isync/src/compat/isync.1

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.ig
\" isync - mbsync wrapper: IMAP4 to Maildir mailbox synchronizer
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
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\" Copyright (C) 2000-2002 Michael R. Elkins <me@mutt.org>
\" Copyright (C) 2002-2004 Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@users.sf.net>
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\"
\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
\" (at your option) any later version.
\"
\" This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
\" GNU General Public License for more details.
\"
\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
\" along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
\"
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..
2012-08-26 13:17:38 +00:00
.TH isync 1 "2010 Feb 7"
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..
.SH NAME
isync - synchronize IMAP4 and Maildir mailboxes
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..
.SH SYNOPSIS
\fBisync\fR [\fIoptions\fR ...] {\fImailbox\fR ...|\fI-a\fR|\fI-l\fR}
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..
.SH DESCRIPTION
\fBisync\fR is a command line application which synchronizes local
Maildir mailboxes with remote IMAP4 mailboxes, suitable for use in
IMAP-disconnected mode. Multiple copies of the remote IMAP4 mailboxes can
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
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be maintained, and all flags are synchronized.
.br
\fBisync\fR is only a wrapper binary around \fBmbsync\fR to simplify upgrades.
It will automatically migrate the UID mapping from previous versions of
\fBisync\fR (even before 0.8) to the new format, and transparently call
\fBmbsync\fR. If you were using \fBisync\fR version 0.8 or 0.9.x you might
want to use \fBmdconvert\fR to convert the mailboxes to the more efficient
\fBnative\fR UID storage scheme after migrating them.
.br
\fBisync\fR is deprecated. Please use the \fB-w\fR option to permanently
migrate the configuration and start using \fBmbsync\fR directly.
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..
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
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\fB-c\fR, \fB--config\fR \fIfile\fR
Read configuration from \fIfile\fR.
By default, the configuration is read from ~/.isyncrc if it exists.
.TP
\fB-1\fR, \fB--one-to-one\fR
Instead of using the mailbox specifications in ~/.isyncrc, isync will pick up
all mailboxes from the local directory and remote folder and map them 1:1
onto each other according to their names.
.TP
\fB-I\fR, \fB--inbox\fR \fImailbox\fR
Exception to the 1:1 mapping created by -1: the special IMAP mailbox \fIINBOX\fR
is mapped to the local \fImailbox\fR (relative to the maildir).
.TP
2001-10-31 06:06:06 +00:00
\fB-a\fR, \fB--all\fR
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
Synchronize all mailboxes (either specified in ~/.isyncrc or determined by the
1:1 mapping).
2001-10-31 06:06:06 +00:00
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fB-l\fR, \fB--list\fR
Don't synchronize anything, but list all mailboxes and exit.
.TP
\fB-L\fR, \fB--create-local\fR
Automatically create the local Maildir mailbox if it doesn't already
exist.
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fB-R\fR, \fB--create-remote\fR
Automatically create the remote IMAP mailbox if it doesn't already exist.
.TP
\fB-C\fR, \fB--create\fR
Automatically create any mailboxes if they don't already exist.
2003-09-02 12:06:26 +00:00
This is simply a combination of -L and -R.
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
.TP
\fB-d\fR, \fB--delete\fR
Causes \fBisync\fR to propagate message deletions.
By default, \fIdead\fR messages are \fBnot\fR deleted.
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.TP
\fB-e\fR, \fB--expunge\fR
Causes \fBisync\fR to permanently remove all messages marked for deletion.
By default, \fIdeleted\fR messages are \fBnot\fR expunged.
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.TP
\fB-f\fR, \fB--fast\fR
Only fetch new messages existing on the server into the local mailbox.
Message deletions and flag changes will not be propagated.
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.TP
\fB-h\fR, \fB--help\fR
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Displays a summary of command line options
.TP
\fB-p\fR, \fB--port\fR \fIport\fR
Specifies the port on the IMAP server to connect to (default: 143 for imap,
993 for imaps)
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.TP
\fB-q\fR, \fB--quiet\fR
Suppress informational messages.
If specified twice, suppress warning messages as well.
