OFFLINEIMAP(1) OfflineIMAP manual OFFLINEIMAP(1) NAME OfflineIMAP - Powerful IMAP/Maildir synchronization and reader support SYNOPSIS offlineimap [ -1 ] [ -P profiledir ] [ -a accountlist ] [ -c configfile ] [ -d ] [ -o ] [ -u interface ] offlineimap -h | --help DESCRIPTION OfflineIMAP is a tool to simplify your e-mail reading. With OfflineIMAP, you can read the same mailbox from mul- tiple computers. You get a current copy of your messages on each computer, and changes you make one place will be visible on all other systems. For instance, you can delete a message on your home computer, and it will appear deleted on your work computer as well. OfflineIMAP is also useful if you want to use a mail reader that does not have IMAP support, has poor IMAP support, or does not pro- vide disconnected operation. OfflineIMAP is FAST; it synchronizes my two accounts with over 50 folders in 3 seconds. Other similar tools might take over a minute, and achieve a less-reliable result. Some mail readers can take over 10 minutes to do the same thing, and some don't even support it at all. Unlike other mail tools, OfflineIMAP features a multi-threaded synchronization algorithm that can dramatically speed up performance in many situations by synchronizing several different things simultaneously. OfflineIMAP is FLEXIBLE; you can customize which folders are synced via regular expressions, lists, or Python expressions; a versatile and comprehensive configuration file is used to control behavior; two user interfaces are built-in; fine-tuning of synchronization performance is possible; internal or external automation is supported; SSL and PREAUTH tunnels are both supported; offline (or "unplugged") reading is supported; and esoteric IMAP fea- tures are supported to ensure compatibility with the widest variety of IMAP servers. OfflineIMAP is SAFE; it uses an algorithm designed to pre- vent mail loss at all costs. Because of the design of this algorithm, even programming errors should not result in loss of mail. I am so confident in the algorithm that I use my own personal and work accounts for testing of OfflineIMAP pre-release, development, and beta releases. METHOD OF OPERATION OfflineIMAP operates by maintaining a hierarchy of mail folders in Maildir format locally. Your own mail reader will read mail from this tree, and need never know that the mail comes from IMAP. OfflineIMAP will detect changes to the mail folders on your IMAP server and your own com- puter and bi-directionally synchronize them, copying, marking, and deleting messages as necessary. INSTALLATION If you are reading this document via the "man" command, it is likely that you have no installation tasks to perform; your system administrator has already installed it. If you need to install it yourself, you have three options: a system-wide installation with Debian, system-wide instal- lation with other systems, and a single-user installation. You can download the latest version of OfflineIMAP from http://quux.org/devel/offlineimap/. PREREQUISITES In order to use OfflineIMAP, you need to have these condi- tions satisfied: o Your mail server must support IMAP. Most Internet Service Providers and corporate networks do, and most operating systems have an IMAP implementation readily available. o You must have Python version 2.2.1 or above installed. If you are running on Debian GNU/Linux, this requirement will automatically be taken care of for you. If you do not have Python already, check with your system administrator or operating system vendor; or, download it from http://www.python.org/. If you intend to use the Tk interface, you must have Tkiner (python-tk) installed. If you intend to use the SSL interface, your Python must have been built with SSL support. o Have a mail reader that supports the Maildir mail- box format. Most modern mail readers have this support built-in, so you can choose from a wide variety of mail servers. This format is also known as the "qmail" format, so any mail reader compati- ble with it will work with OfflineIMAP. DEBIAN SYSTEM-WIDE INSTALLATION If you are tracking Debian unstable, you may install OfflineIMAP by simply running the following command as root: apt-get install offlineimap If you are not tracking Debian unstable, download the Debian .deb package from the OfflineIMAP website and then run dpkg -i to install the downloaded package. Then, go to CONFIGURATION below. You will type offlineimap to invoke the program. OTHER SYSTEM-WIDE INSTALLATION Download the tar.gz version of the package from the web- site. Then run these commands: tar -zxvf offlineimap-x.y.z.tar.gz