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NAME

       mbsync - synchronize IMAP4 and Maildir mailboxes

SYNOPSIS

       mbsync [options ...] {{channel[:box[{,|\n}...]]|group} ...|-a}

DESCRIPTION

       mbsync  is  a command line application which synchronizes mailboxes; currently Maildir and
       IMAP4 mailboxes are supported.  New messages, message deletions and flag  changes  can  be
       propagated both ways; the operation set can be selected in a fine-grained manner.
       Synchronization  is  based  on  unique  message  identifiers  (UIDs), so no identification
       conflicts can occur  (unlike  with  some  other  mail  synchronizers).   OTOH,  mbsync  is
       susceptible  to  UID  validity  changes  (but  will  recover  just  fine  if the change is
       unfounded).  Synchronization state is kept in one local text file per mailbox pair;  these
       files are protected against concurrent mbsync processes.  Mailboxes can be safely modified
       while mbsync operates (see INHERENT PROBLEMS  below  for  a  minor  exception).   Multiple
       replicas of each mailbox can be maintained.

OPTIONS

       -c, --config file
              Read  configuration  from  file.   By  default,  the  configuration  is  read  from
              ~/.mbsyncrc.

       -a, --all
              Select all configured channels. Any channel/group  specifications  on  the  command
              line are ignored.

       -l, --list
              Don't  synchronize  anything,  but  list all mailboxes in the selected channels and
              exit.

       -C[f][n], --create[-far|-near]
              Override any Create options from the config file. See below.

       -R[f][n], --remove[-far|-near]
              Override any Remove options from the config file. See below.

       -X[f][n], --expunge[-far|-near]
              Override any Expunge options from the config file. See below.

       {-n|-N|-d|-f|-0|-F}, {--new|--renew|--delete|--flags|--noop|--full}
       {-L|-H}[n][N][d][f], {--pull|--push}[-new|-renew|-delete|-flags]

              Override any Sync options from the config file. See below.

       -h, --help
              Display a summary of command line options.

       -v, --version
              Display version information.

       -V, --verbose
              Enable verbose mode, which displays what is currently happening.

       -D[C][d|D][m][M][n|N][s]],    --debug[-crash|-driver|-driver-all|-maildir|-main|-net|-net-
       all|-sync]
              Enable debugging categories:
                  C, crash - use built-in crash handler
                  d, driver - print driver calls (metadata only)
                  D, driver-all - print driver calls (including messages)
                  m, maildir - print maildir debug info
                  M, main - print main debug info
                  n, net - print network traffic (protocol only)
                  N, net-all - print network traffic (including payloads)
                  s, sync - print synchronization debug info
              All  categories  except  crash  implictly  enable  verbose  mode.  Without category
              specification, all categories except net-all are enabled.

       -q, --quiet
              Suppress progress counters (this is implicit if stdout is no TTY, or any  debugging
              categories are enabled) and notices.  If specified twice, suppress warning messages
              as well.

CONFIGURATION

       The configuration file is mandatory; mbsync will not run without it.  Lines starting  with
       a  hash  mark (#) are comments and are ignored entirely.  Configuration items are keywords
       followed by one or more arguments; arguments containing spaces must be enclosed in  double
       quotes  ("), and literal double quotes and backslashes (\) must be backslash-escaped.  All
       keywords (including  those  used  as  arguments)  are  case-insensitive.   Bash-like  home
       directory  expansion using the tilde (~) is supported in all options which represent local
       paths.  There are a few global options, the others apply to particular sections.  Sections
       begin  with a section-starting keyword and are terminated by an empty line or end of file.
       Every section defines an object with an identifier unique within that object class.

       There are two basic object classes: Stores and Channels. A Store defines a  collection  of
       mailboxes;  basically  a  folder,  either local or remote.  A Channel connects two Stores,
       describing the way the two are synchronized.
       There are two auxiliary object classes: Accounts and  Groups.  An  Account  describes  the
       connection part of network Stores, so server configurations can be shared between multiple
       Stores. A Group aggregates multiple Channels to save typing on the command line.