.TP
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\fB-r\fR, \fB--remote\fR \fIbox\fR
Specifies the name of the remote IMAP mailbox to synchronize with
(Default: INBOX)
.TP
\fB-s\fR, \fB--host\fR [\fBimaps:\fR]\fIhost\fR
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Specifies the hostname of the IMAP server
.TP
\fB-u\fR, \fB--user\fR \fIuser\fR
Specifies the login name to access the IMAP server (default: $USER)
.TP
\fB-P\fR, \fB--pass\fR \fIpassword\fR
Specifies the password to access the IMAP server (prompted for by default)
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fB-M\fR, \fB--maildir\fR \fIdir\fR
Specifies the location for your local mailboxes.
.TP
\fB-F\fR, \fB--folder\fR \fIfolder\fR/
Specifies the location for your remote mailboxes.
.TP
\fB-v\fR, \fB--version\fR
Displays \fBisync\fR version information.
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fB-V\fR, \fB--verbose\fR
Enables \fIverbose\fR mode, which displays the IMAP4 network traffic.
.TP
\fB-D\fR, \fB--debug\fR
Enable printing of \fIdebug\fR messages.
.TP
\fB-w\fR, \fB--write\fR
Don't run \fBmbsync\fR, but instead write a permanent config file for it.
The UID mappings of all configured mailboxes will be migrated.
Note that most command line options that would affect an actual sync operation
will be incorporated into the new config file as well; exceptions are
--fast and --create[-remote|-local].
The name of the new config file is determined by replacing the last occurrence
of "isync" with "mbsync", or appending ".mbsync" if "isync" was not found.
.TP
\fB-W\fR, \fB--writeto\fR \fIfile\fR
Like \fB-w\fR, but use the specified name for the new config file.
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..
.SH CONFIGURATION
\fBisync\fR by default reads \fI~/.isyncrc\fR to load configuration data.
Each non-empty line of the configuration file that does not start with a
hash mark consists of a command.
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
The following commands are understood:
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
.TP
\fBMailbox\fR \fIpath\fR
Defines a local Maildir mailbox. All configuration commands following this
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
line, up until the next \fIMailbox\fR command, apply to this mailbox only.
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
..
.TP
\fBHost\fR [\fBimaps:\fR]\fIname\fR
2000-12-21 06:27:05 +00:00
Defines the DNS name or IP address of the IMAP server. If the hostname is
prefixed with \fBimaps:\fR the connection is assumed to be a SSL connection
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
to port 993 (though you can change this by placing a \fBPort\fR command
\fBafter\fR the \fBHost\fR command).
Note that modern servers support SSL on the default port 143.
\fBisync\fR will always attempt to use SSL if available.
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
..
.TP
\fBPort\fR \fIport\fR
Defines the TCP port number of the IMAP server (Default: 143 for imap,
993 for imaps)
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
..
.TP
\fBBox\fR \fImailbox\fR
Defines the name of the remote IMAP mailbox associated with the local
Maildir mailbox (Default: INBOX)
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
..
.TP
\fBUser\fR \fIusername\fR
Defines the login name on the IMAP server (Default: current user)
..
.TP
\fBPass\fR \fIpassword\fR
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
Defines the password for \fIusername\fR on the IMAP server.
Note that this option is \fBNOT\fR required.
If no password is specified in the configuration file, \fBisync\fR
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
will prompt you for it.
..
.TP
\fBAlias\fR \fIstring\fR
Defines an alias for the mailbox which can be used as a shortcut on the
command line.
2000-12-21 06:27:05 +00:00
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBCopyDeletedTo\fR \fImailbox\fR
Specifies the remote IMAP mailbox to copy deleted messages to prior to
expunging (Default: none).
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBDelete\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
Specifies whether message deletions are propagated. (Default: no).
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBNOTE:\fR The \fI-d\fR command line option overrides this setting when
set to \fIno\fR.
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBExpunge\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
Specifies whether deleted messages are expunged. (Default: no).
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBNOTE:\fR The \fI-e\fR command line option overrides this setting when
set to \fIno\fR.
..
.TP
\fBMailDir\fR \fIdirectory\fR
Specifies the location of your local mailboxes if a relative path is
specified in a \fIMailbox\fR command (Default: \fI~\fR).
\fBNOTE:\fR This directive is allowed only in the \fIglobal\fR
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
section (see below).
..
.TP
\fBFolder\fR \fIdirectory\fR/
Specifies the location of your IMAP mailboxes
specified in \fIBox\fR commands (Default: \fI""\fR).
\fBNOTE:\fR You \fBmust\fR append the hierarchy delimiter (usually
a slash) to this specification.
