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NAME

       muquery - a language for finding messages in mu databases.

DESCRIPTION

       The  mu  query language is a language used by mu find and mu4e to find messages in mu's Xapian databases.
       The language is quite similar to Xapian's default query-parser, but is an independent implementation that
       is customized for the mu/mu4e use-case.

       In this article, we give a structured but informal overview of the query language and provide examples.

       As a companion to this, we recommend the mu fields and mu flags commands to get an up-to-date list of the
       available fields and flags.

       NOTE: if you use queries on the command-line (say, for mu find), you need to quote  any  characters  that
       would otherwise be interpreted by the shell, such as "", ( and ) and whitespace.

TERMS

       The  basic building blocks of a query are terms; these are just normal words like 'banana' or 'hello', or
       words prefixed with a field-name which make them apply to just that  field.  See  mu  find  for  all  the
       available fields.

       Some example queries:
              vacation
              subject:capybara
              maildir:/inbox

       Terms without an explicit field-prefix, (like 'vacation' above) are interpreted like:
              to:vacation or subject:vacation or body:vacation or ...

       The  language  is case-insensitive for terms and attempts to 'flatten' any diacritics, so angtrom matches
       Ångström.

       If terms contain whitespace, they need to be quoted:
              subject:"hi there"

       This is a so-called phrase query, which means that we match against subjects  that  contain  the  literal
       phrase "hi there".

       Remember that you need to escape those quotes when using this from the command-line:
              mu find subject:\"hi there\"

LOGICAL OPERATORS

       We  can  combine  terms  with  logical operators -- binary ones: and, or, xor and the unary not, with the
       conventional rules for precedence and association, and are case-insensitive.

       You can also group things with ( and ), so you can do things like:
              (subject:beethoven or subject:bach) and not body:elvis

       If you do not explicitly specify an operator between terms, and is implied, so the queries
              subject:chip subject:dale

              subject:chip AND subject:dale

       are equivalent. For readability, we recommend the second version.

       Note that a pure not - e.g. searching for not apples is quite a 'heavy' query.

REGULAR EXPRESSIONS AND WILDCARDS

       The language supports matching basic PCRE regular expressions, see pcre(3).

       Regular expressions are enclosed in //. Some examples:
              subject:/h.llo/          # match hallo, hello, ...
              subject:/

       Note the difference between 'maildir:/foo' and 'maildir:/foo/'; the former matches messages in the '/foo'
       maildir, while the latter matches all messages  in  all  maildirs  that  match  'foo',  such  as  '/foo',
       '/bar/cuux/foo', '/fooishbar' etc.

       Wildcards are an older mechanism for matching where a term with a rightmost * (and only in that position)
       matches  any  term  that starts with the part before the *; they are supported for backward compatibility
       and mu translates them to regular expressions internally:
              foo*

       is equivalent to
              /foo.*/

       As a note of caution, certain wild-cards and regular expression can take quite a bit longer than 'normal'
       queries.

FIELDS

       We already saw a number of search fields, such as subject:  and  body:.  For  the  full  table,  see  mu-
       fields(1).
              bcc,h           Bcc (blind-carbon-copy) recipient(s)
              body,b          Message body
              cc,c            Cc (carbon-copy) recipient(s)
              changed,k       Last change to message file (range)
              date,d          Send date (range)
              embed,e         Search inside embedded text parts
              file,j          Attachment filename
              flag,g          Message Flags
              from,f          Message sender
              list,v          Mailing list (e.g. the List-Id value)
              maildir,m       Maildir
              mime,y          MIME-type of one or more message parts
              msgid,i         Message-ID
              prio,p          Message priority (=low=, =normal= or =high=)
              size,z          Message size range
              subject,s       Message subject
              tag,x           Tags for the message
              thread,w        Thread a message belongs to
              to,t            To: recipient(s)

       The shortcut character can be used instead of the full name:
              f:foo@bar

       is the same as
              from:foo@bar

       For queries that are not one-off, we would recommend the longer name for readability.

       There  are also the special fields contact:, which matches all contact-fields (from, to, cc and bcc), and
       recip, which matches all recipient-fields (to, cc and bcc). Hence, for instance,
              contact:fnorb@example.com

       is equivalent to
              (from:fnorb@example.com or to:fnorb@example.com or
                    cc:from:fnorb@example.com or bcc:fnorb@example.com)

DATE RANGES

       The date: field takes a date-range, expressed as the lower and upper bound, separated by ... Either lower
       or upper (but not both) can be omitted to create an open range.

