Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Fetchmail Ate my inbox!
Operating Systems Linux Fetchmail Ate my inbox! Post 302233172 by era on Saturday 6th of September 2008 11:53:26 AM
Old 09-06-2008
There are tools for moving stuff between IMAP boxes; the simplest to set up is probably something like Thunderbird. Just set it up with a local mbox account and a remote Gmail IMAP account, and you should be able to drag messages back and forth. (Message orders, dates, etc might end up different from what they originally were, of course.)
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

deleting a mail from inbox in unix

I want to programatically delete a mail from my inbox(preferrably through perl). Is there any unix command for the same or do we have some perl modules which can do this job. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: xsriniva
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Pine inbox

i have shell account at grex.org but i cannot get mauil with pine because the inbox cannot be found? any suggestion? (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: cogeek
7 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

extract email from inbox

i want to extract the field from, subject and email body part from an inbox into a csv file under redhat 7.x. prefer perl script or any unix utilities. please help. :confused: (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gxiong
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

fetchmail taking long time to fetchmail...

Hi peeps, We are having around 60 users. The time set to retrieve the mail is 300 sec. But it's taking around 1 hour to deliver mails. I am using debian sarge 3.1. any clues? And how it will affect if I decrease the time? My machine has got 1 p4 3.0 GHZ processor and 1 GB ram. The home... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: squid04
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to lock an inbox using UNIX scripting

Hi All, I have an inbox , which recieves mails every second. I need to copy the contents of the mails in the inbox to a file , say once every minute. Then clear the content of the inbox. There is a possibility that a new mail might come in before I delete the content. Please let me know if... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Manju-he202
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Invoke a shell script on new email in inbox

Hello all, Is there a way I can invoke a shell script when ever a new mail is delivered to my account in solaris? Something like .forward file, instead of forwarding it to another email id, I want the email to be passed onto some shell script. Basically I want to extract the envelop... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: atukuri
3 Replies

7. Programming

Access E-Mail Inbox using PHP

Hi Can anyone please help me out in the below requirement, Need to access the mailbox of any Email server like gmail, yahoo etc.. and access the Inbox and check Emails. If i have to access gmail Inbox of any user, My Input parameter will be the domain name, Email ID and Password. example... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vidhyaS
3 Replies

8. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

A pattern matching Admin ate my hamster

I'm looking forward to learn something via this unix.com. You call me Non-Sense doesn't make any sense. Some people doesn't quote properly in english but they are all just looking for to take some sense out of this forum. If you're good in shell / perl scripting and you can't expect everyone... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ilugopal
3 Replies

9. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

Direct junk mails to inbox (instead of going to delete)

hi, some of my email are going into the junk box. so i have stopped the email junk filtering as per the below link Outlook 2013 Junk Email Filter - Litmus but now the mails are going into delete box instead of my inbox. so any idea how can i stop the junk emails going into delete box and... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mallikarjun7777
2 Replies
Cone(C)

MAILTOOL(1)						  Cone: COnsole Newsreader And E					       MAILTOOL(1)

