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author | Bence Ferdinandy <bence@ferdinandy.com> | 2022-11-26 22:41:10 +0100 |
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committer | Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc> | 2022-11-30 16:15:11 +0100 |
commit | 169a967111c70d7f413ec15be715d9c513c29878 (patch) | |
tree | c08073c51ad6a3f919617935cd65e57120abfcd5 /doc/aerc-config.5.scd | |
parent | eebb85a9d5bd35b460d5cf89a0cadcfce5b68137 (diff) | |
download | aerc-169a967111c70d7f413ec15be715d9c513c29878.tar.gz |
man: update filters section
Add more detailed explanation of how filters work and substantially
increase number and detail of examples.
Signed-off-by: Bence Ferdinandy <bence@ferdinandy.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/aerc-config.5.scd')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/aerc-config.5.scd | 162 |
1 files changed, 138 insertions, 24 deletions
diff --git a/doc/aerc-config.5.scd b/doc/aerc-config.5.scd index 9df2ad49..cd78abbe 100644 --- a/doc/aerc-config.5.scd +++ b/doc/aerc-config.5.scd @@ -565,16 +565,25 @@ These options are configured in the *[compose]* section of _aerc.conf_. # FILTERS -Filters allow you to pipe an email body through a shell command to render -certain emails differently, e.g. highlighting them with ANSI escape codes. -They are configured in the *[filters]* section of _aerc.conf_. - -The first filter which matches the email's mimetype will be used, so order -them from most to least specific. - -You can also match on non-mimetypes, by prefixing with the header to match -against (non-case-sensitive) and a comma, e.g. _subject,text_ will match a -subject which contains _text_. Use _header,~regex_ to match against a _regex_. +Filters are a flexible and powerful way of handling viewing parts of an opened +message. When viewing messages aerc will show the list of available message +parts and their MIME type at the bottom, but unless a filter is defined for +a specific MIME type, it will only show a menu with a few options (allowing you +to open the part in an external program, save it to disk or pipe it to a shell +command). Configuring a filter will allow viewing the output of the filter in +the configured *pager* in aerc's built-in terminal. + +Filters are configured in the *[filters]* section of *aerc.conf*. The first +filter which matches the part's MIME type will be used, so order them from most +to least specific. You can also match on non-MIME types, by prefixing with the +header to match against (non-case-sensitive) and a comma, e.g. _subject,text_ +will match a subject which contains _text_. Use _header,~regex_ to match +against a _regex_. + +Note that aerc will pipe the content into the configured filter program, so +filters need to be able to read from standard input. Many programs support +reading from stdin by putting _-_ instead of a path to a file. You can also +chain together multiple filters by piping with _|_. aerc ships with some default filters installed in the share directory (usually _/usr/share/aerc/filters_). Note that these may have additional dependencies @@ -606,21 +615,126 @@ The following variables are defined in the filter command environment: Note that said email body is converted into UTF-8 before being passed to filters. -Example: +## EXAMPLES -``` -[filters] -from,thatguywhodoesnothardwraphismessages=fmt -w 72 | colorize -subject,~Git(hub|lab)=lolcat -f -text/plain=colorize -text/calendar=calendar | colorize -message/delivery-status=colorize -message/rfc822=colorize -text/html=html | colorize -text/*=bat -fP --file-name="$AERC_FILENAME" -application/x-sh=bat -fP -l sh -image/*=catimg -w $(tput cols) - -``` +_text/plain_ + Color some things, e.g. quotes, git diffs, links, etc.: + + ``` + text/plain=colorize + ``` + + Wrap long lines at 100 characters, while not messing up nested quotes. + Not perfect, but works for most emails: + + ``` + text/plain=fmt -s -p ">>" -w 100 | fmt -s -p ">" -w 100 | fmt -s -w 100 | colorize + ``` + +_from,<sender>_ + Another example of hard wrapping lines of emails sent by a specific + person but using neovim which handles nested quotes without issues: + + ``` + from,thatguywhoneverhardwrapshismessages=case "$AERC_SUBJECT" in \\ + \*PATCH\*) cat;; \\ + \*) nvim - -u NONE -es '+set ft=mail fo=tcqwn1j tw=80' \\ + '+:norm! gggqG' '+%print' '+:q!';; \\ + esac | colorize + ``` + +_subject,~<regexp>_ + Use rainbow coloring with *lolcat*(1) for emails sent by software + forges: + + ``` + subject,~Git(hub|lab)=lolcat -f + ``` + +_text/html_ + Render html to a more human readable version and colorize: + + ``` + text/html=html | colorize + ``` + + Use pandoc to output plain text: + + ``` + text/html=pandoc -f html -t plain + ``` + +_text/calendar_ + Parse calendar invites: + + ``` + text/calendar=calendar + ``` + +_text/\*_ + Catch any other type of text that did not have a specific filter and + use *bat*(1) to color these: + + ``` + text/\*=bat -fP --file-name="$AERC_FILENAME" --style=plain + ``` + +_message/delivery-status_ + When not being able to deliver the provider might send such emails: + + ``` + message/delivery-status=colorize + ``` + +_message/rfc822_ + When getting emails as attachments, e.g. on some mailing lists digest + format is sending an email with all the digest emails as attachments. + Requires *caeml*(1) to be on *PATH*: + + ``` + message/rfc822=caeml | colorize + ``` + + https://github.com/ferdinandyb/caeml + +_application/mbox_ + Emails as attachments in the mbox format. For example aerc can also + create an mbox from messages with the *:pipe* command. Requires + *catbox*(1) and *caeml*(1) to be on *PATH*: + + ``` + application/mbox=catbox -c caeml | colorize + ``` + + https://github.com/konimarti/catbox + +_application/pdf_ + Render pdf to text and rewrap at 100 character width. Requires + *pdftotext*(1) to be on *PATH*: + + ``` + application/pdf=pdftotext - -l 10 -nopgbrk -q - | fmt -w 100 + ``` + + https://www.xpdfreader.com/pdftotext-man.html + +_image/\*_ + This is a tricky topic. It's possible to display images in a terminal, + but for high resolution images the terminal you are using either needs + to support sixels or the kitty terminal graphics protocol. + Unfortunately, aerc's built-in terminal supports neither, so only highly + pixelated images can be shown natively. A workaround is possible by + asking the terminal to draw on top of aerc and then remove the image + when done viewing. + + The built-in terminal can show pixelated images with *catimg*(1): + + ``` + image/\*=catimg -w$(tput cols) - + ``` + +See the wiki at https://man.sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc/ for more examples and possible +customizations of the built-in filters (e.g. colors of _colorize_). # OPENERS |