OfflineImap provides advanced and potentially complex possibilities for
filtering and translating folder names. If you don't need any of this, you can
safely skip this section.
..warning::
Starting with v6.4.0, OfflineImap supports the creation of folders on the remote repostory. This change means that people that only had a nametrans option on the remote repository (everyone) will need to have a nametrans setting on the local repository too that will reverse the name transformation. See section `Reverse nametrans`_ for details.
folderfilter
------------
If you do not want to synchronize all your filters, you can specify a `folderfilter`_ function that determines which folders to include in a sync and which to exclude. Typically, you would set a folderfilter option on the remote repository only, and it would be a lambda or any other python function.
The only parameter to that function is the folder name. If the filter
function returns True, the folder will be synced, if it returns False,
it. will be skipped. The folderfilter operates on the *UNTRANSLATED*
name (before any `nametrans`_ fudging takes place). Consider the
examples below to get an idea of what they do.
Example 1: synchronizing only INBOX and Sent::
folderfilter = lambda folder: folder in ['INBOX', 'Sent']
Example 2: synchronizing everything except Trash::
folderfilter = lambda folder: folder not in ['Trash']
Example 3: Using a regular expression to exclude Trash and all folders
containing the characters "Del"::
folderfilter = lambda folder: not re.search('(^Trash$|Del)', folder)
..note::
If folderfilter is not specified, ALL remote folders will be
synchronized.
You can span multiple lines by indenting the others. (Use backslashes
at the end when required by Python syntax) For instance::
folderfilter = lambda foldername: foldername in
['INBOX', 'Sent Mail', 'Deleted Items',
'Received']
Usually it suffices to put a `folderfilter`_ setting in the remote repository section. You might want to put a folderfilter option on the local repository if you want to prevent some folders on the local repository to be created on the remote one. (Even in this case, folder filters on the remote repository will prevent that)
You can specify `folderincludes`_ to manually include additional folders to be synced, even if they had been filtered out by a folderfilter setting. `folderincludes`_ should return a Python list.
This can be used to 1) add a folder that was excluded by your
folderfilter rule, 2) to include a folder that your server does not specify
with its LIST option, or 3) to include a folder that is outside your basic
`reference`. The `reference` value will not be prefixed to this folder
name, even if you have specified one. For example::
This will add the "debian.user" and "debian.personal" folders even if you
have filtered out everything starting with "debian" in your folderfilter
settings.
nametrans
----------
Sometimes, folders need to have different names on the remote and the
local repositories. To achieve this you can specify a folder name
translator. This must be a eval-able Python expression that takes a
foldername arg and returns the new value. We suggest a lambda function,
but it could be any python function really. If you use nametrans rules, you will need to set them both on the remote and the local repository, see `Reverse nametrans`_ just below for details. The following examples are thought to be put in the remote repository section.
The below will remove "INBOX." from the leading edge of folders (great
Since 6.4.0, OfflineImap supports the creation of folders on the remote repository and that complicates things. Previously, only one nametrans setting on the remote repository was needed and that transformed a remote to a local name. However, nametrans transformations are one-way, and OfflineImap has no way using those rules on the remote repository to back local names to remote names.
Take a remote nametrans rule `lambda f: re.sub('^INBOX/','',f)` which cuts of any existing INBOX prefix. Now, if we parse a list of local folders, finding e.g. a folder "Sent", is it supposed to map to "INBOX/Sent" or to "Sent"? We have no way of knowing. This is why **every nametrans setting on a remote repository requires an equivalent nametrans rule on the local repository that reverses the transformation**.
Take the above examples. If your remote nametrans setting was::
then you will want to have this in your local repository, prepending "INBOX" to any local folder name::
nametrans = lambda folder: 'INBOX' + folder
Failure to set the local nametrans rule will lead to weird-looking error messages of -for instance- this type::
ERROR: Creating folder moo.foo on repository remote
Folder 'moo.foo'[remote] could not be created. Server responded: ('NO', ['Unknown namespace.'])
(This indicates that you attempted to create a folder "Sent" when all remote folders needed to be under the prefix of "INBOX.").
OfflineImap will make some sanity checks if it needs to create a new
folder on the remote side and a back-and-forth nametrans-lation does not
yield the original foldername (as that could potentially lead to
infinite folder creation cycles).
You can probably already see now that creating nametrans rules can be a pretty daunting and complex endeavour. Check out the Use cases in the manual. If you have some interesting use cases that we can present as examples here, please let us know.
Debugging folderfilter and nametrans
------------------------------------
Given the complexity of the functions and regexes involved, it is easy to misconfigure things. One way to test your configuration without danger to corrupt anything or to create unwanted folders is to invoke offlineimap with the `--info` option.
It will output a list of folders and their transformations on the screen (save them to a file with -l info.log), and will help you to tweak your rules as well as to understand your configuration. It also provides good output for bug reporting.
FAQ on nametrans
----------------
Where to put nametrans rules, on the remote and/or local repository?