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06 May, 2020 The S-nail mail client And how to achieve a usable configuration for IMAP/SMTP TL;DR: Here's my [1].mailrc. As I'd mentioned in my blog post about [2]mael, I've been on the lookout for a good, usable mail client. As it happens, I found S-nail just as I was about to give up on mael. Turns out writing an MUA isn't all too easy after all. S-nail turned out to be the perfect client for me, but I had to invest quite some time in reading the [3]very thorough manual and exchanging emails with its [4]very friendly author. I did it so you don't have to^[5]1, and I present to you this guide. basic settings These settings below should guarantee some sane defaults to get started with. Comments added for context. # enable upward compatibility with S-nail v15.0 set v15-compat # charsets we send mail in set sendcharsets=utf-8,iso-8859-1 # reply back in sender's charset set reply-in-same-charset # prevent stripping of full names in replies set fullnames # adds a 'Mail-Followup-To' header; useful in mailing lists set followup-to followup-to-honour-ask-yes # asks for an attachment after composing set askattach # marks a replied message as answered set markanswered # honors the 'Reply-To' header set reply-to-honour # automatically launches the editor while composing mail interactively set editalong # I didn't fully understand this :) set history-gabby=all # command history storage set history-file=~/.s-nailhist # sort mail by date (try 'thread' for threaded view) set autosort=date authentication With these out of the way, we can move on to configuring our account -- authenticating IMAP and SMTP. Before that, however, we'll have to create a ~/.netrc file to store our account credentials. (This of course, assumes that your SMTP and IMAP credentials are the same. I don't know what to do otherwise. ) machine *.domain.tld login user@domain.tld password hunter2 Once done, encrypt this file using gpg / gpg2. This is optional, but recommended. $ gpg2 --symmetric --cipher-algo AES256 -o .netrc.gpg .netrc You can now delete the plaintext .netrc file. Now add these lines to your .mailrc: set netrc-lookup set netrc-pipe='gpg2 -qd ~/.netrc.gpg' Before we define our account block, add these two lines for a nicer IMAP experience: set imap-cache=~/.cache/nail set imap-keepalive=240 Defining an account is dead simple. account "personal" { localopts yes set from="Your Name <user@domain.tld>" set folder=imaps://imap.domain.tld:993 # copy sent messages to Sent; '+' indicates subdir of 'folder' set record=+Sent set inbox=+INBOX # optionally, set this to 'smtps' and change the port accordingly # remove 'smtp-use-starttls' set mta=smtp://smtp.domain.tld:587 smtp-use-starttls # couple of shortcuts to useful folders shortcut sent +Sent \ inbox +INBOX \ drafts +Drafts \ trash +Trash \ archives +Archives } # enable account on startup account personal You might also want to trash mail, instead of perma-deleting them (delete does that). To achieve this, we define an alias: define trash { move "$@" +Trash } commandalias del call trash Replace +Trash with the relative path to your trash folder. aesthetics The fun stuff. I don't feel like explaining what these do (hint: I don't fully understand it either), so just copy-paste it and mess around with the colors: # use whatever symbol you fancy set prompt='> ' colour 256 sum-dotmark ft=bold,fg=13 dot colour 256 sum-header fg=007 older colour 256 sum-header bg=008 dot colour 256 sum-header fg=white colour 256 sum-thread bg=008 dot colour 256 sum-thread fg=cyan The prompt can be configured more extensively, but I don't need it. Read the man page if you do. essential commands Eh, you can just read the man page, I guess. But here's a quick list off the top of my head: * headers: Lists all messages, with the date, subject etc. * mail: Compose mail. * <number>: Read mail by specifiying its number on the message list. * delete <number>: Delete mail. * new <number>: Mark as new (unread). * file <shortcut or path to folder>: Change folders. For example: file sent That's all there is to it. This is day 2 of the #100DaysToOffload challenge. I didn't think I'd participate, until today. So yesterday's post is day 1. Will I keep at it? I dunno. We'll see. __________________________________________________________________ 1. Honestly, read the man page (and email Steffen!) -- there's a ton of useful options in there. References 1. https://github.com/icyphox/dotfiles/blob/master/home/.mailrc 2. https://icyphox.sh/blog/mael 3. https://www.sdaoden.eu/code-nail.html 4. https://www.sdaoden.eu/ 5. https://icyphox.sh/home/icy/leet/site/build/blog/s-nail/temp.html#fn:read-man |