       File system locations (in particular, Path  and  Inbox)  use  the  Store's  internal  path
       separators, which may be slashes, periods, etc., or even combinations thereof.
       Mailbox  names,  OTOH,  always  use canonical path separators, which are Unix-like forward
       slashes.

   All Stores
       These options can be used in all supported Store types.
       In this context, the term "remote" describes the second Store within a  Channel,  and  not
       necessarily a remote server.
       The  special mailbox INBOX exists in every Store; its physical location in the file system
       is Store type specific.

       Path path
              The location of the Store in the (server's) file system.  If this  is  no  absolute
              path,  the reference point is Store type specific.  This string is prepended to the
              mailbox names addressed in this Store, but is not considered part of them; this  is
              important  for  Patterns  and  Create  in the Channels section.  Note that you must
              append a slash if you want to specify an entire directory.  (Default: none)

       MaxSize size[k|m][b]
              Messages larger than size will have only a  small  placeholder  message  propagated
              into this Store. To propagate the full message, it must be flagged in either Store;
              that can be done retroactively, in which case  the  ReNew  operation  needs  to  be
              executed  instead  of  New.   This is useful for avoiding downloading messages with
              large attachments unless they are actually needed.  Caveat: Setting a size limit on
              a  Store  you  never read directly (which is typically the case for servers) is not
              recommended, as you may never notice that affected messages were not propagated  to
              it.
              K  and  M  can be appended to the size to specify KiBytes resp.  MeBytes instead of
              bytes. B is accepted but superfluous.  If size is 0, the maximum  message  size  is
              unlimited.  (Default: 0)

       MapInbox mailbox
              Create a virtual mailbox (relative to Path) which aliases the INBOX. Makes sense in
              conjunction with Patterns in the Channels section, though with a Maildir near side,
              you probably want to place Inbox under Path instead.  This virtual mailbox does not
              support subfolders.

       Flatten delim
              Flatten the hierarchy within this Store by  substituting  the  canonical  hierarchy
              delimiter  /  with delim.  This can be useful when the MUA used to access the Store
              provides suboptimal handling of hierarchical mailboxes, as is the case  with  Mutt.
              A common choice for the delimiter is ..
              Note  that  flattened  sub-folders of the INBOX always end up under Path, including
              the "INBOXdelim" prefix.

       Trash mailbox
              Specifies a mailbox (relative to  Path)  to  copy  deleted  messages  to  prior  to
              expunging.  See RECOMMENDATIONS and INHERENT PROBLEMS below.  (Default: none)

       TrashNewOnly yes|no
              When  trashing,  copy  only  not  yet  propagated messages. This makes sense if the
              remote Store has a Trash as well (with TrashNewOnly no).  (Default: no)

       TrashRemoteNew yes|no
              When expunging the remote Store, copy not yet propagated messages to  this  Store's
              Trash. When using this, the remote Store does not need an own Trash at all, yet all
              messages are archived.  (Default: no)

   Maildir Stores
       The reference point for relative Paths is the current working directory.

       As mbsync needs UIDs, but no standardized UID storage scheme exists  for  Maildir,  mbsync
       supports two schemes, each with its pros and cons.
       The  native  scheme is stolen from the latest Maildir patches to c-client and is therefore
       compatible with pine. The UID validity is stored in a file named  .uidvalidity;  the  UIDs
       are encoded in the file names of the messages.
       The  alternative  scheme is based on the UID mapping used by isync versions 0.8 and 0.9.x.
       The invariant parts of the file names of the messages are used as  keys  into  a  Berkeley
       database named .isyncuidmap.db, which holds the UID validity as well.
       The  native  scheme  is  faster,  more  space efficient, endianness independent and "human
       readable", but will be disrupted if a message  is  copied  from  another  mailbox  without
       getting  a  new  file name; this would result in duplicated UIDs sooner or later, which in
       turn results in a UID validity  change,  making  synchronization  fail.   The  alternative
       scheme  would  fail  if  a  MUA  changed  a message's file name in a part mbsync considers
       invariant; this would be interpreted as a message deletion and a new message, resulting in
       unnecessary traffic.
       Mutt is known to work fine with both schemes.
       Use mdconvert to convert mailboxes from one scheme to the other.

