aerc-config(5) # NAME aerc-config - configuration file formats for *aerc*(1) # CONFIGURATION There are three aerc config files: *aerc.conf*, *binds.conf*, and *accounts.conf*. The last one must be kept secret, as it may include your account credentials. We look for these files in your XDG config home plus "aerc", which defaults to ~/.config/aerc. Examples of these config files are typically included with your installation of aerc and are usually installed in /usr/share/aerc. Each file uses the _ini_ format, and consists of sections with keys and values. A line beginning with # is considered a comment and ignored, as are empty lines. New sections begin with [section-name] on a single line, and keys and values are separated with "=". # AERC.CONF This file is used for configuring the general appearance and behavior of aerc. ## GENERAL OPTIONS These options are configured in the *[general]* section of aerc.conf. *default-save-path* Used as a default path for save operations if no other path is specified. *pgp-provider* If set to "gpg", aerc will use system gpg binary and keystore for all crypto operations. Otherwise, the internal openpgp implementation will be used. Default: internal *unsafe-accounts-conf* By default, the file permissions of accounts.conf must be restrictive and only allow reading by the file owner (_0600_). Set this option to *true* to ignore this permission check. Use this with care as it may expose your credentials. Default: false ## UI OPTIONS These options are configured in the *[ui]* section of aerc.conf. *index-format* Describes the format for each row in a mailbox view. This field is compatible with mutt's printf-like syntax. Default: %D %-17.17n %s [- *Format specifier* :[ *Description* | %% : literal % | %a : sender address | %A : reply-to address, or sender address if none | %C : message number | %d : formatted message timestamp | %D : formatted message timestamp converted to local timezone | %f : sender name and address | %F : author name, or recipient name if the message is from you. The address is shown if no name part. | %g : message labels (for example notmuch tags) | %i : message id | %n : sender name, or sender address if none | %r : comma-separated list of formatted recipient names and addresses | %R : comma-separated list of formatted CC names and addresses | %s : subject | %t : the (first) address the new email was sent to | %T : the account name which received the email | %u : sender mailbox name (e.g. "smith" in "smith@example.net") | %v : sender first name (e.g. "Alex" in "Alex Smith ") | %Z : flags (O=old, N=new, r=answered, D=deleted, !=flagged, \*=marked) *timestamp-format* See time.Time#Format at https://godoc.org/time#Time.Format Default: "2006-01-02 03:04 PM" (ISO 8601 + 12 hour time) *this-day-time-format* Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent today. If this is not specified, *timestamp-format* is used instead. Default: "" *this-week-time-format* Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent within the last 7 days. If this is not specified, *timestamp-format* is used instead. Default: "" *this-year-time-format* Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent this year. If this is not specified, *timestamp-format* is used instead. Default: "" *message-view-timestamp-format* If set, overrides *timestamp-format* for the message view. Default: "" *message-view-this-day-time-format* If set, overrides *timestamp-format* in the message view for messages that were received/sent today. Default: "" *message-view-this-week-time-format* If set, overrides *timestamp-format* in the message view for messages that were recieved/sent within the last 7 days. Default: "" *message-view-this-year-time-format* If set, overrides *timestamp-format* in the message view for messages that were received/sent this year. Default: "" *sidebar-width* Width of the sidebar, including the border. Set to zero to disable the sidebar. Default: 20 *empty-message* Message to display when viewing an empty folder. Default: (no messages) *empty-dirlist* Message to display when no folders exists or are all filtered. Default: (no folders) *mouse-enabled* Enable mouse events in the ui, e.g. clicking and scrolling with the mousewheel Default: false *new-message-bell* Ring the bell when a new message is received. Default: true *pinned-tab-marker* Marker to show before a pinned tab's name. Default: ` *spinner* Animation shown while loading, split by spinner-delimiter (below) Examples: - spinner = "\-\_-,\_-\_" - spinner = '. , .' - spinner = "\,|,/,-" Default: "[..] , [..] , [..] , [..] , [..], [..] , [..] , [..] " *spinner-delimiter* Spinner delimiter to split string into an animation Default: "," *sort* List of space-separated criteria to sort the messages by, see *sort* command in *aerc*(1) for reference. Prefixing a criterion with "-r " reverses that criterion. Example: "from -r date" Default: "" *dirlist-format* Describes the format string to use for the directory list Default: %n %>r [- *Format specifier* :[ *Description* | %% : literal % | %n : directory name | %N : compacted directory name | %r : recent/unseen/total message count | %>X : make format specifier 'X' be right justified *dirlist-delay* Delay after which the messages are actually listed when entering a directory. This avoids loading messages when skipping over folders and makes the UI more responsive. If you do not want that, set it to 0s. Default: 200ms *dirlist-tree* Display the directory list as a foldable tree. Default: false *dirlist-collapse* If dirlist-tree is enabled, set level at which folders are collapsed by default. Set to 0 to disable. Default: 0 *next-message-on-delete* Moves to next message when the current message is deleted Default: true *auto-mark-read* Set the "seen" flag when a message is opened in the message viewer. Default: true *completion-popovers* Shows potential auto-completions for text inputs in popovers. Default: true *completion-delay* How long to wait after the last input before auto-completion is triggered. Default: 250ms *completion-min-chars* The minimum required characters to allow auto-completion to be triggered after *completion-delay*. Default: 1 *border-char-vertical* *border-char-horizontal* Set stylable characters (via the 'border' element) for vertical and horizontal borders. Default: spaces *stylesets-dirs* The directories where the stylesets are stored. The config takes a colon-separated list of dirs. If this is unset or if a styleset cannot be found, the following paths will be used as a fallback in that order: ``` ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/stylesets ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/stylesets /usr/local/share/aerc/stylesets /usr/share/aerc/stylesets ``` Default: "" *styleset-name* The name of the styleset to be used to style the ui elements. The stylesets are stored in the 'stylesets' directory in the config directory. Default: default Have a look at *aerc-stylesets*(7) as to how a styleset looks like. *icon-unencrypted* The icon to display for unencrypted mails. The status indicator is only displayed if an icon is set. Default: "" *icon-encrypted* The icon to display for encrypted mails. Default: [e] *icon-signed* The icon to display for signed mails where the signature was successfully validated. Default: [s] *icon-signed-encrypted* The icon to display for signed and encrypted mails where the signature was successfully verified. The combined icon is only used if set, otherwise the signed and encrypted icons are displayed separately. Default: "" *icon-unknown* The icon to display for signed mails which could not be verified due to the key being unknown. Default: [s?] *icon-invalid* The icon to display for signed mails where verification failed. Default: [s!] *fuzzy-complete* When typing a command or option, the popover will now show not only the items /starting/ with the string input by the user, but it will also show instances of items /containing/ the string, starting at any position and need not be consecutive characters in the command or option. *reverse-msglist-order* Reverses the order of the message list. By default, the message list is ordered with the newest (highest UID) message on top. Reversing the order will put the oldest (lowest UID) message on top. This can be useful in cases where the backend does not support sorting. Default: false *reverse-thread-order* Reverse display of the mesage threads. Default order is the the intial message is on the top with all the replies being displayed below. The reverse option will put the initial message at the bottom with the replies on top. Default: false *sort-thread-siblings* Sort the thread siblings according to the sort criteria for the messages. If sort-thread-siblings is false, the thread siblings will be sorted based on the message UID. This option is only applicable for client-side threading with a backend that enables sorting. Default: false *threading-enabled* Enable a threaded view of messages. If this is not supported by the backend (IMAP server or notmuch), threads will be built by the client. Default: false *force-client-threads* Force threads to be built client-side. Backends that don't support threading will always build threads client side. Default: false ## Contextual UI Configuration The UI configuration can be specialized for accounts, specific mail directories and message subjects. The specializations are added using contextual config sections based on the context. The contextual UI configuration is merged to the base UiConfig in the following order: *Base UIConfig > Account Context > Folder Context > Subject Context.* *[ui:account=]* Adds account specific configuration with the account name. *[ui:folder=]* Add folder specific configuration with the folder name. *[ui:folder~]* Add folder specific configuration for folders whose names match the regular expression. *[ui:subject~]* Add specialized ui configuration for messages that match a given regular expression. Example: ``` [ui:account=Work] sidebar-width=... [ui:folder=Sent] index-format=... [ui:folder~Archive/\d+/.