Linux | Mac |
---|---|
nmail is a terminal-based email client for Linux and macOS with a user interface similar to alpine / pine.
- Support for IMAP and SMTP protocols
- Local cache using sqlite (optionally AES256-encrypted)
- Multi-threaded (email fetch and send done in background)
- Address book auto-generated based on email messages
- Viewing HTML emails (converted to text in terminal, or in external browser)
- Opening/viewing attachments in external program
- Simple setup wizard for Gmail, iCloud and Outlook/Hotmail
- UI similar to Alpine / Pine
- Compose message using external editor ($EDITOR)
- View message using external viewer ($PAGER)
- Saving and continuing draft messages
- Compose HTML emails using Markdown (see
markdown_html_compose
option) - Email search
- Compose emails while offline
- Color customization
- Signature
- Local mailbox downloaded by third-party application (OfflineIMAP, fdm, etc)
- Multiple email accounts in a single session
- Special handling for Gmail labels
- Threaded view
Usage:
nmail [OPTION]
Command-line Options:
-c, --cache-encrypt
prompt for cache encryption during oauth2 setup
-d, --confdir <DIR>
use a different directory than ~/.config/nmail
-e, --verbose
enable verbose logging
-ee, --extra-verbose
enable extra verbose logging
-h, --help
display this help and exit
-k, --keydump
key code dump mode
-o, --offline
run in offline mode
-p, --pass
change password
-s, --setup <SERV>
setup wizard for specified service, supported services: gmail,
gmail-oauth2, icloud, outlook, outlook-oauth2
-v, --version
output version information and exit
-x, --export <DIR>
export cache to specified dir in Maildir format
Configuration files:
~/.config/nmail/auth.conf
configures custom oauth2 client id and secret
~/.config/nmail/main.conf
configures mail account and general settings
~/.config/nmail/ui.conf
customizes UI settings
Examples:
nmail -s gmail
setup nmail for a gmail account
nmail is developed and tested on Linux and macOS. Current version has been tested on:
- macOS Sonoma 14.0
- Ubuntu 22.04 LTS
Brew
brew install nmail
MacPorts
sudo port install nmail
Arch
yay -S nmail
Guix
guix install nmail
Get Source
git clone https://github.com/d99kris/nmail && cd nmail
If using macOS, Alpine, Arch, Fedora, Gentoo, Raspbian or Ubuntu, one can use
the make.sh
script provided.
Dependencies
./make.sh deps
Build / Install
./make.sh build && ./make.sh install
Dependencies
macOS
brew install openssl ncurses xapian sqlite libmagic ossp-uuid
Arch
sudo pacman -Sy cmake make openssl ncurses xapian-core sqlite cyrus-sasl curl expat zlib file pandoc
Debian-based (Ubuntu, Raspbian, etc)
sudo apt install git cmake build-essential libssl-dev libreadline-dev libncurses5-dev libxapian-dev libsqlite3-dev libsasl2-dev libsasl2-modules libcurl4-openssl-dev libexpat-dev zlib1g-dev libmagic-dev uuid-dev
Fedora
sudo yum -y install cmake openssl-devel ncurses-devel xapian-core-devel sqlite-devel cyrus-sasl-devel cyrus-sasl-plain libcurl-devel expat-devel zlib-devel file-devel libuuid-devel clang pandoc
Gentoo
sudo emerge -n dev-util/cmake dev-libs/openssl sys-libs/ncurses dev-libs/xapian dev-db/sqlite dev-libs/cyrus-sasl net-misc/curl dev-libs/expat sys-libs/zlib sys-apps/file
Build
mkdir -p build && cd build && cmake .. && make -s
Install
sudo make install
Use the setup wizard to set up nmail for the account. Example (replace example@gmail.com with your actual gmail address):
$ nmail -s gmail
Email: example@gmail.com
Name: Firstname Lastname
Password:
Save password (y/n): y
Note: Refer to Gmail Prerequisites for enabling IMAP access and password authentication.
Use the setup wizard to set up nmail for the account. Example:
$ nmail -s gmail-oauth2
Note: Refer to Gmail Prerequisites for enabling IMAP access and obtaining OAuth 2.0 access.
