# Offlineimap sample configuration file # This file documents *all* possible options and can be quite scary. # Looking for a quick start? Take a look at offlineimap.conf.minimal. # More details can be found at http://www.offlineimap.org . ################################################## # Overview ################################################## # The default configuration file is "~/.offlineimaprc". # # OfflineIMAP ships with a file named "offlineimap.conf" that you should copy to # that location and then edit. # # OfflineIMAP also ships a file named "offlineimap.conf.minimal" that you can # also try. It's useful if you want to get started with the most basic feature # set, and you can read about other features later with "offlineimap.conf". # # If you want to be XDG-compatible, you can put your configuration file into # "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/offlineimap/config". ################################################## # General definitions ################################################## # NOTE 1: Settings generally support python interpolation. This means # values can contain python format strings which refer to other values # in the same section, or values in a special DEFAULT section. This # allows you for example to use common settings for multiple accounts: # # [Repository Gmail1] # trashfolder: %(gmailtrashfolder)s # # [Repository Gmail2] # trashfolder: %(gmailtrashfolder)s # # [DEFAULT] # gmailtrashfolder = [Gmail]/Papierkorb # # would set the trashfolder setting for your German Gmail accounts. # NOTE 2: Above feature implies that any '%' needs to be encoded as '%%' # NOTE 3: Any variable that is subject to the environment variables # ($NAME) and tilde (~username/~) expansions will receive tilde # expansion first and only after the environment variable will be # expanded in the resulting string. This behaviour is intentional # as it coincides with typical shell expansion strategy. # NOTE 4: multiple same-named sections. # The library used to parse the configuration file has known issue when multiple # sections have the same name. In such case, only the last section is considered. # It is strongly discouraged to have multiple sections with the same name. # See https://github.com/OfflineIMAP/offlineimap/issues/143 for more details. [general] # This specifies where OfflineIMAP is to store its metadata. # This directory will be created if it does not already exist. # # Tilde and environment variable expansions will be performed. # #metadata = ~/.offlineimap # This option stands in the [general] section. # # This variable specifies which accounts are defined. Separate them with commas. # Account names should be alphanumeric only. You will need to specify one # section per account below. You may not use "general" for an account name. # # Always use ASCII characters only. # accounts = Test # This option stands in the [general] section. # # Offlineimap can synchronize more than one account at a time. If you want to # enable this feature, set the below value to something greater than 1. To # force it to synchronize only one account at a time, set it to 1. # # NOTE: if you are using autorefresh and have more than one account, you must # set this number to be >= to the number of accounts you have; since any given # sync run never "finishes" due to a timer, you will never sync your additional # accounts if this is 1. # #maxsyncaccounts = 1 # This option stands in the [general] section. # # You can specify one or more user interface. OfflineIMAP will try the first in # the list, and if it fails, the second, and so forth. # # The pre-defined options are: # Blinkenlights -- A fancy (terminal) interface # TTYUI -- a text-based (terminal) interface # Basic -- Noninteractive interface suitable for cron'ing # Quiet -- Noninteractive interface, generates no output # except for errors. # MachineUI -- Interactive interface suitable for machine # parsing. # # See also offlineimapui(7) # # You can override this with a command-line option -u. # #ui = basic # This option stands in the [general] section. # # If you try to synchronize messages to a folder which the IMAP server # considers read-only, OfflineIMAP will generate a warning. If you want # to suppress these warnings, set ignore-readonly to yes. Read-only # IMAP folders allow reading but not modification, so if you try to # change messages in the local copy of such a folder, the IMAP server # will prevent OfflineIMAP from propagating those changes to the IMAP # server. Note that ignore-readonly is UNRELATED to the "readonly" # setting which prevents a repository from being modified at all. # #ignore-readonly = no ########## Advanced settings # This option stands in the [general] section. # # You can give a Python source filename here and all config file # python snippets will be evaluated in the context of that file. # This allows you to e.g. define helper functions in the Python # source file and call them from this config file. You can find # an example of this in the manual. # # Tilde and environment variable expansions will be performed. # #pythonfile = ~/.offlineimap.py # This option is in the [general] section. # # By default, OfflineIMAP will not exit due to a network