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MUTT(1) |
User Manuals |
MUTT(1) |
mutt - The Mutt Mail User Agent
- mutt
- [-nRyzZ] [-e command] [-F rcfile]
[-m type] [-f mailbox]
- mutt
- [-Enx] [-e command] [-F rcfile] [-H
draft] [-i include]
[-b bcc-addr] [-c cc-addr] [-s
subject]
[-a file ... --] to-addr ...
- mutt
- [-nx] [-e command] [-F rcfile] [-b
bcc-addr] [-c cc-addr]
[-s subject] [-a file ... --] to-addr
... < message
- mutt
- [-n] [-e command] [-F rcfile]
-p
- mutt
- [-n] [-e command] [-F rcfile] -A
alias
- mutt
- [-n] [-e command] [-F rcfile] -Q
variable
- mutt
- -v[v]
- mutt
- -D
Mutt is a small but very powerful text based program for reading and sending
electronic mail under unix operating systems, including support for color
terminals, MIME, OpenPGP, and a threaded sorting mode.
Note: This manual page gives a brief overview of the
mutt executable command line options. A copy of the full manual is
located in /usr/local/share/doc/mutt, in text, HTML, and/or PDF
format. Please refer to the manual to learn how to use and configure
Mutt.
- -A alias
- Print an expanded version of the given alias and exit.
- -a file ...
- Attach a file using MIME. Separating file and to-addr
arguments with “--” is mandatory. For example:
mutt -a image.jpg -- to-addr
mutt -a img.jpg *.png -- to-addr-1 to-addr-2
The -a option must be placed at the end of command line
options.
- -b bcc-addr
- Specify a blind carbon copy (BCC) address.
- -c cc-addr
- Specify a carbon copy (CC) address.
- -d level
- If Mutt was compiled with +DEBUG log debugging output to
~/.muttdebug0. Level can range from -5 to 5 and affects
verbosity. A value of zero disables debugging. A value less than zero
disables automatic log file rotation; the log level is then its absolute
value. A value of 2 (-2) is recommended for most diagnosis.
- -D
- Print the value of all configuration options to stdout.
- -E
- Edit the draft file specified by -H or include file
specified by -i during message composition.
- -e command
- Specify a configuration command to be run after processing of
initialization files.
- -f mailbox
- Specify a mailbox to load.
- -F rcfile
- Use rcfile instead of the user configuration file.
- -h
- Display a short option summary and exit.
- -H draft
- Specify a draft file which contains header and body to use to send
a message. If draft is “-”, then data is read
from stdin. The draft file is expected to contain just an RFC822 email
— headers and a body. Although it is not an mbox file, if an mbox
"From " line is present, it will be silently
discarded. Draft files are processed the same in interactive and batch
mode; they are not passed through untouched. For example, encrypted draft
files will be decrypted.
- -i include
- Specify an include file to be inserted into the body of a message.
Ignored if -H is set. If include is
“-”, then data is read from stdin.
- -m type
- Specify a default mailbox type for newly created folders. Can be
one of the following: mbox, MMDF, MH or Maildir. See also
$mbox_type in the manual.
- -n
- Do not read the system-wide Muttrc configuration file.
- -p
- Resume a postponed message. Exit immediately if there are no postponed
messages.
- -Q variable
- Query a configuration variable. The query is performed after all
configuration files have been parsed, and any commands given on the
command line have been executed.
- -R
- Open a mailbox in read-only mode.
- -s subject
- Specify the subject of the message. Must be enclosed in quotes if
it contains spaces.
- -v
- Display the Mutt version number and compile-time definitions.
- -vv
- Display license and copyright information.
- -x
- Emulate the mailx(1) compose mode.
- -y
- Start Mutt with a listing of all mailboxes specified by the
mailboxes configuration command.
- -z
- Exit immediately with code 1 if mailbox specified by -f does
not contain any messages.
- -Z
- Open the first mailbox specified by the mailboxes configuration
command which contains new mail. Exit immediately with code 1 if there is
no new mail in any of them.
- --
- Treat remaining arguments as to-addr even if they start with a
dash. See also -a above. To-addr can be a local or network
mail address as well as mailto: URL.
- EDITOR, VISUAL
- Specifies the editor to use when composing messages. If both EDITOR and
VISUAL are set, VISUAL takes precedence. If neither EDITOR nor VISUAL are
set, the default is vi(1).
- EGDSOCKET, RANDFILE
- Paths used to initialize the random engine for SSL library.
- EMAIL
- The user's e-mail address.
- HOME
- Full path of the user's home directory.
- MAIL
- Full path of the user's spool mailbox.
- MAILDIR
- Full path of the user's spool mailbox if MAIL is unset. Commonly used when
the spool mailbox is a maildir(5) folder.
- MAILCAPS
- Path to search for mailcap files.
- MM_NOASK
- If this variable is set, mailcap are always used without prompting
first.
- PGPPATH
- Directory in which the user's PGP public keyring can be found. When used
with the original PGP program, mutt and mutt_pgpring(1) rely on
this being set.
- REPLYTO
- Default Reply-To address.
- TMPDIR
- Directory in which temporary files are created. If unset, /tmp is
used. See also $tmpdir configuration variable.
- LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LANG
- Used to determine charset and locale to use.
- TEXTDOMAINDIR
- Directory containing translation files. If set, this path overwrite the
Mutt installation directory. Used for testing translation changes.
- ~/.muttrc
- ~/.mutt/muttrc
- $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mutt/muttrc
- User configuration files.
- /usr/local/etc/Muttrc or /usr/local/share/mutt/Muttrc
- System-wide configuration file.
- /tmp/muttXXXXXX
- Temporary files created by Mutt.
- ~/.muttdebug0
- File containing debugging output. Log files are automatically rotated by
mutt changing the number at the end. See -d option
above.
- ~/.mailcap
- User definition for handling non-text MIME types.
- /usr/local/etc/mailcap
- System definition for handling non-text MIME types.
- ~/.mime.types
- User's personal mapping between MIME types and file extensions.
- /usr/local/etc/mime.types
- System mapping between MIME types and file extensions.
- /usr/local/bin/mutt_dotlock
- The privileged dotlocking program.
- /usr/local/share/doc/mutt/manual.txt
- The Mutt manual.
None. Mutts have fleas, not bugs.
Suspend/resume while editing a file with an external editor does not work under
SunOS 4.x if you use the curses lib in /usr/5lib. It does work with the
S-Lang library, however.
Resizing the screen while using an external pager causes Mutt to
go haywire on some systems.
Suspend/resume does not work under Ultrix.
The help line for the index menu is not updated if you change the
bindings for one of the functions listed while Mutt is running.
For a more up-to-date list of bugs, errm, fleas, please visit the
mutt project's bug tracking system under
https://gitlab.com/muttmua/mutt/issues.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
mutt_dotlock(1), mutt_pgpring(1), pgpewrap(1),
sendmail(1), smail(1), smime_keys(1), curses(3),
ncurses(3), mailcap(5), maildir(5), mbox(5),
mmdf(5), muttrc(5)
Mutt Home Page: http://www.mutt.org/
The Mutt manual
RFC5322 — Internet Message Format:
https://tools.ietf.org/rfcmarkup/5322 (obsoletes RFC2822 and RFC822)
Michael Elkins, and others. Use <mutt-dev@mutt.org> to contact the
developers.
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