I am contemplating moving from Thunderbird to Mutt (provided it is feasible) to move to a faster, simpler application.
My current Thunderbird set-up consists of multiple IMAP accounts (gmail and google apps). Only selected folders (read labels) in each IMAP account are stored locally. For all other folders, I glance through the headers and open a message only if I find it interesting. I also use folder bookmarks to navigate to folders quickly. I also move messages across folders with keyboard shortcuts.
Is it possible to replicate the set-up in Mutt? Can someone share/ point to a sample muttrc file that does the same thing? It would be great if the muttrc file is adequately commented.
On a side note, will it also be possible to import my messages from Thunderbird locally? That will save me considerable network traffic (about 2GB data stored locally).
It is definitely possible to do all the things you want to do with Mutt
, and much more.
Multiple accounts are possible with Mutt
. Personally I have only used multiple gmail imap accounts, as described in this article here, but it is feasible to set them up and move between them. It is not necessary to repeat the information here, but it has a lot to do with how the 'account hooks' and 'folder hooks' are set up; the article explains it well.
However, you can achieve it without folder-hooks
: see my answer here:
To navigate between folders, you can use macros, as these well known ones demonstrate:
macro index,pager gi "=INBOX" "Go to inbox"
macro index,pager ga "=[Gmail]/All Mail" "Go to all mail"
More on how to move between folders and how messages can be moved across folders is explained here in great detail.
Indeed, messages can be exported from Thunderbird
in the mbox
format and then read in Mutt
, as the Mutt wiki notes here. It will be necessary to install the Thunderbird
import/export addon and then export the folders from Thunderbird in mbox
format and then specify the folder in the .muttrc
, by refering to these notes.
Referring to your question in the comments: When you load up your inbox or when you switch between folders Mutt
by default only loads the headers from the server, which I think is what you want. It only downloads the actual message when you click return to view the message. Hence, why we cache headers and messages for performance, and usually most people have standard entries like this in the .muttrc
:
set header_cache=~/.mutt/cache/headers
set message_cachedir=~/.mutt/cache/bodies
For offline availability, you may need to pair Mutt
with another program called offlineimap
, which is available in the repositories; a discussion is available here and here.
I've put these hints together (from the wiki and my own personal rc) into a rough muttrc
but you may have to test and modify it for your own purposes, and obviously add your own details, but it should be a useful starting point.
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