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NAME

       mu-cfind - find contacts in the mu database and export them for use in other programs.

SYNOPSIS

       mu [COMMON-OPTIONS] cfind [OPTIONS] [PATTERN]

DESCRIPTION

       mu  cfind  is  the  mu command for finding contacts (name and e-mail address of people who
       were either an e-mail's sender or receiver). There are different output formats available,
       for importing the contacts into other programs.

SEARCHING CONTACTS

       When  you index your messages (see mu index), mu creates a list of unique e-mail addresses
       found and the accompanying name, and caches this list. In case the same e-mail address  is
       used with different names, the most recent non-empty name is used.

       mu cfind starts a search for contacts that match a regular expression. For example:

              $ mu cfind '@gmail.com'

       would find all contacts with a gmail-address, while

              $ mu cfind Mary

       lists all contacts with Mary in either name or e-mail address.

       If  you  do  not  specify a search expression, mu cfind returns the full list of contacts.
       Note, mu cfind uses a cache with the e-mail information, which  is  populated  during  the
       indexing process.

       The regular expressions are basic case-insensitive PCRE, see pcre(3).

CFIND OPTIONS

   --format plain|mutt-alias|mutt-ab|wl|org-contact|bbdb|csv
       Sets the output format to the given value. The following are available:

                           ┌────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
                           │--format=     description                       │
                           ├────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
                           │plain         default, simple list              │
                           │mutt-alias    mutt alias-format                 │
                           │mutt-ab       mutt external address book format │
                           │wl            wanderlust addressbook format     │
                           │org-contact   org-mode org-contact format       │
                           │bbdb          BBDB format                       │
                           │csv           comma-separated values [1]        │
                           │json          JSON format                       │
                           └────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       [1] CSV is not fully standardized, but mu cfind follows some common practices: any double-
       quote is replaced by a double-double quote (thus, "hello"  become  ""hello"",  and  fields
       with commas are put in double-quotes. Normally, this should only apply to name fields.

   -p, --personal
       Only show addresses seen in messages where one of `my' e-mail addresses was seen in one of
       the address fields; this is to exclude addresses only seen in mailing-list  messages.  See
       the --my-address parameter to mu init.

   --after timestamp
       Only  show  addresses  last  seen  after  timestamp. timestamp is a UNIX time_t value, the
       number of seconds since 1970-01-01 (in UTC).

       From the command line, you can use the date command to get this value. For  example,  only
       consider addresses last seen after 2020-06-01, you could specify
              --after=`date +%s --date='2020-06-01'`

   --muhome
       Use  a  non-default  directory  to  store  and read the database, write the logs, etc.  By
       default, mu uses the XDG Base Directory Specification (e.g. on GNU/Linux this defaults  to
       ~/.cache/mu  and  ~/.config/mu).  Earlier  versions  of  mu  defaulted to ~/.mu, which now
       requires --muhome=~/.mu.

       The environment variable MUHOME can be used as an alternative to --muhome. The latter  has
       precedence.

COMMON OPTIONS

   -d, --debug
       Makes  mu generate extra debug information, useful for debugging the program itself. Debug
       information goes to the standard logging location; see mu(1).

   -q, --quiet
       Causes mu not to output  informational  messages  and  progress  information  to  standard
       output,  but  only  to  the log file. Error messages will still be sent to standard error.
       Note that mu index is much faster with --quiet, so it is recommended you use  this  option
       when using mu from scripts etc.

   --log-stderr
       Causes mu to not output log messages to standard error, in addition to sending them to the
       standard logging location.

   --nocolor
       Do not use ANSI colors. The environment variable NO_COLOR can be used as an alternative to
       --nocolor.

   -V, --version
       Prints mu version and copyright information.

   -h, --help
       Lists the various command line options.

JSON FORMAT

       With --format=json, the matching contacts come out as a JSON array, e.g.,
              [
                {
                  "email"         : "syb@example.com",
                  "name"          : "Sybil Gerard",
                  "display"       : "Sybil Gerard <syb@example.com>",
                  "last-seen"     : 1075982687,
                  "last-seen-iso" : "2004-02-05T14:04:47Z",
                  "personal"      : false,
                  "frequency"     : 14
                },
                {
                  "email"         : "ed@example.com",
                  "name"          : "Mallory, Edward",
                  "display"       : "
                  "last-seen"     : 1425991805,
                  "last-seen-iso" : "2015-03-10T14:50:05Z",
                  "personal"      : true,
                  "frequency"     : 2
                }
              ]

       Each contact has the following fields:

       ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
       │property        description                                                              │
       ├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
       │email           the email-address                                                        │
       │name            the name (or none)                                                       │
       │display         the combination name and e-mail address for display purposes             │
       │last-seen       date of most recent message with this contact (Unix time)                │
       │last-seen-iso   last-seen represented as an ISO-8601 timestamp                           │
       │personal        whether the email was seen in a message together with a personal address │
       │frequency       approximation of the number of times this contact was seen in messages   │
       └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       The JSON format is useful for further processing, e.g. using the jq(1) tool:

       List display names, sorted by their last-seen date:
              $ mu cfind --format=json --personal | jq -r '.[] | ."last-seen-iso" + " " + .display' | sort

INTEGRATION WITH MUTT

       You  can  use mu cfind as an external address book server for mutt.  For this to work, add
       the following to your muttrc:

              set query_command = "mu cfind --format=mutt-ab '%s'"

       Now, in mutt, you can search for e-mail addresses using the query-command,  which  is  (by
       default) accessible by pressing Q.

ENCODING

       mu  cfind output is encoded according to the current locale except for --format=bbdb. This
       is hard-coded to UTF-8, and as such specified in the output-file, so emacs/bbdb can handle
       things correctly, without guessing.

EXIT CODE

       This command returns 0 upon successful completion, or a non-zero exit code otherwise.

       0.  success

       2.  no matches found. Try a different query

       11. database schema mismatch. You need to re-initialize mu, see mu-init(1)

       19. failed to acquire lock. Some other program has exclusive access to the mu database

       99. caught an exception

REPORTING BUGS

       Please report bugs at https://github.com/djcb/mu/issues.

AUTHOR

       Dirk-Jan C. Binnema <djcb@djcbsoftware.nl>

COPYRIGHT

       This manpage is part of mu 1.12.7.

       Copyright  ©  2008-2024  Dirk-Jan  C.  Binnema. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later
       https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html. This is free software:  you  are  free  to  change  and
       redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

SEE ALSO

       mu(1), mu-index(1), mu-find(1), pcre(3), jq(1)

                                                                                      MU CFIND(1)