Provided by: xfm_1.5.4-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       xfm_mailcap - mailcap information for usage within xfm or xfmmailcap

DESCRIPTION

       To  determine  what  command  to use to open a file with a specific mime type, xfm(1) uses
       files in a format similar to the mailcap format.

       The extensions are special  actions  to  open  directories  or  files  to  load  into  the
       application  window  and  to  include  other  mailcap  files,  so that the default mailcap
       databases in ~/.mailcap, /etc/mailcap, /usr/share/etc/mailcap  and  /usr/local/etc/mailcap
       can be included.

       This  man page describes which fields are used and the extensions. For general information
       of the syntax of these files read the man pages mailcap(5) and update-mime(8).

       While this  files  are  supposed  to  be  read  by  xfm(1),  there  also  is  the  program
       xfmmailcap(1) to ease debugging.

GENERAL FORMAT

       There  is one entry per line.  Empty lines and lines starting with a hash (#) are ignored.
       Each line consists of parts separated by semicolons (;).  The first part is the mime  part
       or  the  token  include.   The  second  part  is  the  view option. This is followed by an
       arbitrary number of option names, followed by a value after a equal sign, if they  have  a
       value.

INCLUDES

       Lines  with  a  mime-type  include  or !include are not treated as mailcap specifiers, but
       cause the filename described by the second argument to be read at this place. I  recommend
       placing the following line at the end of every $HOME/.xfm/xfm_mailcap file:

         include; /etc/X11/xfm/mailcap

OPTIONS USED BY XFM

       test   The  value  of  this  option (after unescaping) is executed using system(3).  If it
              fails, the content of the line is not used for anything but increasing  the  amount
              of  output.   Some tests weather a DISPLAY environment variable are set are omitted
              and considered always true.

       nametemplate
              If this option has a value, the filename has to match it when a action is executed.
              Otherwise  it  is  replaced by a symlink matching it. It has to contain exactly one
              unescaped occurrence of %s, which is used as wild card for any positive  number  of
              characters.

       edit   This  is  the  preferred  action  to  open a file.  Unless it is one of the special
              actions explained below, it has to contain exactly one unescaped occurance  of  %s,
              which is replaced by the filename to open, or the filename of a symlink to the file
              to open in the case  the  filename  might  be  dangerous  or  does  not  match  the
              nametemplate of this line.

       needsterminal
              If  this  option,  which  normally has no value, is there, the actions specified in
              this line are executed in an X terminal emulator.

SPECIAL ACTIONS

       If the action with the highest priority is one the special strings OPEN or LOAD, no  shell
       is  spawned  and  no  command executed.  Instead the current file window is changed to the
       selected directory (OPEN) or the file is supposed to be in the xfm(5)  format  and  loaded
       into the application window(LOAD).

FILES

       $HOME/.xfm/xfm_mailcap
              Unless  xfm(1) is told to look at a different place via X resource Xfm.mailcapFile,
              this is  the  first  place  xfm  looks  for  a  file  with  the  describes  format.
              xfmmailcap(1) always looks here first.

       /etc/X11/xfm/xfm_mailcap
              If  the  first  file does not exists, xfm(1) (unless it gets told a different place
              via the X resource Xfm.systemwideMailcapFile) and xfmmailcap(1) look for this file.
              It is recommended that the file in the home directory includes this file to get the
              system wide defaults.

SEE ALSO

       xfm(1), xfmmailcap(1), mailcap(5), update-mime(8).