Table of Contents
Quite a bit of effort has been made to make Mutt the premier text-mode
MIME MUA. Every effort has been made to provide the functionality that
the discerning MIME user requires, and the conformance to the standards
wherever possible. When configuring Mutt for MIME, there are two extra
types of configuration files which Mutt uses. One is the
mime.types
file, which contains the mapping of file extensions to
IANA MIME types. The other is the mailcap
file, which specifies
the external commands to use for handling specific MIME types.
There are three areas/menus in Mutt which deal with MIME, they are the pager (while viewing a message), the attachment menu and the compose menu.
When you select a message from the index and view it in the pager, Mutt
decodes the message to a text representation. Mutt internally supports
a number of MIME types, including text/plain, text/enriched,
message/rfc822, and message/news
. In addition, the export
controlled version of Mutt recognizes a variety of PGP MIME types,
including PGP/MIME and application/pgp.
Mutt will denote attachments with a couple lines describing them. These lines are of the form:
[-- Attachment #1: Description --] [-- Type: text/plain, Encoding: 7bit, Size: 10000 --]
Where the Description
is the description or filename given for the
attachment, and the Encoding
is one of
7bit/8bit/quoted-printable/base64/binary
.
If Mutt cannot deal with a MIME type, it will display a message like:
[-- image/gif is unsupported (use 'v' to view this part) --]
The default binding for view-attachments
is `v', which displays the
attachment menu for a message. The attachment menu displays a list of
the attachments in a message. From the attachment menu, you can save,
print, pipe, delete, and view attachments. You can apply these
operations to a group of attachments at once, by tagging the attachments
and by using the ``tag-prefix'' operator. You can also reply to the
current message from this menu, and only the current attachment (or the
attachments tagged) will be quoted in your reply. You can view
attachments as text, or view them using the mailcap viewer definition.
Finally, you can apply the usual message-related functions (like
resend-message, and the reply
and forward functions) to attachments of type message/rfc822
.
See the help on the attachment menu for more information.
The compose menu is the menu you see before you send a message. It allows you to edit the recipient list, the subject, and other aspects of your message. It also contains a list of the attachments of your message, including the main body. From this menu, you can print, copy, filter, pipe, edit, compose, review, and rename an attachment or a list of tagged attachments. You can also modifying the attachment information, notably the type, encoding and description.
Attachments appear as follows:
- 1 [text/plain, 7bit, 1K] /tmp/mutt-euler-8082-0 <no description> 2 [applica/x-gunzip, base64, 422K] ~/src/mutt-0.85.tar.gz <no description>
The '-' denotes that Mutt will delete the file after sending (or
postponing, or canceling) the message. It can be toggled with the
toggle-unlink
command (default: u). The next field is the MIME
content-type, and can be changed with the edit-type
command
(default: ^T). The next field is the encoding for the attachment,
which allows a binary message to be encoded for transmission on 7bit
links. It can be changed with the edit-encoding
command
(default: ^E). The next field is the size of the attachment,
rounded to kilobytes or megabytes. The next field is the filename,
which can be changed with the rename-file
command (default: R).
The final field is the description of the attachment, and can be
changed with the edit-description
command (default: d).
When you add an attachment to your mail message, Mutt searches your
personal mime.types file at ${HOME}/.mime.types
, and then
the system mime.types file at /usr/local/share/mutt/mime.types
or
/etc/mime.types
The mime.types file consist of lines containing a MIME type and a space separated list of extensions. For example:
application/postscript ps eps application/pgp pgp audio/x-aiff aif aifc aiff
A sample mime.types
file comes with the Mutt distribution, and
should contain most of the MIME types you are likely to use.
If Mutt can not determine the mime type by the extension of the file you
attach, it will look at the file. If the file is free of binary
information, Mutt will assume that the file is plain text, and mark it
as text/plain
. If the file contains binary information, then Mutt will
mark it as application/octet-stream
. You can change the MIME
type that Mutt assigns to an attachment by using the edit-type
command from the compose menu (default: ^T). The MIME type is actually a
major mime type followed by the sub-type, separated by a '/'. 6 major
types: application, text, image, video, audio, and model have been approved
after various internet discussions. Mutt recognizes all of these if the
appropriate entry is found in the mime.types file. It also recognizes other
major mime types, such as the chemical type that is widely used in the
molecular modeling community to pass molecular data in various forms to
various molecular viewers. Non-recognized mime types should only be used
if the recipient of the message is likely to be expecting such attachments.
