Provided by: imapfilter_2.8.2+1-0.2build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       imapfilter_config — imapfilter configuration file

SYNOPSIS

       $HOME/.imapfilter/config.lua

DESCRIPTION

       imapfilter(1) uses the Lua programming language as a configuration and extension language, therefore, the
       configuration file is a Lua script.

       Although knowledge of Lua is not required to use imapfilter(1), it is nonetheless recommended, especially
       if one wants to extend it. For more information on Lua see http://www.lua.org/docs.html.

CONVENTIONS

       A brief description of the Lua values and types mentioned hereafter in the manual page follows:

           The  nil is the type of the value “nil”, whose main property is to be different from any other value;
           usually it represents the absence of a useful value.

           The boolean is the type of the values “true” and “false”.  Both “nil” and “false”  make  a  condition
           false; any other value makes it true.

           The type number represents real numbers.

           The  type  string  represents a sequence of characters and can be defined using single quotes, double
           quotes or double square brackets.

           The type table implements associative arrays, that is, arrays that  can  be  indexed  not  only  with
           numbers, but with any value.

           A  function  is  a  first-class  value;  it  can  be stored in variables, passed as argument to other
           functions, and returned as a result.

OPTIONS

       Program's options are set using an already initialised table named “options”, in the following manner:

           options.timeout = 120
           options.namespace = false
           options.charset = 'ISO-8859-1'

       Available options are:

       cache   When this option is enabled, parts of messages are  cached  locally  in  memory  to  avoid  being
               downloaded  more  than  once.  The cache is preserved for the current session only. This variable
               takes a boolean as a value. Default is “true”.

       certificates
               When this option is enabled, the server certificate can be accepted and stored, to  validate  the
               authenticity  of  the  server  in  future  connections. This variable takes a boolean as a value.
               Default is “true”.

       charset
               Indicates to the server the character set  of  the  strings  for  the  searching  methods.   This
               variable  takes  a  string as a value.  By default, no character set is set, and thus plain ASCII
               should be assumed by the server.

       create  According to the IMAP specification, when trying to write a message to  a  non-existent  mailbox,
               the  server must send a hint to the client, whether it should create the mailbox and try again or
               not. However, some IMAP servers don't  follow  the  specification  and  don't  send  the  correct
               response  code  to  the  client.  By enabling this option the client tries to create the mailbox,
               despite of the server's response. This variable takes a boolean as a value.  Default is “false”.

       close   This option controls whether the currently selected mailbox is implicitly closed at  the  end  of
               each performed operation, thus removing all messages that are marked deleted. This variable takes
               a boolean as a value.  Default is “false”.

       expunge
               Normally,  messages  are marked for deletion and are actually deleted when the mailbox is closed.
               When this option is enabled, messages are expunged immediately after being marked deleted.   This
               variable takes a boolean as a value.  Default is “true”.

       hostnames
               When  this  option is enabled, the server hostname is validated, in order to verify the client is
               talking to the correct server. This variable takes a boolean as a value. Default is “true”.

       info    When this option is enabled, a summary of the program's  actions  is  printed,  while  processing
               mailboxes.  This variable takes a boolean as a value.  Default is “true”.

       keepalive
               The  time  in  minutes before terminating and re-issuing the IDLE command, in order to keep alive
               the connection, by resetting the inactivity timeout of the server.  A standards compliant  server
               must  have an inactivity timeout of at least 30 minutes.  But some IMAP servers might not respect
               that, or some intermediary network device has a shorter timeout.   By  setting  this  option  the
               above  problem  can  be  worked  around. This variable takes a number as a value. Default is “29”
               minutes.

       limit   Some servers have problems handling very long requests, but some of the requests that need to  be
               sent  can  become  quite  long because they apply an action for many messages at once.  When this
               option is set, the client will try to break up these requests into smaller  requests,  that  each
               operates  on fewer messages at a time.  A good value for this would be “50”.  This variable takes
               a number as a value.  Default is “0”.  See also the range option which is related.

