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MAIRIX(1)							     MAIRIX(1)

NAME
       mairix - index and search mail folders

SYNOPSIS
   Indexing
       mairix  [  -v|--verbose	]  [  -p|--purge  ] [ -f|--rcfile mairixrc ] [
       -F|--fast-index ]

   Searching
       mairix [ -v|--verbose ] [ -f|--rcfile mairixrc ] [ -r|--raw-output ]  [
       -x|--excerpt-output  ]  [  -o|--mfolder	mfolder	 ]  [ -a|--augment ] [
       -t|--threads ] search-patterns

   Other
       mairix [ -h|--help ]

       mairix [ -V|--version ]

       mairix [ -d|--dump ]

DESCRIPTION
       mairix indexes and searches a collection of email messages.  The	 fold‐
       ers  containing the messages for indexing are defined in the configura‐
       tion file.  The indexing stage produces a database file.	 The  database
       file  provides  rapid  access to details of the indexed messages during
       searching operations.  A search normally produces a  folder  (so-called
       mfolder)	 containing  the  matched  messages.  However, a raw mode (-r)
       exists which just lists the matched messages instead.

       It can operate with the following folder types

       *      maildir

       *      MH (compatible with the MH folder formats used by xmh, sylpheed,
	      claws-mail, nnml (Gnus) and evolution)

       *      mbox  (including	mboxes	that have been compressed with gzip or
	      bzip2)

       If maildir or MH source folders are used,  and  a  search  outputs  its
       matches	to an mfolder in maildir or MH format, symbolic links are used
       to reference the original messages inside  the  mfolder.	  However,  if
       mbox folders are involved, copies of messages are made instead.

OPTIONS
       mairix decides whether indexing or searching is required by looking for
       the presence of any search-patterns on the command line.

   Special modes
       -h, --help
	      Show usage summary and exit

       -V, --version
	      Show program version and exit

       -d
	      Dump the database's contents in human-readable form to stdout.

   General options
       -f mairixrc
       --rcfile mairixrc
	      Specify an alternative configuration file to use.	  The  default
	      configuration file is ~/.mairixrc.

       -v, --verbose
	      Make the output more verbose

       -Q, --no-integrity-checks
	      Normally	mairix	will  do  some internal integrity tests on the
	      database.	 The -Q option removes these checks, making mairix run
	      faster,  but  it will be less likely to detect internal problems
	      if any bugs creep in.

	      The nochecks directive in the rc file has the same effect.

       --unlock
	      mairix locks its database file during any indexing or  searching
	      operation	 to  prevent  multiple	indexing runs interfering with
	      each other, or an indexing run  interfering  with	 search	 runs.
	      The  --unlock  option  removes  the  lockfile  before  doing the
	      requested indexing or searching operation.  This is a convenient
	      way  of  cleaning	 up a stale lockfile if an earlier run crashed
	      for some reason or was aborted.

   Indexing options
       -p, --purge
	      Cause stale (dead) messages to be purged from the database  dur‐
	      ing  an indexing run.  (Normally, stale messages are left in the
	      database because of the additional cost of compacting  away  the
	      storage that they take up.)

       -F, --fast-index
	      When processing maildir and MH folders, mairix normally compares
	      the mtime and size of each message against the values stored  in
	      the  database.   If  they have changed, the message will be res‐
	      canned.  This check requires each message file  to  be  stat'ed.
	      For large numbers of messages in these folder types, this can be
	      a sizeable overhead.

	      This option tells mairix to assume that when a message currently
	      on-disc  has  a  name  matching  one already in the database, it
	      should assume the message is unchanged.

	      A later indexing run without using this option will fix  up  any
	      rescans that were missed due to its use.

   Search options
       -a, --augment
	      Append  newly matches messages to the current mfolder instead of
	      creating the mfolder from scratch.

       -t, --threads
	      As well as returning the matched	messages,  also	 return	 every
	      message in the same thread as one of the real matches.

       -r, --raw-output
	      Instead  of creating an mfolder containing the matched messages,
	      just show their paths on stdout.

       -x, --excerpt-output
	      Instead of creating an mfolder containing the matched  messages,
	      display  an  excerpt  from their headers on stdout.  The excerpt
	      shows To, Cc, From, Subject and Date.