Mutt supports RFC 1524 MIME Configuration, in particular the Unix specific format specified in Appendix A of RFC 1524. This file format is commonly referred to as the mailcap format. Many MIME compliant programs utilize the mailcap format, allowing you to specify handling for all MIME types in one place for all programs. Programs known to use this format include Netscape, XMosaic, lynx and metamail.
In order to handle various MIME types that Mutt can not handle internally, Mutt parses a series of external configuration files to find an external handler. The default search string for these files is a colon delimited list containing the following files:
$HOME/.mailcap
$PKGDATADIR/mailcap
$SYSCONFDIR/mailcap
/etc/mailcap
/usr/etc/mailcap
/usr/local/etc/mailcap
where $HOME
is your home directory. The
$PKGDATADIR
and the
$SYSCONFDIR
directories depend on where mutt
is installed: the former is the default for shared data, the
latter for system configuration files.
The default search path can be obtained by running the following command:
mutt -nF /dev/null -Q mailcap_path
In particular, the metamail distribution will install a mailcap file,
usually as /usr/local/etc/mailcap
, which contains some baseline
entries.
A mailcap file consists of a series of lines which are comments, blank, or definitions.
A comment line consists of a # character followed by anything you want.
A blank line is blank.
A definition line consists of a content type, a view command, and any number of optional fields. Each field of a definition line is divided by a semicolon ';' character.
The content type is specified in the MIME standard type/subtype method.
For example,
text/plain, text/html, image/gif,
etc. In addition, the mailcap format includes two formats for
wildcards, one using the special '*' subtype, the other is the implicit
wild, where you only include the major type. For example, image/*
, or
video,
will match all image types and video types,
respectively.
The view command is a Unix command for viewing the type specified. There are two different types of commands supported. The default is to send the body of the MIME message to the command on stdin. You can change this behavior by using %s as a parameter to your view command. This will cause Mutt to save the body of the MIME message to a temporary file, and then call the view command with the %s replaced by the name of the temporary file. In both cases, Mutt will turn over the terminal to the view program until the program quits, at which time Mutt will remove the temporary file if it exists.
So, in the simplest form, you can send a text/plain message to the external pager more on stdin:
text/plain; more
Or, you could send the message as a file:
text/plain; more %s
Perhaps you would like to use lynx to interactively view a text/html message:
text/html; lynx %s
In this case, lynx does not support viewing a file from stdin, so you must use the %s syntax. Note: Some older versions of lynx contain a bug where they will check the mailcap file for a viewer for text/html. They will find the line which calls lynx, and run it. This causes lynx to continuously spawn itself to view the object.
On the other hand, maybe you don't want to use lynx interactively, you just want to have it convert the text/html to text/plain, then you can use:
text/html; lynx -dump %s | more
Perhaps you wish to use lynx to view text/html files, and a pager on all other text formats, then you would use the following:
text/html; lynx %s text/*; more
This is the simplest form of a mailcap file.
The interpretation of shell meta-characters embedded in MIME parameters can lead to security problems in general. Mutt tries to quote parameters in expansion of %s syntaxes properly, and avoids risky characters by substituting them, see the $mailcap_sanitize variable.
Although mutt's procedures to invoke programs with mailcap seem to be safe, there are other applications parsing mailcap, maybe taking less care of it. Therefore you should pay attention to the following rules:
Keep the %-expandos away from shell quoting. Don't quote them with single or double quotes. Mutt does this for you, the right way, as should any other program which interprets mailcap. Don't put them into backtick expansions. Be highly careful with eval statements, and avoid them if possible at all. Trying to fix broken behavior with quotes introduces new leaks - there is no alternative to correct quoting in the first place.
