Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 08:41:42AM +0100, bastian-muttu...@t6l.de wrote: > On 30Jan17 17:57 +0100, Peter P. wrote: > > * Chris Green <c...@isbd.net> [2017-01-27 10:13]: > > > On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 08:46:02PM -0200, Marcelo Laia wrote: > > > > On 26/01/17 at 04:28, Chris Green wrote: > > > > > Does anyone here use an address book for mutt other than abook? > > I use the maildir-utils "mu" as a mail indexer. That tool also creates a > database of all email contacts found and as such it is kind of a address > book. > > It integrates well into mutt's address completion function (pressing > CTRL-T): > > set query_command="mu cfind --format mutt-ab %s" > > Good thing: You don't have to manually fill your email address book. It > is all in the mailboxes > > Drawback: I haven't found an easy way to remove/modify entries, besides > directly editing the email and the address book DB (which is ascii). > But that was necessary just one time in four years I use mu. > OK for use within mutt but I want a 'universal' address book that has postal addresses (remember them?) and notes such as 'Christmas Card' too. -- Chris Green
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
On 30Jan17 17:57 +0100, Peter P. wrote: > * Chris Green <c...@isbd.net> [2017-01-27 10:13]: > > On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 08:46:02PM -0200, Marcelo Laia wrote: > > > On 26/01/17 at 04:28, Chris Green wrote: > > > > Does anyone here use an address book for mutt other than abook? I use the maildir-utils "mu" as a mail indexer. That tool also creates a database of all email contacts found and as such it is kind of a address book. It integrates well into mutt's address completion function (pressing CTRL-T): set query_command="mu cfind --format mutt-ab %s" Good thing: You don't have to manually fill your email address book. It is all in the mailboxes Drawback: I haven't found an easy way to remove/modify entries, besides directly editing the email and the address book DB (which is ascii). But that was necessary just one time in four years I use mu. Cheers, -- Bastian
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
* Chris Green <c...@isbd.net> [2017-01-27 10:13]: > On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 08:46:02PM -0200, Marcelo Laia wrote: > > On 26/01/17 at 04:28, Chris Green wrote: > > > Does anyone here use an address book for mutt other than abook? > > > > > > > Yes! I use The Little Brother's Database (lbdb) > > > > http://www.spinnaker.de/lbdb/ > > > Aha! Thank you, I'd not found that in my recent searches though I > think I have noticed it before. A major plus for lbdb is that it's in > the Ubuntu repositories. > > > > Maybe you would like to use goobook with lbdb. > > > > https://pypi.python.org/pypi/goobook > > > No, I don't want my addresses out on the cloud. However there are > lots of possibilities with lbdb and I'm sure something will fit my > needs. For example I do sort and tidy up my collected addresses in lbdb like the following: # let lbdbq filter all duplicates: lbdbq > m_inmail.list.filteredByLbdbq # sort by TAB delimiter according to first and second field, ignoring # the third one and remove duplicates sort -k1,1 -k2,2 -t$'\t' --stable --unique m_inmail.list > m_inmail.list.sorted # extract first column only (email addresses) cut -f1 m_inmail.list.sorted > uppercase.txt # convert them to lowercase tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < uppercase.txt > lowercase.txt # and check for duplicates uniq -d lowercase.txt
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 08:46:02PM -0200, Marcelo Laia wrote: > On 26/01/17 at 04:28, Chris Green wrote: > > Does anyone here use an address book for mutt other than abook? > > > > Yes! I use The Little Brother's Database (lbdb) > > http://www.spinnaker.de/lbdb/ > Aha! Thank you, I'd not found that in my recent searches though I think I have noticed it before. A major plus for lbdb is that it's in the Ubuntu repositories. > Maybe you would like to use goobook with lbdb. > > https://pypi.python.org/pypi/goobook > No, I don't want my addresses out on the cloud. However there are lots of possibilities with lbdb and I'm sure something will fit my needs. -- Chris Green
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
Hei hei, On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 02:10:40PM -0500, Ben Boeckel wrote: > On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 18:25:10 +, Chris Green wrote: > > Yes, but (as I said) they're not in the Ubuntu repositories so I'd > > need to check and update manually - which I'll forget. > > Odd. It's in Debian: > > https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=khard From the not yet released Debian 9 codename stretch aka testing. It's not available for still stable Debian 8 codename jessie, and there's no backport. But thanks for the hint, I probably want to use it, once I made the next dist upgrade. :-) Greets Alex -- »With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.« (Jean-Luc Picard, quoting Judge Aaron Satie) *** GnuPG-FP: C28E E6B9 0263 95CF 8FAF 08FA 34AD CD00 7221 5CC6 *** pgpJCDQ_AiT2j.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
On 26/01/17 at 04:28, Chris Green wrote: > Does anyone here use an address book for mutt other than abook? > Yes! I use The Little Brother's Database (lbdb) http://www.spinnaker.de/lbdb/ Maybe you would like to use goobook with lbdb. https://pypi.python.org/pypi/goobook -- Marcelo
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 18:25:10 +, Chris Green wrote: > Yes, but (as I said) they're not in the Ubuntu repositories so I'd > need to check and update manually - which I'll forget. Odd. It's in Debian: https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=khard > But what do you update with your Android device? Google contacts or > something like that? I used to use Contact Editor Pro[1] but Google Contacts no longer asks which app you'd like to use and just uses its internal editor (I've submitted feedback about this multiple times; no dice so far). Advice on alternative Contact apps appreciated (I've been lazy and just haven't searched for a replacement yet). For sync, I use CardDAV-Sync[2] because it supports client SSL certs, otherwise I'd use DAVdroid[3]. --Ben [1]http://dmfs.org/editor/ [2]http://dmfs.org/carddav/ [3]https://gitlab.com/bitfireAT/davdroid
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 01:01:40PM -0500, Ben Boeckel wrote: > On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 16:28:14 +, Chris Green wrote: > > So, I was wondering if there are any more elegant approaches. I guess > > abook itself is a possibility but I'd really prefer a GUI to add and > > change addresses, it's a place where a GUI is just better and easier. > > > > What I'm after is probably, ideally, a local GUI to add and edit > > addresses, a simple way to get an E-Mail address into mutt via the > > query_command and a way to export to the web in some shape or form. > > vdirsyncer and khard sync over CardDAV, so you can use any client to > edit a CardDAV store/server and sync with it to keep khard up-to-date. > Yes, but (as I said) they're not in the Ubuntu repositories so I'd need to check and update manually - which I'll forget. > Personally, I use Android as my main way of adding and editing contacts > and sync things that way. > But what do you update with your Android device? Google contacts or something like that? -- Chris Green
Re: Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 16:28:14 +, Chris Green wrote: > So, I was wondering if there are any more elegant approaches. I guess > abook itself is a possibility but I'd really prefer a GUI to add and > change addresses, it's a place where a GUI is just better and easier. > > What I'm after is probably, ideally, a local GUI to add and edit > addresses, a simple way to get an E-Mail address into mutt via the > query_command and a way to export to the web in some shape or form. vdirsyncer and khard sync over CardDAV, so you can use any client to edit a CardDAV store/server and sync with it to keep khard up-to-date. Personally, I use Android as my main way of adding and editing contacts and sync things that way. --Ben
Are there any good/recommended address book add-ons for mutt other than abook?
Does anyone here use an address book for mutt other than abook? I currently use a combination of OwnCloud to actually maintain and use (outside mutt) my address book, plus pycardsyncer and pc_query to interrogate it from mutt. However it's all a bit messy in a way and there are various minor issues:- pycardsyncer and pc_query are now 'deprecated' in favour of vcardsyncer and khard but these are not available from the Ubuntu repositories so keeping up to date becomes an issue. Also khard and vcardsyncer are still rather a convoluted way of maintaining a mutt address book. OwnCloud's address book ("Contacts") isn't very good, a major issue for me is not being able to sort in family/last name order. As noted above it's just "messy". So, I was wondering if there are any more elegant approaches. I guess abook itself is a possibility but I'd really prefer a GUI to add and change addresses, it's a place where a GUI is just better and easier. What I'm after is probably, ideally, a local GUI to add and edit addresses, a simple way to get an E-Mail address into mutt via the query_command and a way to export to the web in some shape or form. Any ideas anyone? -- Chris Green
Re: Author's name in index from address book
On Fri, Nov 20, 2015 at 11:26:28AM -0600, David Champion wrote: > But you do need: > > set reverse_alias > > to get that. Thank you, that was exactly what I needed. According to the man page, the format of the aliases should be: alias Foo(Foo Bar) And that worked. Wim
Re: Author's name in index from address book
* On 19 Nov 2015, Ian Zimmerman wrote: > > You don't need to write a script for that. Mutt will display the "real > name" automatically for addresses in your alias list. Define aliases in > your .muttrc as follows: > > alias Foo Foo Bar> > and now incoming mails from foo...@bars.name will have "Foo Bar" in the > origin field. But you do need: set reverse_alias to get that. -- David Champion • d...@bikeshed.us
Re: Author's name in index from address book
On 2015-11-19 22:51 +0100, Wim de With wrote: > I configured Thunderbird to override the name in the From: header with > the name associated with that email address in my address book. I > would like to do the same in Mutt. Is there any way to replace the > author's name in Mutt's index view with a shell script instead of > using the options of the index_format configuration option? You don't need to write a script for that. Mutt will display the "real name" automatically for addresses in your alias list. Define aliases in your .muttrc as follows: alias Foo Foo Bar <foo...@bars.name> and now incoming mails from foo...@bars.name will have "Foo Bar" in the origin field. If you insist on using an address list in some other format such as Thunderbird's, consider automatically converting the other format into mutt's. -- Please *no* private copies of mailing list or newsgroup messages. Rule 420: All persons more than eight miles high to leave the court.
