several bugfixes. 3.2.0
997 was released on July 24, adding support for the Blinkenlights
998 GUI interface. &OfflineIMAP; entered maintenance mode for
999 awhile, as it had reached a feature-complete milestone in my
1000 mind.
1001 </para>
1002 <para>
1003 The 3.99.x branch began in on October 7, 2002, to begin work
1004 for 4.0. The Curses.Blinkenlights interface was added in
1005 3.99.6, and many architectural changes were made.
1006 </para>
1007 <para>
1008 4.0.0 was released on July 18, 2003, including the ability to
1009 synchronize directly between two IMAP servers, the first
1010 re-architecting of the configuration file to refine the
1011 notion of an account, and the new Curses interface.
1012 </para>
1013 </refsect1>
1014 </refentry>
1015 </reference>
1016
1017 <!--
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