NAME
mailtool - Process mailboxes SYNOPSIS
mailtool [options...] USAGE
mailtool is a diagnostic utility for handling various operations on mailboxes. mailtool's main uses include: display the list of folders in a mailbox; displaying list of messages in a mailbox; and copying mailboxes. The following mailboxes can be accessed by mailtool: imap://userid@server[/options] An IMAP account. mailtool will prompt for the login password. imaps://userid@server[/options] An IMAP account accessed via an encrypted SSL connection. pop3://userid@server[/options] A POP3 account. mailtool will prompt for the login password. pop3s://userid@server[/options] A POP3 account accessed via an encrypted SSL connection. maildir:path A local maildir mailbox. path specifies the maildir's location relative to the home directory (NOT the current directory). mbox:path Local mbox mail folders. path specifies the path to an mbox folder file, or a directory containing mbox folders, relative to the home directory (NOT the current directory). inbox:path Local mbox mail folders, like "mbox:path"; additionally, the system spool mailbox is automatically copied to $HOME/Inbox, which is accessible as folder INBOX. The name of a remote IMAP or POP3 server may be followed by one or more options that control various settings of the IMAP or POP3 connection: /cram Do not open the account unless the server supports secure password authentication. Secure password authentication verifies the account's password using a challenge/response authentication mechanism (where the label "cram" comes from). The actual password is never actually transmitted to the server, and therefore cannot be intercepted while in transit over an untrusted network. Secure password authentication is not supported by all servers. This option may not work with some servers. This option does not enable secure password authentication, it only mandates its use. If the server supports secure password authentication, it will be used even without the /cram option. Traditional userid/password authentication will be used only if the server does not implement secure password authentication. The /cram option makes secure password authentication mandatory. The /cram option is marginally useful even with encrypted server connections. The secure password authentication never sends the explicit password to the server. Encryption makes it theoretically impossible to recover the password from an encrypted data connection; but with secure authentication the password is never sent over the connection in the first place (the password's validity is certified by exchanging certain mathematical calculations between the server and the client). If the server is compromised, the compromised server will not receive the account password (unless the password is recovered from the server in other ways). /imap Do not use the SMAP if the server claims the availability of this experimental mail access protocol, and fall back to IMAP compatibility mode (this option is meaningful only with "imap://" and "imaps://" URLs). /notls Do not upgrade a plain connection to an encrypted one. This option is primarily used for testing and debugging purposes. Sometimes this option might be useful with servers that claim to offer encryption, but are unable to do so when taken up on their offer. /novalidate-cert Do not validate the server's SSL certificate when using an encrypted connection. Normally the mail server's SSL certificate must be validate when using an encrypted connection. The certificate's name must match the server's name, and the certificate must be signed by a trusted certificate authority. The encrypted connection normally fails if the certificate cannot be validate. Validation requires that a list of trusted certificate authorities must be known and configured. It's simply impossible to know which certificate authorities are valid without an explicit list of valid, known, trusted, certificate authorities. If a trusted authority list is not configured, no certificate can be validated. If the server's certificate is a self-signed certificate (this is often used for testing purposes), or if it's not signed by a known authority, the encrypted connection fails. This /novalidate-cert option disables certificate validation. The encrypted connection will be established even if the server's certificate would otherwise be rejected. Note This option is applicable even when an encrypted IMAP or POP3 connection is not explicitly requested. Many mail servers are capable of automatically upgrading unencrypted connections to a fully-encrypted connection. If a mail server claims to be able to use encryption, then there's no reason not to use it. The result is that all encryption certification requirements still apply even when encryption is not explicitly requested. Displaying mailbox contents mailtool -tree | -list account -tree shows a hierarchical representation of mail folders in account. -list generates a simple folder listing, one folder name per line. -tree shows folder names, while -list shows the actual mail folder path in account. mailtool -tree imap://jsmith@mail.example.com/novalidate-cert/cram Creating folders mailtool -create | -createdir folder name account -create creates a new subfolder of folder in account. The new subfolder's name is name. -createdir creates a new folder directory (a folder that contains other folders). mailtool -create INBOX.lists announcements maildir:Maildir This command creates a new folder "announcements" as a subfolders of "INBOX.lists" in the local maildir. Deleting folders mailtool -delete | -deletedir folder account -delete deletes an existing folder in account. -deletedir deletes a folder directory. mailtool -delete INBOX.lists.announcements maildir:Maildir Renaming folders mailtool -rename oldfolder folder name account -renames renames an existing oldfolder. The folder is renamed as name, as a subfolder of folder. folder may be an empty string if the folder should be moved to the top level of account's folder hierarchy. mailtool -rename INBOX.lists.announcements INBOX.lists Announcements maildir:Maildir The folder "INBOX.lists.announcements" is renamed to "INBOX.lists.Announcements". This slightly unusual way to rename folder allows folders to be relocated in the mail account's folder hierarchy. Reading folder's index mailtool -index folder account -index downloads and prints a summary of all messages in folder, in account. The summary shows the sender's and recipients' address, the message's subject, and size. mailtool -index INBOX imap://john@mail.example.com/novalidate-cert Removing a message from a folder mailtool -remove folder n account -remove removes message #n (ranging from 1 to the number of messages in the folder) in folder, in account. The message numbers may be obtained by using -index. n may be a comma-separated list of message numbers, in strictly numerically increasing order. -remove confirms the list of messages to remove and issues a "Ready:" prompt. Press ENTER to remove the messages. mailtool -remove INBOX 28,31 imap://john@mail.example.com/novalidate-cert Filtering messages mailtool -filter folder account -filter is a combination of -index and -remove. folder's index is downloaded, and the summary of each message is shown, one message at a time. Each message's summary is followed by a prompt: "Delete, Skip, or Exit". Pressing D removes the message, S leaves the message unchanged, and E leaves the remaining messages unchanged. mailtool -filter INBOX pop3://john@mail.example.com/novalidate-cert Note -filter is not meant to be used with large folders. Unless messages are removed quickly, the connection to the server may be disconnected for inactivity. Copying folders mailtool [-recurse] -tofolder tofolder -copyto toaccount -fromfolder fromfolder fromaccount This command copies an entire folder, fromfolder in fromaccount to a new folder, tofolder (which will be created, if necessary) in toaccount. Optionally, -recurse specifies that all subfolders of fromfolder should also be copied. mailtool -tofolder INBOX -copyto maildir:Maildir -fromfolder "INBOX" imap://mbox100@mail.example.com/novalidate-cert mailtool -recurse -tofolder INBOX.converted_mail -copyto maildir:Maildir -fromfolder "mail" imap://mbox100@mail.example.com/novalidate-cert This example first copies the INBOX on the IMAP server to $HOME/Maildir, then copies subfolders of "mail" on the IMAP server to the "converted_mail" subfolder in the maildir. mailtool -tofolder INBOX -copyto maildir:Maildir -fromfolder "INBOX" inbox:mail mailtool -recurse -tofolder INBOX.converted_mail -copyto maildir:Maildir -fromfolder "" mbox:mail This example first copies $HOME/Inbox (accessed as the INBOX folder in inbox:mail) to $HOME/Maildir, then copies mbox folders from $HOME/mail to the "converted_mail" subfolder in the maildir. Note Mail accounts that contain hybrid folders (folders that contain both messages and subfolders) can only be copied to account types that also support hybrid folders: either local maildirs, or to remote servers that support hybrid folders. SEE ALSO
cone(1). AUTHOR
Sam Varshavchik Cone(C) 04/04/2011 MAILTOOL(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:14 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy