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1#
2# aerc main configuration
3
4[general]
5#
6# Used as a default path for save operations if no other path is specified.
7# ~ is expanded to the current user home dir.
8#
9#default-save-path=
10
11# If set to "gpg", aerc will use system gpg binary and keystore for all crypto
12# operations. If set to "internal", the internal openpgp keyring will be used.
13# If set to "auto", the system gpg will be preferred unless the internal
14# keyring already exists, in which case the latter will be used.
15#
16# Default: auto
17#pgp-provider=auto
18
19# By default, the file permissions of accounts.conf must be restrictive and
20# only allow reading by the file owner (0600). Set this option to true to
21# ignore this permission check. Use this with care as it may expose your
22# credentials.
23#
24# Default: false
25#unsafe-accounts-conf=false
26
27# Output log messages to specified file. A path starting with ~/ is expanded to
28# the user home dir. When redirecting aerc's output to a file using > shell
29# redirection, this setting is ignored and log messages are printed to stdout.
30#
31#log-file=
32
33# Only log messages above the specified level to log-file. Supported levels
34# are: trace, debug, info, warn and error. When redirecting aerc's output to
35# a file using > shell redirection, this setting is ignored and the log level
36# is forced to trace.
37#
38# Default: info
39#log-level=info
40
41# Set the $TERM environment variable used for the embedded terminal.
42#
43# Default: xterm-256color
44#term=xterm-256color
45
46# Display OSC8 strings in the embedded terminal
47#
48# Default: false
49#enable-osc8=false
50
51[ui]
52#
53# Describes the format for each row in a mailbox view. This is a comma
54# separated list of column names with an optional align and width suffix. After
55# the column name, one of the '<' (left), ':' (center) or '>' (right) alignment
56# characters can be added (by default, left) followed by an optional width
57# specifier. The width is either an integer representing a fixed number of
58# characters, or a percentage between 1% and 99% representing a fraction of the
59# terminal width. It can also be one of the '*' (auto) or '=' (fit) special
60# width specifiers. Auto width columns will be equally attributed the remaining
61# terminal width. Fit width columns take the width of their contents. If no
62# width specifier is set, '*' is used by default.
63#
64# Default: date<20,name<17,flags>4,subject<*
65#index-columns=date<20,name<17,flags>4,subject<*
66
67#
68# Each name in index-columns must have a corresponding column-$name setting.
69# All column-$name settings accept golang text/template syntax. See
70# aerc-templates(7) for available template attributes and functions.
71#
72# Default settings
73#column-date={{.DateAutoFormat .Date.Local}}
74#column-name={{index (.From | names) 0}}
75#column-flags={{.Flags | join ""}}
76#column-subject={{.ThreadPrefix}}{{.Subject}}
77
78#
79# String separator inserted between columns. When the column width specifier is
80# an exact number of characters, the separator is added to it (i.e. the exact
81# width will be fully available for the column contents).
82#
83# Default: " "
84#column-separator=" "
85
86#
87# See time.Time#Format at https://godoc.org/time#Time.Format
88#
89# Default: 2006-01-02 03:04 PM (ISO 8601 + 12 hour time)
90#timestamp-format=2006-01-02 03:04 PM
91
92#
93# Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent today.
94# If this is not specified, timestamp-format is used instead.
95#
96#this-day-time-format=
97
98#
99# Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent within the last
100# 7 days. If this is not specified, timestamp-format is used instead.
101#
102#this-week-time-format=
103
104#
105# Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent this year.
106# If this is not specified, timestamp-format is used instead.
107#
108#this-year-time-format=
109
110#
111# Width of the sidebar, including the border.
112#
113# Default: 20
114#sidebar-width=20
115
116#
117# Message to display when viewing an empty folder.
118#
119# Default: (no messages)
120#empty-message=(no messages)
121
122# Message to display when no folders exists or are all filtered
123#
124# Default: (no folders)
125#empty-dirlist=(no folders)
126
127# Enable mouse events in the ui, e.g. clicking and scrolling with the mousewheel
128#
129# Default: false
130#mouse-enabled=false
131
132#
133# Ring the bell when new messages are received
134#
135# Default: true
136#new-message-bell=true
137
138#
139# Template to use for Account tab titles
140#
141# Default: {{.Account}}
142tab-title-account={{.Account}} {{if .Unread}}({{.Unread}}){{end}}
143
144# Marker to show before a pinned tab's name.