error until the # operating system returns an error code. Operating systems can sometimes take # forever to notice this. Here you can activate a timeout on the socket. This # timeout applies to individual socket reads and writes, not to an overall sync # operation. You could perfectly well have a 30s timeout here and your sync # still take minutes. # # Values in the 30-120 second range are reasonable. # # The default is to have no timeout beyond the OS. Times are given in seconds. # #socktimeout = 60 # This option stands in the [general] section. # # By default, OfflineIMAP will use fsync() to force data out to disk at # opportune times to ensure consistency. This can, however, reduce performance. # Users where /home is on SSD (Flash) may also wish to reduce write cycles. # Therefore, you can disable OfflineIMAP's use of fsync(). Doing so will come # at the expense of greater risk of message duplication in the event of a system # crash or power loss. Default is true. Set it to false to disable fsync. # #fsync = true ################################################## # Mailbox name recorder ################################################## [mbnames] # OfflineIMAP can record your mailbox names in a format you specify. # You can define the header, each mailbox item, the separator, # and the footer. Here is an example for Mutt. # If enabled is yes, all six setting must be specified, even if they # are just the empty string "". # # The header, peritem, sep, and footer are all Python expressions passed # through eval, so you can (and must) use Python quoting. # # The incremental setting controls whether the file is written after each # account completes or once all synced accounts are complete. This is usefull if # an account is sightly slower than the other. It allows keeping the previous # file rather than having it partially written. # This works best with "no" if in one-shot mode started by cron or systemd # timers. Default: no. # # The following hash key are available to the expansion for 'peritem': # - accountname: the name of the corresponding account; # - foldername: the name of the folder; # - localfolders: path to the local directory hosting all Maildir # folders for the account. # # Tilde and environment variable expansions will be performed # for "filename" knob. # #enabled = no #filename = ~/Mutt/muttrc.mailboxes #header = "mailboxes " #peritem = "+%(accountname)s/%(foldername)s" #sep = " " #footer = "\n" #incremental = no # This option stands in the [mbnames] section. # # You can also specify a folderfilter. It will apply to the *translated* folder # name here, and it takes TWO arguments: accountname and foldername. In all # other ways, it will behave identically to the folderfilter for accounts. # Please see the folderfilter option for more information and examples. # # This filter can be used only to further restrict mbnames to a subset of # folders that pass the account's folderfilter. # # You can customize the order in which mailbox names are listed in the generated # file by specifying a sort_keyfunc, which takes a single dict argument # containing keys 'accountname' and 'foldername'. This function will be called # once for each mailbox, and should return a suitable sort key that defines this # mailbox' position in the custom ordering. # # This is useful with e.g. Mutt-sidebar, which uses the mailbox order from the # generated file when listing mailboxes in the sidebar. # # Default setting is: #sort_keyfunc = lambda d: (d['accountname'], d['foldername']) ################################################## # Accounts ################################################## # This is an account definition clause. You'll have one of these for each # account listed in the "accounts" option in [general] section (above). [Account Test] # These settings specify the two folders that you will be syncing. # You'll need to have a "Repository ..." section for each one. localrepository = LocalExample remoterepository = RemoteExample ########## Advanced settings # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # You can have OfflineIMAP continue running indefinitely, automatically syncing # your mail periodically. If you want that, specify how frequently to do that # (in minutes) here. Fractional minutes (ie, 3.25) is allowed. # #autorefresh = 5 # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # OfflineImap can replace a number of full updates by quick synchronizations. # This option is ignored if maxage or startdate are used. # # It only synchronizes a folder if # # 1) a Maildir folder has changed # # or # # 2) if an IMAP folder has received new messages or had messages deleted, ie # it does not update if only IMAP flags have changed. # # Full updates need to fetch ALL flags for all messages, so this makes quite a # performance difference (especially if syncing between two IMAP servers). # # Specify 0 for never, -1 for always (works even in non-autorefresh mode) # # A positive integer to do quick updates before doing another full # synchronization (requires autorefresh). Updates are always performed after # minutes, be they quick or full. # #quick = 10 # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # You can specify a pre and post sync