       MaildirStore name
              Define the Maildir Store name, opening a section for its parameters.

       AltMap yes|no
              Use  the alternative UID storage scheme for mailboxes in this Store.  This does not
              affect mailboxes that do already have a UID storage scheme; use mdconvert to change
              it.  See RECOMMENDATIONS below.  (Default: no)

       Inbox path
              The location of the INBOX. This is not relative to Path, but it is allowed to place
              the INBOX inside the Path.  (Default: ~/Maildir)

       InfoDelimiter delim
              The character used to delimit the  info  field  from  a  message's  basename.   The
              Maildir  standard  defines  this  to  be  the  colon, but this is incompatible with
              DOS/Windows file systems.  (Default: the value of FieldDelimiter)

       SubFolders Verbatim|Maildir++|Legacy
              The on-disk folder naming style used for hierarchical mailboxes.  This  option  has
              no effect when Flatten is used.
              Suppose mailboxes with the canonical paths top/sub/subsub and INBOX/sub/subsub, the
              styles will yield the following on-disk paths:
              Verbatim - Path/top/sub/subsub and Inbox/sub/subsub (this is the style you probably
              want to use)
              Maildir++  - Inbox/.top.sub.subsub and Inbox/..sub.subsub (this style is compatible
              with Courier and Dovecot - but  note  that  the  mailbox  metadata  format  is  not
              compatible).  Note that attempts to set Path are rejected in this mode.
              Legacy  - Path/top/.sub/.subsub and Inbox/.sub/.subsub (this is mbsync's historical
              style)
              (Default: unset; will error out when sub-folders are encountered)

   IMAP4 Accounts
       IMAPAccount name
              Define the IMAP4 Account name, opening a section for its parameters.

       Host host
              Specify the DNS name or IP address of the IMAP server.
              If Tunnel is used, this  setting  is  needed  only  if  SSLType  is  not  None  and
              CertificateFile  is  not  used, in which case the host name is used for certificate
              subject verification.

       Port port
              Specify the TCP port number of the IMAP server.  (Default: 143 for  IMAP,  993  for
              IMAPS)
              If Tunnel is used, this setting is ignored.

       Timeout timeout
              Specify  the  connect  and data timeout for the IMAP server in seconds.  Zero means
              unlimited.  (Default: 20)

       User username
              Specify the login name on the IMAP server.

       UserCmd [+]command
              Specify a shell command to obtain a user rather than specifying  a  user  directly.
              This allows you to script retrieving user names.
              The  command  must  produce  exactly  one  line  on stdout; the trailing newline is
              optional.  Prepend + to the command to indicate that it produces TTY output  (e.g.,
              a  prompt);  failure  to  do  so  will  merely produce messier output.  Remember to
              backslash-escape double quotes and backslashes embedded into the command.

       Pass password
              Specify the password for username on the IMAP server.  Note that this option is not
              required.   If  neither  a  password  nor  a  password  command is specified in the
              configuration file, mbsync will prompt you for a password.

       PassCmd [+]command
              Specify a shell command to obtain a password  rather  than  specifying  a  password
              directly. This allows you to use password files and agents.
              See UserCmd above for details.

       UseKeychain yes|no
              Whether to use the macOS Keychain to obtain the password.  (Default: no)

              The neccessary keychain item can be created this way:

                     security  add-internet-password  -r  imap  -s  Host -a User -w password [ -T
                     /path/to/mbsync ]

       Tunnel command
              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.