Author's name in index from address book
I configured Thunderbird to override the name in the From: header with the name associated with that email address in my address book. I would like to do the same in Mutt. Is there any way to replace the author's name in Mutt's index view with a shell script instead of using the options of the index_format configuration option? Wim
Re: address book?
On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 04:05:49PM -0600, Russell Harris wrote: On Tue, November 11, 2014 7:03 am, Chris Bannister wrote: On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 08:23:57AM -0600, Russell Harris wrote: On Mon, November 10, 2014 7:34 am, DaleKelly wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? But if you have a high volume of email and many addresses, you may need to utilize a database package to manage the address book. Do you mean something like abook or lbdb? I would be interested to know what else there is. I had in mind The Little Brother's Database (lbdb), but it has been several years since I considered using a database, so I do not know what is available today. Ah, OK. A search on mutt address book reveals at least three data bases which interface directly with Mutt. And with the aid of a script, it may be possible to use a stand-alone database such as Postgress. Well, I suppose anything's possible with a script, but thanks for your answer anyway. -- If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. --- Malcolm X
Re: address book?
On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 03:09:17PM +0100, Daniël de Kok wrote: Of course, notmuch can be wrapped to provide similar functionality. This repo has a very nice wrapper for notmuch: https://github.com/domo141/nottoomuch/ Cheers, -- Suvayu Open source is the future. It sets us free.
Re: address book?
On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 08:23:57AM -0600, Russell Harris wrote: On Mon, November 10, 2014 7:34 am, DaleKelly wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? But if you have a high volume of email and many addresses, you may need to utilize a database package to manage the address book. Do you mean something like abook or lbdb? I would be interested to know what else there is. -- If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. --- Malcolm X
Re: address book?
On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 09:24:45AM -0500, Patrick Shanahan wrote: * DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org [11-10-14 09:22]: On 11/10/2014 08:55 AM, John Niendorf wrote: Check out abook in the repository. [...] already installed, how do I interface it with mutt? Honestly, from a *long* time linux user... man abook JFTR, in my Debian system I have nothing in my .muttrc about abook, which made me curious. (I couldn't remember setting it up.) Nor in /etc/Muttrc ... but the last line in /etc/Muttrc has: source /usr/lib/mutt/source-muttrc.d| /usr/lib/mutt/source-muttrc.d has: -8- ---8- #!/bin/sh -e for rc in /etc/Muttrc.d/*.rc; do test -r $rc echo source \$rc\ done -8- ---8- root@tal:~# ls -al /etc/Muttrc.d total 40 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Sep 8 22:35 . drwxr-xr-x 118 root root 12288 Nov 12 00:35 .. -rw-r--r-- 1 root root79 Jul 9 2011 abook.rc -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 410 Jan 15 2011 charset.rc -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 612 Jan 15 2011 colors.rc -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 427 May 9 2011 compressed-folders.rc -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1406 Jan 15 2011 gpg.rc -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 3648 Jan 15 2011 smime.rc All nice and tidy. :) -- If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. --- Malcolm X
Re: address book?
On Wed, Nov 12, 2014 at 02:03:15AM +1300, Chris Bannister wrote: On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 08:23:57AM -0600, Russell Harris wrote: On Mon, November 10, 2014 7:34 am, DaleKelly wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? But if you have a high volume of email and many addresses, you may need to utilize a database package to manage the address book. Do you mean something like abook or lbdb? I would be interested to know what else there is. I interpreted that as: if you have to many addresses to keep track of by hand. Mail indexers, such as mu provide functionality to automatically search addresses in the mail archive and to extract them: mu cfind --format=mutt-ab Of course, one could refine the query to restrict the contacts to people that e-mailed you directly, during a certain timeframe, etc. You can then use this as an address book server in mutt: set query_command = mu cfind --format=mutt-ab '%s' Of course, notmuch can be wrapped to provide similar functionality. Kind regards, Daniël
Re: address book?
On Tue, November 11, 2014 7:03 am, Chris Bannister wrote: On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 08:23:57AM -0600, Russell Harris wrote: On Mon, November 10, 2014 7:34 am, DaleKelly wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? But if you have a high volume of email and many addresses, you may need to utilize a database package to manage the address book. Do you mean something like abook or lbdb? I would be interested to know what else there is. I had in mind The Little Brother's Database (lbdb), but it has been several years since I considered using a database, so I do not know what is available today. A search on mutt address book reveals at least three data bases which interface directly with Mutt. And with the aid of a script, it may be possible to use a stand-alone database such as Postgress. RLH
address book?
how can I configure/maintain an address book? -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 08:34:58AM -0500, DaleKelly wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/ Look in the man page for aliases. They're pretty basic but work pretty well. If you're looking for something a bit more robust check out the little brothers database (https://www.spinnaker.de/lbdb/). It supports querying multiple sources with in mutt for address book type functionality. Regards, -- Joshua Smith Lead Systems Administrator WVNET Montani Semper Liberi
Re: address book?
Check out abook in the repository. John On 10 Nov 2014, at 14:34, DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
On 11/10/2014 08:55 AM, John Niendorf wrote: Check out abook in the repository. John On 10 Nov 2014, at 14:34, DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/ already installed, how do I interface it with mutt? -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
On 11/10/2014 09:23 AM, Russell Harris wrote: Unless you have a high volume of incoming mail and you need to add the addresses to you address book, the alias capability of Mutt may be perfectly adequate. I'll look at the alias compatibility -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
* DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org [11-10-14 09:22]: On 11/10/2014 08:55 AM, John Niendorf wrote: Check out abook in the repository. John On 10 Nov 2014, at 14:34, DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/ already installed, how do I interface it with mutt? Honestly, from a *long* time linux user... man abook -- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.orgopenSUSE Community Memberfacebook/ptilopteri http://wahoo.no-ip.orgPhoto Album: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/gallery2 Registered Linux User #207535@ http://linuxcounter.net
Re: address book?
On Mon, November 10, 2014 7:34 am, DaleKelly wrote: how can I configure/maintain an address book? The first thing to do whenever you have a question such as that is to submit to Google (or whatever search engine you prefer) the query mutt address book. Then look over the list of links which the search engine returns and click and click on the links which appear most promising. My own search with Google just now shows several approaches, including the aliases capability of mutt and a package called abook. The second thing to do is look at the Mutt documentation. A search for mutt manual address book turns up several links. Once you have gained a bit of perspective from your own searching, then you are ready to ask the list for advice concerning a particular approach, or for advice as to which approach to take. Much depends upon how many addresses you need to manage and how the addresses are obtained. When you ask the mutt-users list for help, you need to mention such details. Unless you have a high volume of incoming mail and you need to add the addresses to you address book, the alias capability of Mutt may be perfectly adequate. But if you have a high volume of email and many addresses, you may need to utilize a database package to manage the address book. RLH
Re: address book?
On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 09:08:03AM -0500, DaleKelly wrote: Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2014 09:08:03 -0500 From: DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org To: John Niendorf j...@jfniendorf.org CC: mutt-users@mutt.org mutt-users@mutt.org Subject: Re: address book? already installed, how do I interface it with mutt? in .muttrc: macro index I !abook\n macro pager I !abook\n -- Gerard ___ *** * Created with mutt 1.5.21-6.2+deb7u2 * * under Debian Linux WHEEZY version 7.6 * * Registered Linux User #388243 * * https://Linuxcounter.net * ***
Re: address book?
