Mutt-2.2.9
Introduction to Mutt
The Mutt package contains a Mail User
Agent. This is useful for reading, writing, replying to, saving, and
deleting your email.
This package is known to build and work properly
using an LFS 11.3 platform.
Package Information
Mutt Dependencies
Recommended (for a text version of the manual)
Lynx-2.8.9rel.1, or
Links-2.28 (or
W3m, or
ELinks) - please read the Note.
Optional
Aspell-0.60.8,
Cyrus SASL-2.1.28,
DocBook-utils-0.6.14,
GDB-13.1,
GnuPG-2.4.0,
GnuTLS-3.8.0,
GPGME-1.18.0,
libidn-1.41,
MIT Kerberos V5-1.20.1,
an MTA (that provides a sendmail command),
slang-2.3.3,
SQLite-3.40.1,
libgssapi,
Mixmaster,
QDBM or
Tokyo Cabinet
User Notes:
https://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/mutt
Installation of Mutt
Note
Mutt ships with an HTML version of its
manual, but the text version is no longer provided because differences
in the formatting from different text browsers compared to the shipped
version caused complaints. To get a text file, the following are used
in order of preference: lynx with overstriking
(backspaces) for emphasis, w3m or
elinks: the latter two apparently provide
plain text. Plain text is generally preferred unless reading the HTML
manual, so the instructions below use lynx
if available, or else links to produce plain
text.
Mutt requires a group named
mail
. You can
add this group, if it does not exist, with this command:
groupadd -g 34 mail
If you did not install an MTA, you need to
modify the ownership of /var/mail
with this command:
chgrp -v mail /var/mail
Install Mutt by running the following
commands:
To ensure that a plain text manual is created when using
lynx or to otherwise use
links to produce it (instead of
elinks), run the following command:
sed -e 's/ -with_backspaces//' \
-e 's/elinks/links/' \
-e 's/-no-numbering -no-references//' \
-i doc/Makefile.in
Now configure and build the application:
./configure --prefix=/usr \
--sysconfdir=/etc \
--with-docdir=/usr/share/doc/mutt-2.2.9 \
--with-ssl \
--enable-external-dotlock \
--enable-pop \
--enable-imap \
--enable-hcache \
--enable-sidebar &&
make
This package does not come with a test suite.
Now, as the root
user:
make install
Note
If you used a DESTDIR method to only install to a temporary location as
a regular user (as part of a package management process), you will need
to run the following as the root
user after completing the real install:
chown root:mail /usr/bin/mutt_dotlock &&
chmod -v 2755 /usr/bin/mutt_dotlock
An info file is now installed, so you will also need to recreate the
/usr/share/info/dir
as described when
Texinfo was installed in LFS.
Command Explanations
sed ... -e 's/ -with_backspaces//' ...
: This turns
off the backspaces used for overstriking when lynx
is used, resulting in readable plain text when using view.
sed ... -e 's/elinks/links/' ...
: This allows
links to be run instead of elinks
which is not in the book.
sed ... -e 's/-no-numbering -no-references//' ...
:
This removes switches which are not understood by links.
--enable-external-dotlock
: In some circumstances
the mutt-dotlock program is not created. This switch ensures it is always
created.
--enable-pop
: This switch enables POP3 support.
--enable-imap
: This switch enables IMAP support.
--enable-hcache
: This switch enables
header caching.
--enable-sidebar
: This switch enables support
for the sidebar (a list of mailboxes). It is off by default, but can be
turned on by :set sidebar_visible in mutt (and off
again with ':unset'), or it can be enabled in
~/.muttrc
.
--with-ssl
: This parameter adds SSL/TLS
support from openssl in POP3/IMAP/SMTP.
--enable-autocrypt --with-sqlite3
: These two
switches add support for passive protection against data collection,
using gnupg and gpgme (gpgme is enabled by autocrypt). See The Manual.
--enable-gpgme
: This switch enables GPG support
through the GPGME package. Use this switch if you want GPG support in
Mutt.
--enable-smtp
: This switch enables
SMTP relay support.
--with-idn2
: Use this parameter if both libidn and
libidn2 have been installed, and you wish to use libidn2 here.
--with-sasl
: This parameter adds authentication support
from Cyrus SASL-2.1.28 in POP3/IMAP/SMTP if they are enabled.
Depending on the server configuration, this may not be needed for POP3
or IMAP. However, it is needed for SMTP authentication.
Configuring Mutt
Config Files
/etc/Muttrc
,
~/.muttrc
,
/etc/mime.types
, and
~/.mime.types
Configuration Information
No changes in these files are necessary to begin using
Mutt. When you are ready to make changes,
the man page for muttrc
is a good starting place.
In order to utilize GnuPG, use the following
command:
cat /usr/share/doc/mutt-2.2.9/samples/gpg.rc >> ~/.muttrc
Contents
Installed Programs: flea, mutt, mutt_dotlock, muttbug, pgpewrap, mutt_pgpring, and
smime_keys
Installed Libraries: None
Installed Directories: /usr/share/doc/mutt-2.2.9
Short Descriptions
flea |
is a script showing where to report bugs
|
mutt |
is a Mail User Agent (MUA) which enables you to read, write
and delete your email
|
mutt_dotlock |
implements the mail spool file lock
|
muttbug |
is a script identical to flea
|
pgpewrap |
prepares a command line for the GnuPG-2.4.0 utilities
|
pgpring |
is a key ring dumper for
PGP. It is not
needed for GnuPG-2.4.0
|
smime_keys |
manages a keystore for S/MIME certificates
|