\fBNOTE 2:\fR This directive is allowed only in the \fIglobal\fR
section (see below).
..
.TP
\fBMaxMessages\fR \fIcount\fR
Sets the number of messages \fBisync\fR should keep in the local copy of a
mailbox.
This is useful for mailboxes where you keep a complete archive on the server,
but want to mirror only the last messages (for instance, for mailing lists).
The messages that were the first to arrive in the mailbox (independently of the
actual date of the message) will be deleted first.
Messages that are flagged (marked as important) and unread messages will not be
automatically deleted.
If \fIcount\fR is 0, the maximum number of messages is \fBunlimited\fR.
(Default: 0)
..
.TP
\fBMaxSize\fR \fIbytes\fR
Messages larger than that many bytes will not be transferred over the wire.
This is useful for weeding out messages with large attachments.
If \fIbytes\fR is 0, the maximum file size is \fBunlimited\fR.
(Default: 0)
..
.TP
\fBTunnel\fR \fIcommand\fR
Specify a command to run to establish a connection rather than opening a TCP
socket. This allows you to run an IMAP session over an SSH tunnel, for
example.
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBUseNamespace\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
Selects whether the server's first "personal" NAMESPACE should be prefixed to
mailbox names. Disabling this makes sense for some broken IMAP servers.
This option is meaningless if a \fIFolder\fR was specified.
(Default: \fIyes\fR)
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBRequireCRAM\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
If set to \fIyes\fR, \fBisync\fR will abort the connection if no CRAM-MD5
authentication is possible. (Default: \fIno\fR)
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBRequireSSL\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
\fBisync\fR will abort the connection if a TLS/SSL session cannot be
established with the IMAP server. (Default: \fIyes\fR)
2000-12-21 06:27:05 +00:00
..
.TP
\fBCertificateFile\fR \fIpath\fR
File containing X.509 CA certificates used to verify server identities.
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBUseSSLv2\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
Should \fBisync\fR use SSLv2 for communication with the IMAP server over SSL?
(Default: \fIno\fR)
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
..
.TP
\fBUseSSLv3\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
Should \fBisync\fR use SSLv3 for communication with the IMAP server over SSL?
(Default: \fIyes\fR if the imaps port is used, otherwise \fIno\fR)
..
.TP
\fBUseTLSv1\fR \fIyes\fR|\fIno\fR
Should \fBisync\fR use TLSv1 for communication with the IMAP server over SSL?
(Default: \fIyes\fR)
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
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\fBOneToOne\fR
\fBisync\fR will ignore any \fIMailbox\fR specifications and instead pick up
all mailboxes from the local \fIMailDir\fR and remote \fIFolder\fR and map
them 1:1 onto each other according to their names.
\fBNOTE:\fR This directive is allowed only in the \fIglobal\fR
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
section (see below).
..
.TP
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
\fBInbox\fR \fImailbox\fR
Exception to the OneToOne mapping: the special IMAP mailbox \fIINBOX\fR
is mapped to the local \fImailbox\fR (relative to the \fIMailDir\fR).
\fBNOTE:\fR This directive is only meaningful in the \fIglobal\fR
section (see below).
..
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
.P
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
Configuration commands that appear prior to the first \fBMailbox\fR
command are considered to be \fIglobal\fR
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options which are used as defaults when those specific options are not
specifically set for a defined Mailbox. For example, if you use the same
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
login name for several IMAP servers, you can put a \fBUser\fR command before
the first \fBMailbox\fR command, and then leave out the \fBUser\fR command
in the sections for each mailbox.
\fBisync\fR will then use the global value by default.
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
..
.SH FILES
.TP
.B ~/.isyncrc
Default configuration file
..
.SH BUGS
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
The configuration file takes precedence over command line options.
2003-05-14 13:42:49 +00:00
.br
Use -c /dev/null to work around.
.P
See the \fBINHERENT PROBLEMS\fR section in the \fBmbsync\fR man page, too.
..
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
.SH SEE ALSO
mbsync(1), mdconvert(1), mutt(1), maildir(5)
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.P
2003-05-14 13:42:49 +00:00
Up to date information on \fBisync\fR can be found at http://isync.sf.net/
2000-12-20 21:41:21 +00:00
..
.SH AUTHORS
Originally written by Michael R. Elkins,
currently maintained by Oswald Buddenhagen.