If you have to use the %-expandos' values in context where you need
quoting or backtick expansions, put that value into a shell variable
and reference the shell variable where necessary, as in the following
example (using $charset
inside the backtick expansion is safe,
since it is not itself subject to any further expansion):
text/test-mailcap-bug; cat %s; copiousoutput; test=charset=%{charset} \ && test "`echo $charset | tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'`" != iso-8859-1
In addition to the required content-type and view command fields, you can add semi-colon ';' separated fields to set flags and other options. Mutt recognizes the following optional fields:
This flag tells Mutt that the command passes possibly large amounts of
text on stdout. This causes Mutt to invoke a pager (either the internal
pager or the external pager defined by the pager variable) on the output
of the view command. Without this flag, Mutt assumes that the command
is interactive. One could use this to replace the pipe to more
in the lynx -dump
example in the Basic section:
text/html; lynx -dump %s ; copiousoutput
This will cause lynx to format the text/html output as text/plain and Mutt will use your standard pager to display the results.
Mutt uses this flag when viewing attachments with auto_view, in order to decide whether it should honor the setting of the $wait_key variable or not. When an attachment is viewed using an interactive program, and the corresponding mailcap entry has a needsterminal flag, Mutt will use $wait_key and the exit status of the program to decide if it will ask you to press a key after the external program has exited. In all other situations it will not prompt you for a key.
This flag specifies the command to use to create a new attachment of a specific MIME type. Mutt supports this from the compose menu.
This flag specifies the command to use to create a new attachment of a specific MIME type. This command differs from the compose command in that mutt will expect standard MIME headers on the data. This can be used to specify parameters, filename, description, etc. for a new attachment. Mutt supports this from the compose menu.
This flag specifies the command to use to print a specific MIME type. Mutt supports this from the attachment and compose menus.
This flag specifies the command to use to edit a specific MIME type. Mutt supports this from the compose menu, and also uses it to compose new attachments. Mutt will default to the defined editor for text attachments.
This field specifies the format for the file denoted by %s in the
command fields. Certain programs will require a certain file extension,
for instance, to correctly view a file. For instance, lynx will only
interpret a file as text/html
if the file ends in .html
.
So, you would specify lynx as a text/html
viewer with a line in
the mailcap file like:
text/html; lynx %s; nametemplate=%s.html
This field specifies a command to run to test whether this mailcap entry should be used. The command is defined with the command expansion rules defined in the next section. If the command returns 0, then the test passed, and Mutt uses this entry. If the command returns non-zero, then the test failed, and Mutt continues searching for the right entry. Note: the content-type must match before Mutt performs the test. For example:
text/html; netscape -remote 'openURL(%s)' ; test=RunningX text/html; lynx %s
In this example, Mutt will run the program RunningX which will return 0 if the X Window manager is running, and non-zero if it isn't. If RunningX returns 0, then Mutt will call netscape to display the text/html object. If RunningX doesn't return 0, then Mutt will go on to the next entry and use lynx to display the text/html object.
When searching for an entry in the mailcap file, Mutt will search for
the most useful entry for its purpose. For instance, if you are
attempting to print an image/gif
, and you have the following
entries in your mailcap file, Mutt will search for an entry with the
print command:
image/*; xv %s image/gif; ; print= anytopnm %s | pnmtops | lpr; \ nametemplate=%s.gif
Mutt will skip the image/*
entry and use the image/gif
entry with the print command.
In addition, you can use this with auto_view to denote two commands for viewing an attachment, one to be viewed automatically, the other to be viewed interactively from the attachment menu. In addition, you can then use the test feature to determine which viewer to use interactively depending on your environment.
text/html; netscape -remote 'openURL(%s)' ; test=RunningX text/html; lynx %s; nametemplate=%s.html text/html; lynx -dump %s; nametemplate=%s.html; copiousoutput
For auto_view, Mutt will choose the third entry because of the copiousoutput tag. For interactive viewing, Mutt will run the program RunningX to determine if it should use the first entry. If the program returns non-zero, Mutt will use the second entry for interactive viewing.