hook to execute a external command. In # this case a call to imapfilter to filter mail before the sync process starts # and a custom shell script after the sync completes. # # The pre sync script has to complete before a sync to the account will start. # #presynchook = imapfilter -c someotherconfig.lua #postsynchook = notifysync.sh # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # The historical backend is 'plain' which writes out the state in plain text # files. See manual. # #status_backend = sqlite # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # If you have a limited amount of bandwidth available you can exclude larger # messages (e.g. those with large attachments etc). If you do this it will # appear to OfflineIMAP that these messages do not exist at all. They will not # be copied, have flags changed etc. For this to work on an IMAP server the # server must have server side search enabled. This works with Gmail and most # imap servers (e.g. cyrus etc) # # The maximum size should be specified in bytes - e.g. 2000000 for approx 2MB # #maxsize = 2000000 # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # maxage enables you to sync only recent messages. There are two ways to specify # what "recent" means: if maxage is given as an integer, then only messages from # the last maxage days will be synced. If maxage is given as a date, then only # messages later than that date will be synced. # # Messages older than the cutoff will not be synced, their flags will not be # changed, they will not be deleted, etc. For OfflineIMAP it will be like these # messages do not exist. This will perform an IMAP search in the case of IMAP or # Gmail and therefore requires that the server support server side searching. # # Known edge cases are described in offlineimap(1). # # maxage is allowed only when the local folder is of type Maildir. It can't be # used with startdate. # # The maxage option expects an integer (for the number of days) or a date of the # form yyyy-mm-dd. # #maxage = 3 #maxage = 2015-04-01 # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # Maildir file format uses colon (:) separator between uniq name and info. # Unfortunatelly colon is not allowed character in windows file name. If you # enable maildir-windows-compatible option, OfflineIMAP will be able to store # messages on windows drive, but you will probably loose compatibility with # other programs working with the maildir. # #maildir-windows-compatible = no # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # Specifies if we want to sync GMail labels with the local repository. # Effective only for GMail IMAP repositories. # # Non-ASCII characters in labels are bad handled or won't work at all. # #synclabels = no # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # Name of the header to use for label storage. Format for the header # value differs for different headers, because there are some de-facto # "standards" set by popular clients: # # - X-Label or Keywords keep values separated with spaces; for these # you, obviously, should not have label values that contain spaces; # # - X-Keywords use comma (',') as the separator. # # To be consistent with the usual To-like headers, for the rest of header # types we use comma as the separator. # # Use ASCII characters only. # #labelsheader = X-Keywords # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # Set of labels to be ignored. Comma-separated list. GMail-specific # labels all start with backslash ('\'). # # Use ASCII characters only. # #ignorelabels = \Inbox, \Starred, \Sent, \Draft, \Spam, \Trash, \Important # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # OfflineIMAP can strip off some headers when your messages are propagated # back to the IMAP server. This option carries the comma-separated list # of headers to trim off. Header name matching is case-sensitive. # # This knob is respected only by IMAP-based accounts. Value of labelsheader # for GMail-based accounts is automatically added to this list, you don't # need to specify it explicitely. # # Use ASCII characters only. # #filterheaders = X-Some-Weird-Header # This option stands in the [Account Test] section. # # Use proxy connection for this account. Usefull to bypass the GFW in China. # To specify a proxy connection, join proxy type, host and port with colons. # Available proxy types are SOCKS5, SOCKS4, HTTP. # You also need to install PySocks through pip. # # Currently, this feature leaks DNS support. # #proxy = SOCKS5:IP:9999 [Repository LocalExample] # Each repository requires a "type" declaration. The types supported for # local repositories are Maildir, GmailMaildir and IMAP. # type = Maildir # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # Specify local repository. Your IMAP folders will be synchronized # to maildirs created under this path. OfflineIMAP will create the # maildirs for you as needed. # localfolders = ~/Test # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # You can specify the "folder separator character" used for your Maildir # folders. It is inserted in-between the components of the tree. If you # want your folders to be nested directories, set it to "/". 