MAILINSPECT
NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
EXIT STATUS
OPTIONS
USAGE
FILES
ENVIRONMENT
SOURCE
AUTHOR
SEE ALSO
NAME
mailinspect
− sort an mbox by category and pipe emails to a
command.
SYNOPSIS
|
mailinspect [-zjiI] |
|
-c category FILE [-gG
regex]... [-s command] [-p |
style] [-o
scoring]
DESCRIPTION
mailinspect
reads the single mbox folder named FILE and sorts it in
order of similarity to the category, which must have
been created by dbacl(1). It can be used as a command
line tool or interactively, when given the -I
switch.
When used as a
command line tool, mailinspect prints the sorted list
of emails on STDOUT. Each line consists of a seek position
for the given email within FILE, followed by the score and a
description string in one of several styles chosen via the
-p option.
When supplying
a command string in conjunction with the -s
option, mailinspect spawns a shell and executes
command for every email in FILE (possibly selected
via the -g or-G options), in the sorted order.
This is similar to the formail(1) functionality,
except the latter doesn’t order the emails.
In interactive
mode, all the command line functionality is available via
keypresses. The sorted list of emails is displayed in a
scrollable format, and can be viewed, searched, tagged,
resorted and sent to shell commands. Predefined shell
commands can be associated with function keys. See the usage
section below.
The sorting
heuristics are currently (and may always be) experimental,
so there is no guarantee that the orderings are particularly
well suited for anything.
EXIT STATUS
mailinspect
returns 1 on success, 0 if some error occurred.
OPTIONS
|
-c |
|
Use category to compute
the scores and sort the emails, which should be the file
name of a dbacl(1) category. |
|
-g |
|
Only emails matching the regular expression regex
are sorted. All other emails are ignored. When several
-g and -G options are present on the command
line, earlier regular expressions are overridden by later
ones where applicable. |
|
-i |
|
Force internationalized mode. |
|
-j |
|
Force regular expression searches to be case
sensitive. |
|
-o |
|
Determines the scoring formula to be used. The parameter
scoring must be an integer greater than or equal to
zero. By default, scoring equals zero. |
|
-p |
|
Prints the email index in the given style. The parameter
style must be an integer greater than or equal to
zero. By default, style equals zero. |
|
-s |
|
For each email in the list, execute the shell
command, with the email body on STDIN. Emails are
processed in sorted order. |
|
-z |
|
Reverse sort order. Normally, emails are sorted in order
of closest to furthest relative to category, but in
this case, the opposite is true. |
|
-I |
|
Interactive mode. Instead of printing the sorted list of
emails on STDOUT, emails are displayed and can be scrolled,
viewed, searched and piped interactively at the
terminal. |
|
-G |
|
Only emails not matching the regular expression
regex are sorted. Opposite of -g switch. |
|
-V |
|
Print the program version number and exit. |
USAGE
mailinspect
needs to read a prelearned category before it can
sort the emails in FILE. See dbacl(1).
Suppose you
have two mail folders named good.mbox and
bad.mbox respectively. You can create appropriate
categories by typing the commands
% dbacl -l good
good.mbox -T email
% dbacl -l bad bad.mbox -T email
Next, you can
type the following command to view interactively the
bad.mbox file with the emails whose score is closest
to the category good listed first:
% mailinspect
-I -c good bad.mbox
Alternatively,
you might be interested only in the five emails in the
folder bad.mbox whose score marks them as the
furthest away from the category bad, completely
independently from any other category such as good
(ie you want outliers in the scoring sense).
% mailinspect
-z -c bad bad.mbox | head -5
In interactive
mode, the following keys are defined:
|
o |
|
toggles another scoring
formula. |
|
p |
|
toggles another display style. |
|
q |
|
exits mailinspect. |
|
s |
|
sends the currently highlighted email to a shell
command. |
|
S |
|
sends all currently tagged emails to a shell command, in
sorted order. Every email executes the shell command
independently. |
|
t |
|
tags the currently highlighted email. |
|
T |
|
tags all listed emails. |
|
v |
|
sends the currently highlighted email to $PAGER for
viewing. If the environment variable PAGER is not defined,
sends the email to less(1). |
|
u |
|
untags the highlighted email. |
|
U |
|
untags all listed emails. |
|
z |
|
reverses the sort order of displayed emails. |
|
/ |
|
searches for a regular expression (see regex(7))
anywhere within the contents of all listed emails. Hides all
emails which don’t match. |
|
? |
|
like /, but hides all emails which match, keeping all
those which don’t match. |
As a
convenience, the function keys F1-F10 can each be associated
with a shell command string. In this case, typing a function
key has the same effect as the S key, but the command is
already typed and ready to be edited/accepted. The function
key associations are read from the configuration file
.mailinspectrc if it exits.
FILES
$HOME/.mailinspectrc
mailinspect reads the
file .mailinspectrc in the $HOME directory, if it exists.
This is a plain text file which contains entries of the
form
# this is a
comment
F2 cat >> interesting.mbox
F5 mail zarniwoop@megadodo.com
ENVIRONMENT
DBACL_PATH
When this variable is set, its
value is prepended to every category filename which
doesn’t start with a ’/’.
SOURCE
The source code
for the latest version of this program is available at the
following locations:
http://www.lbreyer.com/gpl.html
http://dbacl.sourceforge.net
AUTHOR
Laird A. Breyer
<laird@lbreyer.com>
SEE ALSO
bayesol(1),
dbacl(1), less(1), mailcross(1),
regex(7)
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