       AuthMechs type ...
              The  list  of  acceptable authentication mechanisms.  In addition to the mechanisms
              listed in the SASL registry (link below), the legacy IMAP LOGIN mechanism is known.
              The  wildcard  *  represents  all  mechanisms that are deemed secure enough for the
              current SSLType setting.  The actually used mechanism is  the  most  secure  choice
              from  the  intersection  of  this  list,  the  list supplied by the server, and the
              installed SASL modules.  (Default: *)

       SSLType {None|STARTTLS|IMAPS}
              Select the connection security/encryption method:
              None - no security.  This is the default when Tunnel is set, as tunnels are usually
              secure.
              STARTTLS  - security is established via the STARTTLS extension after connecting the
              regular IMAP port 143. Most servers support this, so it is the  default  (unless  a
              tunnel is used).
              IMAPS  -  security  is  established  by  starting  SSL/TLS  negotiation right after
              connecting the secure IMAP port 993.

       SSLVersions [SSLv3] [TLSv1] [TLSv1.1] [TLSv1.2] [TLSv1.3]
              Select the acceptable SSL/TLS versions.  Use old versions only when the server  has
              problems with newer ones.  (Default: [TLSv1] [TLSv1.1] [TLSv1.2] [TLSv1.3]).

       SystemCertificates yes|no
              Whether the system's default CA (certificate authority) certificate store should be
              used to verify certificate trust chains. Disable this if you  want  to  trust  only
              hand-picked certificates.  (Default: yes)

       CertificateFile path
              File containing additional X.509 certificates used to verify server identities.  It
              may contain two types of certificates:

              Host   These certificates are matched only against the received server  certificate
                     itself.   They  are  always  trusted, regardless of validity.  A typical use
                     case would be forcing acceptance of an expired certificate.
                     These certificates may be obtained using the mbsync-get-cert tool; make sure
                     to verify their fingerprints before trusting them, or transfer them securely
                     from the server's network (if it can be trusted beyond the server itself).

              CA     These certificates are used as trust anchors when building  the  certificate
                     chain  for  the  received  server certificate.  They are used to supplant or
                     supersede the system's trust  store,  depending  on  the  SystemCertificates
                     setting;  it  is  not  necessary and not recommended to specify the system's
                     trust store itself here.  The trust chains are fully validated.

       ClientCertificate path
              File containing a client certificate to send to the server.  ClientKey should  also
              be specified.
              Note  that  client  certificate  verification  is  usually  not  required, so it is
              unlikely that you need this option.

       ClientKey path
              File containing the private key corresponding to ClientCertificate.

       CipherString string
              Specify OpenSSL cipher string for connections secured with TLS up  to  version  1.2
              (but  not 1.3 and above).  The format is described in ciphers(1).  (Default: empty,
              which implies system wide policy).

       PipelineDepth depth
              Maximum number of IMAP commands which can be  simultaneously  in  flight.   Setting
              this  to 1 disables pipelining.  This is mostly a debugging option, but may also be
              used to limit average bandwidth consumption (GMail may require this if you  have  a
              very  fast  connection),  or  to  spare  flaky servers like M$ Exchange.  (Default:
              unlimited)

       DisableExtension[s] extension ...
              Disable the use of specific IMAP extensions.  This can be used to work around  bugs
              in servers (and possibly mbsync itself).  (Default: empty)

   IMAP Stores
       The reference point for relative Paths is whatever the server likes it to be; probably the
       user's $HOME or $HOME/Mail on that server. The location of INBOX is up to  the  server  as
       well and is usually irrelevant.

       IMAPStore name
              Define the IMAP4 Store name, opening a section for its parameters.

       Account account
              Specify  which IMAP4 Account to use. Instead of defining an Account and referencing
              it here, it is also possible to specify all the Account  options  directly  in  the
              Store's section - this makes sense if an Account is used for one Store only anyway.

       UseNamespace yes|no
              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 Path was specified.  (Default: yes)

       PathDelimiter delim
              Specify  the server's hierarchy delimiter.  (Default: taken from the server's first
              "personal" NAMESPACE)
              Do not abuse this to re-interpret the hierarchy.  Use Flatten instead.

