341 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
341 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "A perfect email setup (for me)"
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author: ["Amolith"]
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cover: ./cover.png
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lastmod: 2023-01-27T13:00:36-05:00
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tags: ["Email", "Workflow"]
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categories: ["Technology"]
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draft: true
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---
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I've never been satisfied with any of the email clients most people use. I've
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tried [Thunderbird,](https://www.thunderbird.net/en-GB/)
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[Evolution,](https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Evolution)
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[Mailspring,](https://getmailspring.com/)
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[Mail.app,](https://support.apple.com/mail) [Roundcube,](https://roundcube.net/)
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[SOGo,](https://sogo.nu/) [Geary,](https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Geary) and _many_
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more. _None_ of them handle multiple accounts particularly well because all of
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the emails associated with that account are bound within it. Sure, you can make
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a new folder somewhere called `TODO` and move all of your actionable emails to
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that folder but, when you go to move actionable emails from _another_ account
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into that folder, you'll likely find that the client simply doesn't let you. If
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it does, when you reply, it will likely be sent from the wrong account. This is
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a limitation of the IMAP protocol; everything is _managed_ locally but changes
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are pushed to the remote server and mixing things the way I want leads to broken
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setups.
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Before I go any further, these are a few characteristics of my ideal email tool.
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- Support for multiple accounts (obviously)
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- _Native desktop application_ (**not**
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[Electron](https://github.com/electron/electron))
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- Has stellar keyboard shortcuts
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- Doesn't require internet connectivity (other than downloading and sending of
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course)
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- Organisation can be done with tags
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## Why tags? {#why-tags}
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Because they're better. Hierarchies are useful for prose and code but not for
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files, emails, notes, or anything where an item may fit within multiple
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categories. Imagine you get an email from your Computer Science professor that
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includes test dates, homework, and information about another assignment. In that
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same email, he asks every student to reply with something they learned from the
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previous class as a form of attendance. In a hierarchy, the best place for this
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might just be a `TODO` folder _even though_ it would also fit under `School`,
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`CS`, `Dates`, `To read`, and `Homework`. Maybe you have a few minutes and want
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to clear out some emails that don't require any interaction. In a tag-based
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workflow, this would be a good time to open `To read`, get that email out of the
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way, and remove the `To read` tag. It would still show up under the other tags
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so you can find it later and take the time to fully answer the professor's
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question, add those dates to your calendar, and add the homework assignments to
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your `TODO` list. Hierarchies can be quite cumbersome to work with, especially
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when one folder ends up getting all the data. Tags ensure that you only see what
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you want when you want it. Tags are more efficient and they will remain my
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organisation system of choice.
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## The tools {#the-tools}
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In short, the tools we will be using are...
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- [`mbsync`](https://isync.sourceforge.io/mbsync.html) to download our emails
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- [`notmuch`,](https://notmuchmail.org/) the primary way emails will be
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organised
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- [`afew`](https://afew.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) to apply initial `notmuch`
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tags based on subject, sender, recipient, etc.
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- [NeoMutt](https://neomutt.org/) to interact with those emails, reply,
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compose, add/remove tags, etc.
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- [`msmtp`](https://marlam.de/msmtp/) for relaying our replies and
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compositions to our mail provider
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Yes, it's a lot. Yes, it's time-consuming to set up. Yes, it's worth it (in my
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opinion).
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## `mbsync` {#mbsync}
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As I said above, IMAP is limiting; we need to use some other method of
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downloading our emails. There's an awesome piece of software called
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[mbsync](https://isync.sourceforge.io/mbsync.html) which is built for exactly
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this purpose. Its configuration can be rather daunting if you have as many
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accounts as I do (19) but it's not _terrible_.
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The following sections are named **Near**, **Far**, and **Sync**. Near and Far
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are terms mbsync uses to profile _how_ your emails are stored, _where_ they're
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stored, and how to interact with them. In this guide, Far will our mail
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provider's IMAP server and Near will be our local Maildir.
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### Far {#far}
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```text
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IMAPAccount amo_ema
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Host imap.nixnet.email
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CertificateFile /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
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SSLType STARTTLS
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User amolith@nixnet.email
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PassCmd "secret-tool lookup Title amolith@nixnet.email"
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IMAPStore amo_ema-remote
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Account amo_ema
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```
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### Near {#near}
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```text
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MaildirStore amo_ema-local
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SubFolders Verbatim
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Path ~/new-mail/amo_ema/
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Inbox ~/new-mail/amo_ema/INBOX/
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```
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In the first block, `localrepository` and `remoterepository` tell OfflineIMAP
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where to look for your emails. `use_exa-local` is an arbitrary naming scheme I
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use to differentiate between the various local and remote accounts. It can
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easily be swapped with something else.