145#
146# Default: `
147#pinned-tab-marker='`'
148
149# Template for the left side of the directory list.
150# See aerc-templates(7) for all available fields and functions.
151#
152# Default: {{.Folder}}
153#dirlist-left={{.Folder}}
154
155# Template for the right side of the directory list.
156# See aerc-templates(7) for all available fields and functions.
157#
158# Default: {{if .Unread}}{{humanReadable .Unread}}/{{end}}{{if .Exists}}{{humanReadable .Exists}}{{end}}
159#dirlist-right={{if .Unread}}{{humanReadable .Unread}}/{{end}}{{if .Exists}}{{humanReadable .Exists}}{{end}}
160
161# Delay after which the messages are actually listed when entering a directory.
162# This avoids loading messages when skipping over folders and makes the UI more
163# responsive. If you do not want that, set it to 0s.
164#
165# Default: 200ms
166#dirlist-delay=200ms
167
168# Display the directory list as a foldable tree that allows to collapse and
169# expand the folders.
170#
171# Default: false
172#dirlist-tree=false
173
174# If dirlist-tree is enabled, set level at which folders are collapsed by
175# default. Set to 0 to disable.
176#
177# Default: 0
178#dirlist-collapse=0
179
180# List of space-separated criteria to sort the messages by, see *sort*
181# command in *aerc*(1) for reference. Prefixing a criterion with "-r "
182# reverses that criterion.
183#
184# Example: "from -r date"
185#
186#sort=
187
188# Moves to next message when the current message is deleted
189#
190# Default: true
191#next-message-on-delete=true
192
193# Automatically set the "seen" flag when a message is opened in the message
194# viewer.
195#
196# Default: true
197#auto-mark-read=true
198
199# The directories where the stylesets are stored. It takes a colon-separated
200# list of directories. If this is unset or if a styleset cannot be found, the
201# following paths will be used as a fallback in that order:
202#
203# ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/stylesets
204# ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/stylesets
205# /usr/local/share/aerc/stylesets
206# /usr/share/aerc/stylesets
207#
208#stylesets-dirs=
209
210# Uncomment to use box-drawing characters for vertical and horizontal borders.
211#
212# Default: " "
213#border-char-vertical=" "
214#border-char-horizontal=" "
215
216# Sets the styleset to use for the aerc ui elements.
217#
218# Default: default
219#styleset-name=default
220
221# Activates fuzzy search in commands and their arguments: the typed string is
222# searched in the command or option in any position, and need not be
223# consecutive characters in the command or option.
224#
225# Default: false
226#fuzzy-complete=false
227
228# How long to wait after the last input before auto-completion is triggered.
229#
230# Default: 250ms
231#completion-delay=250ms
232
233# The minimum required characters to allow auto-completion to be triggered after
234# completion-delay.
235#
236# Default: 1
237#completion-min-chars=1
238
239#
240# Global switch for completion popovers
241#
242# Default: true
243#completion-popovers=true
244
245# Uncomment to use UTF-8 symbols to indicate PGP status of messages
246#
247# Default: ASCII
248#icon-unencrypted=
249#icon-encrypted=✔
250#icon-signed=✔
251#icon-signed-encrypted=✔
252#icon-unknown=✘
253#icon-invalid=⚠
254
255# Reverses the order of the message list. By default, the message list is
256# ordered with the newest (highest UID) message on top. Reversing the order
257# will put the oldest (lowest UID) message on top. This can be useful in cases
258# where the backend does not support sorting.
259#
260# Default: false
261#reverse-msglist-order = false
262
263# Reverse display of the mesage threads. Default order is the the intial
264# message is on the top with all the replies being displayed below. The
265# reverse option will put the initial message at the bottom with the
266# replies on top.
267#
268# Default: false
269#reverse-thread-order=false
270
271# Sort the thread siblings according to the sort criteria for the messages. If
272# sort-thread-siblings is false, the thread siblings will be sorted based on
273# the message UID in ascending order. This option is only applicable for
274# client-side threading with a backend that enables sorting. Note that there's
275# a performance impact when sorting is activated.
276#
277# Default: false
278#sort-thread-siblings=false
279
280#[ui:account=foo]
281#
282# Enable a threaded view of messages. If this is not supported by the backend
283# (IMAP server or notmuch), threads will be built by the client.