On 11/10/2014 09:23 AM, Russell Harris wrote: The first thing to do whenever you have a question such as that is to submit to Google (or whatever search engine you prefer) the query mutt address book. Then look over the list of links which the search engine returns and click and click on the links which appear most promising. My own search with Google just now shows several approaches, including the aliases capability of mutt and a package called abook. The second thing to do is look at the Mutt documentation. A search for mutt manual address book turns up several links. Once you have gained a bit of perspective from your own searching, then you are ready to ask the list for advice concerning a particular approach, or for advice as to which approach to take. I try to do this, but I am kind of a hack, short attention span, I'm over 50, sometimes its just as easy to search and ask at the same time I remember about 20 years ago on Unix there were some HOWTO formatted documentations coming around, whatever happened to this format in documentation?, man pages aren't that easy for me I'll try harder, thanks, it might extend my attention span -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
On 11/10/2014 09:24 AM, Patrick Shanahan wrote: Honestly, from a*long* time linux user... man abook I'll try, about 20 years ago on Unix they were doing some HOWTO format documentation on things you wanted to do, not much around any more -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
On 11/10/2014 10:18 AM, Gerard ROBIN wrote: On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 09:08:03AM -0500, DaleKelly wrote: Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2014 09:08:03 -0500 From: DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org To: John Niendorf j...@jfniendorf.org CC: mutt-users@mutt.org mutt-users@mutt.org Subject: Re: address book? already installed, how do I interface it with mutt? in .muttrc: macro index I !abook\n macro pager I !abook\n THANKS honorable guru -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
* DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org [11-10-14 14:53]: On 11/10/2014 09:24 AM, Patrick Shanahan wrote: Honestly, from a*long* time linux user... man abook I'll try, about 20 years ago on Unix they were doing some HOWTO format documentation on things you wanted to do, not much around any more Then stop complaining about age, we all endeavour to age and you are quite young. There are still howto's and much information on google. You are only making excuses or just taking the LAZY way utilizing others time w/o regard for them. -- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.orgopenSUSE Community Memberfacebook/ptilopteri http://wahoo.no-ip.orgPhoto Album: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/gallery2 Registered Linux User #207535@ http://linuxcounter.net
Re: address book?
On 11/10/2014 10:18 AM, Gerard ROBIN wrote: On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 09:08:03AM -0500, DaleKelly wrote: Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2014 09:08:03 -0500 From: DaleKelly d...@dalekelly.org To: John Niendorf j...@jfniendorf.org CC: mutt-users@mutt.org mutt-users@mutt.org Subject: Re: address book? already installed, how do I interface it with mutt? in .muttrc: macro index I !abook\n macro pager I !abook\n when I press I in mutt, I get an empty abook, a put my addresses in abook what can I do to get the populated one instead? how do you select and send? -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
Re: address book?
On 11/10/2014 03:31 PM, DaleKelly wrote: when I press I in mutt, I get an empty abook, a put my addresses in abook what can I do to get the populated one instead? got it, in mutt abook, I choose l to import the addressbook after I exported it using w from just abook, the commands are in ? in abook thanks everyone -- (my whereabouts below) http://www.dalekelly.org/
nbook: a notmuch based address book for mutt
Hi, I wrote a small address book program for use with mutt based on the notmuch email indexer. I thought notmuch users on the list might be interested to try this out. https://github.com/suvayu/nbook This uses the python bindings for notmuch, so the appropriate python packages should be installed. e.g. on Fedora you can simply do: # yum install python-notmuch Hope you like it, and of course all kinds of feedback welcome. Cheers, PS: This is my first serious python program. -- Suvayu Open source is the future. It sets us free.
Re: nbook: a notmuch based address book for mutt
[ Suvayu Ali wrote on Mon 24.Sep'12 at 11:31:54 +0200 ] Hi, I wrote a small address book program for use with mutt based on the notmuch email indexer. I thought notmuch users on the list might be interested to try this out. https://github.com/suvayu/nbook This uses the python bindings for notmuch, so the appropriate python packages should be installed. e.g. on Fedora you can simply do: # yum install python-notmuch Hope you like it, and of course all kinds of feedback welcome. Cheers, PS: This is my first serious python program. Thanks for sharing Suvayu
Re: nbook: a notmuch based address book for mutt
Hello Suvayu, On Monday, 24 September 2012, Suvayu Ali wrote: I wrote a small address book program for use with mutt based on the notmuch email indexer. I thought notmuch users on the list might be interested to try this out. https://github.com/suvayu/nbook Interesting idea. It would be nice if the e-mail address would be sorted on last-seen, to ensure you have the last address of the person you are looking for. However; at this moment it's not working for me at all. Is there a limit to the number of e-mails that are searched? otter@sambal:~/bin$ ./nbook niels den otter Error opening /home/otter/OfflineMail/SURFnet/INBOX/cur/1338539898_0.4620.sambal,U=986381,FMD5=7e33429f656f1e6e9d79b29c3f82c57e:2,S: Too many open files Traceback (most recent call last): File ./nbook, line 167, in module File ./nbook, line 72, in __init__ File /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/notmuch/message.py, line 233, in get_header notmuch.errors.NullPointerError Error in sys.excepthook: Traceback (most recent call last): File /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/apport_python_hook.py, line 64, in apport_excepthook ImportError: No module named fileutils Original exception was: Traceback (most recent call last): File ./nbook, line 167, in module File ./nbook, line 72, in __init__ File /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/notmuch/message.py, line 233, in get_header notmuch.errors.NullPointerError Kind regards, Niels den Otter smime.p7s Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
Re: nbook: a notmuch based address book for mutt
Hi Niels, First a thank you for testing it out. On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 02:18:24PM +0200, Niels den Otter wrote: Hello Suvayu, On Monday, 24 September 2012, Suvayu Ali wrote: I wrote a small address book program for use with mutt based on the notmuch email indexer. I thought notmuch users on the list might be interested to try this out. https://github.com/suvayu/nbook Interesting idea. It would be nice if the e-mail address would be sorted on last-seen, to ensure you have the last address of the person you are looking for. That is a nice idea. I'll see if I can retrieve that information from notmuch. However I'm not sure if the maildir format keeps the information when an email was last read. However; at this moment it's not working for me at all. Is there a limit to the number of e-mails that are searched? otter@sambal:~/bin$ ./nbook niels den otter Error opening /home/otter/OfflineMail/SURFnet/INBOX/cur/1338539898_0.4620.sambal,U=986381,FMD5=7e33429f656f1e6e9d79b29c3f82c57e:2,S: Too many open files Traceback (most recent call last): File ./nbook, line 167, in module File ./nbook, line 72, in __init__ File /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/notmuch/message.py, line 233, in get_header notmuch.errors.NullPointerError I can replicate this error when I search for my name. But it works with any other name where I expect to have lots of results. I'll look into it, however you have to be a bit patient since I'm a Python newbie. :-p Thanks a lot for reporting the issue. :) Kind regards, Niels den Otter Cheers, -- Suvayu Open source is the future. It sets us free.
Re: nbook: a notmuch based address book for mutt
Hello Suvayu, On Monday, 24 September 2012, Suvayu Ali wrote: Interesting idea. It would be nice if the e-mail address would be sorted on last-seen, to ensure you have the last address of the person you are looking for. That is a nice idea. I'll see if I can retrieve that information from notmuch. However I'm not sure if the maildir format keeps the information when an email was last read. Well the 'date' of the e-mail (read or not) should be good. I can replicate this error when I search for my name. But it works with any other name where I expect to have lots of results. I'll look into it, however you have to be a bit patient since I'm a Python newbie. :-p This problem occurs on other searches for me as well. Some do work. Looks like it's related to the amount of e-mails that match the pattern. -- Niels smime.p7s Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
Re: nbook: a notmuch based address book for mutt
On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 03:23:31PM +0200, Niels den Otter wrote: Hello Suvayu, On Monday, 24 September 2012, Suvayu Ali wrote: Interesting idea. It would be nice if the e-mail address would be sorted on last-seen, to ensure you have the last address of the person you are looking for. That is a nice idea. I'll see if I can retrieve that information from notmuch. However I'm not sure if the maildir format keeps the information when an email was last read. Well the 'date' of the e-mail (read or not) should be good. That is a good suggestion. I'll try this out. I can replicate this error when I search for my name. But it works with any other name where I expect to have lots of results. I'll look into it, however you have to be a bit patient since I'm a Python newbie. :-p This problem occurs on other searches for me as well. Some do work. Looks like it's related to the amount of e-mails that match the pattern. Yes, I think you are correct. So far it seems to me the problem is in notmuch's python bindings and how it reads messages. I'll look more into this. -- Niels Thanks again, -- Suvayu Open source is the future. It sets us free.