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### Sync {#sync}
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```text
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Channel amo_ema
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Far :amo_ema-remote:
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Near :amo_ema-local:
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SyncState *
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Patterns *
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Create Both
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```
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The repository sections describe how the emails are stored or retrieved. In the
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`local` block, you'll notice that the type is `Maildir`. In this format, each
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email is given a unique filename and stored in a hierarchy of folders within
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your account. This is often how your emails are stored on your provider's mail
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server.
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`pythonfile` is used here to authenticate with the remote server. This can be
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complicated and depends _entirely_ on how you manage your passwords. I use
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[KeePassXC](https://keepassxc.org/) and love it. When I set OfflineIMAP up,
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however, it didn't have `libsecret` compatibility. This would have made setup
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significantly easier but, as it already just works™, I don't really see a reason
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to change it.
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This new feature allows `libresecret`-based applications to query KeePassXC for
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your passwords or store them there on your behalf. CLI/TUI applications that
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need a secure mechanism for background authentication can use `secret-tool
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lookup Title "TITLE_OF_PASSWORD"` as the password command. See [the pull
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request](https://github.com/keepassxreboot/keepassxc/pull/2726) for more
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details. Because this wasn't a feature when I first set it up, I put my
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passwords in plaintext files and encrypted them with the GPG key stored on my
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YubiKey. As long as my key is plugged in, OfflineIMAP can authenticate and
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download all my emails just fine. The process for using a GPG key _not_ stored
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on a hardware token is pretty much the same and I'll talk about that process
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instead.
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These are the contents of my `~/.offlineimap.py`.
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```python
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#! /usr/bin/env python2
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from subprocess import check_output
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def get_pass(account):
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return check_output(["gpg", "-dq", f" ~/.mail_pass/{account}.gpg"]).strip("\n")
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```
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This runs `gpg -dq ~/.mail_pass/use_exa.gpg` then strips the newline character
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before returning it to OfflineIMAP. `-d` tells GPG that you're passing it a file
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you want decrypted and `-q` tells it not to give any output other than the
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file's contents. For a setup that works with this Python script, put your
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passwords in plaintext files with the account name as the file name (e.g.
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`use_exa`). You'll then encrypt it with `gpg -er <YOUR_KEY_ID> use_exa`. Running
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`gpg -dq use_exa.gpg` should display your password. Repeat for every account and
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store the resulting files in `~/.mail_pass/`.
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The other option, `sync_deletes`, is whether or not to delete remote emails that
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have been deleted locally. I enabled that because I want to have easy control
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over how much remote storage is used.
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Here's the next block again so you don't have to scroll up:
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```text
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[Repository use_exa-remote]
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type = IMAP
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remotehost = imap.example.com
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starttls = yes
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ssl = no
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remoteport = 143
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remoteuser = user@example.com
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remotepasseval = get_pass("use_exa")
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auth_mechanisms = GSSAPI, XOAUTH2, CRAM-MD5, PLAIN, LOGIN
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maxconnections = 1
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createfolders = True
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sync_deletes = yes
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```
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This one's pretty self-explanatory. `type`, `remotehost`, `starttls`, `ssl`, and
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`remoteport` should all be somewhere in your provider's documentation.
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`remoteuser` is your email address and `remotepasseval` is the function that
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will return your password and allow OfflineIMAP to authenticate. You'll want
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enter the name of your password file without the `.gpg` extension; the script
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takes care of adding that. Leave `auth_mechanisms` alone and the same for
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`maxconnections` unless you know your provider won't rate limit you or something
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for opening multiple connections. `sync_deletes` is the same as in the previous
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block.
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Copy those three blocks for as many accounts as you want emails downloaded from.
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I have 510 lines just for `Account` and `Repository` blocks due to the number of
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address I'm keeping track of.
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## `notmuch` {#notmuch}
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[`notmuch`](https://notmuchmail.org/) is _a fast, global-search, and tag-based
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email system_. This what does all of our organisation as well as what provides
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the "virtual" mailboxes NeoMutt will display later on. Configuration is
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incredibly simple. This file goes in `~/.notmuch-config`.