The various commands defined in the mailcap files are passed to the
/bin/sh
shell using the system() function. Before the
command is passed to /bin/sh -c
, it is parsed to expand
various special parameters with information from Mutt. The keywords
Mutt expands are:
As seen in the basic mailcap section, this variable is expanded to a filename specified by the calling program. This file contains the body of the message to view/print/edit or where the composing program should place the results of composition. In addition, the use of this keyword causes Mutt to not pass the body of the message to the view/print/edit program on stdin.
Mutt will expand %t to the text representation of the content
type of the message in the same form as the first parameter of the
mailcap definition line, ie text/html
or
image/gif
.
Mutt will expand this to the value of the specified parameter from the Content-Type: line of the mail message. For instance, if Your mail message contains:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
then Mutt will expand %{charset} to iso-8859-1. The default metamail mailcap file uses this feature to test the charset to spawn an xterm using the right charset to view the message.
This will be replaced by a %
Mutt does not currently support the %F and %n keywords specified in RFC 1524. The main purpose of these parameters is for multipart messages, which is handled internally by Mutt.
This mailcap file is fairly simple and standard:
# I'm always running X :) video/*; xanim %s > /dev/null image/*; xv %s > /dev/null # I'm always running netscape (if my computer had more memory, maybe) text/html; netscape -remote 'openURL(%s)'
This mailcap file shows quite a number of examples:
# Use xanim to view all videos Xanim produces a header on startup, # send that to /dev/null so I don't see it video/*; xanim %s > /dev/null # Send html to a running netscape by remote text/html; netscape -remote 'openURL(%s)'; test=RunningNetscape # If I'm not running netscape but I am running X, start netscape on the # object text/html; netscape %s; test=RunningX # Else use lynx to view it as text text/html; lynx %s # This version would convert the text/html to text/plain text/html; lynx -dump %s; copiousoutput # I use enscript to print text in two columns to a page text/*; more %s; print=enscript -2Gr %s # Netscape adds a flag to tell itself to view jpegs internally image/jpeg;xv %s; x-mozilla-flags=internal # Use xv to view images if I'm running X # In addition, this uses the \ to extend the line and set my editor # for images image/*;xv %s; test=RunningX; \ edit=xpaint %s # Convert images to text using the netpbm tools image/*; (anytopnm %s | pnmscale -xysize 80 46 | ppmtopgm | pgmtopbm | pbmtoascii -1x2 ) 2>&1 ; copiousoutput # Send excel spreadsheets to my NT box application/ms-excel; open.pl %s
In addition to explicitly telling Mutt to view an attachment with the MIME viewer defined in the mailcap file, Mutt has support for automatically viewing MIME attachments while in the pager.
To work, you must define a viewer in the mailcap file which uses the
copiousoutput
option to denote that it is non-interactive.
Usually, you also use the entry to convert the attachment to a text
representation which you can view in the pager.
You then use the auto_view
muttrc command to list the
content-types that you wish to view automatically.
For instance, if you set auto_view to:
auto_view text/html application/x-gunzip \ application/postscript image/gif application/x-tar-gz
Mutt could use the following mailcap entries to automatically view attachments of these types.
text/html; lynx -dump %s; copiousoutput; nametemplate=%s.html image/*; anytopnm %s | pnmscale -xsize 80 -ysize 50 | ppmtopgm | \ pgmtopbm | pbmtoascii ; copiousoutput application/x-gunzip; gzcat; copiousoutput application/x-tar-gz; gunzip -c %s | tar -tf - ; copiousoutput application/postscript; ps2ascii %s; copiousoutput
``unauto_view'' can be used to remove previous entries from the autoview list. This can be used with message-hook to autoview messages based on size, etc. ``unauto_view *'' will remove all previous entries.
Mutt has some heuristics for determining which attachment of a multipart/alternative type to display. First, mutt will check the alternative_order list to determine if one of the available types is preferred. The alternative_order list consists of a number of mimetypes in order, including support for implicit and explicit wildcards, for example:
alternative_order text/enriched text/plain text application/postscript image/*
Next, mutt will check if any of the types have a defined auto_view, and use that. Failing that, Mutt will look for any text type. As a last attempt, mutt will look for any type it knows how to handle.