       SubscribedOnly yes|no
              Selects whether to synchronize only mailboxes that are subscribed to  on  the  IMAP
              server. In technical terms, if this option is set, mbsync will use the IMAP command
              LSUB instead of LIST to look for mailboxes in this Store.  This option  make  sense
              only in conjunction with Patterns.  (Default: no)

   Channels
       Channel name
              Define the Channel name, opening a section for its parameters.

       {Far|Near} :store:[mailbox]
              Specify the far resp. near side Store to be connected by this Channel.  If Patterns
              are specified, mailbox is interpreted as a prefix which is not matched against  the
              patterns,  and  which  is  not  affected  by mailbox list overrides.  Otherwise, if
              mailbox is omitted, INBOX is assumed.

       Pattern[s] [!]pattern ...
              Instead of synchronizing only one mailbox  pair,  synchronize  all  mailboxes  that
              match  the  pattern(s).  The  mailbox  names are the same on the far and near side.
              Patterns are IMAP4 patterns, i.e., * matches anything and % matches anything up  to
              the  next  hierarchy  delimiter.  Prepending  ! to a pattern makes it an exclusion.
              Multiple patterns can be specified (either by supplying multiple  arguments  or  by
              using Pattern multiple times); later matches take precedence.
              Note that INBOX is not matched by wildcards, unless it lives under Path.
              The  mailbox  list  selected  by  Patterns can be overridden by a mailbox list in a
              channel reference (a Group specification or the command line).
              Example: "Patterns % !Trash"

       MaxSize size[k|m][b]
              Analogous to the homonymous option in the Stores section, but  applies  equally  to
              Far  and  Near.  Note  that  this actually modifies the Stores, so take care not to
              provide conflicting settings if you use the Stores in multiple Channels.

       MaxMessages count
              Sets the maximum number of messages to keep in each near  side  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 (by default) unread messages will not be automatically deleted.  If count is 0,
              the maximum number of messages is unlimited (Default: 0).

       ExpireUnread yes|no
              Selects whether unread messages  should  be  affected  by  MaxMessages.   Normally,
              unread messages are considered important and thus never expired.  This ensures that
              you never miss new messages even after  an  extended  absence.   However,  if  your
              archive  contains  large  amounts  of  unread  messages by design, treating them as
              important would practically defeat MaxMessages. In this case  you  need  to  enable
              this option.  (Default: no).

       Sync {None|[Pull] [Push] [New] [ReNew] [Delete] [Flags]|All}
              Select the synchronization operation(s) to perform:
              Pull - propagate changes from far to near side.
              Push - propagate changes from near to far side.
              New - propagate newly appeared messages.
              ReNew  -  upgrade  placeholders  to  full  messages.  Useful only with a configured
              MaxSize.
              Delete - propagate message deletions.  This  applies  only  to  messages  that  are
              actually  gone,  i.e., were expunged. The affected messages in the remote Store are
              marked as deleted only, i.e., they won't be really  deleted  until  that  Store  is
              expunged.
              Flags  -  propagate flag changes. Note that Deleted/Trashed is a flag as well; this
              is particularly interesting if you use mutt with the maildir_trash option.
              All (--full on the command line) - all of the above.  This is the global default.
              None (--noop on the command line) - don't propagate anything.  Useful if  you  want
              to expunge only.