Re: Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 02:22:39AM -0500, Patrice Levesque wrote: So, does everyone here use abook, or nothing, or just have all their E-Mail addresses in mutt aliases, or what? Any suggestions would be very welcome. If I found something that could synchronize my (any) phone as well then I'd be *very* happy! :-) My current setup does just that. - OpenLDAP acts as the addressbook container; - Horde's Turba acts as a web-based data entry frontend; - Horde's Turba can also deal with phone two-way synchronization mechanism (via ActiveSync), if you use Horde ≥ 4 and Turba ≥ 3. I've often toyed with Horde but have never actually really got into it, maybe I should revisit it. The phone sync setup can easily accomodate calendars as well if you add Horde's Kronolith. You may also handle mail via Horde's Imp as a web-based plan B (I like a shell environment on my cellphone but I understand it's not everyone's taste, especially for those without a physical keyboard; native smartphone mail apps often suck) and you could even deal with mail filters (think procmail or sieve) using Horde's Ingo. My mail is stored in IMAP, don't know about your setup, so YMMV. Turba works well enough (though clumsily) in a text-based browser like ELinks if you want to add contacts without leaving the comfort of your shell. (No, this is not a Horde selling pitch! I'm getting back to the subject at hand, now!) Mutt accesses OpenLDAP via a thin shell script; my OpenLDAP server is located thousands of miles away and the Ctrl-T completion seldom takes more than 2 seconds. Of course, all that may seem like overhead just to get e-mail address completion, but I like to think of it the other way around; mutt fits in *nicely* in that ecosystem ;) Yes, that's the way round I am really. I want a good/comfortable contacts manager for lots of reasons other than using it with mutt, being able to extract E-Mail addresses to mutt is just a bonus. -- Chris Green
Re: Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
Yes, that's the way round I am really. I want a good/comfortable contacts manager for lots of reasons other than using it with mutt, being able to extract E-Mail addresses to mutt is just a bonus. I can't stress enough then that you *want* to build around a LDAP server; maybe Horde won't float your boat but any respectable addressbook application will be able to hook into LDAP. Even Evolution if you ever miss it someday ;) -- --|-- | Patrice Levesque http://ptaff.ca/ mutt.wa...@ptaff.ca | --|-- -- signature.asc Description: Digital signature
Re: Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
So, does everyone here use abook, or nothing, or just have all their E-Mail addresses in mutt aliases, or what? Any suggestions would be very welcome. If I found something that could synchronize my (any) phone as well then I'd be *very* happy! :-) My current setup does just that. - OpenLDAP acts as the addressbook container; - Horde's Turba acts as a web-based data entry frontend; - Horde's Turba can also deal with phone two-way synchronization mechanism (via ActiveSync), if you use Horde ≥ 4 and Turba ≥ 3. The phone sync setup can easily accomodate calendars as well if you add Horde's Kronolith. You may also handle mail via Horde's Imp as a web-based plan B (I like a shell environment on my cellphone but I understand it's not everyone's taste, especially for those without a physical keyboard; native smartphone mail apps often suck) and you could even deal with mail filters (think procmail or sieve) using Horde's Ingo. My mail is stored in IMAP, don't know about your setup, so YMMV. Turba works well enough (though clumsily) in a text-based browser like ELinks if you want to add contacts without leaving the comfort of your shell. (No, this is not a Horde selling pitch! I'm getting back to the subject at hand, now!) Mutt accesses OpenLDAP via a thin shell script; my OpenLDAP server is located thousands of miles away and the Ctrl-T completion seldom takes more than 2 seconds. Of course, all that may seem like overhead just to get e-mail address completion, but I like to think of it the other way around; mutt fits in *nicely* in that ecosystem ;) -- --|-- | Patrice Levesque http://ptaff.ca/ mutt.wa...@ptaff.ca | --|-- -- signature.asc Description: Digital signature
Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
I currently use the Evolution Contacts list for contacts, with a Python script that I have written to extract E-Mail addresses to mutt (via Ctrl-T etc.). I'm getting fed up with Evolution's slowness, crap user interface and non-standard storage format so I'm looking for alternatives, so far I've had very little luck even though I have cast my net pretty far looking at everything from abook to full-blown web groupware. My requirements are:- Storage of full contact information, i.e. postal address and telephone numbers as well as E-Mail address. Standard storage format (e.g. vCard or LDAP) so that it's easy to access, convert and move around. This isn't *absolutely* necessary, a program that provides all I want and stores data in some strange format might be acceptable. Fast and lightweight, I don't want to have to wait a long time while the program loads and I want the UI to be fast. This is where Evolution falls down, on my fairly modern and fast (quad processor, SATA disks) system it takes 5 seconds or so to simply start up. Simple, straightforward data entry, search, etc., again Evolution is bad (IMHO) here, I find the user interface to Contacts confusing and clumsy. I've played with abook but it doesn't really quite do it for me, I've nothing against it being text mode (I'm a mutt user after all) but entering full contact data really isn't its forté and I do want to keep all user contact data in one place. I think a small desktop GUI would be my ideal solution but a web based program (if fast and light) might be a possibility too. So, does everyone here use abook, or nothing, or just have all their E-Mail addresses in mutt aliases, or what? Any suggestions would be very welcome. -- Chris Green
Re: Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
On Dec 10, 2011 at 02:55 PM +, Chris Green wrote: So, does everyone here use abook, or nothing, or just have all their E-Mail addresses in mutt aliases, or what? Any suggestions would be very welcome. This isn't going to be very useful to you since you are using Linux and I'm on OS X, but it might give you some ideas. I use the OS X built in Address Book app. It's got a goofy GUI, but now that Apple has released iCloud (for free!), my contacts sync wirelessly automatically between my phone, my computer, and Apple's iCloud web mail (not that I use that). The syncing between my phone and computer are the big features for me. It is also nice that it keeps track of physical addresses, phone numbers, IM names, etc - all of which my phone can utilize I might add. Lastly, lot's of apps on OS X tap into the Address Book database, so having my contacts in there makes using OS X generally a nicer experience. I also use lbdb in mutt. There's a helper that queries the OS X address book, so I can run a query by hitting ^T and search the address book. I have lbdb setup to also scrape addresses from outgoing messages and store them. So when I run the ^T query, not only does it search the OS X address book, but it also checks the outgoing address list. One could also run searches against LDAP if you desired. I also use a simple mutt alias file for my most commonly used addresses where I want to define a nickname to use. Like 'mom' or 'mike'. I have many Mike's I correspond with, including both my brother and my boss. You can imagine I send completely different types of correspondences to those two, so I want to make sure I have no mix ups. I've defined 'mike' as my brother and 'boss' as my boss. The last bit of glue I use is a python script that dumps the OS X address book into mutt alias format. This happens nightly via a cron job. I do this so I can quickly use tab completion when typing in addresses and also to access the groups I have defined in the OS X address book. This way I can define hooks in mutt based on those groups. It all sounds much more complicated than it actually is in use. When getting a new contact, I enter it in my phone if on the road, or add it to the Address Book app. When composing emails, I start typing who I want to address an email to and hit tab. If that alias doesn't come up either from my commonly used alias file or from the Address Book dump alias file, I hit ^T and query lbdb.
Re: Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
On Sat, Dec 10, 2011 at 11:25:28AM -0500, Tim Gray wrote: On Dec 10, 2011 at 02:55 PM +, Chris Green wrote: So, does everyone here use abook, or nothing, or just have all their E-Mail addresses in mutt aliases, or what? Any suggestions would be very welcome. This isn't going to be very useful to you since you are using Linux and I'm on OS X, but it might give you some ideas. I use the OS X built in Address Book app. It's got a goofy GUI, but now that Apple has released iCloud (for free!), my contacts sync wirelessly automatically between my phone, my computer, and Apple's iCloud web mail (not that I use that). The syncing between my phone and computer are the big features for me. It is also nice that it keeps track of physical addresses, phone numbers, IM names, etc - all of which my phone can utilize I might add. Lastly, lot's of apps on OS X tap into the Address Book database, so having my contacts in there makes using OS X generally a nicer experience. If I found something that could synchronize my (any) phone as well then I'd be *very* happy! :-) I also use lbdb in mutt. There's a helper that queries the OS X address book, so I can run a query by hitting ^T and search the address book. I have lbdb setup to also scrape addresses from outgoing messages and store them. So when I run the ^T query, not only does it search the OS X address book, but it also checks the outgoing address list. One could also run searches against LDAP if you desired. lbdb is good to know about, thank you. It means that I can choose almost any program for my address book and can link it to mutt. I also use a simple mutt alias file for my most commonly used addresses where I want to define a nickname to use. Like 'mom' or 'mike'. I have many Mike's I correspond with, including both my brother and my boss. You can imagine I send completely different types of correspondences to those two, so I want to make sure I have no mix ups. I've defined 'mike' as my brother and 'boss' as my boss. The last bit of glue I use is a python script that dumps the OS X address book into mutt alias format. This happens nightly via a cron job. I do this so I can quickly use tab completion when typing in addresses and also to access the groups I have defined in the OS X address book. This way I can define hooks in mutt based on those groups. It all sounds much more complicated than it actually is in use. When getting a new contact, I enter it in my phone if on the road, or add it to the Address Book app. When composing emails, I start typing who I want to address an email to and hit tab. If that alias doesn't come up either from my commonly used alias file or from the Address Book dump alias file, I hit ^T and query lbdb. No, doesn't sound very complex, what I need is the equivalent of that Address Book program you're using. -- Chris Green
Re: Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
On Saturday, 10 December 2011 at 17:38, Chris Green wrote: No, doesn't sound very complex, what I need is the equivalent of that Address Book program you're using. There's also goobook (which could easily be wired into lbdb) for synchronizing everything with google contacts. It'll let you sync with your android phone too.