To remove a MIME type from the alternative_order
list, use the
unalternative_order
command.
If you ever lose track of attachments in your mailboxes, Mutt's attachment-counting and -searching support might be for you. You can make your message index display the number of qualifying attachments in each message, or search for messages by attachment count. You also can configure what kinds of attachments qualify for this feature with the attachments and unattachments commands.
In order to provide this information, mutt needs to fully MIME-parse all messages affected first. This can slow down operation especially for remote mail folders such as IMAP because all messages have to be downloaded first regardless whether the user really wants to view them or not.
The syntax is:
attachments {+|-}disposition mime-type unattachments {+|-}disposition mime-type attachments ?
Disposition is the attachment's Content-disposition type -- either "inline" or "attachment". You can abbreviate this to I or A.
Disposition is prefixed by either a + symbolor a - symbol. If it's a +, you're saying that you want to allow this disposition and MIME type to qualify. If it's a -, you're saying that this disposition and MIME type is an exception to previous + rules. There are examples below of how this is useful.
Mime-type is, unsurprisingly, the MIME type of the attachment you want to affect. A MIME type is always of the format "major/minor", where "major" describes the broad category of document you're looking at, and "minor" describes the specific type within that category. The major part of mim-type must be literal text (or the special token "*"), but the minor part may be a regular expression. (Therefore, "*/.*" matches any MIME type.)
The MIME types you give to the attachments directive are a kind of pattern. When you use the attachments directive, the patterns you specify are added to a list. When you use unattachments, the pattern is removed from the list. The patterns are not expanded and matched to specific MIME types at this time -- they're just text in a list. They're only matched when actually evaluating a message.
Some examples might help to illustrate. The examples that are not commented out define the default configuration of the lists.
## Removing a pattern from a list removes that pattern literally. It ## does not remove any type matching the pattern. ## ## attachments +A */.* ## attachments +A image/jpeg ## unattachments +A */.* ## ## This leaves "attached" image/jpeg files on the allowed attachments ## list. It does not remove all items, as you might expect, because the ## second */.* is not a matching expression at this time. ## ## Remember: "unattachments" only undoes what "attachments" has done! ## It does not trigger any matching on actual messages. ## Qualify any MIME part with an "attachment" disposition, EXCEPT for ## text/x-vcard and application/pgp parts. (PGP parts are already known ## to mutt, and can be searched for with ~g, ~G, and ~k.) ## ## I've added x-pkcs7 to this, since it functions (for S/MIME) ## analogously to PGP signature attachments. S/MIME isn't supported ## in a stock mutt build, but we can still treat it specially here. ## attachments +A */.* attachments -A text/x-vcard application/pgp.* attachments -A application/x-pkcs7-.* ## Discount all MIME parts with an "inline" disposition, unless they're ## text/plain. (Why inline a text/plain part unless it's external to the ## message flow?) ## attachments +I text/plain ## These two lines make Mutt qualify MIME containers. (So, for example, ## a message/rfc822 forward will count as an attachment.) The first ## line is unnecessary if you already have "attach-allow */.*", of ## course. These are off by default! The MIME elements contained ## within a message/* or multipart/* are still examined, even if the ## containers themseves don't qualify. ## #attachments +A message/.* multipart/.* #attachments +I message/.* multipart/.* ## You probably don't really care to know about deleted attachments. attachments -A message/external-body attachments -I message/external-body
"attachments ?" will list your current settings in Muttrc format, so that it can be pasted elsewhere.
Mutt's mime_lookup list specifies a list of mime-types that should not be treated according to their mailcap entry. This option is designed to deal with binary types such as application/octet-stream. When an attachment's mime-type is listed in mime_lookup, then the extension of the filename will be compared to the list of extensions in the mime.types file. The mime-type associated with this extension will then be used to process the attachment according to the rules in the mailcap file and according to any other configuration options (such as auto_view) specified. Common usage would be:
mime_lookup application/octet-stream application/X-Lotus-Manuscript
In addition, the unmime_lookup command may be used to disable this feature for any particular mime-type if it had been set, for example, in a global muttrc.