       namespace
               When enabled, the program gets the namespace  of  the  user's  personal  mailboxes,  and  applies
               automatically  the  prefix  and hierarchy delimiter to any mailboxes residing on the mail server;
               the user must use the ‘/’ character as the delimiter  and  “”  (i.e.   nothing)  as  the  prefix,
               regardless  of the folder format of the mail server.  This must be disabled, if the user wants to
               manually specify mailbox names (e.g. because they are not part of the user's  personal  namespace
               mailboxes).  This variable takes a boolean as a value.  Default is “true”.

       range   Some  servers have problems handling long sequence number ranges, and by setting this option, the
               number of messages included in each range can be limited.  A good value for this would  be  “50”.
               This  variable  takes  a  number as a value.  By default, no such limit is imposed.  See also the
               limit option which is related.

       starttls
               When this option is enabled and the server supports the IMAP STARTTLS extension, a TLS connection
               will be negotiated with the mail server in the beginning of the session.  This variable  takes  a
               boolean as value.  Default is “true”.

       subscribe
               By  enabling this option new mailboxes that were automatically created, get also subscribed; they
               are set active in order for IMAP clients to recognize them.  This variable takes a boolean  as  a
               value.  Default is “false”.

       timeout
               The  time  in  seconds  for  the  program to wait for a mail server's response.  If set to 0, the
               client will block indefinitely.  This variable takes a  number  as  a  value.   Default  is  “60”
               seconds.

       wakeonany
               By  enabling  this  option,  the  IDLE command will return on any event that is received from the
               server, and not just on the “RECENT” and “EXISTS” events, that normally indicate the arrival of a
               new message.  Examples of other events are “FETCH”, which indicates that the details of a message
               (e.g. its flags) have been modified, or “EXPUNGE”,  which  indicates  that  a  message  has  been
               deleted.  This variable takes a boolean as a value.  Default is “false”.

ACCOUNTS

       Accounts  are  initialized using the IMAP() function, and the details of the connection are defined using
       an account table:

           myaccount = IMAP {
               server = 'imap.mail.server',
               username = 'me',
               password = 'secret',
               ssl = 'auto'
           }

       An account table must have the following elements:

       server  The hostname of the IMAP server to connect to.  It takes a string as a value.

       username
               User's name.  It takes a string as a value.

       An account table can also have the following optional elements:

       password
               User's secret keyword.  If a password wasn't supplied, the  user  will  be  asked  to  enter  one
               interactively  the  first time it will be needed (unless oauth2 has been set).  It takes a string
               as a value.

               Passwords can also be extracted during execution time from  an  encrypted  password  vault.   The
               samples/extend.lua file contains such an example.

               Note  that  due to Lua using backslash ‘\’ as an escape character for its strings, one has to use
               double backslashes in order to insert a single backslash, and thus a backslash character inside a
               password might require four backslashes.

       oauth2  The OAuth2 string to use to authenticate  if  the  server  supports  the  XOAUTH2  authentication
               mechanism.   If  the  server does not support it and a password has also been set, authentication
               will be attempted using the password.  It takes a string as a value.

               Note that this requires that an OAuth client ID and client secret have been obtained,  an  OAuth2
               token  has been generated and authorized, a new access token has been generated using the refresh
               token if the last access token has expired, and an OAuth2 string  has  been  generated  from  the
               access  token.   The  aforementioned  OAuth2 string is a Base64 encoded string that should be set
               here.  For more information, see https://developers.google.com/gmail/xoauth2_protocol.

               The samples/extend.lua file contains an example of authentication using OAuth2.

       port    The port to connect to.  It takes a number as a value.  Default is “143” for imap and  “993”  for
               imaps.

       ssl     Forces  an  imaps  connection  and specifies the SSL/TLS protocol/version to be used.  It takes a
               string as a value, specifically one of: “auto”, “tls1.2”, “tls1.1”, “tls1”, “ssl3”.

               Note that the latest versions of the OpenSSL library have deprecated  version  specific  methods,
               and  the  actual  protocol  version  used,  will be negotiated to be the highest version mutually
               supported by the client and the server.  This is also what the “auto” value does.

