Provided by: mairix_0.23+git20131125-0.4ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       mairix - index and search mail folders

SYNOPSIS

   Indexing
       mairix  [  -v|--verbose  ]  [  -p|--purge ] [ -f|--rcfile mairixrc ] [ -F|--fast-index ] [
       --force-hash-key-new-database hash ]

   Searching
       mairix [ -v|--verbose ] [ -f|--rcfile mairixrc ] [ -r|--raw-output ] [ -x|--excerpt-output
       ]  [  -H|--force-hardlinks  ]  [  -o|--mfolder mfolder ] [ -a|--augment ] [ -t|--threads ]
       search-patterns

   Other
       mairix [ -h|--help ]

       mairix [ -V|--version ]

       mairix [ -d|--dump ]

DESCRIPTION

       mairix indexes and searches a collection of email messages.  The  folders  containing  the
       messages  for indexing are defined in the configuration file.  The indexing stage produces
       a database file.  The database file provides  rapid  access  to  details  of  the  indexed
       messages  during  searching  operations.   A  search normally produces a folder (so-called
       mfolder) containing the matched messages.  However, a raw  mode  (-r)  exists  which  just
       lists the matched messages instead.

       It can operate with the following folder types

       *      maildir

       *      MH  (compatible  with the MH folder formats used by xmh, sylpheed, claws-mail, nnml
              (Gnus) and evolution)

       *      mbox (including mboxes that have been compressed with gzip or bzip2)

       If maildir or MH source folders are used, and a search outputs its matches to  an  mfolder
       in maildir or MH format, symbolic links are used to reference the original messages inside
       the mfolder.  However, if mbox folders are involved, copies of messages are made instead.

OPTIONS

       mairix decides whether indexing or searching is required by looking for  the  presence  of
       any search-patterns on the command line.

   Special modes
       -h, --help
              Show usage summary and exit

       -V, --version
              Show program version and exit

       -d
              Dump the database's contents in human-readable form to stdout.

   General options
       -f mairixrc
       --rcfile mairixrc
              Specify  an  alternative configuration file to use.  The default configuration file
              is ~/.mairixrc.

       -v, --verbose
              Make the output more verbose

       -Q, --no-integrity-checks
              Normally mairix will do some internal integrity tests  on  the  database.   The  -Q
              option  removes  these checks, making mairix run faster, but it will be less likely
              to detect internal problems if any bugs creep in.

              The nochecks directive in the rc file has the same effect.

       --unlock
              mairix locks its database file  during  any  indexing  or  searching  operation  to
              prevent  multiple  indexing  runs  interfering  with each other, or an indexing run
              interfering with search runs.  The --unlock  option  removes  the  lockfile  before
              doing  the  requested indexing or searching operation.  This is a convenient way of
              cleaning up a stale lockfile if an earlier run  crashed  for  some  reason  or  was
              aborted.

   Indexing options
       -p, --purge
              Cause  stale (dead) messages to be purged from the database during an indexing run.
              (Normally, stale messages are left in the database because of the  additional  cost
              of compacting away the storage that they take up.)

       -F, --fast-index
              When processing maildir and MH folders, mairix normally compares the mtime and size
              of each message against the values stored in the database.  If they  have  changed,
              the  message  will  be  rescanned.   This  check  requires  each message file to be
              stat'ed.  For large numbers of messages in  these  folder  types,  this  can  be  a
              sizeable overhead.

              This option tells mairix to assume that when a message currently on-disc has a name
              matching one already in the database, it should assume the message is unchanged.

              A later indexing run without using this option will fix up any  rescans  that  were
              missed due to its use.

       --force-hash-key-new-database hash
              This option should only be used for debugging.
              If a new database is created, hash is used as hash key, instead of a random hash.

   Search options
       -a, --augment
              Append  newly  matches  messages  to  the  current  mfolder instead of creating the
              mfolder from scratch.

       -t, --threads
              As well as returning the matched messages, also return every message  in  the  same
              thread as one of the real matches.

       -r, --raw-output
              Instead  of  creating  an  mfolder containing the matched messages, just show their
              paths on stdout.

