Provided by: nmh_1.7.1-11_amd64 bug

NAME

       inc - incorporate new mail to an nmh folder

SYNOPSIS

       inc [-help] [-version] [+folder] [-audit audit-file] [-noaudit] [-changecur |
            -nochangecur] [-form formfile] [-format string] [-file name] [-silent | -nosilent]
            [-truncate | -notruncate] [-width columns] [-host hostname] [-port portname/number]
            [-user username] [-proxy command] [-sasl | -nosasl] [-saslmech mechanism]
            [-authservice service] [-initialtls] [-notls] [-certverify | -nocertverify] [-snoop]

DESCRIPTION

       inc  incorporates mail from the user's incoming mail drop into an nmh folder.  If the mail
       drop is a file, it can be in mbox or MMDF format.  If the mail drop is a directory  it  is
       considered to be in Maildir format.

       You  may  specify  which  folder to use with +folder.  If no folder is specified, then inc
       will use either the folder given by a (non-empty) “Inbox” entry in the user's profile,  or
       the  folder  named  “inbox”.  If the specified (or default) folder doesn't exist, the user
       will be queried prior to its creation.

       When the new messages are incorporated into the folder, they are assigned numbers starting
       with  the  next  highest  number  for  the  folder.  As the messages are processed, a scan
       listing of the new mail is produced.

       The newly created messages will have a mode of 0600, see  chmod(1),  on  filesystems  that
       support  it.   Alternatively, a “Msg-Protect: nnn” profile entry gives the mode to use, in
       octal.  For all subsequent operations on these messages, this initially assigned mode will
       be preserved.

       If  the  switch  -audit audit-file is specified (usually as a default switch in the user's
       profile), then inc will append a header line and a  line  per  message  to  the  specified
       audit-file with the format:

            <<inc>> date
            <scan line for first message>
            <scan line for second message>
            <etc.>

       This is useful for keeping track of volume and source of incoming mail.  Eventually, repl,
       forw, comp, and dist may also output audit information to this (or another) file,  perhaps
       with  “Message-Id”  information  to keep an exact correspondence history.  “Audit-file” is
       assumed to be in the user's nmh directory unless a full path is specified.

       inc will incorporate even improperly  formatted  messages  into  the  user's  nmh  folder,
       inserting a blank line prior to the offending component and printing a comment identifying
       the bad message.

       In all cases, except the use of -file name (see below),  the  user's  mail  drop  will  be
       zeroed, unless the -notruncate switch is given.

       If the profile entry “Unseen-Sequence” is present and non-empty, then inc will add each of
       the newly incorporated messages to each sequence named in the profile entry.  inc will not
       zero each sequence prior to adding messages.

       The interpretation of the -form formatfile, -format string, and -width columns switches is
       the same as in scan(1).

       By using the -file name switch, one can direct inc to incorporate  messages  from  a  file
       other  than the user's mail drop.  Note that the named file will not be zeroed, unless the
       -truncate switch is given.

       The -file switch does not support the  use  of  standard  input.   Instead,  the  rcvstore
       command can be used to incorporate mail from the standard input stream.

       If  the  environment  variable  $MAILDROP  is set, then inc uses it as the location of the
       user's mail drop instead of the default (the  -file  name  switch  still  overrides  this,
       however).   If  this  environment  variable  is not set, then inc will consult the profile
       entry “MailDrop” for this information.  If the value found is not  absolute,  then  it  is
       interpreted  relative  to  the  user's nmh directory.  If the value is not found, then inc
       will look in the standard system location for the user's mail drop.

       The -silent switch directs inc to be quiet and not ask any  questions  at  all.   This  is
       useful for putting inc in the background and going on to other things.

   Using POP
       inc  will  normally  check local mail drops for mail, as covered above.  But if the option
       “pophost” is set in “mts.conf”, or if the -host  hostname  switch  is  given,  or  if  the
       $MAILHOST  environment variable is set, then inc will query this POP service host for mail
       to incorporate.  If $MAILHOST is set and -host is  specified  as  well,  the  command-line
       switch  will  override the environment variable.  The -port switch specifies the port name
       or number used to connect to the POP server.  If unspecified, the default is “pop3”.

       To specify a username for authentication with the  POP  server,  use  the  -user  username
       switch.   The  credentials  profile  entry in mh-profile(5) describes the ways to supply a
       username and password.

       If passed the -proxy command switch, inc will use the specified command to  establish  the
       connection  to  the  POP  server.  The string %h in the command will be substituted by the
       hostname to connect to.

       For debugging purposes, you may give the switch -snoop, which will allow  you  to  monitor
       the  POP  transaction.   If  -sasl -saslmech xoauth2 is used, the HTTP transaction is also
       shown.

       If nmh has been compiled with SASL support, the -sasl switch will enable the use  of  SASL
       authentication.   Depending  on  the  SASL  mechanism used, this may require an additional
       password prompt from the user (but the netrc file can be used to store this  password,  as
       described in mh-profile(5)).  The -saslmech switch can be used to select a particular SASL
       mechanism.

       If SASL authentication is successful, inc will attempt to negotiate a security  layer  for
       session  encryption.   Encrypted  traffic is labelled with `(encrypted)' and `(decrypted)'
       when viewing the POP transaction with the -snoop switch; see the post man page description
       of -snoop for its other features.

       If nmh has been compiled with OAuth support, the -sasl and -saslmech xoauth2 switches will
       enable OAuth authentication.  The -user switch must be used, and the user-name must be  an
       email  address the user has for the service, which must be specified with the -authservice
       service switch.  Before using this, the user must authorize nmh  by  running  mhlogin  and
       granting authorization to that account.  See mhlogin(1) for more details.

       If  nmh  has  been  compiled  with  TLS  support,  the -initialtls switch will require the
       negotiation of TLS when connecting to the remote  POP  server.   inc  will  negotiate  TLS
       immediately  after  the  connection  has  taken place, before any POP commands are sent or
       received.  Data encrypted by TLS is labeled `(tls-encrypted)' and  `(tls-decrypted)`  when
       viewing  the  POP  transaction with the -snoop switch.  The -notls switch will disable all
       attempts to negotiate TLS.

       When using TLS the default is to verify the remote certificate and SubjectName against the
       local  trusted  certificate  store.   This  can  be  controlled  by  the  -certverify  and
       -nocertverify  switches.   See  your  OpenSSL  documentation  for  more   information   on
       certificate verification.

FILES

       $HOME/.mh_profile   The user's profile.
       /etc/nmh/mts.conf   mts configuration file.
       /var/mail/$USER     Location of the system mail drop.

PROFILE COMPONENTS

       Path:               To determine the user's nmh directory.
       Alternate-Mailboxes:
                           To determine the user's mailboxes.
       Inbox:              To determine the inbox.
       Folder-Protect:     To set mode when creating a new folder.
       Msg-Protect:        To set mode when creating a new message and audit-file.
       Unseen-Sequence:    To name sequences denoting unseen messages.

SEE ALSO

       mhmail(1), scan(1), mh-mail(5), mh-profile(5), mhlogin(1), post(8), rcvstore(1)

DEFAULTS

       +folder             defaulted by “Inbox” above.
       -noaudit
       -changecur
       -format             As described above.
       -nosilent
       -nosasl
       -notruncate         Unless -file name is given.
       -width              The width of the terminal.

CONTEXT

       The folder into which messages are being incorporated will become the current folder.  The
       first message incorporated will become the current message, unless the -nochangecur option
       is specified.  This leaves the context ready for a show of the first new message.