'sep' is # ignored for IMAP repositories, as it is queried automatically. # Otherwise, default value is ".". # # Don't use quotes. # #sep = . # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # startdate syncs mails starting from a given date. It applies the date # restriction to LocalExample only. The remote repository MUST be empty # at the first sync where this option is used. # # Unlike maxage, this is supported for IMAP-IMAP sync. # # startdate can't be used with maxage. # # The startdate option expects a date in the format yyyy-mm-dd. # #startdate = 2015-04-01 # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # Propagate deletions from local to remote. Messages deleted in this repository # won't get deleted on remote if set to "no". Default is yes. # # See sync_deletes in the RemoteExample section, too. # # While we have positive feedbacks, this feature is still EXPERIMENTAL. # #sync_deletes = yes # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # Some users may not want the atime (last access time) of folders to be # modified by OfflineIMAP. If 'restoreatime' is set to yes, OfflineIMAP # will restore the atime of the "new" and "cur" folders in each maildir # folder to their original value after each sync. # # In nearly all cases, the default should be fine. # #restoreatime = no # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # Set modification time of messages basing on the message's "Date" header. This # option makes sense for the Maildir type, only. # # This is useful if you are doing some processing/finding on your Maildir (for # example, finding messages older than 3 months), without parsing each # file/message content. # # If enabled, this prevents the -q (quick mode) CLI option to work correctly. # # Default: no. # #utime_from_header = no # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # This option is similar to "utime_from_header" and could be use as a # complementary feature to keep track of a message date. This option only # makes sense for the Maildir type. # # By default each message is stored in a file which prefix is the fetch # timestamp and an order rank such as "1446590057_0". In a multithreading # environment message are fetched in a random order, then you can't trust # the file name to sort your boxes. # # If set to "yes" the file name prefix if build on the message "Date" header # (which should be present) or the "Received-date" if "Date" is not # found. If neither "Received-date" nor "Date" is found, the current system # date is used. Now you can quickly sort your messages using their file # names. # # Used in combination with "utime_from_header" all your message would be in # order with the correct mtime attribute. # #filename_use_mail_timestamp = no # This option stands in the [Repository LocalExample] section. # # Map IMAP [user-defined] keywords to lowercase letters, similar to Dovecot's # format described in http://wiki2.dovecot.org/MailboxFormat/Maildir . This # option makes sense for the Maildir type, only. # # Configuration example: # customflag_x = some_keyword # # With the configuration example above enabled, all IMAP messages that have # 'some_keyword' in their FLAGS field will have an 'x' in the flags part of the # maildir filename: # 1234567890.M20046P2137.mailserver,S=4542,W=4642:2,Sx # # Valid fields are customflag_[a-z], valid values are whatever the IMAP server # allows. # # Comparison in offlineimap is case-sensitive. # #customflag_a = some_keyword #customflag_b = $OtherKeyword #customflag_c = NonJunk #customflag_d = ToDo [Repository GmailLocalExample] # This type of repository enables syncing of Gmail. All Maildir # configuration settings are also valid here. # # This is a separate Repository type from Maildir because it involves # some extra overhead which sometimes may be significant. We look for # modified tags in local messages by looking only to the files # modified since last run. This is usually rather fast, but the first # time OfflineIMAP runs with synclabels enabled, it will have to check # the contents of all individual messages for labels and this may take # a while. # type = GmailMaildir [Repository RemoteExample] # The remote repository. We only support IMAP or Gmail here. # type = IMAP # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Configure which address family to use for the connection. If not specified, # AF_UNSPEC is used as a fallback (default). # # AF_INET6: #ipv6 = True # # AF_INET: #ipv6 = False # These options stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # The following can fetch the account credentials via a python expression that # is parsed from the pythonfile parameter. For example, a function called # "getcredentials" that parses a file "filename" and returns the account # details for "hostname". # #remotehosteval = getcredentials("filename", "hostname", "hostname") #remoteporteval = getcredentials("filename", "hostname", "port") #remoteusereval = getcredentials("filename", "hostname", "user") #remotepasseval = getcredentials("filename", "hostname", "passwd") # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Specify the remote hostname. # remotehost = examplehost # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Whether or not to use SSL. # # Note: be care to configure the 