From 3fe2a57b95333659e2ecdeeca3f4009bcf3b30cf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: MaxSchlueter Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2021 18:36:31 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] mu: fix command (#1623) mu-cfind is meant to search for contacts within your contacts database and the emails that you have sent/received. The use of the --personal flag in that command is meant to filter for only emails that use your email addresses (which are all the ones you specify with the ${myAddresses} variable. Disregard what I said in #1623 (comment). --my-address= specifies that some e-mail addresses are 'my-address' (--my-address can be used multiple times). This is used by mu cfind -- any e-mail address found in the address fields of a message which also has in one of its address fields is considered a personal e-mail address. This allows you, for example, to filter out (mu cfind --personal) addresses which were merely seen in mailing list messages. To initialize the database with mu init, the ${myAddresses} is not required to be passed to successfully initialize the database, but it is heavily recommended to do so. To see the difference, in a safe location, run mu init --maildir=, then mu index. You'll notice that "personal addresses" returns , although the database will still work. However, mu cfind --personal will fail (as the personal contacts don't exist). Then run mu init --maildir= --my-address=
, then mu index. Then you'll be able to search for contacts using mu cfind --personal. --- modules/programs/mu.nix | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/modules/programs/mu.nix b/modules/programs/mu.nix index 18c3993a..233624d1 100644 --- a/modules/programs/mu.nix +++ b/modules/programs/mu.nix @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ in { # In theory, mu is the only thing that creates that directory, and it is # only created during the initial index. if [[ ! -d "${dbLocation}" ]]; then - $DRY_RUN_CMD mu init ${maildirOption} $VERBOSE_ARG; + $DRY_RUN_CMD mu init ${maildirOption} ${myAddresses} $VERBOSE_ARG; fi ''; };