Re: Address Book/Contacts utilities that work (well) with mutt - what's out there?
On Dec 10, 2011 at 05:38 PM +, Chris Green wrote: lbdb is good to know about, thank you. It means that I can choose almost any program for my address book and can link it to mutt. lbdb is the glue which makes it all happen really. It's a great program.
External Address Book
Just curious. Has anyone tried Goobook? http://pypi.python.org/pypi/goobook/1.3a1 It uses Gmail Contacts for your external addressbook. I have been using just a few minutes and so far it is really cool. I have been looking for a way to sync Gmail Contacts with an addressbook database for Mutt but so far this is way better. Just wanted to share -- Chuck Smith signature.asc Description: Digital signature
Re: External Address Book
On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 12:56:18PM -0400, Chuck Smith wrote: Just curious. Has anyone tried Goobook? http://pypi.python.org/pypi/goobook/1.3a1 It uses Gmail Contacts for your external addressbook. I have been using just a few minutes and so far it is really cool. I have been looking for a way to sync Gmail Contacts with an addressbook database for Mutt but so far this is way better. ABook http://abook.sourceforge.net/ Abook is a text-based addressbook program designed to use with mutt mail client. Written in C. ...python is a hog on system resources. ;-) -- Roger http://rogerx.freeshell.org/
Re: External Address Book
On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 11:52:09AM -0800, rog...@sdf.org wrote: ABook http://abook.sourceforge.net/ Abook is a text-based addressbook program designed to use with mutt mail client. Written in C. ...python is a hog on system resources. ;-) Which matters a lot... if you're running on a i386 shared by a dozen users or something. =8^) -- Derek D. Martinhttp://www.pizzashack.org/ GPG Key ID: 0xDFBEAD02 -=-=-=-=- This message is posted from an invalid address. Replying to it will result in undeliverable mail due to spam prevention. Sorry for the inconvenience. pgpOehAcf4Bat.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: External Address Book
On 2010-05-12, rog...@sdf.org rog...@sdf.org wrote: On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 12:56:18PM -0400, Chuck Smith wrote: Just curious. Has anyone tried Goobook? http://pypi.python.org/pypi/goobook/1.3a1 It uses Gmail Contacts for your external addressbook. I have been using just a few minutes and so far it is really cool. I have been looking for a way to sync Gmail Contacts with an addressbook database for Mutt but so far this is way better. ABook http://abook.sourceforge.net/ Abook is a text-based addressbook program designed to use with mutt mail client. Written in C. ...python is a hog on system resources. ;-) On a console-only Unix machine that ran nothing but mutt, that would be a valid point. But, I use enough python apps, that the incremental cost of running one more is trivial. -- Grant Edwards grant.b.edwardsYow! My face is new, my at license is expired, and I'm gmail.comunder a doctor's care
address book
When I select recipient and then starting compose message from abook interface, unsuitable for current folder e-mail address appears in the From: field. Part of my .muttrc have look: folder-hook 01-4625khz \ 'set postponed=+01-4625khz/queue; \ fcc-hook . =01-4625khz/`date +%Y`_sent; \ set signature=~/01-4625khz/.sig; \ set realname=Buzzer; \ my_hdr From: Buzzer 4625...@...' -- /Buzzer
Re: How to match an email by the sender is in the address book?
On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 01:24:15PM +0800, wei ribao wrote: I use mutt/gmail to subscribe and read a lot of mail-lists.By using mutt it is really efficient to read and process large amount of emails. However, some personal emails can be burried in these group emails. I wish to hight light those emails that their senders have been save in my address book(mutt.alias). How can I match these emails?Is it possible in mutt? What pattern should I use? I cann't find related stuff in the manul.Any clue is welcome! excerpts from 'man muttrc': ### color object foreground background [ regexp ] color index foreground background [ pattern ] uncolor index pattern [ pattern ... ] If your terminal supports color, these commands can be used to assign foreground/background combinations to certain objects. Valid objects are: attachment, body, bold, header, hdrdefault, index, indicator, markers, message, normal, quoted, quotedN, search, signature, status, tilde, tree, underline. The body and header objects allow you to restrict the colorization to a regu‐ lar expression. The index object permits you to select colored messages by pattern. Valid colors include: white, black, green, magenta, blue, cyan, yellow, red, default, colorN. ### then proceed to read what 'man muttrc' has to say about patterns: ### Constructing Patterns A simple pattern consists of an operator of the form “~character”, pos‐ sibly followed by (...) Simple Patterns Mutt understands the following simple patterns: ~A all messages ~b EXPR messages which contain EXPR in the message body. =b STRING messages which contain STRING in the message body. If IMAP (...) ~p messages addressed to you (as defined by alternates) ~P messages from you (as defined by alternates) ### and an example from my muttrc: ### color index brightgreen default ~p | ~P ### Cheers, Markus
Re: How to match an email by the sender is in the address book?
[ please limit your line length to something around 72 chars ] Hi, * wei ribao wrote: I wish to hight light those emails that their senders have been save in my address book(mutt.alias). How can I match these emails?Is it possible in mutt? What pattern should I use? You can't do that right now because there's no pattern for it. But as written in another message, you can mark mails sent to you. That works unless you're listed as a Bcc recipient. Rocco
How to match an email by the sender is in the address book?
I use mutt/gmail to subscribe and read a lot of mail-lists.By using mutt it is really efficient to read and process large amount of emails. However, some personal emails can be burried in these group emails. I wish to hight light those emails that their senders have been save in my address book(mutt.alias). How can I match these emails?Is it possible in mutt? What pattern should I use? I cann't find related stuff in the manul.Any clue is welcome!