*] index-format=... [ui:subject~^\[PATCH] index-format=... ``` ## STATUSLINE These options are configured in the *[statusline]* section of aerc.conf. *render-format* Describes the format string for the statusline format. For a minimal statusline that only shows the current account and the connection information, use [%a] %c. To completely mute the statusline (except for push notifications), use %m only. Default: [%a] %S %>%T [- *Format specifier* :[ *Description* | %% : literal % | %a : active account name | %d : active directory name | %c : connection state | %p : current path | %m : mute statusline and show only push notifications | %S : general status information (e.g. connection state, filter, search) | %T : general on/off information (e.g. passthrough, threading, sorting) | %> : does not print anything but all format specifier that follow will be right justified. *separator* Specifies the separator between grouped statusline elements (e.g. for the %S and %T specifiers in *render-format*). Default: " | " *display-mode* Defines the mode for displaying the status elements. Options: text, icon Default: text ## VIEWER These options are configured in the *[viewer]* section of aerc.conf. *pager* Specifies the pager to use when displaying emails. Note that some filters may add ANSI escape sequences to add color to rendered emails, so you may want to use a pager which supports ANSI. Default: less -R *alternatives* If an email offers several versions (multipart), you can configure which mimetype to prefer. For example, this can be used to prefer plaintext over HTML emails. Default: text/plain,text/html *header-layout* Defines the default headers to display when viewing a message. To display multiple headers in the same row, separate them with a pipe, e.g. "From|To". Rows will be hidden if none of their specified headers are present in the message. Authentication information from the Authentication-Results header can be displayed by adding DKIM, SPF or DMARC. To show more information than just the authentication result, append a plus sign (+) to the header name (e.g. DKIM+). Default: From|To,Cc|Bcc,Date,Subject *show-headers* Default setting to determine whether to show full headers or only parsed ones in message viewer. Default: false *always-show-mime* Whether to always show the mimetype of an email, even when it is just a single part. Default: false *parse-http-links* Parses and extracts http links when viewing a message. Links can then be accessed with the open-link command. Default: true ## COMPOSE These options are configured in the *[compose]* section of aerc.conf. *editor* Specifies the command to run the editor with. It will be shown in an embedded terminal, though it may also launch a graphical window if the environment supports it. Defaults to *$EDITOR*, or *vi*(1). *header-layout* Defines the default headers to display when composing a message. To display multiple headers in the same row, separate them with a pipe, e.g. "To|From". Default: To|From,Subject *address-book-cmd* Specifies the command to be used to tab-complete email addresses. Any occurrence of "%s" in the address-book-cmd will be replaced with anything the user has typed after the last comma. The command must output the completions to standard output, one completion per line. Each line must be tab-delimited, with an email address occurring as the first field. Only the email address field is required. The second field, if present, will be treated as the contact name. Additional fields are ignored. This parameter can also be set per account in accounts.conf. Example: khard email --remove-first-line --parsable '%s' Default: none *reply-to-self* If set to false, do not mail yourself when replying (e.g., if replying to emails previously sent by yourself, address your replies to the original To: and Cc:). Default: true *no-attachment-warning* Specifies a regular expression against which an email's body should be tested before sending an email with no attachment. If the regexp matches, aerc will warn you before sending the message. Leave empty to disable this feature. Uses Go's regexp syntax, documented at https://golang.org/s/re2syntax. The "(?im)" flags are set by default (case-insensitive and multi-line). Example: no-attachment-warning=^[^>]\*attach(ed|ment) Default: none ## 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. aerc ships with some default filters installed in the share directory (usually _/usr/share/aerc/filters_). Note that these may have additional dependencies that aerc does not have alone. The filter commands are invoked with sh -c [command]. The following folders are appended to the system $PATH to allow referencing filters from their name only. ``` ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/filters ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/filters $PREFIX/share/aerc/filters /usr/share/aerc/filters ``` The following variables are defined in the filter command environment: _AERC_MIME_TYPE_ the part MIME type/subtype _AERC_FILENAME_ the attachment filename (if any) Note that said email body is converted into UTF-8 before being passed to filters. ## OPENERS Openers allow you to specify the command to use for the *:open* action on a per-MIME-type basis. They are configured in the *[openers]* section of aerc.conf. *{}* is expanded as the temporary filename to be opened. If it is not encountered in the command, the temporary filename will be appened to the end of the command. Environment variables are also expanded. Tilde is not