'remotehost' line with the domain name defined # in the certificate. E.g., if you trust your provider and want to use the # certificate it provides on a shared server. Otherwise, OfflineIMAP will stop # and say that the domain is not named in the certificate. # #ssl = yes # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # SSL Client certificate (optional). # # Tilde and environment variable expansions will be performed. # #sslclientcert = /path/to/file.crt # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # SSL Client key (optional). # # Tilde and environment variable expansions will be performed. # #sslclientkey = /path/to/file.key # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # SSL CA Cert(s) to verify the server cert against (optional). # No SSL verification is done without this option. If it is # specified, the CA Cert(s) need to verify the Server cert AND # match the hostname (* wildcard allowed on the left hand side) # The certificate should be in PEM format. # # Tilde and environment variable expansions will be performed. # # Special value OS-DEFAULT makes OfflineIMAP to automatically # determine system-wide location of standard trusted CA roots file # for known OS distributions and use the first bundle encountered # (if any). If no system-wide CA bundle is found, OfflineIMAP # will refuse to continue; this is done to prevent creation # of false security expectations ("I had configured CA bundle, # thou certificate verification shalt be present"). # # You can also use fingerprint verification via cert_fingerprint. # See below for more verbose explanation. # #sslcacertfile = /path/to/cacertfile.crt # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # If you connect via SSL/TLS (ssl = yes) and you have no CA certificate # specified, OfflineIMAP will refuse to sync as it connects to a server # with an unknown "fingerprint". If you are sure you connect to the # correct server, you can then configure the presented server # fingerprint here. OfflineIMAP will verify that the server fingerprint # has not changed on each connect and refuse to connect otherwise. # # You can also configure fingerprint validation in addition to # CA certificate validation above and it will check both: # OfflineIMAP fill verify certificate first and if things will be fine, # fingerprint will be validated. # # Multiple fingerprints can be specified, separated by commas. # # In Windows, Microsoft uses the term "thumbprint" instead of "fingerprint". # # Fingerprints must be in hexadecimal form without leading '0x': # 40 hex digits like bbfe29cf97acb204591edbafe0aa8c8f914287c9. # #cert_fingerprint = [, ] # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Set SSL version to use (optional). # # It is best to leave this unset, in which case the correct version will be # automatically detected. In rare cases, it may be necessary to specify a # particular version from: tls1, tls1_1, tls_1_2, ssl3, ssl23. # # tls1_1 and tls1_2 are available with OpenSSL since v1.0.1. # # ssl23 automatically selects the highest protocol version that both the client # and server support. Despite the name, this option can select “TLS” protocols # as well as “SSL”. # # Be aware that a MITM attack can consist in downgrading the protocol version # which is used upon client/server agreement. So, they might fallback to the # less secure available protocol. Hence, it is considered more safe to manually # define the protocol version. # # See the configuration option tls_level to disable insecure protocols. # #ssl_version = ssl23 # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # TLS support level (optional). # # Specify the level of support that should be allowed for this repository. # Can be used to enable insecure SSL versions as defined by imaplib2. # See, IETF https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6176 to know more. # # Supported values are: # tls_secure, tls_no_ssl, tls_compat (default). # # Current mapping: # - tls_secure: # - tls1_1 # - tls1_2 # - tls_no_ssl: # - all tls_secure # - tls1 (less desirable than tls1_1 or higher) # - tls_compat # - all tls_no_ssl # - ssl3 (less desirable than tls1) # - ssl23 (can fallback up to ssl3) # #tls_level = tls_compat # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Specify the port. If not specified, use a default port. # #remoteport = 993 # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Specify the remote user name. # remoteuser = username # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Specify the user to be authorized as. Sometimes we want to # authenticate with our login/password, but tell the server that we # really want to be treated as some other user; perhaps server will # allow us to do that (or maybe not). Some IMAP servers migrate # account names using this functionality: your credentials remain # intact, but remote identity changes. # # Currently this variable is used only for SASL PLAIN authentication # mechanism, so consider using auth_mechanisms to prioritize PLAIN # or even make it the only mechanism to be tried. # #remote_identity = authzuser # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Specify which authentication/authorization mechanisms we should try and the # order in which