b5f3c7aa9d
typo fixes
263 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
263 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
OfflineIMAP
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Copyright (C) 2002 John Goerzen <jgoerzen@complete.org>
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This software comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; see the file
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COPYING for details. This is free software, and you are welcome
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to distribute it under the conditions laid out in COPYING.
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gopher://quux.org/1/devel/offlineimap
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http://quux.org/devel/offlineimap
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==================================================
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Welcome
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==================================================
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OfflineIMAP is a tool to simplify your e-mail reading. With
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OfflimeIMAP, you can:
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* Read the same mailbox from multiple computers, and have your
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changes (deletions, etc.) be automatically reflected on
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all computers
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* Use various mail clients to read a single mail box
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* Read mail while offline (on a laptop) and have all changes
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synchronized when you get connected again
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* Read IMAP mail with mail readers that do not support IMAP
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* Use SSL (secure connections) to read IMAP mail even if your reader
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doesn't support SSL
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* Synchronize your mail using a completely safe and fault-tolerant
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algorithm. (At least I think it is!)
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In short, OfflineIMAP is a tool to let you read mail how YOU want to.
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==================================================
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Requirements
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==================================================
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To use OfflineIMAP, you must:
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1. Have your mail delivered to a server that supports IMAP
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2. Have Python 2.2 or above installed
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3. Have a mail reader that supports Maildirs (most modern ones do)
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These requirements are easy to meet, and most people will have met
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them already without even being aware of it.
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If you do not have Python already, check your operating system vendor
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or download it from http://www.python.org/
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==================================================
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Installation
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==================================================
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Basic installation for a single user requires only these steps:
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1. Copy offlineimap.conf to ~/.offlineimaprc and edit that file
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for your accounts. Full instructions are in it.
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2. Make the directory that you will store your folders in.
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(~/Test in the example)
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You can then just run "python2.2 offlineimap.py" to synchronize your
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mail.
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------------------------------
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Systemwide
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If you wish to install OfflineIMAP for all users on your system:
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1. Either install the Debian package or run "python2.2 setup.py" and
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follow the prompts
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2. Advise users to perform steps 1 and 2 above
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3. Run OfflineIMAP by typing "offlineimap"
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That's it!
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==================================================
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Frequently Asked Questions
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==================================================
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Q. I get a message saying "UID validity problem for folder; skipping".
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What does this mean and how do I fix it?
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A. IMAP servers use a unique ID (UID) to refer to a specific message.
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This number is guaranteed to be unique to a particular message
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FOREVER. No other message in the same folder will ever get the same
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UID. UIDs are an integral part of OfflineIMAP's synchronization
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scheme; they are used to match up messages on your computer to
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messages on the server.
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Sometimes, the UIDs on the server might get reset. Usually this will
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happen if you delete and then recreate a folder. When you create a
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folder, the server will often start the UID back from 1. But
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OfflineIMAP might still have the UIDs from the previous folder by the
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same name stored. OfflineIMAP will detect this condition and skip the
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folder. This is GOOD, because it prevents data loss.
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You can fix it by removing your local folder and cache data. For
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instance, if your folders are under ~/Folders and the folder with the
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problem is INBOX, you'd type this:
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rm -r ~/Folders/INBOX
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rm ~/.offlineimap/AccountName/INBOX
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(replacing AccountName with the account name as specified in
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~/.offlineimaprc)
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Next time you run OfflineIMAP, it will re-download the folder with the
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new UIDs. Note that the procedure specified above will lose any local
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changes made to the folder.
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Some IMAP servers are broken and do not support UIDs properly. If you
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continue to get this error for all your folders even after performing
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the above procedure, it is likely that your IMAP server falls into
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this category. OfflineIMAP is incompatible with such servers. Using
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OfflineIMAP with them will not destroy any mail, but at the same time,
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it will not actually synchronize it either. (OfflineIMAP will detect
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this condition and abort prior to synchronization)
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. What platforms does OfflineIMAP run on?