Re: Online Address book
On Tue, Feb 12, 2008 at 01:43:25AM +0100, Nathan Huesken wrote: Hi, I am using mutt from different computers (like my laptop and the desktop PC at home) and I am wondering if there is some way to always keep my address book synchronized between the two computers. The coolest solution would be, if I could install some sort of database on my vServer and make mutt query it everytime I need the address book (and also add new addresses to it). Is there some sort if solution for this kind of think? Thanks! Nathan Hello, I currently use ldap for an address book with mutt, I thought I would send you the scripts I use todo with what you will. I have added the following lines to my .muttrc ... ## ldap search set query_command=~/mutt-ldap-search.pl '%s' ## adding addresses to ldap macro index,pager a 'shell-escape/home/matt/bin/add2ldapenter' Allowing me to search and also add addresses by pressing a The mutt search perl script I found online somewhere, I did make a change to it allowing me to have entries without surnames, I just put surnames as '.' in this case. and the add2ldap is a bash script I just chucked together, there prob a better way of writing it but it works :) hth, Matt. -- Matt Richards #!/bin/bash echo Adding a new address to the LDAP database ... if [ -z $1 ]; then echo I need an email address: read email else email=$1 fi if [ -z $email ]; then echo I really do need an email address! exit fi if [ -z $2 ]; then echo I need a First Name: read fname else fname=$2 fi if [ -z $3 ]; then echo I need a Second Name: read sname if [ -z $sname ]; then echo Using . for second name sname=. fi else sname=$3 fi echo dn: mail=$email,ou=Contacts,o=mattstone cn: $fname $sname sn: $sname givenName: $fname mail: $email objectClass: top objectClass: person objectClass: inetOrgPerson objectClass: organizationalPerson | ldapadd -h 192.168.4.6 -D uid=matt,ou=People,o=mattstone -x -w --PASSWD-- #!/usr/bin/perl # use strict; use Net::LDAP; use constant HOST = '192.168.4.6'; use constant BASE = 'ou=Contacts, o=mattstone'; use constant VERSION = 3; use constant SCOPE = 'sub'; my $name; my @attributes = qw( dn givenName sn mail ); { print Searching directory... ; $name = shift || die; my $filter = (|(sn=$name*)(givenName=$name*)); my $ldap = Net::LDAP-new( HOST, onerror = 'die' ) || die Cannot connect: $@; #$ldap-bind(version = VERSION) or die Cannot bind: $@; $ldap-bind( uid=matt,ou=People,o=mattstone, password = --PASSWD-- ) or die Cannot bind: $@; my $result = $ldap-search( base = BASE, scope = SCOPE, attrs = [EMAIL PROTECTED], filter = $filter ); my @entries = $result-entries; $ldap-unbind(); print scalar @entries, entries found.\n; foreach my $entry ( @entries ) { my @emailAddr = $entry-get_value('mail'); foreach my $addr (@emailAddr) { print $addr , \t; if ($entry-get_value('sn') eq '.') { print $entry-get_value('givenName'), \n; } else { print $entry-get_value('givenName'), ; print $entry-get_value('sn'), \n; } } } } signature.asc Description: Digital signature
Re: Online Address book
On 02/12/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, Thanks for your reply. ldap is running on my vServer. But I am not sure how to setup lbdb to use ldap and mutt to use lbdb. Any advise where to look? Thanks! Nathan On Mon, Feb 11, 2008 at 09:04:00PM -0500, Raffi Khatchadourian wrote: On Tue 12.Feb'08 at 1:43:25 +0100, Nathan Huesken wrote: I am using mutt from different computers (like my laptop and the desktop PC at home) and I am wondering if there is some way to always keep my address book synchronized between the two computers. The coolest solution would be, if I could install some sort of database on my vServer and make mutt query it everytime I need the address book (and also add new addresses to it). Is there some sort if solution for this kind of think? Using LDAP and lbdb kinda solves this problem. Another solution is to setup svn on a server somewhere and then use that to keep your addresses, muttrc files, and other home data you want to be shared everywhere. I also keep my icewm files, alias setups and so on there. Make an alias that does svn ci of your files before starting mutt. -- |respectfull, Joseph | signature.asc Description: Digital signature
Re: Online Address book
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Tuesday, February 12 at 03:03 PM, quoth [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Hi, Thanks for your reply. ldap is running on my vServer. But I am not sure how to setup lbdb to use ldap and mutt to use lbdb. Any advise where to look? http://www.spinnaker.de/lbdb/ and http://www.spinnaker.de/lbdb/mutt_ldap_query.html ~Kyle - -- This is my simple religion. There is no need for temples; no need for complicated philosophy. Our own brain, our own heart is our temple; the philosophy is kindness. -- Dalai Lama -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Comment: Thank you for using encryption! iD8DBQFHscYeBkIOoMqOI14RAvyGAKCyvSqirqlnrX2HmTBkqRiB29jIjQCg1T6j V7dVRNi8vxtEXMoWFC8kQEQ= =KCqx -END PGP SIGNATURE-
Re: Online Address book
Hi, Thanks for your reply. ldap is running on my vServer. But I am not sure how to setup lbdb to use ldap and mutt to use lbdb. Any advise where to look? Thanks! Nathan On Mon, Feb 11, 2008 at 09:04:00PM -0500, Raffi Khatchadourian wrote: On Tue 12.Feb'08 at 1:43:25 +0100, Nathan Huesken wrote: I am using mutt from different computers (like my laptop and the desktop PC at home) and I am wondering if there is some way to always keep my address book synchronized between the two computers. The coolest solution would be, if I could install some sort of database on my vServer and make mutt query it everytime I need the address book (and also add new addresses to it). Is there some sort if solution for this kind of think? Using LDAP and lbdb kinda solves this problem.
Re: Online Address book
On Tue 12.Feb'08 at 1:43:25 +0100, Nathan Huesken wrote: I am using mutt from different computers (like my laptop and the desktop PC at home) and I am wondering if there is some way to always keep my address book synchronized between the two computers. The coolest solution would be, if I could install some sort of database on my vServer and make mutt query it everytime I need the address book (and also add new addresses to it). Is there some sort if solution for this kind of think? Using LDAP and lbdb kinda solves this problem.
Online Address book
Hi, I am using mutt from different computers (like my laptop and the desktop PC at home) and I am wondering if there is some way to always keep my address book synchronized between the two computers. The coolest solution would be, if I could install some sort of database on my vServer and make mutt query it everytime I need the address book (and also add new addresses to it). Is there some sort if solution for this kind of think? Thanks! Nathan
Re: recommend good address book
David T-G [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ...and then Kevin Coyner said... I'm enjoying using Mutt, although mangling the messages, but am wondering whether there is a good console type address book to use with it? 1) I don't use it, but I hear that abook is pretty good. I use it, and it's pretty good, IMHO. There's just one thing I'd like to know; is it in *any way* possible to use abook's addresses in case of forwarding of bouncing mails? I've read the help screen that pops up when you press '?' in abook, but for no avail. This is actually the only thing why I'm still keeping both, aliases and abook.addressbook... -- Jussi Ekholm -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://erppimaa.cjb.net/ msg28754/pgp0.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: [OT] scriting abook, was: recommend good address book
* Mike Arrison [EMAIL PROTECTED], 2002-06-06 16:39 -0400: Kevin, I'm enjoying using Mutt, although mangling the messages, but am wondering whether there is a good console type address book to use with it? I agree that abook is good. In fact, it is the first project that to which I've felt obliged and able to contribute. Its source is simple, so if you don't like the way it does something, or you want to add a feature, it's easy. Yeah Open Source! -Mike Arrison Talking about abook, is there a way to extract the snailmail address of certain user for use in shell srcipts and the like? -Andre
Re: [OT] scriting abook, was: recommend good address book
Andre, On Sat, Jun 08, 2002 at 09:55:04AM -0400, Andre Berger wrote: Talking about abook, is there a way to extract the snailmail address of certain user for use in shell srcipts and the like? -Andre Its funny, but I don't think there is a way currently. That's a good feature request. If you know any C, you can add another export function in the filter.c file. I think even a custom exporter would be easy to write at somepoint. Whereby you could specifiy your output format with a series of printf like commands %Name %Street %City %State %Zip Wouldn't that be nifty? Maybe I'll work on that, of if someone smarter wants to jump in here. -Mike Arrison
recommend good address book
As the newest Mutt user on the block (and definitely still trying to figure things out), one of the things I'm leaving behind with KMail is the KAddressbook. The two integrated pretty well. I'm enjoying using Mutt, although mangling the messages, but am wondering whether there is a good console type address book to use with it? Thanks Kevin
Re: recommend good address book
Kevin -- ...and then Kevin Coyner said... % % As the newest Mutt user on the block (and definitely still *grin* ... % % I'm enjoying using Mutt, although mangling the messages, but % am wondering whether there is a good console type address % book to use with it? 1) I don't use it, but I hear that abook is pretty good. 2) Check the archives for things like this. Lots of past discussion of alias management and address books right there for your reference. [The archives are linked from the mutt.org site, BTW.] % % Thanks % Kevin HTH HAND :-D -- David T-G * It's easier to fight for one's principles (play) [EMAIL PROTECTED] * than to live up to them. -- fortune cookie (work) [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.justpickone.org/davidtg/Shpx gur Pbzzhavpngvbaf Qrprapl Npg! msg28682/pgp0.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: recommend good address book
Kevin, I'm enjoying using Mutt, although mangling the messages, but am wondering whether there is a good console type address book to use with it? I agree that abook is good. In fact, it is the first project that to which I've felt obliged and able to contribute. Its source is simple, so if you don't like the way it does something, or you want to add a feature, it's easy. Yeah Open Source! -Mike Arrison
aliases and address book
Hi Mutters, I'm curious if anyone has a good solution for using Mutt's aliasing feature as a good address book (email addr only). The problem I'm running into is that I couldn't possibly come up with a one word nickname for all 100 or so people I know. So instead of saying: alias Adam Smith, Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] alias Bob Jones, Bob [EMAIL PROTECTED] alias Chuck Jackson, Chuck [EMAIL PROTECTED] ... I would like to to have to specify a nickname, such as: alias Smith, Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] alias Jones, Bob [EMAIL PROTECTED] alias Jackson, Chuck [EMAIL PROTECTED] ... I'm willing to type in their full names, but I don't want to have to remember full email addresses. Is that legal? -Mike Arrison
Re: aliases and address book
On Thu, May 30, 2002 at 08:50:28AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I would like to to have to specify a nickname, such as: alias Smith, Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] alias Jones, Bob [EMAIL PROTECTED] alias Jackson, Chuck [EMAIL PROTECTED] ... I'm willing to type in their full names, but I don't want to have to remember full email addresses. Is that legal? You might run into problems with spaces, since the list of email addresses is separated by spaces. You could always do alias Adam_Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] or something similar. HTH... -- David SmithWork Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] STMicroelectronics Home Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Bristol, England
Re: aliases and address book
* Mike Arrison [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2002-05-30 08:50:28 -0400]: I'm curious if anyone has a good solution for using Mutt's aliasing feature as a good address book (email addr only). The problem I'm running into is that I couldn't possibly come up with a one word nickname for all 100 or so people I know. [SNIP] How about, instead of using aliases, you use mutt's address query facility (see section 4.5 of the manual)? Then, all you need do is type in the part of their name that you can remember and hit the query key. -- Dave Pearson: | mutt.octet.filter - autoview octet-streams http://www.davep.org/ | mutt.vcard.filter - autoview simple vcards Mutt: | muttrc2html - muttrc - HTML utility http://www.davep.org/mutt/ | muttrc.sl - Jed muttrc mode
Re: aliases and address book
Mike -- ...and then Mike Arrison said... % % Hi Mutters, % I'm curious if anyone has a good solution for using Mutt's % aliasing feature as a good address book (email addr only). The problem So you're specifically not interested in abook or another add-on? No problem, but there are some that are highly recommended (see the archives). % I'm running into is that I couldn't possibly come up with a one word % nickname for all 100 or so people I know. So instead of saying: Ahhh... Yes, that's a problem, especially when Adam has both a home and a work address. % % alias Adam Smith, Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] ... % % I would like to to have to specify a nickname, such as: % % alias Smith, Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] ... % % I'm willing to type in their full names, but I don't want to have to % remember full email addresses. Is that legal? No, you have to have some alias name. In addition to the complete-query suggestion already posted (which will work well with lbdb even if you don't need a separate address book, since it can be rigged to capture every email address that ever comes in), you might find it helpful to name your aliases like fullnames, as alias adam.smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Adam Smith) alias adam.smith-work [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Adam at work) and so on. This, including the -* designation for various work, home, hotmail vs msn vs other mails and then an actual fname.lname alias which simply points the the alias of the account that the person wants to use this week, works quite well for me and my 1228 single aliases (as well as 32 group aliases, some nested). % % -Mike Arrison HTH HAND :-D -- David T-G * It's easier to fight for one's principles (play) [EMAIL PROTECTED] * than to live up to them. -- fortune cookie (work) [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.justpickone.org/davidtg/Shpx gur Pbzzhavpngvbaf Qrprapl Npg! msg28396/pgp0.pgp Description: PGP signature
Address book how-to?