cd offlineimap-x.y.z python2.2 setup.py Some systems will need to use python instead of python2.2. Next, proceed to configuration. You will type offlineimap to invoke the program. SINGLE-ACCOUNT INSTALLATION Download the tar.gz version of the package from the web- site. Then run these commands: tar -zxvf offlineimap-x.y.z.tar.gz cd offlineimap-x.y.z When you want to run OfflineIMAP, you will issue the cd command as above and then type ./offlineimap; there is no installation step necessary. CONFIGURATION OfflineIMAP is regulated by a configuration file that is normally stored in ~/.offlineimaprc. OfflineIMAP ships with a file named offlineimap.conf that you should copy to that location and then edit. This file is vital to proper operation of the system; it sets everything you need to run OfflineIMAP. Full documentation for the configuration file is included within the sample file. OPTIONS Most configuration is done via the configuration file. Nevertheless, there are a few options that you may set for OfflineIMAP. -1 Disable all multithreading operations and use solely a single-thread sync. This effectively sets the maxsyncaccounts and all maxconnections configu- ration file variables to 1. -P profiledir Sets OfflineIMAP into profile mode. The program will create profiledir (it must not already exist). As it runs, Python profiling information about each thread is logged into profiledir. Please note: This option is present for debugging and optimiza- tion only, and should NOT be used unless you have a specific reason to do so. It will significantly slow program performance, may reduce reliability, and can generate huge amounts of data. You must use the -1 option when you use -P. -a accountlist Overrides the accounts section in the config file. Lets you specify a particular account or set of accounts to sync without having to edit the config file. You might use this to exclude certain accounts, or to sync some accounts that you nor- mally prefer not to. -c configfile Specifies a configuration file to use in lieu of the default, ~/.offlineimaprc. -d Enables IMAP protocol stream and parsing debugging. This is useful if you are trying to track down a malfunction or figure out what is going on under the hood. I suggest that you use this with -1 in order to make the results more sensible. Note that this output will contain full IMAP protocol in plain text, including passwords, so take care to remove that from the debugging output before send- ing it to anyone else. -o Run only once, ignoring any autorefresh setting in the config file. -h, --help Show summary of options. -u interface Specifies an alternative user interface module to use. This overrides the default specified in the configuration file. The UI specified with -u will be forced to be used, even if its isuable() method states that it cannot be. Use this option with care. The pre-defined options are Tk.TkUI (a graphical interface), TTY.TTYUI (a text-mode interface), Non- interactive.Basic (a non-interactive mode suitable for cronning), and Noninteractive.Quiet (a mode that generates no output except for errors). EXAMPLES Here is an example configuration for a particularly com- plex situation; more examples will be added later. MULTIPLE ACCOUNTS WITH MUTT This example shows you how to set up OfflineIMAP to syn- chronize multiple accounts with the mutt mail reader. Start by creating a directory to hold your folders: mkdir ~/Mail In your ~/.offlineimaprc, specify this: accounts = Personal, Work Make sure that you have both a [Personal] and a [Work] section, with different localfolder pathnames and enable [mbnames]. In each account section, do something like this: localfolders = ~/Mail/Personal Add these lines to your ~/.muttrc: source ~/path-to-mbnames-muttrc-mailboxes folder-hook Personal set from="youremail@personal.com" folder-hook Work set from="youremail@work.com" set mbox_type=Maildir set folder=$HOME/Mail set spoolfile=+Personal/INBOX That's it! UW-IMAPD AND REFERENCES Some users with a UW-IMAPD server need to use OfflineIMAP's "reference" feature to get at their mail- boxes, specifying a reference of "~/Mail" or "#mh/" depending on the configuration. The below configuration from docwhat@gerf.org shows using a reference of Mail, a nametrans that strips the leading Mail/ off incoming folder names, and a folderfilter that limits the folders synced to just three. [Gerf] localfolders = ~/Mail remotehost = gerf.org ssl = yes remoteuser = docwhat reference = Mail # Trims off the preceeding Mail on all the folder names. nametrans = lambda foldername: \ re.sub('^Mail/', '', foldername) # Yeah, you