   LISTING
       The following methods can be used on an account to list mailboxes in a folder of an account:

       list_all(folder)
               Lists all the available mailboxes in the folder (string),  and  returns  a  table  that  contains
               strings, the available mailboxes, and a table that contains strings, the available folders.

       list_subscribed(folder)
               Lists  all  the  subscribed  mailboxes  in the folder (string), and returns a table that contains
               strings, the subscribed mailboxes, and a table that contains strings, the subscribed folders.

       The following methods can be used on an account to list mailboxes, using wildcards, in  a  folder  of  an
       account.   The  ‘*’  wildcard,  matches any character and the ‘%’ matches any character except the folder
       delimiter, i.e.  non-recursively:

       list_all(folder, mailbox)
               Lists all the available mailboxes in the folder (string) with  the  name  mailbox  (string),  and
               returns  a  table  that  contains  strings,  the  available  mailboxes, and a table that contains
               strings, the available folders.  Wildcards may only be used in the mailbox argument.

       list_subscribed(folder, mailbox)
               Lists all the subscribed mailboxes in the folder (string) with the  name  mailbox  (string),  and
               returns  a  table  that  contains  strings,  the  subscribed mailboxes, and a table that contains
               strings, the subscribed folders.  Wildcards may only be used in the mailbox argument.

       Examples:

           mailboxes, folders = myaccount:list_subscribed('myfolder')
           mailboxes, folders = myaccount:list_all('myfolder/mysubfolder', '*')

   MANIPULATING
       The following methods can be used to manipulate mailboxes in an account:

       create_mailbox(name)
               Creates the name (string) mailbox.

       delete_mailbox(name)
               Deletes the name (string) mailbox.

       rename_mailbox(oldname, newname)
               Renames the oldname (string) mailbox to newname (string).

       subscribe_mailbox(name)
               Subscribes the name (string) mailbox.

       unsubscribe_mailbox(name)
               Unsubscribes the name (string) mailbox.

       Examples:

           myaccount:create_mailbox('mymailbox')
           myaccount:subscribe_mailbox('mymailbox')
           myaccount:unsubscribe_mailbox('myfolder/mymailbox')
           myaccount:delete_mailbox('myfolder/mymailbox')

MAILBOXES

       After an IMAP account has been initialized, mailboxes residing in that account can be accessed simply  as
       elements of the account table:

           myaccount.mymailbox

       If  mailbox  names  don't  only  include  letters,  digits  and  underscores,  or  begin with a digit, an
       alternative form must be used:

           myaccount['mymailbox']

       A mailbox inside a folder can be only accessed by using the alternative form:

           myaccount['myfolder/mymailbox']

       The methods that are available for an account (e.g.  list_all(), create_mailbox(), etc.) , are considered
       keywords and must not be used as mailbox names, and the same also applies for any string starting with an
       underscore, as they are considered reserved.

   CHECKING
       The following methods can be used to check the status of a mailbox:

       check_status()

               The check_status() method gets the current status of a mailbox, and returns four values of number
               type: the total number of messages, the number of recent messages, the number of unseen  messages
               in the mailbox, and the next UID to be assigned to a new message in the mailbox.

       enter_idle()
               The  enter_idle()  method implements the IMAP IDLE (RFC 2177) extension.  By using this extension
               it's not necessary to poll the server for changes  to  the  selected  mailbox  (i.e.   using  the
               check_status()  method),  but  instead  the  server sends an update when there is a change in the
               mailbox (e.g. in case of new mail).  When  the  enter_idle()  method  has  been  called  no  more
               commands  in  the configuration file are executed until an update is received, at which point the
               enter_idle() method returns.  For the  enter_idle()  to  work,  the  IDLE  extension  has  to  be
               supported by the IMAP server.

               The  enter_idle()  method  returns  a  value  of  type  boolean:  “true” if the IDLE extension is
               supported and there was an update in the mailbox, and  “false”  if  the  IDLE  extension  is  not
               supported,  in  which  case the method returns immediately.  When the aforementioned return value
               was “true”, an additional second value of type string is  also  returned,  indicating  the  event
               received from the server, which is useful when the wakeonany option has been enabled.