Hello Mutt Users, Could you give me directions how to organize address book working with Mutt? How do you handle this task? Thanks.
Re: Address book how-to?
On Sun, Dec 09, 2001 at 08:13:22PM +0200, Slava Pechenin wrote: Hello Mutt Users, Could you give me directions how to organize address book working with Mutt? How do you handle this task? Use a text editor. :) This is the first line of my .muttrc file: source ~/.mutt_aliases Then I have my aliases defined in ~/.mutt_aliases. See here http://www.mutt.org/doc/manual/manual-3.html#ss3.2 Mike -- Michael P. Soulier [EMAIL PROTECTED], GnuPG pub key: 5BC8BE08 ...the word HACK is used as a verb to indicate a massive amount of nerd-like effort. -Harley Hahn, A Student's Guide to Unix msg21366/pgp0.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Address book how-to?
Slava -- ...and then Slava Pechenin said... % % Hello Mutt Users, Hi! % % Could you give me directions how to organize address book % working with Mutt? How do you handle this task? The address book in mutt is simply a file containing aliases; it could even be your muttrc file. What many folks do is to maintain an aliases file somewhere and have a line like source $HOME/.mutt/aliases to have mutt know about them (because they're defined every time you start mutt and go away when you quit). See the manual for more information, including lexical structure. I've heard that abook is an excellent address book program; there are some others out there as well. You might check the contrib area at ftp.mutt.org or the mailing list archives for other discussions. % % Thanks. HTH HAND :-D -- David T-G * It's easier to fight for one's principles (play) [EMAIL PROTECTED] * than to live up to them. -- fortune cookie (work) [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.justpickone.org/davidtg/Shpx gur Pbzzhavpngvbaf Qrprapl Npg! msg21372/pgp0.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Address Book for Vim?
On Mon, Sep 17, 2001 at 08:13:39AM -0700, Ryan Allen wrote: I'm just curious what people are using for an address book application if anything at all?? http://freshmeat.net/projects/muttaddressbook/ -- Christian Ordig Germany
Re: Address Book for Vim?
On Wed, Sep 19, 2001 at 10:20:14PM -0700, Ryan Allen wrote: the application abook (thanks Andre), was exactly what I was looking for. It works seamlessly with mutt and vim, and I had it working in a matter of minutes. I also produced a script in under an hour that queried my contacts database and created a .abook.addressbook file. This is an awesome program, simple and powerful querying capabilites. It can be found at: abook.sourceforge.net Thanks! -- Ryan Yes it is a cute program (can a program be cute ?) But I wish it had a facility to edit an entry (if you make a spilling mistake)..rather than have to type it in again... -- Regards Cliff
Re: Address Book for Vim?
Cliff Sarginson wrote: Yes it is a cute program (can a program be cute ?) But I wish it had a facility to edit an entry (if you make a spilling mistake)..rather than have to type it in again... yes!!! that is one of my main annoyances with it as well. it would be nice if it supported standard emacs line editor bindings as well (or better yet, allowed programmable ones). i assume you mean 'spelling mistake' not 'spilling mistake' or was that on purpose? : w -- Sintax error in config file! (line 378) aborted! GPG Public Key: http://infinitejazz.net/will/pgp/
Re: Address Book for Vim?
On Wed, Sep 19, 2001 at 10:20:14PM -0700, Ryan Allen wrote: | This is an awesome program, simple and powerful querying capabilites. It | can be found at: | | abook.sourceforge.net Are there some things I don't see? I've just installed it, imported my aliases, but don't see the added value of this program. It has some extra features that mutt doesn't have, but the fact that I can't add an address from within mutt is a bummer. So, I don't see the added value. Please convince me with some arguments, so I can tell if I'm overlooking something... -- René Clerc - ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) It's illegal in Wilbur, Washington, to ride an ugly horse.
Re: Address Book for Vim?
On Thu, Sep 20, 2001 at 11:31:59AM +0200, René Clerc wrote: On Wed, Sep 19, 2001 at 10:20:14PM -0700, Ryan Allen wrote: | This is an awesome program, simple and powerful querying capabilites. It | can be found at: | | abook.sourceforge.net Are there some things I don't see? I've just installed it, imported my aliases, but don't see the added value of this program. It has some extra features that mutt doesn't have, but the fact that I can't add an address from within mutt is a bummer. From my mutt startup files... macro pager A |~/Procmail/mail2abook.py\n mail2abook should be in the abook directory somewhere.. It doesn't win a prize for speed though... -- Regards Cliff
Re: Address Book for Vim?
the application abook (thanks Andre), was exactly what I was looking for. It works seamlessly with mutt and vim, and I had it working in a matter of minutes. I also produced a script in under an hour that queried my contacts database and created a .abook.addressbook file. This is an awesome program, simple and powerful querying capabilites. It can be found at: abook.sourceforge.net Thanks! -- Ryan * Rino Mardo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on [09-18-01y 04:30]: On Mon, Sep 17, 2001 at 08:13:39AM -0700 or thereabouts, Ryan Allen wrote: Hi, I'm just curious what people are using for an address book application if anything at all?? I use vim as my editor for mutt, and would like to know if there are any applications avaliable that work well with mutt and vim. Curses based would be great, much like pine uses. What are people using out there, and how are they set up? Cut and Paste is only efficient for so long there's no separate address book application or an application itself. mutt uses can use any text file you've set as your alias. I have mine set as source ~/.mutt/alias in my ~/.muttrc and the format of the alias file is: alias mutt Mutt Users [EMAIL PROTECTED] so whenever i type mutt in the To: field it gets expanded to the real email address. just like an address book application! :-) you can also add entries to it using your favorite text editor and just following the same format or while viewing an email just hit the a key to add an alias. hth and my 2cents. -- In is out and out is in. But out is out and in is in. -- Pumbaa
Re: Address Book for Vim?
On Mon, Sep 17, 2001 at 08:13:39AM -0700, Ryan Allen wrote: What are people using out there, and how are they set up? Cut and Paste is only efficient for so long abook http://abook.sourceforge.net/ HTH Andre
Re: Address Book for Vim?