have to mention the Mail dir, even though it # would seem intuitive that reference would trim it. folderfilter = lambda foldername: foldername in [ 'Mail/INBOX', 'Mail/list/zaurus-general', 'Mail/list/zaurus-dev', ] maxconnections = 1 holdconnectionopen = no ERRORS If you get one of some frequently-encountered or confusing errors, please check this section. UID validity problem for folder IMAP servers use a unique ID (UID) to refer to a specific message. This number is guaranteed to be unique to a par- ticular message FOREVER. No other message in the same folder will ever get the same UID. UIDs are an integral part of OfflineIMAP's synchronization scheme; they are used to match up messages on your computer to messages on the server. Sometimes, the UIDs on the server might get reset. Usu- ally this will happen if you delete and then recreate a folder. When you create a folder, the server will often start the UID back from 1. But OfflineIMAP might still have the UIDs from the previous folder by the same name stored. OfflineIMAP will detect this condition and skip the folder. This is GOOD, because it prevents data loss. You can fix it by removing your local folder and cache data. For instance, if your folders are under ~/Folders and the folder with the problem is INBOX, you'd type this: rm -r ~/Folders/INBOX rm ~/.offlineimap/AccountName/INBOX (replacing AccountName with the account name as specified in ~/.offlineimaprc) Next time you run OfflineIMAP, it will re-download the folder with the new UIDs. Note that the procedure speci- fied above will lose any local changes made to the folder. Some IMAP servers are broken and do not support UIDs prop- erly. If you continue to get this error for all your folders even after performing the above procedure, it is likely that your IMAP server falls into this category. OfflineIMAP is incompatible with such servers. Using OfflineIMAP with them will not destroy any mail, but at the same time, it will not actually synchronize it either. (OfflineIMAP will detect this condition and abort prior to synchronization) OTHER FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS There are some other FAQs that might not fit into another section of this document, and they are enumerated here. What platforms does OfflineIMAP run on? It should run on most platforms supported by Python, which are quite a few. I'm using Mutt. Other IMAP sync programs require me to use set maildir_trash=yes . Do I need to do that with OfflineIMAP? No. OfflineIMAP is smart enough to figure out mes- sage deletion without this extra crutch. You'll get the best results if you don't use this setting, in fact. How do I specify the names of my folders? You do not need to. OfflineIMAP is smart enough to automatically figure out what folders are present on the IMAP server and synchronize them. You can use the folderfilter and foldertrans configuration file options to request certain folders and rename them as they come in if you like. How can I prevent certain folders from being synced? Use the folderfilter option in the configuration file. How can I add or delete a folder? OfflineIMAP does not currently provide this fea- ture, but if you create a new folder on the IMAP server, it will be created locally automatically. Are there any other warnings that I should be aware of? Yes; see the NOTES section below. What is the mailbox name recorder (mbnames) for? The Mutt mail reader is not capable of automati- cally determining the names of your mailboxes. OfflineIMAP can help it (or many other) programs out be writing these names out in a format you specify. See the example offlineimap.conf file for details. Can I synchronize multiple accounts with OfflineIMAP? Sure. Just name them all in the accounts line in the general section of the config file, and add a per-account section for each one. Does OfflineIMAP support POP? No. POP is not robust enough to do a completely reliable multi-machine synchronization like OfflineIMAP can do. OfflineIMAP will not support it. Do you support mailbox formats other than Maildir? Not at present. There is no technical reason not to; just no demand yet. Maildir is a superior for- mat anyway. [technical] Why are your Maildir message filenames so huge? OfflineIMAP has two relevant principles: 1) never modifying your messages in any way and 2) ensuring 100% reliable synchronizations. In order to do a reliable sync, OfflineIMAP must have a way to uniquely identify each e-mail. Three pieces of information are required to do this: your account name, the folder name, and the message UID. The account name can