       Dates are expressed in local time and using ISO-8601 format (YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS); you can leave out  the
       right  part,  and mu adds the rest, depending on whether this is the beginning or end of the range (e.g.,
       as a lower bound, '2015' would be interpreted as the start of that year; as an upper bound as the end  of
       the year).

       You can use '/' , '.', '-' and 'T' to make dates more human readable.

       Some examples:
              date:20170505..20170602
              date:2017-05-05..2017-06-02
              date:..2017-10-01T12:00
              date:2015-06-01..
              date:2016..2016

       You can also use the special 'dates' now and today:
              date:20170505..now
              date:today..

       Finally,  you  can  use  relative  'ago' times which express some time before now and consist of a number
       followed by a unit, with units s for seconds, M for minutes, h for hours, d for days, w for week,  m  for
       months and y for years. Some examples:

              date:3m..
              date:2017.01.01..5w

SIZE RANGES

       The  size  or  z  field  allows you to match size ranges -- that is, match messages that have a byte-size
       within a certain range. Units (b (for bytes), K (for 1000 bytes) and  M  (for  1000  *  1000  bytes)  are
       supported). Some examples:

              size:10k..2m
              size:10m..

FLAG FIELD

       The flag/g field allows you to match message flags. The following fields are available:
              a,attach        Message with attachment
              d,draft         Draft Message
              f,flagged       Flagged
              l,list          Mailing-list message
              n,new           New message (in new/ Maildir)
              p,passed        Passed ('Handled')
              r,replied       Replied
              s,seen          Seen
              t,trashed       Marked for deletion
              u,unread        new OR NOT seen
              x,encrypted     Encrypted message
              z,signed        Signed message

       Some examples:
              flag:attach
              flag:replied
              g:x

       Encrypted messages may be signed as well, but this is only visible after decrypting and thus invisible to
       mu.

PRIORITY FIELD

       The message priority field (prio:) has three possible values: low, normal or high. For instance, to match
       high-priority messages:
              prio:high

MAILDIR

       The Maildir field describes the directory path starting after the Maildir-base path, and before the /cur/
       or    /new/    part.    So    for    example,    if    there's    a    message   with   the   file   name
       ~/Maildir/lists/running/cur/1234.213:2,, you could find it (and  all  the  other  messages  in  the  same
       maildir) with:
              maildir:/lists/running

       Note the starting ''. If you want to match mails in the 'root' maildir, you can do with a single '':
              maildir:/

       If you have maildirs (or any fields) that include spaces, you need to quote them, ie.
              maildir:"/Sent Items"

       Note that from the command-line, such queries must be quoted:
              mu find 'maildir:"/Sent Items"'

MORE EXAMPLES

       Here  are  some  simple  examples of mu queries; you can make many more complicated queries using various
       logical operators, parentheses and so on, but in the author's experience, it's usually faster to  find  a
       message with a simple query just searching for some words.

       Find all messages with both 'bee' and 'bird' (in any field)
              bee AND bird

       Find all messages with either Frodo or Sam:
              Frodo OR Sam

       Find all messages with the 'wombat' as subject, and 'capybara' anywhere:
              subject:wombat and capybara

       Find all messages in the 'Archive' folder from Fred:
              from:fred and maildir:/Archive

       Find all unread messages with attachments:
              flag:attach and flag:unread

       Find all messages with PDF-attachments:
              mime:application/pdf

       Find all messages with attached images:
              mime:image/*

CAVEATS

       With current Xapian versions, the apostroph character is considered part of a word. Thus, you cannot find
       D'Artagnan by searching for Artagnan. So, include the apostroph in search or use a regexp search.

       Matching  on spaces has changed compared to the old query-parser; this applies e.g. to Maildirs that have
       spaces in their name, such as Sent Items. See MAILDIR above.

REPORTING BUGS

       Please report bugs at https://github.com/djcb/mu/issues.

AUTHOR

       Dirk-Jan C. Binnema <djcb@djcbsoftware.nl>

COPYRIGHT

       This manpage is part of mu 1.10.8.

       Copyright  ©  2022-2023  Dirk-Jan  C.  Binnema.  License   GPLv3+:   GNU   GPL   version   3   or   later
       https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html.  This  is  free  software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
       There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

SEE ALSO

       mu-find(1), mu-fields(1), *pcre(3)

                                                                                                     MU QUERY(7)