               Apart from an event received by the server, the SIGUSR1 or SIGUSR2 signals can also interrupt the
               IDLE  mode  at  any time, and the execution of the configuration file will then continue from the
               next line after the enter_idle().  In this case, only the value “true” is returned.

       Examples:

           exist, unread, unseen, uidnext = myaccount.mymailbox:check_status()
           update = myaccount.mymailbox:enter_idle()
           update, event = myaccount.mymailbox:enter_idle()

   SEARCHING
       The searching methods in this subsection can be applied to any mailbox.  They return a  special  form  of
       table, that contains the messages that match the searching method.  This table can be combined with other
       tables  using  logic  theory.  There are three available operations, that implement logical “or”, logical
       “and” and logical “not”.

       The logical “or” is implemented using the ‘+’ operator:

           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen() +
                     myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000)

       The logical “and” is implemented using the ‘*’ operator:

           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen() *
                     myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000)

       The logical “not” is implemented using the ‘-’ operator:

           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen() -
                     myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000)

       The three logical operators can be combined  in  the  same  expression.  The  logical  “and”  has  higher
       precedence  than  the logical “or” and the logical “not”, with the latter two having the same precedence,
       and parentheses may be used to change this behaviour:

           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen() +
                     myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000) *
                     myaccount.mymailbox:contain_subject('test')

           results = ( myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen() +
                       myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000) ) *
                       myaccount.mymailbox:contain_subject('test')

       The returned tables of the searching methods can also be stored in variables and then further processed:

           unseen = myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen()
           larger = myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000)
           subject = myaccount.mymailbox:contain_subject('test')
           results = unseen + larger * subject

       A composite filter that includes one or more simple rules can be defined:

           myfilter = function ()
                          return myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen() +
                                 myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000) *
                                 myaccount.mymailbox:contain_subject('test')
                      end

           results = myfilter()

       Composite filters can may be more dynamic by adding arguments:

           myfilter = function (mailbox, size, subject)
                          return mailbox:is_unseen() +
                                 mailbox:is_larger(size) *
                                 mailbox:contain_subject(subject)
                      end

           results = myfilter(myaccount.mailbox, 100000, 'test')

       It is also possible to combine the searching methods in  different  mailboxes,  either  at  the  same  or
       different  accounts, for example when the same actions will be executed on messages residing in different
       mailboxes or accounts.

           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_unseen() +
                     myaccount.myothermailbox:is_larger(100000) +
                     myotheraccount.myothermailbox:contain_subject('test')

       And for those that want to know more about the return values of the following  methods,  it  is  a  table
       which  contains  tables  with two values: the mailbox (table) the message belongs to, and the message UID
       (number) which points to the matching message.  For examples  on  iterating  these  returned  tables,  or
       creating  new  tables  of  this  format  (they  are  actually  metatables  implementing  sets),  see  the
       samples/extend.lua file.

           {
               { <myaccount.mymailbox>, 1 },
               { <myaccount.mymailbox>, 3 },
               { <myaccount.myothermailbox>, 5 },
               { <myothermailbox.myothermailbox>, 7},
               { ... },
               ...
           }

       The following method can be used to get all messages in a mailbox:

       select_all()
               All messages.

       The following methods can be used to search for messages that are in a specific state:

       is_answered()
               Messages that have been answered.

       is_deleted()
               Messages that are marked for later removal.

       is_draft()
               Messages that have not completed composition.

       is_flagged()
               Messages that are flagged for urgent/special attention.

       is_new()
               Messages that are recently arrived (this session is the first to have been notified  about  these
               messages) and have not been read.

       is_old()
               Messages that are not recently arrived (this session is not the first to have been notified about
               these messages) and have not been read.

       is_recent()
               Messages  that  are recently arrived (this session is the first to have been notified about these
               messages).

       is_seen()
               Messages that have been read.

       is_unanswered()
               Messages that have not been answered.

       is_undeleted()
               Messages that are not marked for later removal.

       is_undraft()
               Messages that have completed composition.

       is_unflagged()
               Messages that are not flagged for urgent/special attention.

       is_unseen()
               Messages that have not been read.