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```text
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[database]
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path=/home/user/mail/
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[user]
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name=Amolith
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primary_email=user@example.com
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[new]
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tags=unread;new;
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ignore=Trash;
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[search]
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exclude_tags=deleted;spam;
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[maildir]
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synchronize_flags=true
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```
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First section is the path to where all of your archives are, the `[user]`
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section is where you list all of your accounts, `[new]` adds `tags` to mail
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notmuch hasn't indexed yet and ignores indexing the `Trash` folder, and
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`[search]` ignores mail tagged with `deleted` or `spam`. The final section tells
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`notmuch` to add maildir flags which correspond with `notmuch` tags. These flags
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will be synced to the remote server the next time OfflineIMAP runs and things
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will be somewhat organised in your webmail interface.
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After creating the configuration file, run `notmuch new` and wait for all of
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your mail to be indexed. This could take a short amount of time or it could take
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minutes up to an hour, depending on how many emails you have. After it's
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finished, you'll be able to run queries and see matching emails:
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```text
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$ notmuch search from:user@example.com
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thread:0000000000002e9d December 28 [1/1] Example User; Random subject that means nothing
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```
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This is not terribly useful in and of itself because you can't read it or reply
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to it or anything. That's where the Mail User Agent (MUA) comes in.
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## `afew` {#afew}
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[`afew`](https://afew.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) is _an initial tagging script
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for notmuch_. After calling `notmuch new`, `afew` will add tags based on headers
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such as `From:`, `To:`, `Subject:`, etc. as well as handle killed threads and
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spam. The official [quickstart
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guide](https://afew.readthedocs.io/en/latest/quickstart.html) is probably the
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best resource on getting started but I'll include a few tips here as well.
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## NeoMutt {#neomutt}
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## `msmtp` {#msmtp}
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`msmtp` is what's known as a _Mail Transfer Agent_ (MTA). You throw it an email
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and it will relay that to your mail provider's SMTP server so it can have the
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proper headers attached for authentication, it can be sent from the proper
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domain, etc. All the necessary security measures can be applied that prevent
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your email from going directly to spam or from being rejected outright.
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`msmtp`'s configuration is also fairly simple if a bit long, just like
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OfflineIMAP's.
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```text
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# Set default values for all following accounts.
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defaults
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# Use the mail submission port 587 instead of the SMTP port 25.
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port 587
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# Always use TLS.
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tls on
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```
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This section just sets the defaults. It uses port 587 (STARTTLS) for all SMTP
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servers unless otherwise specified and enables TLS.
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```text
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account user@example.com
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host smtp.example.com
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from user@example.com
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auth on
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user user@example.com
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passwordeval secret-tool lookup Title "user@example.com"
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```
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This section is where things get tedious. When passing an email to `msmtp`, it
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looks at the `From:` header and searches for a block with a matching `from`
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line. If it finds one, it will use those configuration options to relay the
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email. `host` is simply the SMTP server of your mail provider, sometimes this is
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`mail.example.com`, `smtp.example.com`, etc. I've already explained `from`,
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`auth` simply says that a username and password will have to be provided, `user`
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is that username, and `passwordeval` is a method to obtain the password.
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When I got to configuring `msmtp`, [KeePassXC](https://keepassxc.org/) had just
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released their `libsecret` integration and I wanted to try it. `secret-tool` is
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a command line tool used to store and retrieve passwords from whatever keyring
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you're using. I think KDE has `kwallet` and GNOME has `gnome-keyring` if you
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already have those set up and want to use them; the process should be quite
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similar regardless.
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As mentioned above `secret-tool` stores and retrieves passwords. For retrieval,
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it expects the command to look like this.
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```text
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secret-tool lookup {attribute} {value} ...
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```
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I don't know what `kwallet` and `gnome-keyring`'s attributes are but this can be
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used with KeePassXC by specifying the `Title` attribute. If the password to your
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email account is stored in KeePassXC with the address as the entry title, you
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can retrieve it by simply running...
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```text
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secret-tool lookup Title "user@example.com"
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```
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If you have a different naming system, you'll have to experiment and try
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different things; I don't know what KeePassXC's other attributes are so I can't
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give other examples.
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```text
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passwordeval gpg -dq ~/.mail_pass/use_exa.gpg
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```
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Now that the whole block is assembled, copy/paste/edit for as many accounts as
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you want to send email from.
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## Summary {#summary}
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## <span class="org-todo todo TODO">TODO</span> Pong fluffy when finished {#pong-fluffy-when-finished}
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