Use the setup wizard to set up nmail for the account. Example (replace example@hotmail.com with your actual outlook / hotmail address):
$ nmail -s outlook
Email: example@hotmail.com
Name: Firstname Lastname
Password:
Save password (y/n): y
Use the setup wizard to set up nmail for the account. Example:
$ nmail -s outlook-oauth2
Run nmail once in order for it to automatically generate the default config file:
$ nmail
Then open the config file ~/.config/nmail/main.conf
in your favourite text
editor and fill out the required fields:
address=example@example.com
drafts=Drafts
imap_host=imap.example.com
imap_port=993
inbox=Inbox
name=Firstname Lastname
sent=Sent
smtp_host=smtp.example.com
smtp_port=587
trash=Trash
user=example@example.com
Full example of a config file ~/.config/nmail/main.conf
:
address=example@example.com
addressbook_encrypt=0
auth=pass
auth_encrypt=1
cache_encrypt=0
cache_index_encrypt=0
client_store_sent=0
copy_to_trash=
coredump_enabled=0
downloads_dir=
drafts=Drafts
editor_cmd=
file_picker_cmd=
folders_exclude=
html_preview_cmd=
html_to_text_cmd=
html_viewer_cmd=
idle_inbox=1
idle_timeout=29
imap_host=imap.example.com
imap_port=993
inbox=Inbox
logdump_enabled=0
msg_viewer_cmd=
name=Firstname Lastname
network_timeout=30
pager_cmd=
parts_viewer_cmd=
prefetch_all_headers=1
prefetch_level=2
queue_encrypt=1
save_pass=1
send_ip=1
sent=Sent
server_timestamps=0
smtp_host=smtp.example.com
smtp_port=587
smtp_user=
sni_enabled=1
text_to_html_cmd=
trash=Trash
user=example@example.com
verbose_logging=0
The from-address to use. Required for sending emails.
Indicates whether nmail shall encrypt local address book cache or not. Enabling it has some performance impact when starting and exiting nmail (default disabled).
Specifies whether nmail shall use password authentication (pass
) or Gmail
OAuth 2.0 authentication (gmail-oauth2
).
Indicates whether nmail shall encrypt local OAuth 2.0 access token store (default enabled).
Indicates whether nmail shall encrypt local message cache or not. Enabling it has some performance impact when starting and exiting nmail, as well as when navigating to different folders (default disabled).
Indicates whether nmail shall encrypt local search index or not. Enabling it has some performance impact when starting and exiting nmail (default disabled).
This field should generally be left 0
. It indicates whether nmail shall upload
sent emails to configured sent
folder. Many email service providers
(gmail, outlook, etc) do this on server side, so this should only be enabled if
emails sent using nmail do not automatically gets stored in the sent folder.
Specifies whether to delete messages by copying them to trash and then deleting from current folder, instead of using the IMAP move command. This is disabled by default, except for GMail IMAP where it is enabled to work around a server-side issue, for details see Issue #172.
Specifies whether to enable core dumps on application crash.
Specifies a custom downloads directory path to save attachments to, for example
downloads_dir=~/Downloads
. If not specified, the current working dir is used.
Name of drafts folder - needed if using functionality to postpone email editing.
The field editor_cmd
allows overriding which external editor to use when
composing / editing an email using an external editor (Ctrl-E
). If not
specified, nmail will use the editor specified by the environment variable
$EDITOR
. If $EDITOR
is not set, nmail will use nano
.
By default when using Ctrl-T
to select attachment files, the nmail internal
file picker is used. By specifying this parameter an external command may be
used instead. The command must output selected file(s) separated by line breaks,
on stdout. Examples:
nnn: file_picker_cmd=TMP=$(mktemp); 2>&1 nnn -p ${TMP}; (cat ${TMP} | tr '\0' '\n' | uniq; rm ${TMP})
ranger: file_picker_cmd=TMP=$(mktemp); 2>&1 ranger --choosefiles=${TMP}; (cat ${TMP}; rm ${TMP})
This field allows excluding certain folders from being accessible in nmail
and also from being indexed by the search engine. This is mainly useful for
email service providers with "virtual" folders that are holding copies of
emails in other folders. When using the setup-wizard to configure a Gmail
account, this field will be configured to
"[Gmail]/All Mail","[Gmail]/Important","[Gmail]/Starred"
. As an alternative
to configuring this parameter for Gmail, folders can be excluded from IMAP
access on server side. In Gmail web interface, navigate to "Settings",
"See all settings", "Labels" and untick "Show in IMAP" for "Starred",
"Important" and "All Mail".
This field allows overriding the external viewer used when previewing
messages composed using markdown. The viewer may be a terminal-based
program, e.g. w3m -o confirm_qq=false
. By default nmail uses open
on macOS and xdg-open >/dev/null 2>&1
on Linux.
This field allows customizing how nmail should convert HTML emails to text.
If not specified, nmail uses a helper script html2nmail
which in turn uses
pandoc
(for html without tables), w3m
, lynx
or elinks
if available
on the system (in that order). The exact command used is one of:
pandoc -f html -t plain+literate_haskell --wrap=preserve
w3m -T text/html -I utf-8 -dump
lynx -assume_charset=utf-8 -display_charset=utf-8 -nomargins -dump
elinks -dump-charset utf-8 -dump
Note that while pandoc generally produces a better text-equivalent to an html email, it is also slower than the other tools. For usage on a lower spec'ed system, consider using any of the other conversion utilities instead.
This field allows overriding the external viewer used when viewing message
html using V
. The viewer may be a terminal-based program, e.g.
w3m -o confirm_qq=false
. By default nmail uses open
on macOS and
xdg-open >/dev/null 2>&1
on Linux.
This parameter controls whether imap idle should watch the inbox for new messages (default enabled) or the currently selected imap folder.
This parameter controls the imap idle timeout in minutes (default 29). This should generally not be changed, refer to RFC 2177 for details.
IMAP hostname / address. Required for fetching emails.
IMAP port. Required for fetching emails.
IMAP inbox folder name. Required for nmail to open the proper default folder.
Specifies whether to dump warning and error log messages to stdout upon exit.
This field allows overriding the command used for externally viewing a
message (.eml
file) with W
. By default nmail uses open
on macOS and
xdg-open >/dev/null 2>&1
on Linux.
Real name of sender. Recommended when sending emails.
Specify timeout for IMAP and SMTP operations in seconds. If using a very slow network connection and sending very large emails it may be necessary to increase this timeout. By setting it to 0 network operations will not time out. Default 30 seconds.
The field pager_cmd
allows overriding which external pager / text viewer to
use when viewing an email using an external pager (E
). If not specified,
nmail will use the pager specified by the environment variable $PAGER
.
If $PAGER
is not set, nmail will use less
.
This field allows overriding the external viewer used when viewing email
parts and attachments. By default nmail uses open
on macOS and
xdg-open >/dev/null 2>&1
on Linux.
Determines whether nmail shall fetch headers for all messages when viewing a folder, or only the latest based on message uid. By disabling this option there is no guarantee folder message lists are sorted by timestamp, as only headers for the last messages stored/added in the folder will be retrieved from server. Also note that some other nmail features may operate in degraded mode when this setting is disabled. The ability to disable pre-fetching of all headers is mainly to encompass use-cases where one wants to minimize network usage, or use nmail without persistant cache. Default enabled.
Messages are pre-fetched from server based on the prefetch_level
config
setting. The following levels are supported:
0 = no pre-fetching, messages are retrieved when viewed
1 = pre-fetching of currently selected message
2 = pre-fetching of all messages in current folder view (default)
3 = pre-fetching of all messages in all folders, i.e. full sync
With level 0-2 configured, pre-fetch level 3 - a single full sync - may be
triggered at run-time by pressing s
from the message list.
Indicates whether nmail shall encrypt local message offline queue or not (default enabled).
Specifies whether nmail shall store the password(s) (default enabled).
Controls whether to send client local IP address (otherwise local hostname) in SMTP handshaking when sending outgoing emails (default enabled).
IMAP sent folder name. Used by nmail if client_store_sent
is enabled to store
copies of outgoing emails.
Use server timestamps for messages, rather than the timestamp in the message header (default disabled).
SMTP hostname / address. Required for sending emails.
SMTP port. Required for fetching emails. Default 587.
The field smtp_user
should generally be left blank, and only be specified in
case the email account has different username and password for sending emails
(or if one wants to use one email service provider for receiving and another
for sending emails). If not specified, the configured user
field will be
used.