       -x, --excerpt-output
              Instead of creating an mfolder containing the matched messages, display an  excerpt
              from their headers on stdout.  The excerpt shows To, Cc, From, Subject and Date.

       -H, --force-hardlinks
              Instead of creating symbolic links, force the use of hardlinks.  This helps mailers
              such as alpine to realize that there are new mails in the search folder.

       -o mfolder
       --mfolder mfolder
              Specify a temporary alternative path for the mfolder to use, overriding the mfolder
              directive in the rc file.

              mairix  will  refuse  to  output  search results into any folder that appears to be
              amongst those that are indexed.  This is to prevent accidental deletion of emails.

   Search patterns
       t:word
              Match word in the To: header.

       c:word
              Match word in the Cc: header.

       f:word
              Match word in the From: header.

       s:word
              Match word in the Subject: header.

       m:word
              Match word in the Message-ID: header.

       b:word
              Match word in the message body.

              Message body is taken to mean any body part of type text/plain or  text/html.   For
              text/html,  text  within  meta  tags is ignored.  In particular, the URLs inside <A
              HREF="..."> tags are not currently indexed.  Non-text attachments are ignored.   If
              there's  an  attachment  of  type  message/rfc822,  this is parsed and the match is
              performed on this sub-message too.  If a  hit  occurs,  the  enclosing  message  is
              treated as having a hit.

       d:[start-datespec]-[end-datespec]
              Match messages with Date: headers lying in the specific range.

       z:[low-size]-[high-size]
              Match messages whose size lies in the specified range.  If the low-size argument is
              omitted it defaults to zero.  If the high-size argument is omitted it  defaults  to
              infinite size.

              For  example,  to  match  messages between 10kilobytes and 20kilobytes in size, the
              following search term can be used:

                   mairix z:10k-20k

              The suffix 'k' on a number means multiply by 1024, and the suffix 'M' on  a  number
              means multiply by 1024*1024.

       n:word
              Match word occurring as the name of an attachment in the message.  Since attachment
              names are usually long, this option would usually be used in  the  substring  form.
              So

                   mairix n:mairix=

              would  match  all messages which have attachments whose names contain the substring
              mairix.

              The attachment name is determined from the name=xxx or filename=xxx  qualifiers  on
              the Content-Type: and Content-Disposition: headers respectively.

       F:flags
              Match  messages with particular flag settings.  The available flags are 's' meaning
              seen,  'r'  meaning  replied,  and  'f'  meaning  flagged.   The  flags  are  case-
              insensitive.  A flag letter may be prefixed by a '-' to negate its sense.  Thus


                   mairix F:-s d:1w-
              would match any unread message less than a week old, and

                   mairix F:f-r d:-1m

              would  match  any  flagged  message older than a month which you haven't replied to
              yet.

              Note that the flag characters and their meanings  agree  with  those  used  as  the
              suffix letters on message filenames in maildir folders.

   Searching for a match amongst more than one part of a message
       Multiple  body parts may be grouped together, if a match in any of them is sought.  Common
       examples follow.

       tc:word
              Match word in either the To: or Cc: headers (or both).

       bs:word
              Match word in either the Subject: header or the message body (or both).

       The a: search pattern is an abbreviation for tcf:; i.e. match the word in the To:, Cc:  or
       From: headers.  ("a" stands for "address" in this case.)

   Match words
       The word argument to the search strings can take various forms.

       ~word
              Match messages not containing the word.

       word1,word2
              This matches if both the words are matched in the specified message part.

       word1/word2
              This matches if either of the words are matched in the specified message part.

       substring=
              Match any word containing substring as a substring

       substring=N
              Match  any  word  containing  substring, allowing up to N errors in the match.  For
              example, if N is 1, a single error is allowed, where an error can be

       *      a missing letter

       *      an extra letter

       *      a different letter.

       ^substring=
              Match any word containing substring as  a  substring,  with  the  requirement  that
              substring occurs at the beginning of the matched word.