       The following method can be used to search for messages that have a specific keyword flag set:

       has_keyword(flag)
               Messages with the specified keyword flag (string) set.
       has_unkeyword(flag)
               Messages without the specified keyword flag (string) set.

       The following methods can be used to search for messages based on their size:

       is_larger(size)
               Messages that are larger than the size (number) in octets (bytes).

       is_smaller(size)
               Messages that are smaller than the size (number) in octets (bytes).

       The following methods can be used to search for messages based on their age:

       is_newer(age)
               Messages that are newer than the age (number) in days.

       is_older(age)
               Messages that are older than the age (number) in days.

       The following methods can be used to search for messages based on their arrival  or  sent  date,  in  the
       “day-month-year”  form,  where  day  is  the  day  of the month as a decimal number (01-31), month is the
       abbreviated month ( “Jan”, “Feb”, “Mar”, “Apr”, “May”, “Jun”, “Jul”, “Aug”, “Sep”, “Oct”,  “Nov”,  “Dec”)
       and year is the year as decimal number including the century (e.g. 2007):

       arrived_before(date)
               messages  that have arrived earlier than the date (string), where date is in the “day-month-year”
               form.

       arrived_on(date)
               Messages that have arrived within the date (string), where date is in the “day-month-year” form.

       arrived_since(date)
               Messages that have arrived within or  later  than  the  date  (string),  where  date  is  in  the
               “day-month-year” form.

       sent_before(date)
               Messages   that   have  been  sent  earlier  than  the  date  (string),  where  date  is  in  the
               “day-month-year” form.

       sent_on(date)
               Messages that have been sent within the date (string), where  date  is  in  the  “day-month-year”
               form.

       sent_since(date)
               Messages  that  have  been  sent  within  or  later  than the date (string), where date is in the
               “day-month-year” form.

       The following methods can be used to do case-insensitive searching, for messages that contain a  specific
       word or phrase:

       contain_bcc(string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the “Bcc” header field.

       contain_cc(string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the “Cc” header field.

       contain_from(string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the “From” header field.

       contain_subject(string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the “Subject” header field.

       contain_to(string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the “To” header field.

       contain_field(field, string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the field (string) header field.

       contain_body(string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the message body.

       contain_message(string)
               Messages that contain the string (string) in the message.

       The  following  methods  can  be  used to do case-sensitive searching, for messages that match a specific
       regular expression pattern. The matching mechanism that is used to support this is  based  on  the  Perl-
       compatible  regular expressions (PCRE), and more information about the patterns and modifiers that can be
       used, is available in the relevant documentation at http://pcre.org/original/doc/html/.

       This way of searching is not supported by the IMAP protocol, and this means that  what  actually  happens
       under the hood, is that the relevant parts of all the messages are downloaded and matched locally.  It is
       therefore  recommended  to  use  these  methods  with meta-searching (see following section), in order to
       narrow down the set of messages that should be searched, and thus minimize what will be downloaded.

       Note that due to Lua using backslash ‘\’ as an escape character for its strings, one has  to  use  double
       backslashes in order to insert a single backslash inside a regular expression pattern:

       match_bcc(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the “Bcc” header field.

       match_cc(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the “Cc” header field.

       match_from(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the “From” header field.

       match_subject(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the “Subject” header field.

       match_to(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the “To” header field.

       match_field(field, pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the field (string) header field.

       match_header(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the message header.

       match_body(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the message body.

       match_message(pattern)
               Messages that match the regular expression pattern (string) in the message.

       The  following  method  can  be  used  to  search  for  messages  using  user  queries  based on the IMAP
       specification (RFC 3501 Section 6.4.4):

       send_query(criteria)
               Searches messages by sending an IMAP search query as described in the search criteria (string).

       Examples:

           results = myaccount.mymailbox:select_all()
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_new()
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_recent()
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_larger(100000)
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:is_older(10)
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:has_keyword('MyFlag')
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:arrived_before('01-Jan-2007')
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:sent_since('01-Jan-2007')
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:contain_subject('test')
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:contain_field('Sender', 'user@host')
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:contain_body('hello world')
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:match_from('.*(user1|user2)@host')
           results = myaccount.mymailbox:send_query('ALL')

           results = myaccount['mymailbox']:is_new()
           results = myaccount['myfolder/mymailbox']:is_recent()

RESULTS

       After one of more searching methods have been applied to one or more mailboxes, the result  contains  all
       the  necessary  information,  such as which messages matched in which mailboxes.  Using this result these
       messages can be either searched further or processed in various way.