       -o mfolder
       --mfolder mfolder
	      Specify a temporary alternative path for	the  mfolder  to  use,
	      overriding the mfolder directive in the rc file.

	      mairix will refuse to output search results into any folder that
	      appears to be amongst those that are indexed.  This is  to  pre‐
	      vent accidental deletion of emails.

   Search patterns
       t:word
	      Match word in the To: header.

       c:word
	      Match word in the Cc: header.

       f:word
	      Match word in the From: header.

       s:word
	      Match word in the Subject: header.

       m:word
	      Match word in the Message-ID: header.

       b:word
	      Match word in the message body.

	      Message  body  is taken to mean any body part of type text/plain
	      or text/html.  For text/html, text within meta tags is  ignored.
	      In  particular, the URLs inside <A HREF="..."> tags are not cur‐
	      rently indexed.  Non-text attachments are ignored.   If  there's
	      an  attachment  of  type	message/rfc822, this is parsed and the
	      match is performed on this sub-message too.  If  a  hit  occurs,
	      the enclosing message is treated as having a hit.

       d:[start-datespec]-[end-datespec]
	      Match messages with Date: headers lying in the specific range.

       z:[low-size]-[high-size]
	      Match  messages  whose size lies in the specified range.	If the
	      low-size argument is omitted it defaults to zero.	 If the	 high-
	      size argument is omitted it defaults to infinite size.

	      For  example,  to match messages between 10kilobytes and 20kilo‐
	      bytes in size, the following search term can be used:

		   mairix z:10k-20k

	      The suffix 'k' on a number means multiply by 1024, and the  suf‐
	      fix 'M' on a number means multiply by 1024*1024.

       n:word
	      Match  word  occurring  as the name of an attachment in the mes‐
	      sage.  Since attachment names  are  usually  long,  this	option
	      would usually be used in the substring form.  So

		   mairix n:mairix=

	      would match all messages which have attachments whose names con‐
	      tain the substring mairix.

	      The attachment name is determined from  the  name=xxx  or	 file‐
	      name=xxx	qualifiers  on	the Content-Type: and Content-Disposi‐
	      tion: headers respectively.

       F:flags
	      Match messages with particular  flag  settings.	The  available
	      flags are 's' meaning seen, 'r' meaning replied, and 'f' meaning
	      flagged.	The flags are case-insensitive.	 A flag letter may  be
	      prefixed by a '-' to negate its sense.  Thus

		   mairix F:-s d:1w-

	      would match any unread message less than a week old, and

		   mairix F:f-r d:-1m

	      would  match  any	 flagged  message older than a month which you
	      haven't replied to yet.

	      Note that the flag characters  and  their	 meanings  agree  with
	      those used as the suffix letters on message filenames in maildir
	      folders.

   Searching for a match amongst more than one part of a message
       Multiple body parts may be grouped together, if a match in any of  them
       is sought.  Common examples follow.

       tc:word
	      Match word in either the To: or Cc: headers (or both).

       bs:word
	      Match word in either the Subject: header or the message body (or
	      both).

       The a: search pattern is an abbreviation for tcf:; i.e. match the  word
       in  the	To:,  Cc: or From: headers.  ("a" stands for "address" in this
       case.)

   Match words
       The word argument to the search strings can take various forms.

       ~word
	      Match messages not containing the word.

       word1,word2
	      This matches if both the words are matched in the specified mes‐
	      sage part.

       word1/word2
	      This matches if either of the words are matched in the specified
	      message part.

       substring=
	      Match any word containing substring as a substring

       substring=N
	      Match any word containing substring, allowing up to N errors  in
	      the  match.   For example, if N is 1, a single error is allowed,
	      where an error can be

       *      a missing letter

       *      an extra letter

       *      a different letter.

       ^substring=
	      Match any word containing substring as  a	 substring,  with  the
	      requirement  that	 substring  occurs  at	the  beginning	of the
	      matched word.

   Precedence matters
       The binding order of the constructions is:

       1.     Individual command line  arguments  define  separate  conditions
	      which are AND-ed together

       2.     Within  a	 single	 argument, the letters before the colon define
	      which message parts the expression applies to.  If there	is  no
	      colon,  the expression applies to all the headers listed earlier
	      and the body.