              Pull  and  Push  are  direction  flags, while New, ReNew, Delete and Flags are type
              flags. The two flag classes make up a two-dimensional matrix (a table).  Its  cells
              are the individual actions to perform. There are two styles of asserting the cells:
              In  the  first  style,  the flags select entire rows/colums in the matrix. Only the
              cells which are selected both horizontally and vertically are asserted.  Specifying
              no  flags  from a class is like specifying all flags from this class.  For example,
              "Sync Pull New Flags" will propagate new messages and flag  changes  from  the  far
              side  to  the  near  side,  "Sync New Delete"  will  propagate message arrivals and
              deletions both ways, and "Sync Push" will propagate all changes from the near  side
              to the far side.
              In  the  second  style,  direction  flags  are  concatenated with type flags; every
              compound flag immediately asserts a cell in the matrix. In addition to at least one
              compound  flag,  the  individual  flags  can be used as well, but as opposed to the
              first style, they immediately assert all cells in their respective row/column.  For
              example,   "Sync PullNew PullDelete Push"   will  propagate  message  arrivals  and
              deletions from the far side to the near side and any changes from the near side  to
              the  far  side.   Note  that  it  is not allowed to assert a cell in two ways, e.g.
              "Sync PullNew Pull" and "Sync PullNew Delete Push" induce error messages.

       Create {None|Far|Near|Both}
              Automatically create missing mailboxes [on the far/near side].  Otherwise print  an
              error  message  and  skip that mailbox pair if a mailbox and the corresponding sync
              state does not exist.  (Global default: None)

       Remove {None|Far|Near|Both}
              Propagate mailbox deletions [to the  far/near  side].   Otherwise  print  an  error
              message  and  skip  that  mailbox  pair  if  a  mailbox  does  not  exist  but  the
              corresponding sync state does.
              For MailDir mailboxes it is sufficient to delete the cur/ subdirectory to mark them
              as deleted. This ensures compatibility with SyncState *.
              Note that for safety, non-empty mailboxes are never deleted.
              (Global default: None)

       Expunge {None|Far|Near|Both}
              Permanently  remove  all  messages [on the far/near side] marked for deletion.  See
              RECOMMENDATIONS below.  (Global default: None)

       CopyArrivalDate {yes|no}
              Selects whether their arrival time should be propagated together with the messages.
              Enabling  this  makes  sense  in order to keep the time stamp based message sorting
              intact.  Note that IMAP does not guarantee that the  time  stamp  (termed  internal
              date) is actually the arrival time, but it is usually close enough.  (Default: no)

       Sync,  Create,  Remove,  Expunge,  MaxMessages, and CopyArrivalDate can be used before any
       section for a global effect.  The  global  settings  are  overridden  by  Channel-specific
       options, which in turn are overridden by command line switches.

       SyncState {*|path}
              Set  the  location of this Channel's synchronization state files.  * means that the
              state should be saved in a file named .mbsyncstate in the near side mailbox itself;
              this  has the advantage that you do not need to handle the state file separately if
              you delete the mailbox, but  it  works  only  with  Maildir  mailboxes,  obviously.
              Otherwise  this is interpreted as a string to prepend to the near side mailbox name
              to make up a complete path.
              This option can be used outside any section for a global effect. In this  case  the
              appended  string  is  made  up  according  to the pattern :far-store:far-box_:near-
              store:near-box (see also FieldDelimiter below).
              (Global default: ~/.mbsync/).

   Groups
       Group name [channel[:box[,...]]] ...
              Define the Group name, opening a section for its parameters.  Note that even though
              Groups  have  an own namespace, they will "hide" Channels with the same name on the
              command line.
              One or more Channels can be specified on the same line.
              If you supply one or more boxes to a channel, they will be used instead of what  is
              specified  in  the  Channel's  Patterns.  The same can be done on the command line,
              except that there newlines can be used as mailbox name separators as well.

       Channel[s] channel[:box[,...]] ...
              Add the specified channels to the group. This  option  can  be  specified  multiple
              times within a Group.