   META-SEARCHING
       The results of the searching methods can be searched further on in the same way as searching is  done  in
       mailboxes.   The  difference  is  that  instead  of doing the search in the whole mailbox, ie. in all the
       messages, it is instead done only to those messages that were returned in a previous search.

       Examples:

           results:match_message('^[Hh]ello world!?$')
           myaccount.mymailbox:is_new():match_body('^[Ww]orld, hello!?$')

   PROCESSING
       The processing methods are applied to the results that searching returned.

       The following method can be used to delete messages in a mailbox:

       delete_messages()
               Deletes the messages that matched.

       The following methods can be used to copy and move messages  in  a  mailbox  at  the  same  or  different
       accounts.   If  the  destination  mailbox  is  in  a  different account than the source mailbox, then the
       messages are downloaded and then uploaded to the destination:

       copy_messages(destination)
               Copies the messages to the destination, which is a mailbox at an account.

       move_messages(destination)
               Moves the messages to the destination, which is a mailbox at an account.

       The following methods can be used to mark messages in a mailbox:

       mark_answered()
               Marks the messages as answered.

       mark_deleted()
               Marks the messages for later removal.

       mark_draft()
               Marks the messages as draft.

       mark_flagged()
               Marks the messages for urgent/special attention.

       mark_seen()
               Marks the messages as read.

       unmark_answered()
               Unmarks the messages that have been marked as answered.

       unmark_deleted()
               Unmarks the messages that have been marked for later removal.

       unmark_draft()
               Unmarks the messages that have been marked as draft.

       unmark_flagged()
               Unmarks the messages that have been marked for urgent/special attention.

       unmark_seen()
               Unmarks the messages that have been marked as read.

       The following methods can be used  to  flag  messages  in  a  mailbox.  The  standard  system  flags  are
       “\Answered”,  “\Deleted”,  “\Draft”,  “\Flagged”,  “\Seen”,  while,  if  the server supports it, new user
       keywords may be defined:

       add_flags(flags)
               Adds the flags (table that contains strings) to the messages.

       remove_flags(flags)
               Removes the flags (table that contains strings) from the messages.

       replace_flags(flags)
               Replaces the flags (table that contains strings) of the messages.

       Examples:

           results:delete_messages()
           results:copy_messages(myaccount.myothermailbox)
           results:move_messages(myotheraccount.mymailbox)
           results:mark_seen()
           results:unmark_flagged()
           results:add_flags({ 'MyFlag', '\\Seen' })
           results:remove_flags({ '\\Seen' })

           results:move_messages(myotheraccount['myfolder/mymailbox'])

MESSAGES

       The messages that are residing in any mailbox can also be accessed, as a whole or in parts.  Messages can
       be accessed using their unique identifier (UID):

           myaccount.mymailbox[22]

       The UIDs of messages the user is interested in, are gained from the results of searching:

           results = account.INBOX:is_unseen()
           for _, message in ipairs(results) do
               mailbox, uid = table.unpack(message)
               header = mailbox[uid]:fetch_header()
           end

   FETCHING
       The following methods can be used to fetch  parts  of  messages.   The  methods  return  a  string.   The
       downloaded message parts are cached locally, so they can be reused inside the same program session:

       fetch_message()
               Fetches the header and body of the message.

       fetch_header()
               Fetches the header of the message.

       fetch_body()
               Fetches the body of the messages.

       fetch_field(field)
               Fetches the specified header field (string) of the message.

       fetch_part(part)
               Fetches the specified part (string) of the message.