284#
285# Default: false
286#threading-enabled=false
287
288# Force client-side thread building
289#
290# Default: false
291#force-client-threads=false
292
293# Debounce client-side thread building
294#
295# Default: 50ms
296#client-threads-delay=50ms
297
298[statusline]
299#
300# Describes the format for the status line. This is a comma separated list of
301# column names with an optional align and width suffix. See [ui].index-columns
302# for more details. To completely mute the status line except for push
303# notifications, explicitly set status-columns to an empty string.
304#
305# Default: left<*,center:=,right>*
306#status-columns=left<*,center:=,right>*
307
308#
309# Each name in status-columns must have a corresponding column-$name setting.
310# All column-$name settings accept golang text/template syntax. See
311# aerc-templates(7) for available template attributes and functions.
312#
313# Default settings
314#column-left=[{{.Account}}] {{.StatusInfo}}
315#column-center={{.PendingKeys}}
316#column-right={{.TrayInfo}}
317
318#
319# String separator inserted between columns.
320# See [ui].column-separator for more details.
321#
322#column-separator=" "
323
324# Specifies the separator between grouped statusline elements.
325#
326# Default: " | "
327#separator=" | "
328
329# Defines the mode for displaying the status elements.
330# Options: text, icon
331#
332# Default: text
333#display-mode=text
334
335[viewer]
336#
337# Specifies the pager to use when displaying emails. Note that some filters
338# may add ANSI codes to add color to rendered emails, so you may want to use a
339# pager which supports ANSI codes.
340#
341# Default: less -R
342#pager=less -R
343
344#
345# If an email offers several versions (multipart), you can configure which
346# mimetype to prefer. For example, this can be used to prefer plaintext over
347# html emails.
348#
349# Default: text/plain,text/html
350#alternatives=text/plain,text/html
351
352#
353# Default setting to determine whether to show full headers or only parsed
354# ones in message viewer.
355#
356# Default: false
357#show-headers=false
358
359#
360# Layout of headers when viewing a message. To display multiple headers in the
361# same row, separate them with a pipe, e.g. "From|To". Rows will be hidden if
362# none of their specified headers are present in the message.
363#
364# Default: From|To,Cc|Bcc,Date,Subject
365#header-layout=From|To,Cc|Bcc,Date,Subject
366
367# Whether to always show the mimetype of an email, even when it is just a single part
368#
369# Default: false
370#always-show-mime=false
371
372# Parses and extracts http links when viewing a message. Links can then be
373# accessed with the open-link command.
374#
375# Default: true
376#parse-http-links=true
377
378[compose]
379#
380# Specifies the command to run the editor with. It will be shown in an embedded
381# terminal, though it may also launch a graphical window if the environment
382# supports it. Defaults to $EDITOR, or vi.
383#editor=
384
385#
386# Default header fields to display when composing a message. To display
387# multiple headers in the same row, separate them with a pipe, e.g. "To|From".
388#
389# Default: To|From,Subject
390#header-layout=To|From,Subject
391
392#
393# Specifies the command to be used to tab-complete email addresses. Any
394# occurrence of "%s" in the address-book-cmd will be replaced with what the
395# user has typed so far.
396#
397# The command must output the completions to standard output, one completion
398# per line. Each line must be tab-delimited, with an email address occurring as
399# the first field. Only the email address field is required. The second field,
400# if present, will be treated as the contact name. Additional fields are
401# ignored.
402#
403# This parameter can also be set per account in accounts.conf.
404#address-book-cmd=
405
406# Specifies the command to be used to select attachments. Any occurence of '%s'
407# in the file-picker-cmd will be replaced the argument <arg> to :attach -m
408# <arg>.
409#
410# The command must output the selected files to standard output, one file per
411# line.
412#file-picker-cmd=
413
414#
415# Allow to address yourself when replying
416#
417# Default: true
418#reply-to-self=true
419
420#
421# Warn before sending an email that matches the specified regexp but does not
422# have any attachments. Leave empty to disable this feature.
423#
424# Uses Go's regexp syntax, documented at https://golang.org/s/re2syntax. The
425# "(?im)" flags are set by default (case-insensitive and multi-line).