Controls whether to enable Server Name Indication (SNI) during TLS handshaking.
This field specifies a custom command to use for spell checking composed
messages. If not specified, nmail checks if aspell
or ispell
is available
on the system (in that order), and uses the first found. The command used is
one of:
aspell -c
spell -o -x
This field allows customizing how nmail should convert composed plain text
markdown message to corresponding text/html part. If not specified, nmail
checks if pandoc
or markdown
is available on the system (in that order),
and uses the first found. The exact command used is one of:
pandoc -s -f gfm -t html
markdown
IMAP trash folder name. Needs to be specified in order to delete emails.
Email account username for IMAP (and SMTP).
Allows forcing nmail to enable specified logging level:
0 = info, warnings, errors (default)
1 = debug (same as `-e`, `--verbose` - enable verbose logging)
2 = trace (same as `-ee`, `--extra-verbose` - enable extra verbose logging)
nmail does currently not support multiple email accounts (in a single session). It is however possible to run multiple nmail instances in parallel with different config directories (and thus different email accounts), but it will be just that - multiple instances - each in its own terminal. To facilitate such usage one can set up aliases for accessing different accounts, e.g.:
alias gm='nmail -d ${HOME}/.config/nmail-gm' # gmail
alias hm='nmail -d ${HOME}/.config/nmail-hm' # hotmail
The email navigator / viewer supports the following commands:
< select folder
> view message / attachments
p previous message
n next message
r reply all
R reply to sender
f forward
F forward as attachment
d delete
c compose
C compose copy of message
l refresh current folder
m move with auto-selection of folder
M move without auto-selection of folder
t toggle unread
v view html part in external viewer
x export
w view message in external viewer
i import
a select all
/ search
<space> select
s start full sync
= search messages with same subject
- search messages with same sender
j jump to message in search results
! sort by unread flag
@ sort by attachment flag
# sort by date
$ sort by sender name
% sort by subject
1 filter by current message unread flag
2 filter by current message attachment flag
3 filter by current message date
4 filter by current message sender name
5 filter by current message subject
` filter reset
The built-in email compose editor in nmail supports the following:
Alt-Backspace delete previous word
Alt-Delete delete next word
Alt-Left move the cursor backward one word
Alt-Right move the cursor forward one word
Arrow keys move the cursor
Backspace backspace
Ctrl-C cancel message
Ctrl-E edit message in external editor
Ctrl-K delete current line
Ctrl-N toggle markdown editing
Ctrl-O postpone message
Ctrl-R toggle rich headers (bcc)
Ctrl-T to select, from address book / from file dialog
Ctrl-V preview html part (using markdown to html conversion)
Ctrl-X send message
Delete delete
Enter new line
Page Up/Down move the cursor page up / down
The email headers To
, Cc
and Attchmnt
support comma-separated values, ex:
To : Alice <alice@example.com>, Bob <bob@example.com>
Cc : Chuck <chuck@example.com>, Dave <dave@example.com>
Attchmnt: localpath.txt, /tmp/absolutepath.txt
Subject : Hello world
Attachment paths may be local (just filename) or absolute (full path).
Press /
in the message list view to search the local cache for an email. The
local cache can be fully syncronized with server by pressing s
. The search
engine supports queries with "quoted strings"
, +musthave
, -mustnothave
,
partialstring*
, AND
, OR
, XOR
and NOT
.
Search terms may be prefixed by body:
, subject:
, from:
, to:
or
folder:
to search only specified fields. By default search query terms are
combined with AND
unless specified. Results are sorted by email timestamp.
Press <
or Left
to exit search results and go back to current folder
message list.
Refer to Debugging for details.
A Telegram group https://t.me/nmailusers is available for users to discuss nmail usage and related topics.
nmail caches data locally to improve performance. Cached data can be encrypted
by setting by setting cache_encrypt=1
in main.conf. Message databases are
then encrypted using OpenSSL AES256-CBC with a key derived from a random salt
and the email account password. Folder names are hashed using SHA256 (thus not
encrypted).
Storing the account password (save_pass=1
in main.conf) is not secure.
While nmail encrypts the password, the key is trivial to determine from
the source code. Only store the password if measurements are taken to ensure
~/.config/nmail/secret.conf
cannot by accessed by a third-party.
Aside from main.conf
covered above, the following files can be used to
configure nmail.
This configuration file controls the UI aspects of nmail. Default configuration file (platform-dependent defaults are left empty below):
attachment_indicator=📎
automove_trash_allow=1
bottom_reply=0
cancel_without_confirm=0
colors_enabled=1
compose_backup_interval=10
compose_line_wrap=0
delete_without_confirm=0
full_header_include_local=0
help_enabled=1
invalid_input_notify=1
key_back=,
key_backward_kill_word=
key_backward_word=
key_begin_line=KEY_CTRLA
key_cancel=KEY_CTRLC
key_compose=c
key_compose_copy=C
key_delete=d
key_delete_line_after_cursor=KEY_CTRLK
key_delete_line_before_cursor=KEY_CTRLU
key_end_line=KEY_CTRLE
key_export=x
key_ext_editor=KEY_CTRLW
key_ext_html_preview=KEY_CTRLV
key_ext_html_viewer=v
key_ext_msg_viewer=w
key_ext_pager=e
key_filter_show_current_date=3
key_filter_show_current_name=4
key_filter_show_current_subject=5
key_filter_show_has_attachments=2
key_filter_show_unread=1
key_filter_sort_reset=`
key_find=/
key_find_next=?
key_forward=f
key_forward_attached=F
key_forward_word=
key_goto_folder=g
key_goto_inbox=i
key_import=z
key_jump_to=j
key_kill_word=
key_move=m
key_next_msg=n
key_next_page=KEY_NPAGE
key_next_page_compose=KEY_NPAGE
key_open=.
key_othercmd_help=o
key_postpone=KEY_CTRLO
key_prev_msg=p
key_prev_page=KEY_PPAGE
key_prev_page_compose=KEY_PPAGE
key_quit=q
key_refresh=l
key_reply_all=r
key_reply_sender=R
key_rich_header=KEY_CTRLR
key_save_file=s
key_search=/
key_search_current_name=-
key_search_current_subject==
key_search_show_folder=\
key_select_all=a
key_select_item=KEY_SPACE
key_send=KEY_CTRLX
key_sort_date=#
key_sort_has_attachments=@
key_sort_name=$
key_sort_subject=%
key_sort_unread=!
key_spell=KEY_CTRLS
key_sync=s
key_to_select=KEY_CTRLT
key_toggle_full_header=h
key_toggle_markdown_compose=KEY_CTRLN
key_toggle_text_html=t
key_toggle_unread=u
localized_subject_prefixes=
markdown_html_compose=0
new_msg_bell=1
persist_file_selection_dir=1
persist_find_query=0
persist_folder_filter=1
persist_search_query=0
persist_selection_on_sortfilter_change=1
persist_sortfilter=1
plain_text=1
postpone_without_confirm=0
quit_without_confirm=1
respect_format_flowed=1
rewrap_quoted_lines=1
search_show_folder=0
send_without_confirm=0
show_embedded_images=1
show_progress=1
show_rich_header=0
signature=0
tab_size=8
terminal_title=
top_bar_show_version=0
unread_indicator=N
unwrap_quoted_lines=1
Controls which character to indicate that an email has attachments
(default: 📎
). For a more plain layout one can use an ascii character: +
.
Specifies whether trash folder may be selected as automove target folder.
Controls whether to reply at the bottom of emails (default disabled).
Allow cancelling email compose without confirmation prompt (default disabled).
Enable terminal color output (default enabled).
Specify interval in seconds for local backups during compose (default 10). If the system running nmail is unexpectedly shutdown while user is composing an email, then upon next nmail startup any backuped compose message will be automatically uploaded to the draft folder. Setting this parameter to 0 disables local backups.
Specify how nmail shall wrap lines in outgoing emails. Supported options:
0 = none (default)
1 = using format=flowed
2 = hard wrap at 72 chars width
Allow deleting emails (moving to trash folder) without confirmation prompt (default disabled).
While viewing full headers (by pressing h
) nmail displays RFC 822 headers
by default. This parameter allows enabling nmail to also display local /
internal header fields, such as server timestamp. Default disabled.
Show supported keyboard shortcuts at bottom of screen (default enabled).
Notify user when unsupported keyboard shortcuts are input (default enabled).
Keyboard bindings for various functions (default see above). The keyboard bindings may be specified in the following formats:
- Ncurses macro (ex:
KEY_CTRLK
) - Hex key code (ex:
0x22e
) - Octal key code sequence (ex:
\033\177
) - Plain-text lower-case ASCII (ex:
r
) - Disable key binding (
KEY_NONE
)
To determine the key code sequence for a key, one can run nmail in key code
dump mode nmail -k
which will output the octal code, and ncurses macro name
(if present).
Email subjects are normalized (stripped of re:
, fwd:
) when sorting emails
by subject, and when replying to, or forwarding an email. By default only the
English prefixes re
and fwd?
(regex for fwd
and fw
) are removed. This
parameter allows extending the removal to other localized prefixes. Example
configuration for a Swedish user:
localized_subject_prefixes=sv,vb
For a French user:
localized_subject_prefixes=ref,tr
For a German user:
localized_subject_prefixes=aw,wg
Default value for each new email, whether nmail shall enable markdown HTML compose. I.e. whether nmail shall generate a text/html message part based on processing the composed message as Markdown, when sending sending emails from nmail. This can be overridden on a per-email basis by pressing CTRL-N when editing an email (default disabled).
Indicate new messages with terminal bell (default enabled).
Determines whether file selection view shall remember previous directory (default enabled).
Controls whether to start with previous find query when performing repeated find queries (default disabled).
Determines whether to persist move-to-folder list filter (default enabled).
Controls whether to start with previous search query when performing repeated search queries (default disabled).
Determines whether to keep current message list selection when filtering/sorting mode is changed (default enabled).
Specifies whether each folder listing shall persist its filtering/sorting mode (default enabled).
Determines whether showing plain text (vs. html converted to text) is
preferred. If the preferred email part is not present, nmail automatically
attempts to show the other. This option can be re-configured at run-time
by pressing t
when viewing an email (default enabled).
Allow postponing email compose without confirmation prompt (default disabled).
Allow exiting nmail without confirmation prompt (default enabled).
Specify whether nmail shall respect email line wrapping of format=flowed type (default enabled).
Control whether nmail shall rewrap quoted lines (default enabled).
Determines whether folder name should be shown in search results. This option
can be re-configured at run-time by pressing \
when viewing search results
(default disabled).
Allow sending email during compose without confirmation prompt (default disabled).
Determines whether to show embedded images in text/html part when viewing it using external viewer; press right arrow when viewing a message to go to parts view, and then select the text/html part and press right arrow again (default enabled).
Specify how nmail shall show progress indication when fetching or indexing emails. Supported options:
0 = disabled
1 = show floating point percentage (default)
2 = show integer percentage
Determines whether to show rich headers (bcc field) during email compose. This
option can be re-configured in run-time by pressing CTRL-R
when composing
an email (default disabled).
Determines whether to suffix emails with a signature (default disabled). When
enabled, nmail will use ~/.config/nmail/signature.txt
if present, or
otherwise use ~/.signature
for signature plain text content. When composing
markdown formatted emails, nmail will use ~/.config/nmail/signature.html
if
present, for the html part, and otherwise simply convert the plain text
signature to html.
Note: For custom html signature to work properly, the plain text signature should not be present more than once in the composed message, thus a very short plain text signature may not be ideal.
Example signature files: signature.txt, signature.html
Tabs are expanded to spaces when viewed in nmail. This parameter controls the space between tab stops (default 8).
Specifies custom terminal title, ex: terminal_title=nmail - d99kris@email.com
.
Controls which character to indicate that an email is unread (default: N
).
For a more graphical interface, an emoji such as ✉
can be used.
Specifies whether nmail shall unwrap quoted lines before wrapping them when composing a message reply.
This configuration file controls the configurable colors of nmail. For this
configuration to take effect, colors_enabled=1
must be set in
~/.config/nmail/ui.conf
.
Example color config files are provided in /usr/local/share/nmail/themes
and can be used by overwriting ~/.config/nmail/colors.conf
.
This color theme is similar to htop's default, see screenshot below with nmail and htop.