OfflineIMAP will try them. # # NOTE: any given mechanism will be tried ONLY if it is supported by the remote # IMAP server. # # Default value is ranged is from strongest to more weak ones. Due to technical # limitations, if GSSAPI is set, it will be tried first, no matter where it was # specified in the list. # #auth_mechanisms = GSSAPI, CRAM-MD5, XOAUTH2, PLAIN, LOGIN # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # XOAuth2 authentication (for instance, to use with Gmail). # # This option was tested on Gmail only, but should work # with type = IMAP for compatible servers. # # Mandatory parameters are "oauth2_client_id", "oauth2_client_secret" and # either "oauth2_refresh_token" or "oauth2_access_token". # # See below to learn how to get those. # # Specify the OAuth2 client id and secret to use for the connection.. # Here's how to register an OAuth2 client for Gmail, as of 10-2-2016: # - Go to the Google developer console # https://console.developers.google.com/project # - Create a new project # - In API & Auth, select Credentials # - Setup the OAuth Consent Screen # - Then add Credentials of type OAuth 2.0 Client ID # - Choose application type Other; type in a name for your client # - You now have a client ID and client secret # #oauth2_client_id = YOUR_CLIENT_ID #oauth2_client_secret = YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET # Specify the refresh token to use for the connection to the mail server. # Here's an example of a way to get a refresh token: # - Clone this project: https://github.com/google/gmail-oauth2-tools # - Type the following command-line in a terminal and follow the instructions # python python/oauth2.py --generate_oauth2_token \ # --client_id=YOUR_CLIENT_ID --client_secret=YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET # - Access token can be obtained using refresh token with command # python python/oauth2.py --user=YOUR_EMAIL --client_id=YOUR_CLIENT_ID # --client_secret=YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET --refresh_token=REFRESH_TOKEN # # Access tokens have limited lifetimes. If you need access beyond the lifetime # of a single access token, you should use a refresh token. A refresh token # allows offlineimap to obtain new access tokens. # # If you want to use a refresh token, make sure you disabled/removed any # oauth2_access_token option. The access token is downloaded from the URL # defined in the oauth2_request_url configuration option. # If the type of the remote is IMAP, oauth2_request_url MUST be defined. # For Gmail, the default URL is https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/token. # #oauth2_access_token = ACCESS_TOKEN #oauth2_request_url = https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/token #oauth2_refresh_token = REFRESH_TOKEN ########## Passwords # There are six ways to specify the password for the IMAP server: # # 1. No password at all specified in the config file. # If a matching entry is found in ~/.netrc (see netrc (5) for # information) this password will be used. Do note that netrc only # allows one entry per hostname. If there is no ~/.netrc file but # there is an /etc/netrc file, the password will instead be taken # from there. Otherwise you will be prompted for the password when # OfflineIMAP starts when using a UI that supports this. # # 2. The remote password stored in this file with the remotepass # option. Any '%' needs to be encoded as '%%'. Example: # remotepass = mypassword # # 3. The remote password stored as a single line in an external # file, which is referenced by the remotefile option. Example: # remotepassfile = ~/Password.IMAP.Account1 # # 4. With a preauth tunnel. With this method, you invoke an external # program that is guaranteed *NOT* to ask for a password, but rather # to read from stdin and write to stdout an IMAP procotol stream that # begins life in the PREAUTH state. When you use a tunnel, you do # NOT specify a user or password (if you do, they'll be ignored.) # Instead, you specify a preauthtunnel, as this example illustrates # for Courier IMAP on Debian: # preauthtunnel = ssh -q imaphost '/usr/bin/imapd ./Maildir' # # 5. If you are using Kerberos and have the Python Kerberos package # installed, you should not specify a remotepass. If the user has a # valid Kerberos TGT, OfflineIMAP will figure out the rest all by # itself, and fall back to password authentication if needed. # # 6. Using arbitrary python code. With this method, you invoke a # function from your pythonfile. To use this method assign the name # of the function to the variable 'remotepasseval'. Example: # remotepasseval = get_password("imap.example.net") # You can also query for the username: # remoteusereval = get_username("imap.example.net") # This method can be used to design more elaborate setups, e.g. by # querying the gnome-keyring via its python bindings. ########## Advanced settings # These options stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Tunnels. There are two types: # # - preauth: they teleport your connection to the remote system # and you don't need to authenticate yourself there; the sole # fact that you succeeded to get the tunnel running is enough. # This tunnel type was explained above in the 