       The following methods can be used to fetch details about the state of a message:

       fetch_flags()
               Fetches the flags of the message.  Returns a table of strings.

       fetch_date()
               Fetches the internal date of the message.  Returns a string.

       fetch_size()
               Fetches the size of the message.  Returns a number.

       fetch_structure()
               Fetches  the  body  structure  of  the message. Returns a table that has as keys the parts of the
               message, and as values a table that has one mandatory element, the type (string) of the part, and
               two optional elements, the size (number) and name (string) of the part.

   APPENDING
       The following methods can be used to append a message to a mailbox:

       append_message(message)
               Appends the message (string) to the mailbox.

       append_message(message, flags, date)
               Appends the message (string) to the mailbox, setting the specified flags (table of  strings),  as
               returned by fetch_flags(), and date (string), as returned by fetch_date().

       Examples:

           myaccount.mymailbox[2]:fetch_message()
           myaccount.mymailbox[3]:fetch_field('subject')
           myaccount.mymailbox[5]:fetch_part('1.1')

           myaccount['mymailbox'][7]:fetch_message()
           myaccount['myfolder/mymailbox'][11]:fetch_message()

           myaccount.mymailbox:append_message(message)

FUNCTIONS

       The following auxiliary functions are also available for convenience:

       form_date(days)
               Forms  a  date in “day-month-year” format that the system had before the number of days (number),
               and returns it as a string.

       get_password(prompt)
               Displays the specified prompt (string), and reads a password, while character echoing  is  turned
               off.  Returns that password as a string.

       become_daemon(interval, commands)
       become_daemon(interval, commands, nochdir)
       become_daemon(interval, commands, nochdir, noclose)
               Detaches  the  program  from  the  controlling  terminal  and runs it in the background as system
               daemon. The program will then repeatedly poll at the specified interval (number) in seconds. Each
               time the program wakes up, the commands (function) are executed.

               If nochdir (boolean) is “true”, the  current  working  directory  is  not  changed  to  the  root
               directory (/).

               If  noclose  (boolean)  is “true”, the standard input, standard output and standard error are not
               redirected to /dev/null.

       pipe_to(command, data)
               Executes the system's command (string) and sends the data (string) to the standard input  channel
               of the subprocess. Returns a number, the exit status of the child process.

       pipe_from(command)
               Executes the system's command (string) and retrieves the data from the standard output channel of
               the subprocess.  Returns a number, the exit status of the child process, and a string, the output
               of the child process.

       regex_search(pattern, string)
               Implements  Perl-compatible  regular  expressions (PCRE). The pattern (string) is a PCRE pattern.
               The string (string) is the subject string in which the pattern is  matched  against.  Returns  at
               least  a  boolean, that denotes if the match was successful, and any captures which are of string
               type.  Note that due to Lua using backslash ‘\’ as an escape character for its strings,  one  has
               to  use  double  backslashes  in  order  to insert a single backslash inside a regular expression
               pattern.  For more information on PCRE see http://pcre.org/original/doc/html/.

       sleep(interval)
               Delay for the specified interval (number) in seconds.

       recover(commands)
       recover(commands, retries)
               Protects the commands (function) executed from raising an error. Whenever an error is raised,  it
               sleeps for a few seconds (using exponential backoff up to some upper limit), and then re-executes
               the commands (function) from start.

               If  the  maximum count of retries (number) is specified, it will retry up to the specified number
               of times, otherwise it will never give up.

               Returns the status code of the execution as the first result, “true” if it succeeded  or  “false”
               if  it  failed.  If  it  succeeded,  it  returns  all  values the commands (function) returned as
               additional results.  If it failed, it returns the error as an additional result.

       Examples:

           date = form_date(14)
           password = get_password('Enter password: ')
           become_daemon(600, myfunction)
           status = pipe_to('mycommandline', 'mydata')
           status, data = pipe_from('mycommandline')
           success, capture = regex_search('^(?i)pcre: (\\w)$', 'mystring')
           sleep(300)
           recover(myfunction, 5)

       For more examples, see the samples/extend.lua file.

EXAMPLES

       See samples/config.lua and samples/extend.lua in the source code distribution.

ENVIRONMENT

       HOME    User's home directory.

SEE ALSO

       imapfilter(1)

Debian                                             Jan 6, 2023                              IMAPFILTER_CONFIG(5)