expanded. Example: ``` [openers] text/html=surf -dfgms text/plain=gvim {} +125 message/rfc822=thunderbird ``` ## TRIGGERS Triggers specify commands to execute when certain events occur. They are configured in the *[triggers]* section of aerc.conf. *new-email* Executed when a new email arrives in the selected folder. e.g. new-email=exec notify-send "New email from %n" "%s" Default: "" Format specifiers from *index-format* are expanded with respect to the new message. ## TEMPLATES Templates are used to populate the body of an email. The compose, reply and forward commands can be called with the -T flag with the name of the template name. aerc ships with some default templates installed in the share directory (usually _/usr/share/aerc/templates_). These options are configured in the *[templates]* section of aerc.conf. *template-dirs* The directory where the templates are stored. The config takes a colon-separated list of dirs. If this is unset or if a template cannot be found, the following paths will be used as a fallback in that order: ``` ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/templates ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/templates /usr/local/share/aerc/templates /usr/share/aerc/templates ``` Default: "" *new-message* The default template to be used for new messages. Default: "new_message" *quoted-reply* The default template to be used for quoted replies. Default: "quoted_reply" *forwards* The default template to be used for forward as body. Default: "forward_as_body" # ACCOUNTS.CONF This file is used for configuring each mail account used for aerc. Each section is the name of an account you want to configure, and the keys & values in that section specify details of that account's configuration. In addition to the options documented here, specific transports for incoming and outgoing emails may have additional configuration parameters, documented on their respective man pages. Note that many of these configuration options are written for you, such as *source* and *outgoing*, when you run the account configuration wizard (*:new-account*). *archive* Specifies a folder to use as the destination of the *:archive* command. Default: Archive *check-mail* Specifies an interval to check for new mail. Mail will be checked at startup, and every interval. IMAP accounts will check for mail in all unselected folders, and the selected folder will continue to receive PUSH mail notifications. Maildir/Notmuch folders must use *check-mail-cmd* in conjunction with this option. See *aerc-maildir* and *aerc-notmuch* for more information. Setting this option to 0 will disable check-mail Example: 5m Default: 0 *copy-to* Specifies a folder to copy sent mails to, usually "Sent". Default: none *default* Specifies the default folder to open in the message list when aerc configures this account. Default: INBOX *folders* Specifies the comma separated list of folders to display in the sidebar. Names prefixed with ~ are interpreted as regular expressions. Default: all folders *folders-exclude* Specifies the comma separated list of folders to exclude from the sidebar. Names prefixed with ~ are interpreted as regular expressions. Note that this overrides anything from *folders*. Default: no folders *enable-folders-sort* If true, folders are sorted, first by specified folders (see *folders-sort*), then alphabetically. Default: true *folders-sort* Specifies a comma separated list of folders to be shown at the top of the list in the provided order. Remaining folders will be sorted alphabetically. Default: none *from* The default value to use for the From header in new emails. This should be an RFC 5322-compatible string, such as "Your Name ". Default: none *aliases* All aliases of the current account. These will be used to fill in the From: field. Make sure that your email server accepts this value, or for example use *aerc-sendmail*(5) in combination with msmtp and --read-envelope-from. Default: none *outgoing* Specifies the transport for sending outgoing emails on this account. It should be a connection string, and the specific meaning of each component varies depending on the protocol in use. See each protocol's man page for more details: - *aerc-smtp*(5) *outgoing-cred-cmd* Specifies an optional command that is run to get the outgoing account's password. See each protocol's man page for more details. Default: none *outgoing-cred-cmd-cache* By default, the credentials returned by the command will be cached until aerc is shut down. If set to false, *outgoing-cred-cmd* will be executed every time an email is to be sent. Default: true *pgp-auto-sign* If true, all outgoing emails from this account will be signed (if a signing key is available) Default: false *pgp-key-id* Specify the key id to use when signing a message. Can be either short or long key id. If unset, aerc will look up the key by email *pgp-opportunistic-encrypt* If true, any outgoing email from this account will be encrypted when all recipients (including "cc" and "bcc" field) have a public key available in the keyring Default: false *postpone* Specifies the folder to save postponed messages to. Default: Drafts *send-as-utc* Converts the timestamp of the Date header to