be calculated from the path in which your messages are. The folder name can usu- ally be as well, BUT some mail clients move mes- sages between folders by simply moving the file, leaving the name intact. So, OfflineIMAP must store both a UID folder ID. The folder ID is necessary so OfflineIMAP can detect a message moved to a different folder. OfflineIMAP stores the UID (U= number) and an md5sum of the foldername (FMD5= number) to facilitate this. What is the speed of OfflineIMAP's sync? OfflineIMAP versions 2.0 and above contain a multi- threaded system. A good way to experiment is by setting maxsyncaccounts to 3 and maxconnections to 3 in each account clause. This lets OfflineIMAP open up multiple connections simultaneously. That will let it process multiple folders and messages at once. In most cases, this will increase performance of the sync. Don't set the number too high. If you do that, things might actually slow down as your link gets saturated. Also, too many connections can cause mail servers to have excessive load. Administra- tors might take unkindly to this, and the server might bog down. There are many variables in the optimal setting; experimentation may help. An informal benchmark yields these results for my setup: 10 minutes with MacOS X Mail.app "manual cache" 5 minutes with GNUS agent sync 20 seconds with OfflineIMAP 1.x 9 seconds with OfflineIMAP 2.x 3 seconds with OfflineIMAP 3.x "cold start" 2 seconds with OfflineIMAP 3.x "held connection" CONFORMING TO o Internet Message Access Protocol version 4rev1 (IMAP 4rev1) as specified in RFC2060 o Maildir as specified in http://www.qmail.org/qmail- manual-html/man5/maildir.html and http://cr.yp.to/proto/maildir.html. o Standard Python 2.2.1 as implemented on POSIX-com- pliant systems. NOTES DELETING LOCAL FOLDERS OfflineIMAP does a two-way synchronization. That is, if you make a change to the mail on the server, it will be propogated to your local copy, and vise-versa. Some peo- ple might think that it would be wise to just delete all their local mail folders periodically. If you do this with OfflineIMAP, remember to also remove your local sta- tus cache (~/.offlineimap by default). Otherwise, OfflineIMAP will take this as an intentional deletion of many messages and will interpret your action as requesting them to be deleted from the server as well. (If you don't understand this, don't worry; you probably won't encounter this situation) COPYING MESSAGES BETWEEN FOLDERS Normally, when you copy a message between folders or add a new message to a folder locally, OfflineIMAP will just do the right thing. However, sometimes this can be tricky -- if your IMAP server does not provide the SEARCH command, or does not return something useful, OfflineIMAP cannot determine the new UID of the message. So, in these rare instances, OfflineIMAP will upload the message to the IMAP server and delete it from your local folder. Then, on your next sync, the message will be re-downloaded with the proper UID. OfflineIMAP makes sure that the message was properly uploaded before deleting it, so there should be no risk of data loss. MAILING LIST There is an OfflineIMAP mailing list available. To subscribe, send the text "Subscribe" in the subject of a mail to offlineimap-request@complete.org. To post, send the message to offlineimap@complete.org. BUGS Reports of bugs should be sent via e-mail to the OfflineIMAP bug-tracking system (BTS) at offlineimap@bugs.complete.org or submitted on-line using the Web interface at http://bugs.complete.org/. The Web site also lists all current bugs, where you can check their status or contribute to fixing them. COPYRIGHT OfflineIMAP is Copyright (C) 2002 John Goerzen. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. 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. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to: Free Software Foundation, Inc. 59 Temple Place Suite 330 Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA AUTHOR OfflineIMAP, its libraries, documentation, and all included files, except where noted, was written by John Goerzen and copyright is held as stated in the COPYRIGHT section. OfflineIMAP may be downloaded, and information found, from its homepage via either Gopher or HTTP: gopher://quux.org/1/devel/offlineimap http://quux.org/devel/offlineimap OfflineIMAP may also be downloaded using Subversion. Additionally, the distributed tar.gz may be updated with a simple "svn update" command; it is ready to go. For information on getting OfflineIMAP with Subversion, please visit: http://svn.complete.org/ SEE ALSO mutt(1), python(1).