On Mon, Sep 17, 2001 at 08:13:39AM -0700 or thereabouts, Ryan Allen wrote: Hi, I'm just curious what people are using for an address book application if anything at all?? I use vim as my editor for mutt, and would like to know if there are any applications avaliable that work well with mutt and vim. Curses based would be great, much like pine uses. What are people using out there, and how are they set up? Cut and Paste is only efficient for so long there's no separate address book application or an application itself. mutt uses can use any text file you've set as your alias. I have mine set as source ~/.mutt/alias in my ~/.muttrc and the format of the alias file is: alias mutt Mutt Users [EMAIL PROTECTED] so whenever i type mutt in the To: field it gets expanded to the real email address. just like an address book application! :-) you can also add entries to it using your favorite text editor and just following the same format or while viewing an email just hit the a key to add an alias. hth and my 2cents. -- In is out and out is in. But out is out and in is in. -- Pumbaa PGP signature
Re: Address Book
On Wed, Aug 22, 2001 at 03:25:39PM -0400, steve wrote: Could someone please point me in the right direction for information. you could use mutt-aliases but they're not really flexible (no flame ware please!) I also didn't like the mentioned abook, because it didn't integrate with mutt as I wished and doesn't have the feature to search for a comment I add to an address. (at least it hadn't when I checked) So I decided to write a little address book for mutt which has this ability. Furthermore it supports simply adding addresses to the address book from the browser/index in mutt. URL: http://thor.prohosting.com/~chrordig/ and there in the Linux section. any feedback is welcome. -- Christian Ordig Germany
Re: Address Book
On Wed, Aug 22, 2001 at 06:11:38PM -0700, dannyman wrote: So, what is the point of abook? To query non-mutt address books from mutt? It looks like if I was silly enough to want to manage my .aliases file with it, I would have to convert .aliases to abook format, then run abook, then convert back to mutt .aliases. Or am I missing something? you don't need to convert the abook back to aliases - you can just use it as an external query command, and get email addresses directly from abook. basicly, stop using .aliases. HTH -- Dan Boger Linux MVP brainbench.com PGP signature
Address Book
Hello, I'm a recent convert from pine. One thing I can't find any documentation on so far,[I've read the man page for mutt and the web FAQ so far] is how to use an address book with mutt. Otherwise everything is fine in respect to this great mua. Could someone please point me in the right direction for information. Thank-you. In the meantime I'll keep looking. -- Steve - Toronto ICQ 35454764 /~\ 'If you're not a rebel when you're 20 you've got no heart; if \ / you're not establishment when you're 30 you've got no brain. X Join the ASCII ribbon campaign against HTML email/ \
Re: Address Book
steve mutt [22/08/01 15:25 -0400]: I'm a recent convert from pine. One thing I can't find any documentation on so far,[I've read the man page for mutt and the web FAQ so far] is how to use an address book with mutt. Otherwise everything is fine in respect to this great mua. http://abook.sourceforge.net -suresh
Re: Address Book
On Thu, Aug 23, 2001 at 01:05:15AM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote: steve mutt [22/08/01 15:25 -0400]: I'm a recent convert from pine. One thing I can't find any documentation on so far,[I've read the man page for mutt and the web FAQ so far] is how to use an address book with mutt. http://abook.sourceforge.net If you just want to convert a pine addressbook to a mutt alias file, look in ftp://ftp.mutt.org/pub/mutt/contrib/ for addressbook-to-alias.pl.gz -- (T.) Michael Sanders internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Physics Department URL: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~sanders University of Michigan phone: 734/936-0799 Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1120 FAX: 734/764-6843
Re: Address Book
On Thu, Aug 23, 2001 at 01:05:15AM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote: steve mutt [22/08/01 15:25 -0400]: I'm a recent convert from pine. One thing I can't find any documentation on so far,[I've read the man page for mutt and the web FAQ so far] is how to use an address book with mutt. Otherwise everything is fine in respect to this great mua. http://abook.sourceforge.net -suresh Thanks to all 3 of you for the concise and rapid responses. I'm looking @ abook. -- Steve - Toronto ICQ 35454764 /~\ 'If you're not a rebel when you're 20 you've got no heart; if \ / you're not establishment when you're 30 you've got no brain. X Join the ASCII ribbon campaign against HTML email/ \
Re: Address Book
On Wed, Aug 22, 2001 at 05:43:14PM -0400, steve wrote: On Thu, Aug 23, 2001 at 01:05:15AM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote: http://abook.sourceforge.net -suresh Thanks to all 3 of you for the concise and rapid responses. I'm looking @ abook. So, what is the point of abook? To query non-mutt address books from mutt? It looks like if I was silly enough to want to manage my .aliases file with it, I would have to convert .aliases to abook format, then run abook, then convert back to mutt .aliases. Or am I missing something? -d -- http://dannyman.toldme.com/
selecting multiple addresses from the address book
Le samedi 19 mai 2001 à 05:50:24 +0200, Jeroen Valcke écrivait : How can I select multiple mailaddresses (aliases) from the addressbook. When you I'm prompted for an address I usually press tab and have all the aliases there, but how can I select more than one. When you have all your aliases display after having pressed tab, you can tag all the persons you want with the 't' key. Then you press 'Enter' to write the message. Antoine Sirinelli
Re: selecting multiple addresses from the address book
Use 't' to tag the ones you want, then press enter. cheers, roel On Sat, May 19, 2001 at 05:50:24PM +0200, Jeroen Valcke wrote: How can I select multiple mailaddresses (aliases) from the addressbook. When you I'm prompted for an address I usually press tab and have all the aliases there, but how can I select more than one. -- You know you're a geek when... * ...the garbage collectors come you go out and give them pointers.
Re: selecting multiple addresses from the address book
On 010519, at 17:50:24, Jeroen Valcke wrote How can I select multiple mailaddresses (aliases) from the addressbook. When you I'm prompted for an address I usually press tab and have all the aliases there, but how can I select more than one. Tag those you wish to select (tag-entry is bound to 't' by default). -- David Ellement
Re: address book
On Fri, Apr 13, 2001 at 03:06:19PM +0200, Christian Ordig wrote: It's some months ago. If there's some interest I could repost it or put it onto my website. it's finally done. My Mutt Address Book can be found in the Linux section of my website. For further information read the hints on the page and the INSTALL file coming with the scripts or drop me a mail. -- Christian Ordig | Homepage: http://thor.prohosting.com/~chrordig/ Germany |eMail: Christian Ordig [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP signature
Re: address book
On Thu, Apr 12, 2001 at 08:00:36PM +0200, Christian Ordig wrote: I've posted a complete addressbook for use with the Query function and some mutt macros to add addresses to it the way you intend to do it. It's some months ago. If there's some interest I could repost it or put it onto my website. I've checked it. I sent this script on Dec 21st 2000. -- Christian Ordig | Homepage: http://thor.prohosting.com/~chrordig/ Germany |eMail: Christian Ordig [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP signature
Re: address book
Frederick V. Heitkamp muttered: Is there a way to pull specific addresses out of message headers and add them to the address book? You mean to your $alias_file? Try pressing "a" in the pager, that's for the From: header at least. For other headers you may either copy / past them to $alias_file diretly. Or write a small script that parses a header then add's its output to $alias_file. HTH, Michael -- "...and scantily clad females, of course. Who cares if it's below zero outside" (By Linus Torvalds) PGP-Key: http://www-stud.ims.uni-stuttgart.de/~tatgeml/public.key
Re: address book
On Wed, Apr 11, 2001 at 07:02:47AM -0400, Frederick V. Heitkamp wrote: Is there a way to pull specific addresses out of message headers and add them to the address book? I've posted a complete addressbook for use with the Query function and some mutt macros to add addresses to it the way you intend to do it. It's some months ago. If there's some interest I could repost it or put it onto my website. Features: Full name of person eMail address comment every field is searched when using ^T or Q. so you can also search for comments easyly. Adding new addresses and comments is done using a macro from the index or browser directly in mutt. ok ... that's it. -- Christian Ordig | Homepage: http://thor.prohosting.com/~chrordig/ Germany |eMail: Christian Ordig [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP signature
Re: address book
LBDB (Little Brother DB) ships with an util that, called from your MDA, procmail (i.e.) adds the From adresses to its DB. Hope this helps, MuPPy | TeLeNiEkO| | e-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]|
Re: address book
TeLeNiEkO proclaimed on mutt-users that: LBDB (Little Brother DB) ships with an util that, called from your MDA, procmail (i.e.) adds the From adresses to its DB. Yep. Right. Now, about your headers, User-Agent: Mutt/1.3.17i X-Mailer: Mutt 1.3.12i you might want to use the regexps on mutt -v that were posted here recently instead of hardcoding the stuff in your muttrc (though why an X-Mailer when there's a perfectly good User-Agent header, I dont know) :) -s -- Suresh Ramasubramanian + Wallopus Malletus Indigenensis mallet @ cluestick.org + Lumber Cartel of India, tinlcI EMail Sturmbannfuhrer, Lower Middle Class Unix Sysadmin
address book
Is there a way to pull specific addresses out of message headers and add them to the address book? -- Fred