   Global Options
       FSync yes|no
              Selects whether mbsync performs forced flushing, which determines the level of data
              safety after system crashes and power outages.  Disabling it is reasonably safe for
              file  systems  which  are  mounted  with  data=ordered mode.  Enabling it is a wise
              choice for file systems mounted with data=writeback, in particular  modern  systems
              like  ext4,  btrfs  and  xfs.  The  performance impact on older file systems may be
              disproportionate.  (Default: yes)

       FieldDelimiter delim
              The character to use  to  delimit  fields  in  the  string  appended  to  a  global
              SyncState.   mbsync  prefers  to  use  the  colon,  but  this  is incompatible with
              DOS/Windows file systems.  This option is meaningless for SyncState if  the  latter
              is *, obviously. However, it also determines the default of InfoDelimiter.  (Global
              default: ; on Windows, : everywhere else)

       BufferLimit size[k|m][b]
              The per-Channel, per-direction instantaneous memory usage above which  mbsync  will
              refrain  from  using  more  memory.  Note that this is no absolute limit, as even a
              single message can consume more memory than this.  (Default: 10M)

CONSOLE OUTPUT

       If mbsync's output is connected to a console, it will print progress counters by  default.
       The output will look like this:

           C: 1/2  B: 3/4  F: +13/13 *23/42 #0/0  N: +0/7 *0/0 #0/0

       This represents the cumulative progress over channels, boxes, and messages affected on the
       far and near side, respectively.  The message counts represent  added  messages,  messages
       with  updated  flags, and trashed messages, respectively.  No attempt is made to calculate
       the totals in advance, so they grow over time as more information is gathered.

RECOMMENDATIONS

       Make sure your IMAP server does not auto-expunge  deleted  messages  -  it  is  slow,  and
       semantically  somewhat  questionable. Specifically, Gmail needs to be configured not to do
       it.

       By default, mbsync will not delete any messages - deletions are propagated by marking  the
       messages  as  deleted  on the remote store.  Once you have verified that your setup works,
       you will typically want to set Expunge to Both, so that deletions become effective.

       mbsync's built-in trash functionality relies on mbsync  doing  the  expunging  of  deleted
       messages. This is the case when it propagates deletions of previously propagated messages,
       and the trash is on the target store (typically your IMAP server).
       However, when you intend mbsync to trash messages which were not propagated yet,  the  MUA
       must  mark  the  messages  as  deleted  without expunging them (e.g., Mutt's maildir_trash
       option). Note that most messages are propagated a long time before they  are  deleted,  so
       this is a corner case you probably do not want to optimize for. This also implies that the
       TrashNewOnly and TrashRemoteNew options are typically not very useful.

       If your server supports auto-trashing (as Gmail does), it is probably a good idea to  rely
       on  that  instead  of  mbsync's  trash  functionality.   If  you  do  that,  and intend to
       synchronize the trash like other mailboxes, you should not use mbsync's  Trash  option  at
       all.

       Use  of  the  Trash option with M$ Exchange 2013 requires the use of DisableExtension MOVE
       due to a server bug.

       When using the more efficient default UID mapping scheme, it is  important  that  the  MUA
       renames files when moving them between Maildir folders.  Mutt always does that, while mu4e
       needs to be configured to do it:
           (setq mu4e-change-filenames-when-moving t)

INHERENT PROBLEMS

       Changes done after mbsync has retrieved the message list will not  be  synchronised  until
       the next time mbsync is invoked.

       Using  Trash  on  IMAP Stores without the UIDPLUS extension (notably, M$ Exchange up to at
       least 2010) bears a race condition: messages will be lost if they are  marked  as  deleted
       after the message list was retrieved but before the mailbox is expunged.  There is no risk
       as long as the IMAP mailbox is accessed by only one client (including mbsync) at a time.

FILES

       ~/.mbsyncrc
              Default configuration file

       ~/.mbsync/
              Directory containing synchronization state files

SEE ALSO

       mdconvert(1), mutt(1), maildir(5)

       Up to date information on mbsync can be found at http://isync.sf.net/

       SASL  mechanisms  are  listed   at   http://www.iana.org/assignments/sasl-mechanisms/sasl-
       mechanisms.xhtml

AUTHORS

       Originally  written  by  Michael  R.  Elkins, rewritten and currently maintained by Oswald
       Buddenhagen, contributions by Theodore Y. Ts'o.

                                           2015 Mar 22                                  mbsync(1)