X-Git-Url: https://git.cworth.org/git?a=blobdiff_plain;f=emacstips.mdwn;h=84d616189ced7b3129ed32bfe2d5c3f3b6722fc4;hb=792fd375db0281ef388914709f68cfc2a2743610;hp=03bb5b60d6b9ffa185b66b8add8b3362ff973dce;hpb=1705ac358c39eb780b5cf77fd00c0e65b7876bdb;p=notmuch-wiki diff --git a/emacstips.mdwn b/emacstips.mdwn index 03bb5b6..84d6161 100644 --- a/emacstips.mdwn +++ b/emacstips.mdwn @@ -218,7 +218,7 @@ displaying the count for the saved-search. For example (setq notmuch-saved-searches '((:name "inbox" :query "tag:inbox" :count-query "tag:inbox and tag:unread" - :sort-order 'oldest-first))) + :sort-order oldest-first))) specifies a single saved search for inbox, but the number displayed by the search will be the number of unread messages in the inbox, and the @@ -274,6 +274,41 @@ With that in place, you need a `.msmtprc` with the accounts configured for the domains you want to send out using specific SMTP servers and the rest will go to the default account. +## sending mail using smtpmail + +another option is to use remov + + + +If setting up local `sendmail` or `msmtp` is not feasible or desirable, +the Emacs `smtpmail` package can be used to send email by talking to remote +SMTP server via TCP connection. It is pretty easy to configure: + +1. `M-x customize-group smtpmail` + + as as minimum, 'Smtpmail Smtp Server' needs to be set. + + - then continue with `M-x load-library message` and + `M-x customize-variable message-send-mail-function` + -- choose `message-smtpmail-send-it` for that. + +1. Set some variables in .emacs or in [notmuch init file](/notmuch-emacs#notmuch_init_file) + + (setq smtpmail-smtp-server "smtp.server.tld" ;; <-- edit this !!! + ;; smtpmail-smtp-service 25 ;; 25 is default -- uncomment and edit if needed + ;; smtpmail-stream-type 'starttls + ;; smtpmail-debug-info t + ;; smtpmail-debug-verb t + message-send-mail-function 'message-smtpmail-send-it) + +More information for smtpmail is available: + +* In Emacs: `M-x info-display-manual smtpmail` +* At http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/SendingMail + + ## Address completion when composing There are currently three solutions to this: @@ -318,7 +353,7 @@ available: from notmuch. It also includes a vim plugin. You can perform tab-completion using any of these programs. -Just add the following to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file): +Just add the following to your [notmuch init file](/notmuch-emacs#notmuch_init_file): (require 'notmuch-address) (setq notmuch-address-command "/path/to/address_fetching_program") @@ -352,7 +387,7 @@ Enter the cloned repository and create a build directory: You will find the akonadimailsearch binary in the build/src directory. Copy it to ~/bin . You can now add the following settings to your -[notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file): +[notmuch init file](/notmuch-emacs#notmuch_init_file): (require 'notmuch-address) (setq notmuch-address-command "~/bin/akonadimailsearch") @@ -484,7 +519,7 @@ See also the **Usage:** section in `gnus-alias.el`. ## Resending (or bouncing) messages -Add the following to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file) to be able +Add the following to your [notmuch init file](/notmuch-emacs#notmuch_init_file) to be able to resend the current message in show mode. (define-key notmuch-show-mode-map "b" @@ -496,7 +531,7 @@ to resend the current message in show mode. ## `notmuch-hello` refresh status message -Add the following to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file) to get a +Add the following to your [notmuch init file](/notmuch-emacs#notmuch_init_file) to get a status message about the change in the number of messages in the mail store when refreshing the `notmuch-hello` buffer. @@ -526,7 +561,7 @@ when refreshing the `notmuch-hello` buffer. Mailman mailing list software rewrites and rewraps long message subjects in a way that causes TABs to appear in the middle of the subject and header -lines. Add this to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file) to replace +lines. Add this to your [notmuch init file](/notmuch-emacs#notmuch_init_file) to replace tabs with spaces in subject lines: (defun notmuch-show-subject-tabs-to-spaces () @@ -673,14 +708,14 @@ notmuch-show-stash-mlarchive-link-alist RET`. Add a new entry with "Function returning the URL:" set to: - (lambda (message-id) - (concat "http://patchwork.example.com/patch/" - (nth 0 - (process-lines "/path/to/pwclient" "search" - "-p" "the-project" - "-m" (concat "<" message-id ">") - "-n" "1" - "-f" "%{id}")))) + (lambda (message-id) + (concat "http://patchwork.example.com/patch/" + (nth 0 + (process-lines "/path/to/pwclient" "search" + "-p" "the-project" + "-m" (concat "<" message-id ">") + "-n" "1" + "-f" "%{id}")))) Replacing `http://patchwork.example.com/patch/`, `/path/to/pwclient`, and `the-project` appropiately. You should now be able to stash the Patchwork URL @@ -689,22 +724,22 @@ using `c l`. Going further, if the patch has been committed, you can get the commit hash with this: - (lambda (message-id) - (nth 0 - (process-lines "/path/to/pwclient" "search" - "-p" "the-project" - "-m" (concat "<" message-id ">") - "-n" "1" - "-f" "%{commit_ref}"))) + (lambda (message-id) + (nth 0 + (process-lines "/path/to/pwclient" "search" + "-p" "the-project" + "-m" (concat "<" message-id ">") + "-n" "1" + "-f" "%{commit_ref}"))) And finally, if the project has a web interface to its source repository, you can turn the commit hash into a URL pointing there, for example: - (lambda (message-id) - (concat "http://cgit.example.com/the-project/commit/?id=" - (nth 0 - (process-lines "/path/to/pwclient" "search" - "-p" "the-project" - "-m" (concat "<" message-id ">") - "-n" "1" - "-f" "%{commit_ref}")))) + (lambda (message-id) + (concat "http://cgit.example.com/the-project/commit/?id=" + (nth 0 + (process-lines "/path/to/pwclient" "search" + "-p" "the-project" + "-m" (concat "<" message-id ">") + "-n" "1" + "-f" "%{commit_ref}"))))