To use this config:
cp /usr/local/share/nmail/themes/htop-style.conf ~/.config/nmail/colors.conf
Alternatively one may manually edit colors.conf
. Colors may
be specified using standard palette names (black
, red
, green
, yellow
,
blue
, magenta
, cyan
, white
, gray
, bright_red
, bright_green
,
bright_yellow
, bright_blue
, bright_magenta
, bright_cyan
and
bright_white
) or using integer palette numbers (0
, 1
, 2
, etc).
To use default terminal color, leave the color empty or set it to normal
.
To use inverted / reverse color set both fg
and bg
values to reverse
.
For terminals supporting custom palettes it is also possible to specify colors
using six digit hex format with 0x
prefix, e.g. 0xa0a0a0
. For each item
background _bg
and foreground _fg
can be specified. Default
configuration file:
color_dialog_bg=reverse
color_dialog_fg=reverse
color_help_desc_bg=
color_help_desc_fg=
color_help_keys_bg=reverse
color_help_keys_fg=reverse
color_highlighted_text_bg=reverse
color_highlighted_text_fg=reverse
color_quoted_text_bg=
color_quoted_text_fg=gray
color_regular_text_bg=
color_regular_text_fg=
color_selected_item_bg=
color_selected_item_fg=gray
color_top_bar_bg=reverse
color_top_bar_fg=reverse
User prompt dialogs and notifications at bottom of the screen, just above the help bar.
Help shortcut description texts at bottom of the screen, i.e. Compose
in
C Compose
.
Help shortcut key binding texts at bottom of the screen, i.e. C
in
C Compose
.
Highlighted text, such as current message in message view, current folder in folder list, text strings found in message find, etc.
Quoted message text (lines starting with >
).
Default text color.
Selected messages in message list view.
Top / title bar.
This configuration file allows users to set up custom OAuth 2.0 client id and client secret. If not specified, nmail uses its own application id and secret. Default configuration file:
oauth2_client_id=
oauth2_client_secret=
Custom OAuth 2.0 client id.
Custom OAuth 2.0 client secret.
Gmail prevents IMAP access by default.
In order to enable IMAP access go to the Gmail web interface - typically
mail.google.com - and navigate to
Settings -> Forwarding and POP/IMAP -> IMAP access
and select: Enable IMAP
Gmail prevents password authentication by default. To enable password-authenticated IMAP access, one must set up an "app password".
To set up an "app password", navigate to https://myaccount.google.com/apppasswords and select app "Mail" and an appropriate device, e.g. "Mac", then click Generate.
Google OAuth 2.0 application review has not yet been requested for nmail, and
as such users need to request an invitation to use this. Please send an email
to d99kris at gmail dot com
with subject nmail google oauth2 invite
from
the google account address you would like to be invited.
Alternatively a user may set up their own OAuth 2.0 application with Google
and configure ~/.config/nmail/auth.conf
accordingly.
The nmail message cache may be exported to the Maildir format using the following command:
nmail --export ~/Maildir
A basic ~/.muttrc
config file for reading the exported Maildir in mutt
:
set mbox_type=Maildir
set spoolfile="~/Maildir"
set folder="~/Maildir"
set mask=".*"
Note: nmail is not designed for working with other email clients, this export option is mainly available as a data recovery option in case access to an email account is lost, and one needs a local Maildir archive to import into a new email account. Such import is not supported by nmail, but is supported by some other email clients, like Thunderbird.
nmail is implemented in C++. Its source tree includes the source code from the following third-party libraries:
- apathy - Copyright 2013 Dan Lecocq - MIT License
- cereal - Copyright 2014 Randolph Voorhies, Shane Grant - BSD-3 License
- cxx-prettyprint - Copyright 2010 Louis Delacroix - Boost License
- cyrus-imap - Copyright 1994-2000 Carnegie Mellon University - BSD-3 License
- libetpan - Copyright 2001-2005 Dinh Viet Hoa - BSD-3 License
- sqlite_modern_cpp - Copyright 2017 aminroosta - MIT License
Uncrustify is used to maintain consistent source code formatting, example:
./make.sh src
nmail is distributed under the MIT license. See LICENSE file.
alternative to alpine, command line, console-based, email client, linux, macos, ncurses, terminal-based.