Don't know if this helps with the problem, but I see a small "m" in
your .muttrc, but at command prompt, you type Mail with capital "M"
Two different directories.

Yep, I actually renamed the folder to Mail since I started this
thread. Seems to make it stand out more.

On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 1:44 PM, David Woodfall <d...@dawoodfall.net> wrote:
* On 29 Apr 2014, David Woodfall wrote:


Significant parts from .muttrc:

set mbox_type=maildir
set folder="$HOME/mail"
set mbox="$HOME/mail"
set spoolfile="$HOME/mail"


Your $folder may be the source of the problem.  My hypothesis: if you
change that (to anything else, pretty much) and open up ~/mail directly,
you'll see it as intended.  Since $folder is the directory in which
mailboxes are expected to be located -- i.e. there should be maildirs
*within* ~/mail -- mutt is searching it for mailboxes and unable to
treat it as a mailbox itself.


This helps:

set mask="!^\\.|^dovecot*|^tmp$|^new$|^cur$|^subscriptions$"

Now I just set my mailboxes and everything else is hidden.


Well, I'm not quite out of the woods. Although mutt starts off in my
Inbox (using mutt -f ~/Mail) and it shows everything correctly, when
I change folder, to say view all my mailboxes, then I can't get back
into my Inbox. Inbox isn't listed anywhere that I can see, and the
only way seems to be to restart mutt -f ~/Mail.

If I hit 'c' to change folder it just lists all my folders minus
Inbox. I guess I could make an Inbox folder and set that in procmail
to be default. Is that the proper way? I expect I would need to point
dovecot at it too.

I tried commenting out the $folder as you suggested but it doesn't
seem to help. I also noticed that $MAIL was set to
/var/spool/mail/... so I also pointed that at ~/Mail.

Dave

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