   Precedence matters
       The binding order of the constructions is:

       1.     Individual  command  line  arguments  define  separate  conditions which are AND-ed
              together

       2.     Within a single argument, the letters before the colon define which  message  parts
              the expression applies to.  If there is no colon, the expression applies to all the
              headers listed earlier and the body.

       3.     After the colon, commas delineate separate disjuncts, which are OR-ed together.

       4.     Each disjunct may contain separate conjuncts, which are separated  by  plus  signs.
              These conditions are AND-ed together.

       5.     Each  conjunct  may start with a tilde to negate it, and may be followed by a slash
              to indicate a substring match, optionally followed by  an  integer  to  define  the
              maximum number of errors allowed.

   Date specification
       This  section describes the syntax used for specifying dates when searching using the `d:'
       option.

       Dates are specified as a range.  The start and end of the range  can  both  be  specified.
       Alternatively,  if the start is omitted, it is treated as being the beginning of time.  If
       the end is omitted, it is treated as the current time.

       There are 4 basic formats:

       d:start-end
              Specify both start and end explicitly

       d:start-
              Specify start, end is the current time

       d:-end Specify end, start is 'a long time ago' (i.e. early enough to include any message).

       d:period
              Specify start and end implicitly, as the start and end of the period given.

       The start and end can be specified either absolute or relative.  A  relative  endpoint  is
       given as a number followed by a single letter defining the scaling:

       ┌────────┬─────────────┬───────────┬───────────────────────┐
       │lettershort forexamplemeaning              │
       ├────────┼─────────────┼───────────┼───────────────────────┤
       │d       │  days       │  3d       │  3 days               │
       │w       │  weeks      │  2w       │  2 weeks (14 days)    │
       │m       │  months     │  5m       │  5 months (150 days)  │
       │y       │  years      │  4y       │  4 years (4*365 days) │
       └────────┴─────────────┴───────────┴───────────────────────┘

       Months are always treated as 30 days, and years as 365 days, for this purpose.

       Absolute  times  can  be specified in many forms.  Some forms have different meanings when
       they define a start date from  that  when  they  define  an  end  date.   Where  a  single
       expression specifies both the start and end (i.e. where the argument to d: doesn't contain
       a `-'), it will usually have different interpretations in the two cases.

       In the examples below, suppose the current date is Sunday May 18th, 2003 (when  I  started
       to write this material.)

       ┌─────────────────────┬──────────────────────┬───────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐
       │Example              │  Start date          │  End date             │  Notes                          │
       ├─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼───────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
       │d:20030301-20030425  │  March 1st, 2003     │  25th April, 2003     │                                 │
       │d:030301-030425      │  March 1st, 2003     │  April 25th, 2003     │  century assumed                │
       │d:mar1-apr25         │  March 1st, 2003     │  April 25th, 2003     │                                 │
       │d:Mar1-Apr25         │  March 1st, 2003     │  April 25th, 2003     │  case insensitive               │
       │d:MAR1-APR25         │  March 1st, 2003     │  April 25th, 2003     │  case insensitive               │
       │d:1mar-25apr         │  March 1st, 2003     │  April 25th, 2003     │  date and month in either order │
       │d:2002               │  January 1st, 2002   │  December 31st, 2002  │  whole year                     │
       │d:mar                │  March 1st, 2003     │  March 31st, 2003     │  most recent March              │
       │d:oct                │  October 1st, 2002   │  October 31st, 2002   │  most recent October            │
       │d:21oct-mar          │  October 21st, 2002  │  March 31st, 2003     │  start before end               │
       │d:21apr-mar          │  April 21st, 2002    │  March 31st, 2003     │  start before end               │
       │d:21apr-             │  April 21st, 2003    │  May 18th, 2003       │  end omitted                    │
       │d:-21apr             │  January 1st, 1900   │  April 21st, 2003     │  start omitted                  │
       │d:6w-2w              │  April 6th, 2003     │  May 4th, 2003        │  both dates relative            │
       │d:21apr-1w           │  April 21st, 2003    │  May 11th, 2003       │  one date relative              │
       │d:21apr-2y           │  April 21st, 2001    │  May 11th, 2001       │  start before end               │
       │d:99-11              │  January 1st, 1999   │  May 11th, 2003       │ 2 digits are a day of the month │
       │                     │                      │                       │ if possible, otherwise a year   │
       │d:99oct-1oct         │  October 1st, 1999   │  October 1st, 2002    │ end before now, single digit is │
       │                     │                      │                       │ a day of the month              │
       │d:99oct-01oct        │  October 1st, 1999   │  October 31st, 2001   │ 2  digits  starting  with  zero │
       │                     │                      │                       │ treated as a year               │
       │d:oct99-oct1         │  October 1st, 1999   │  October 1st, 2002    │ day and month in either order   │
       │d:oct99-oct01        │  October 1st, 1999   │  October 31st, 2001   │ year and month in either order  │
       └─────────────────────┴──────────────────────┴───────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘

       The principles in the table work as follows.

       •      When the expression defines a period of more than a day (i.e. if a month or year is
              specified), the earliest day in the period is taken when the start date is defined,
              and the last day in the period if the end of the range is being defined.

       •      The end date is always taken to be on or before the current date.

       •      The start date is always taken to be on or before the end date.

SETTING UP THE MATCH FOLDER

       If the match folder does not exist when  running  in  search  mode,  it  is  automatically
       created.   For 'mformat=maildir' (the default), this should be all you need to do.  If you
       use 'mformat=mh', you may have to run some commands before your mailer will recognize  the
       folder.  e.g.  for mutt, you could do

              mkdir -p /home/richard/Mail/mfolder
              touch /home/richard/Mail/mfolder/.mh_sequences

       which seems to work.  Alternatively, within mutt, you could set MBOX_TYPE to in advance.

       If  you  use  Sylpheed,  the  best  way  seems  to be to create the new folder from within
       Sylpheed before letting mairix write into it.

EXAMPLES

       Suppose my email address is <richard@doesnt.exist>.

       Either of the following will match all messages newer than 3 months from me with the  word
       'chrony' in the subject line:

              mairix d:3m- f:richard+doesnt+exist s:chrony
              mairix d:3m- f:richard@doesnt.exist s:chrony

       Suppose I don't mind a few spurious matches on the address, I want a wider date range, and
       I suspect that some messages I replied to might have had the subject keyword spelt wrongly
       (let's allow up to 2 errors):

              mairix d:6m- f:richard s:chrony=2

NOTES

       mairix  works  exclusively  in  terms  of  words.  The index that's built in indexing mode
       contains a table of which words occur in which messages.  Hence, the search capability  is
       based  on  finding  messages  that contain particular words.  mairix defines a word as any
       string of alphanumeric characters + underscore.  Any whitespace, punctuation, hyphens  etc
       are treated as word boundaries.

       mairix  has  special handling for the To:, Cc: and From: headers.  Besides the normal word
       scan, these headers are scanned a second time, where the characters '@', '-' and  '.'  are
       also  treated as word characters.  This allows most (if not all) email addresses to appear
       in the database as single words.  So if you have a mail from  wibble@foobar.zzz,  it  will
       match on both these searches

              mairix f:foobar
              mairix f:wibble@foobar.zzz

       It  should  be  clear  by  now that the searching cannot be used to find messages matching
       general regular expressions.  This has never been much of a limitation.  Most searches are
       for  particular  keywords  that were in the messages, or details of the recipients, or the
       approximate date.

       It's also worth pointing out that there is no 'locality' information stored, so you  can't
       search for messages that have one words 'close' to some other word.  For every message and
       every word, there is a simple yes/no condition stored - whether the message  contains  the
       word  in  a  particular  header  or  in  the body.  So far this has proved to be adequate.
       mairix has a similar feel to using an Internet search engine.

FILES

       ~/.mairixrc

AUTHOR

       Copyright (C) 2002-2006 Richard P. Curnow <rc@rc0.org.uk>

SEE ALSO

       mairixrc(5)

BUGS

       We need a plugin scheme to allow more types of attachment to be scanned and indexed.

                                           January 2006                                 MAIRIX(1)