UTC. Default: false *source* Specifies the source for reading incoming emails on this account. This key is required for all accounts. It should be a connection string, and the specific meaning of each component varies depending on the protocol in use. See each protocol's man page for more details: - *aerc-imap*(5) - *aerc-maildir*(5) - *aerc-notmuch*(5) Default: none *source-cred-cmd* Specifies an optional command that is run to get the source account's password. See each protocol's man page for more details. *signature-file* Specifies the file to read in order to obtain the signature to be added to emails sent from this account. *signature-cmd* Specifies the command to execute in *sh* in order to obtain the signature to be added to emails sent from this account. If the command fails then *signature-file* is used instead. *trusted-authres* Comma-separated list of trustworthy hostnames from which the Authentication Results header will be displayed. Entries can be regular expressions. If you want to trust any host (e.g. for debugging), use the wildcard \*. # BINDS.CONF This file is used for configuring keybindings used in the aerc interactive client. You may configure different keybindings for different contexts by writing them into different *[sections]* of the ini file. The available contexts are: *[messages]* keybindings for the message list *[view]* keybindings for the message viewer *[view::passthrough]* keybindings for the viewer, when in key passthrough mode (toggled with :toggle-key-passthrough) *[compose]* keybindings for the message composer *[compose::editor]* keybindings for the composer, when the editor is focused *[compose::review]* keybindings for the composer, when reviewing the email before it's sent *[terminal]* keybindings for terminal tabs You may also configure account specific key bindings for each context: *[context:account=]* keybindings for this context and account, where matches the account name you provided in *accounts.conf*. Folder-specific bindings can be configured for message lists: *[messages:folder=]* keybindings under this section will be specific to the folder named . Keybindings from a *folder* specifier will take precedence over *account* specifiers Example: ``` [messages:account=Mailbox] c = :cf path:mailbox/** and [compose::editor:account=Mailbox2] [messages:folder=Drafts] = :recall ... ``` You may also configure global keybindings by placing them at the beginning of the file, before specifying any context-specific sections. For each *key=value* option specified, the _key_ is the keystrokes pressed (in order) to invoke this keybinding, and _value_ specifies keystrokes that aerc will simulate when the keybinding is invoked. Generally this is used to execute commands, for example: rq = :reply -q Pressing r, then q, will simulate typing in ":reply -q", and execute :reply -q accordingly. It is also possible to invoke keybindings recursively in a similar fashion. Additionally, the following special options are available in each binding context: *$noinherit* If set to "true", global keybindings will not be effective in this context. Default: false *$ex* This can be set to a keystroke which will bring up the command input in this context. Default: ':' In addition to letters, special keys may be specified in . The following special keys are supported: [[ *Name* :- *Description* | space : " " | semicolon : ; | tab : Tab | enter : Enter | up : Up arrow | c-up : Ctrl+Up | a-up : Alt+Up | down : Down arrow | c-down : Ctrl+Down | a-down : Alt+Down | right : Right arrow | c-right : Ctrl+Right | a-right : Alt+Right | left : Left arrow | c-left : Ctrl+Left | a-left : Alt+Left | pgup : Page Up | c-pgup : Ctrl+PageUp | a-pgup : Alt+PageUp | pgdn : Page Down | c-pgdn : Ctrl+PageDn | a-pgdn : Alt+PageDn | home : Home | end : End | insert : Insert | delete : Delete | exit : Exit | cancel : Cancel | print : Print screen | pause : Pause | backtab : Shift+Tab | c-space : Ctrl+Space | a-space : Alt+Space | c-a : Ctrl+a | a-a : Alt+a | c-b : Ctrl+b | a-b : Alt+b | c-c : Ctrl+c | a-c : Alt+c | c-d : Ctrl+d | a-d : Alt+d | c-e : Ctrl+e | a-e : Alt+e | c-f : Ctrl+f | a-f : Alt+f | c-g : Ctrl+g | a-g : Alt+g | c-h : Ctrl+h | a-h : Alt+h | c-i : Ctrl+i | a-i : Alt+i | c-j : Ctrl+j | a-j : Alt+j | c-k : Ctrl+k | a-k : Alt+k | c-l : Ctrl+l | a-l : Alt+l | c-m : Ctrl+m | a-m : Alt+m | c-n : Ctrl+n | a-n : Alt+n | c-o : Ctrl+o | a-o : Alt+o | c-p : Ctrl+p | a-p : Alt+p | c-q : Ctrl+q | a-q : Alt+q | c-r : Ctrl+r | a-r : Alt+r | c-s : Ctrl+s | a-s : Alt+s | c-t : Ctrl+t | a-t : Alt+t | c-u : Ctrl+u | a-u : Alt+u | c-v : Ctrl+v | a-v : Alt+v | c-w : Ctrl+w | a-w : Alt+w | c-x : Ctrl+x | a-x : Alt+x | c-y : Ctrl+y | a-y : Alt+y | c-z : Ctrl+z | a-z : Alt+z | c-] : Ctrl+] | a-] : Alt+] | c-[ : Ctrl+[ | a-[ : Alt+[ | c-^ : Ctrl+^ | a-^ : Alt+^ | c-\_ : Ctrl+\_ | a-\_ : Alt+\_ # SEE ALSO *aerc*(1) *aerc-imap*(5) *aerc-smtp*(5) *aerc-maildir*(5) *aerc-sendmail*(5) *aerc-notmuch*(5) *aerc-stylesets*(7) # AUTHORS Originally created by Drew DeVault and maintained by Robin Jarry who is assisted by other open source contributors. For more information about aerc development, see https://sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc/.