426#
427# Example:
428# no-attachment-warning=^[^>]*attach(ed|ment)
429#
430#no-attachment-warning=
431
432#
433# When set, aerc will generate "format=flowed" bodies with a content type of
434# "text/plain; format=flowed" as described in RFC3676. This format is easier to
435# handle for some mailing software, and generally just looks like ordinary
436# text. To actually make use of this format's features, you'll need support in
437# your editor.
438#
439#format-flowed=false
440
441[multipart-converters]
442#
443# Converters allow to generate multipart/alternative messages by converting the
444# main text/plain part into any other MIME type. Only exact MIME types are
445# accepted. The commands are invoked with sh -c and are expected to output
446# valid UTF-8 text.
447#
448# Example (obviously, this requires that you write your main text/plain body
449# using the markdown syntax):
450text/html=pandoc -f markdown -t html --standalone
451
452[filters]
453#
454# Filters allow you to pipe an email body through a shell command to render
455# certain emails differently, e.g. highlighting them with ANSI escape codes.
456#
457# The commands are invoked with sh -c. The following folders are appended to
458# the system $PATH to allow referencing filters from their name only:
459#
460# ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/filters
461# ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/filters
462# $PREFIX/share/aerc/filters
463# /usr/share/aerc/filters
464#
465# The following variables are defined in the filter command environment:
466#
467# AERC_MIME_TYPE the part MIME type/subtype
468# AERC_FORMAT the part content type format= parameter
469# AERC_FILENAME the attachment filename (if any)
470# AERC_SUBJECT the message Subject header value
471# AERC_FROM the message From header value
472#
473# The first filter which matches the email's mimetype will be used, so order
474# them from most to least specific.
475#
476# You can also match on non-mimetypes, by prefixing with the header to match
477# against (non-case-sensitive) and a comma, e.g. subject,text will match a
478# subject which contains "text". Use header,~regex to match against a regex.
479#
480text/plain=colorize
481text/calendar=calendar
482message/delivery-status=colorize
483message/rfc822=colorize
484text/html=pandoc -f html -t plain | colorize
485#text/html=html | colorize
486text/*=bat -fP --file-name="$AERC_FILENAME"
487#application/x-sh=bat -fP -l sh
488#image/*=catimg -w $(tput cols) -
489#subject,~Git(hub|lab)=lolcat -f
490#from,thatguywhodoesnothardwraphismessages=wrap -w 100 | colorize
491
492# This special filter is only used to post-process email headers when
493# [viewer].show-headers=true
494# By default, headers are piped directly into the pager.
495#
496.headers=colorize
497
498[openers]
499#
500# Openers allow you to specify the command to use for the :open and :open-link
501# actions on a per-MIME-type basis. The :open-link URL scheme is used to
502# determine the MIME type as follows: x-scheme-handler/<scheme>.
503#
504# {} is expanded as the temporary filename to be opened. If it is not
505# encountered in the command, the temporary filename will be appened to the end
506# of the command.
507#
508# Like [filters], openers support basic shell globbing. The first opener which
509# matches the part's MIME type (or URL scheme handler MIME type) will be used,
510# so order them from most to least specific.
511#
512# Examples:
513# x-scheme-handler/irc=hexchat
514# x-scheme-handler/http*=firefox
515# text/html=surf -dfgms
516# text/plain=gvim {} +125
517# message/rfc822=thunderbird
518
519[hooks]
520#
521# Hooks are triggered whenever the associated event occurs.
522
523#
524# Executed when a new email arrives in the selected folder
525#mail-received=notify-send "New mail from $AERC_FROM_NAME" "$AERC_SUBJECT"
526
527#
528# Executed when aerc starts
529#aerc-startup=aerc :terminal calcurse && aerc :next-tab
530
531#
532# Executed when aerc shuts down.
533#aerc-shutdown=
534
535[templates]
536# Templates are used to populate email bodies automatically.
537#
538
539# The directories where the templates are stored. It takes a colon-separated
540# list of directories. If this is unset or if a template cannot be found, the
541# following paths will be used as a fallback in that order:
542#
543# ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/templates
544# ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/templates
545# /usr/local/share/aerc/templates
546# /usr/share/aerc/templates
547#
548#template-dirs=
549
550# The default template to be used for new messages.
551#
552# default: new_message
553#new-message=new_message
554
555# The default template to be used for quoted replies.
556#
557# default: quoted_reply
558#quoted-reply=quoted_reply
559
560# The default template to be used for forward as body.
561#
562# default: forward_as_body
563#forwards=forward_as_body