'Passwords' section. # # - transport: the just provide the transport (probably encrypted) # to the IMAP server, but you still need to authenticate at the # IMAP server. # # Tunnels are currently working only with IMAP servers and their # derivatives (GMail currently). Additionally, for GMail accounts # preauth tunnel settings are ignored: we don't believe that there # are ways to preauthenticate at Google mail system IMAP servers. # # You must choose at most one tunnel type, be wise M'Lord! # #preauthtunnel = ssh -q imaphost '/usr/bin/imapd ./Maildir' #transporttunnel = openssl s_client -host myimap -port 993 -quiet # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Some IMAP servers need a "reference" which often refers to the "folder root". # # This is most commonly needed with UW IMAP, where you might need to specify the # directory in which your mail is stored. The 'reference' value will be prefixed # to all folder paths refering to that repository. E.g. accessing folder 'INBOX' # with "reference = Mail" will try to access Mail/INBOX. # # The nametrans and folderfilter functions will apply to the full path, # including the reference prefix. Most users will not need this. # #reference = Mail # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # IMAP defines an encoding for non-ASCII ("international") characters. Enable # this option if you want to decode them to the nowadays ubiquitous UTF-8. # # Note that the IMAP 4rev1 specification (RFC 3501) allows both UTF-8 and # modified UTF-7 folder names. # # WARNING: with this option enabled: # - compatibility with any other version is NOT GUARANTED (including newer); # - no support is provided. # #decodefoldernames = no # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # In between synchronisations, OfflineIMAP can monitor mailboxes for new # messages using the IDLE command. If you want to enable this, specify here the # folders you wish to monitor. IMAP protocol requires a separate connection for # each folder monitored in this way, so setting this option will force settings # for: # # - maxconnections: to be at least the number of folders you give # - holdconnectionopen: to be true # - keepalive: to be 29 minutes unless you specify otherwise # # This feature isn't complete and may well have problems. See the "Known Issues" # entry in the manual for more details. # # This option should return a Python list. For example # #idlefolders = ['INBOX', 'INBOX.Alerts'] # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # OfflineIMAP can use a compressed connection to the IMAP server. # This can result in faster downloads for some cases. # #usecompression = yes # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # OfflineIMAP can use multiple connections to the server in order # to perform multiple synchronization actions simultaneously. # This may place a higher burden on the server. In most cases, # setting this value to 2 or 3 will speed up the sync, but in some # cases, it may slow things down. The safe answer is 1. You should # probably never set it to a value more than 5. # #maxconnections = 2 # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # OfflineIMAP normally closes IMAP server connections between refreshes if # the global option autorefresh is specified. If you wish it to keep the # connection open, set this to true. If not specified, the default is # false. Keeping the connection open means a faster sync start the # next time and may use fewer server resources on connection, but uses # more server memory. This setting has no effect if autorefresh is not set. # #holdconnectionopen = no # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # If you want to have "keepalives" sent while waiting between syncs, specify the # amount of time IN SECONDS between keepalives here. Note that sometimes more # than this amount of time might pass, so don't make it tight. This setting has # no effect if autorefresh and holdconnectionopen are not both set. # #keepalive = 60 # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Normally, OfflineIMAP will expunge deleted messages from the server. You can # disable that if you wish. This means that OfflineIMAP will mark them deleted # on the server, but not actually delete them. You must use some other IMAP # client to delete them if you use this setting; otherwise, the messages will # just pile up there forever. Therefore, this setting is definitely NOT # recommended for a long term. # #expunge = no # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Specify whether to process all mail folders on the server, or only # those listed as "subscribed". # #subscribedonly = no # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # You can specify a folder translator. This must be a eval-able. # # Python expression that takes a foldername arg and returns the new value. A # lambda function is suggested. # # WARNING: you MUST construct it so that it NEVER returns the same value for two # folders, UNLESS the second values are filtered out by folderfilter below. # Failure to follow this rule will result in undefined behavior. # # If you enable nametrans, you will likely need to set the reversed nametrans on # the other side. See the user documentation for details and use cases. They # are also online at: http://www.offlineimap.org/doc/nametrans.html # # This example below will remove "INBOX." from the leading edge of folders # (great for Courier IMAP users). # #nametrans = lambda foldername: re.sub('^INBOX\.', '', foldername) # # Using Courier remotely and want to duplicate its mailbox naming locally? Try # this: # #nametrans = lambda foldername: re.sub('^INBOX\.