       3.     After the colon, commas delineate separate disjuncts, which  are
	      OR-ed together.

       4.     Each  disjunct  may  contain separate conjuncts, which are sepa‐
	      rated by plus signs.  These conditions are AND-ed together.

       5.     Each conjunct may start with a tilde to negate it,  and  may  be
	      followed	by  a  slash to indicate a substring match, optionally
	      followed by an integer to define the maximum  number  of	errors
	      allowed.

   Date specification
       This  section  describes	 the  syntax  used  for	 specifying dates when
       searching using the `d:' option.

       Dates are specified as a range.	The start and end  of  the  range  can
       both  be	 specified.   Alternatively,  if  the  start is omitted, it is
       treated as being the beginning of time.	If the end is omitted,	it  is
       treated as the current time.

       There are 4 basic formats:

       d:start-end
	      Specify both start and end explicitly

       d:start-
	      Specify start, end is the current time

       d:-end Specify  end,  start  is 'a long time ago' (i.e. early enough to
	      include any message).

       d:period
	      Specify start and end implicitly, as the start and  end  of  the
	      period given.

       The start and end can be specified either absolute or relative.	A rel‐
       ative endpoint is given as a number followed by a single letter	defin‐
       ing the scaling:

       ┌────────┬─────────────┬───────────┬───────────────────────┐
       │letter	│  short for  │	 example  │  meaning		  │
       ├────────┼─────────────┼───────────┼───────────────────────┤
       │d	│  days	      │	 3d	  │  3 days		  │
       │w	│  weeks      │	 2w	  │  2 weeks (14 days)	  │
       │m	│  months     │	 5m	  │  5 months (150 days)  │
       │y	│  years      │	 4y	  │  4 years (4*365 days) │
       └────────┴─────────────┴───────────┴───────────────────────┘

       Months  are  always treated as 30 days, and years as 365 days, for this
       purpose.

       Absolute times can be specified in many forms.  Some forms have differ‐
       ent  meanings  when they define a start date from that when they define
       an end date.  Where a single expression specifies both  the  start  and
       end (i.e. where the argument to d: doesn't contain a `-'), it will usu‐
       ally have different interpretations in the two cases.

       In the examples below, suppose the current date	is  Sunday  May	 18th,
       2003 (when I started to write this material.)

       ┌─────────────────────┬──────────────────────┬───────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐
       │Example		     │	Start date	    │  End date		    │  Notes			      │
       ├─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼───────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
       │d:20030301-20030425  │	March 1st, 2003	    │  25th April, 2003	    │				      │
       │d:030301-030425	     │	March 1st, 2003	    │  April 25th, 2003	    │  century assumed		      │
       │d:mar1-apr25	     │	March 1st, 2003	    │  April 25th, 2003	    │				      │
       │d:Mar1-Apr25	     │	March 1st, 2003	    │  April 25th, 2003	    │  case insensitive		      │
       │d:MAR1-APR25	     │	March 1st, 2003	    │  April 25th, 2003	    │  case insensitive		      │
       │d:1mar-25apr	     │	March 1st, 2003	    │  April 25th, 2003	    │  date and month in either order │
       │d:2002		     │	January 1st, 2002   │  December 31st, 2002  │  whole year		      │
       │d:mar		     │	March 1st, 2003	    │  March 31st, 2003	    │  most recent March	      │
       │d:oct		     │	October 1st, 2002   │  October 31st, 2002   │  most recent October	      │
       │d:21oct-mar	     │	October 21st, 2002  │  March 31st, 2003	    │  start before end		      │
       │d:21apr-mar	     │	April 21st, 2002    │  March 31st, 2003	    │  start before end		      │
       │d:21apr-	     │	April 21st, 2003    │  May 18th, 2003	    │  end omitted		      │
       │d:-21apr	     │	January 1st, 1900   │  April 21st, 2003	    │  start omitted		      │
       │d:6w-2w		     │	April 6th, 2003	    │  May 4th, 2003	    │  both dates relative	      │
       │d:21apr-1w	     │	April 21st, 2003    │  May 11th, 2003	    │  one date relative	      │
       │d:21apr-2y	     │	April 21st, 2001    │  May 11th, 2001	    │  start before end		      │
       │d:99-11		     │	January 1st, 1999   │  May 11th, 2003	    │ 2 digits are a day of the month │
       │		     │			    │			    │ if possible, otherwise a year   │
       │d:99oct-1oct	     │	October 1st, 1999   │  October 1st, 2002    │ end before now, single digit is │
       │		     │			    │			    │ a day of the month	      │
       │d:99oct-01oct	     │	October 1st, 1999   │  October 31st, 2001   │ 2	 digits	 starting  with	 zero │
       │		     │			    │			    │ treated as a year		      │
       │d:oct99-oct1	     │	October 1st, 1999   │  October 1st, 2002    │ day and month in either order   │
       │d:oct99-oct01	     │	October 1st, 1999   │  October 31st, 2001   │ year and month in either order  │
       └─────────────────────┴──────────────────────┴───────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘

       The principles in the table work as follows.

       ·      When the expression defines a period of more than a day (i.e. if
	      a month or year is specified), the earliest day in the period is
	      taken when the start date is defined, and the last  day  in  the
	      period if the end of the range is being defined.

       ·      The  end	date  is  always  taken to be on or before the current
	      date.

       ·      The start date is always taken to be on or before the end date.

SETTING UP THE MATCH FOLDER
       If the match folder does not exist when running in search mode,	it  is
       automatically  created.	 For  'mformat=maildir'	 (the  default),  this
       should be all you need to do.  If you use 'mformat=mh', you may have to
       run  some  commands before your mailer will recognize the folder.  e.g.
       for mutt, you could do

	      mkdir -p /home/richard/Mail/mfolder
	      touch /home/richard/Mail/mfolder/.mh_sequences

       which seems  to	work.	Alternatively,	within	mutt,  you  could  set
       MBOX_TYPE to in advance.

       If  you use Sylpheed, the best way seems to be to create the new folder
       from within Sylpheed before letting mairix write into it.

EXAMPLES
       Suppose my email address is <richard@doesnt.exist>.

       Either of the following will match all messages	newer  than  3	months
       from me with the word 'chrony' in the subject line:

	      mairix d:3m- f:richard+doesnt+exist s:chrony
	      mairix d:3m- f:richard@doesnt.exist s:chrony

       Suppose	I  don't  mind a few spurious matches on the address, I want a
       wider date range, and I suspect that some messages I replied  to	 might
       have  had  the  subject	keyword	 spelt	wrongly	 (let's	 allow up to 2
       errors):

	      mairix d:6m- f:richard s:chrony=2

NOTES
       mairix works exclusively in terms of words.  The index that's built  in
       indexing	 mode contains a table of which words occur in which messages.
       Hence, the search capability is based on finding messages that  contain
       particular  words.  mairix defines a word as any string of alphanumeric
       characters + underscore.	 Any whitespace, punctuation, hyphens etc  are
       treated as word boundaries.

       mairix  has  special  handling  for  the	 To:,  Cc:  and From: headers.
       Besides the normal word scan, these headers are scanned a second	 time,
       where  the characters '@', '-' and '.' are also treated as word charac‐
       ters.  This allows most (if not all) email addresses to appear  in  the
       database	 as  single  words.   So  if  you have a mail from wibble@foo‐
       bar.zzz, it will match on both these searches

	      mairix f:foobar
	      mairix f:wibble@foobar.zzz

       It should be clear by now that the searching cannot  be	used  to  find
       messages	 matching  general  regular  expressions.  This has never been
       much of a limitation.  Most searches are for particular	keywords  that
       were  in the messages, or details of the recipients, or the approximate
       date.

       It's also worth pointing out that there is  no  'locality'  information
       stored, so you can't search for messages that have one words 'close' to
       some other word.	 For every message and every word, there is  a	simple
       yes/no  condition  stored  - whether the message contains the word in a
       particular header or in the body.  So far this has proved  to  be  ade‐
       quate.  mairix has a similar feel to using an Internet search engine.

FILES
       ~/.mairixrc

AUTHOR
       Copyright (C) 2002-2006 Richard P. Curnow <rc@rc0.org.uk>

SEE ALSO
       mairixrc(5)

BUGS
       We need a plugin scheme to allow more types of attachment to be scanned
       and indexed.

				 January 2006			     MAIRIX(1)
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