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A. It should run on most platforms supported by Python, which are
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quite a few.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. I'm using Mutt. Other IMAP synchronization programs require me to
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"set maildir_trash=yes". Do I need to do that with OfflineIMAP?
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A. No. OfflineIMAP is smart enough to figure out message deletion
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without this extra crutch. You'll get the best results if you don't
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use that setting, in fact.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. How do I specify the names of my folders?
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A. You do not need to. OfflineIMAP is smart enough to automatically
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figure out what folders are present on the IMAP server and synchronize
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them.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. How can I prevent certain folders from being synced?
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A. This feature will be introduced in a future version of OfflineIMAP.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. How can I add or delete a folder?
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A. OfflineIMAP does not currently provide this feature.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. Are there any specific warnings or things I should be aware of
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before using OfflineIMAP?
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A. Yes. OfflineIMAP does a two-way synchronization. That is, if you
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make a change to the mail on the server, it will be propogated to your
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local copy, and vise-versa. Some people might think that it would be
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wise to just delete all their local mail folders periodically. If you
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do this with OfflineIMAP, remember to also remove your local status
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cache (~/.offlineimap by default). Otherwise, OfflineIMAP will take
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this as an intentional deletion of many messages and will interpret
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your action as requesting them to be deleted from the server as well.
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(If you don't understand this, don't worry; you probably won't
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encounter this situation)
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. What's thie Mailbox name recorder (mbnames) thing all about?
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A. The Mutt mail reader is not capable of automatically determining
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the names of your mailboxes. OfflineIMAP can help it (or many other)
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programs out be writing these names out in a format you specify. See
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the example offlineimap.conf file for details.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. Can I synchronize multiple accounts with OfflineIMAP?
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A. Sure. Just name them all in the accounts line in the general
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section of the config file, and add a per-account section for each one.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. Do you support POP?
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A. No. POP is not robust enough to do a completely reliable
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multi-machine synchronization like OfflineIMAP can do. OfflineIMAP
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will not support it.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. Do you support mailbox formats other than Maildir?
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A. Not at present. There is no technical reason not to; just no
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demand yet. Maildir is a superior format anyway.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. [technical] Why are your Maildir message filenames so huge?
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A. OfflineIMAP has two relevant principles: 1) never modifying your
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messages in any way and 2) ensuring 100% reliable synchronizations.
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In order to do a reliable sync, OfflineIMAP must have a way to
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uniquely identify each e-mail. Three pieces of information are
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required to do this: your account name, the folder name, and the
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message UID. The account name can be calculated from the path in
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which your messages are. The folder name can usually be as well, BUT
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some mail clients move messages between folders by simply moving the
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file, leaving the name intact.
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So, OfflineIMAP must store both a UID folder ID. The folder ID is
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necessary so OfflineIMAP can detect a message moved to a different
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folder. OfflineIMAP stores the UID (U= number) and an md5sum of the
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foldername (FMD5= number) to facilitate this.
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--------------------------------------------------
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Q. Can you provide an example of using OfflineIMAP with Mutt and
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multiple accounts?
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A. Sure. I set it up to have a single Mail directory with additional
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directories under that for each account. So, mkdir ~/Mail. Then,
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in your ~/.offlineimaprc:
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Set "accounts = Personal, Work"
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Make sure you have a [Personal] and a [Work] section, with different
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pathnames. Enable [mbnames].
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In each account section, do something like this:
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localfolders = ~/Mail/Personal
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or
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localfolders = ~/Mail/Work
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In Mutt:
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add lines like this to your ~/.muttrc:
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source ~/path-to-mbnames-muttrc-mailboxes
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folder-hook Personal set from="youremail@personal.com"
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folder-hook Work set from="youremail@work.com"
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set mbox_type=Maildir
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set folder=$HOME/Mail
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set spoolfile=+Personal/INBOX
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That's it!
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