*', '.', foldername) # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Determines if folderfilter will be invoked on each run (dynamic folder # filtering) or filtering status will be determined at startup (default # behaviour). # #dynamic_folderfilter = False # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # You can specify which folders to sync using the folderfilter setting. You can # provide any python function (e.g. a lambda function) which will be invoked for # each foldername. If the filter function returns True, the folder will be # synced, if it returns False, it. # # The folderfilter operates on the *UNTRANSLATED* name (before any nametrans # translation takes place). # # Example 1: synchronizing only INBOX and Sent. # #folderfilter = lambda foldername: foldername in ['INBOX', 'Sent'] # # Example 2: synchronizing everything except Trash. # #folderfilter = lambda foldername: foldername not in ['Trash'] # # Example 3: Using a regular expression to exclude Trash and all folders # containing the characters "Del". # #folderfilter = lambda foldername: not re.search('(^Trash$|Del)', foldername) # # 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'] # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # You can specify folderincludes to include additional folders. It should # return a Python list. This might be used to include a folder that was # excluded by your folderfilter rule, to include a folder that your server does # not specify with its LIST option, or 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: # #folderincludes = ['debian.user', 'debian.personal'] # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # If you do not want to have any folders created on this repository, # set the createfolders variable to False, the default is True. Using # this feature you can e.g. disable the propagation of new folders to # the new repository. # #createfolders = True # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Propagate deletions from remote to local. Messages deleted in this repository # won't get deleted on the local repositor if set to "no". Default is yes. # # See sync_deletes in the LocalExample section, too. # # While we have positive feedbacks, this feature is still EXPERIMENTAL. # #sync_deletes = yes # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # 'foldersort' determines how folders are sorted. # # This affects order of synchronization and mbnames. The expression should # return -1, 0, or 1, as the default Python cmp() does. The two arguments, x # and y, are strings representing the names of the folders to be sorted. The # sorting is applied *AFTER* nametrans, if any. The default is to sort IMAP # folders alphabetically (case-insensitive). Usually, you should never have to # modify this. To eg. reverse the sort: # #foldersort = lambda x, y: -cmp(x, y) # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # Enable 1-way synchronization. When setting 'readonly' to True, this # repository will not be modified during synchronization. Usefull to # e.g. backup an IMAP server. The readonly setting can be applied to any # type of Repository (Maildir, Imap, etc). # #readonly = False # This option stands in the [Repository RemoteExample] section. # # You can specify a newmail hook to execute an external command upon receipt # of new mail in the INBOX. # # The pythonfile must be set to import any required library. # # This example plays a sound file of your chosing when new mail arrives. # #newmail_hook = lambda: os.system( #"cvlc --play-and-stop --play-and-exit /path/to/sound/file.mp3 > /dev/null 2>&1") [Repository GmailExample] # A repository using Gmail's IMAP interface. # # Any configuration parameter of "IMAP" type repositories can be used here. # Only "remoteuser" (or "remoteusereval" ) is mandatory. Default values for # other parameters are OK, and you should not need fiddle with those. # # The Gmail repository will use hard-coded values for "remotehost", # "remoteport", "tunnel" and "ssl". Any attempt to set those parameters will be # silently ignored. For details, see # # http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=78799&topic=12814 # # To enable GMail labels synchronisation, set the option "synclabels" # in the corresponding "Account" section. # type = Gmail # This option stands in the [Repository GmailExample] section. # # Specify the Gmail user name. This is the only mandatory parameter. # remoteuser = username@gmail.com # This option stands in the [Repository GmailExample] section. # # The trash folder name may be different from [Gmail]/Trash due to localization. # You should look for the localized names of the spam folder too: "spamfolder" # tunable will help you to override the standard name. # # For example on German Gmail, this setting should be: # #trashfolder = [Gmail]/Papierkorb