utf8proc: Update from 2.1.0 to 2.1.1
[termux-packages] / packages / alpine / pine.conf
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cb0edd1e 1#
2# Alpine configuration file
3#
4# This file sets the configuration options used by Alpine and PC-Alpine. These
5# options are usually set from within Alpine or PC-Alpine. There may be a
6# system-wide configuration file which sets the defaults for some of the
7# variables. On Unix, run alpine -conf to see how system defaults have been set.
8# For variables that accept multiple values, list elements are separated by
9# commas. A line beginning with a space or tab is considered to be a
10# continuation of the previous line. For a variable to be unset its value must
11# be blank. To set a variable to the empty string its value should be "".
12# You can override system defaults by setting a variable to the empty string.
13# Lines beginning with "#" are comments, and ignored by Alpine.
14
15# Over-rides your full name from Unix password file. Required for PC-Alpine.
16personal-name=
17
18# Sets domain part of From: and local addresses in outgoing mail.
19user-domain=
20
21# List of SMTP servers for sending mail. If blank: Unix Alpine uses sendmail.
22smtp-server=
23
24# NNTP server for posting news. Also sets news-collections for news reading.
25nntp-server=
26
27# Path of (local or remote) INBOX, e.g. ={mail.somewhere.edu}inbox
28# Normal Unix default is the local INBOX (usually /usr/spool/mail/$USER).
29inbox-path=
30
31# List of folder pairs; the first indicates a folder to archive, and the
32# second indicates the folder read messages in the first should
33# be moved to.
34incoming-archive-folders=
35
36# List of folders, assumed to be in first folder collection,
37# offered for pruning each month. For example: mumble
38pruned-folders=
39
40# Over-rides default path for sent-mail folder, e.g. =old-mail (using first
41# folder collection dir) or ={host2}sent-mail or ="" (to suppress saving).
42# Default: sent-mail (Unix) or SENTMAIL.MTX (PC) in default folder collection.
43default-fcc=
44
45# Over-rides default path for saved-msg folder, e.g. =saved-messages (using 1st
46# folder collection dir) or ={host2}saved-mail or ="" (to suppress saving).
47# Default: saved-messages (Unix) or SAVEMAIL.MTX (PC) in default collection.
48default-saved-msg-folder=
49
50# Over-rides default path for postponed messages folder, e.g. =pm (which uses
51# first folder collection dir) or ={host4}pm (using home dir on host4).
52# Default: postponed-msgs (Unix) or POSTPOND.MTX (PC) in default fldr coltn.
53postponed-folder=
54
55# If set, specifies where already-read messages will be moved upon quitting.
56read-message-folder=
57
58# If set, specifies where form letters should be stored.
59form-letter-folder=
60
61# If set, specifies where trash is moved to in Web Alpine.
62trash-folder=
63
64# Contains the actual signature contents as opposed to the signature filename.
65# If defined, this overrides the signature-file. Default is undefined.
66literal-signature=
67
68# Over-rides default path for signature file. Default is ~/.signature
69signature-file=
70
71# List of features; see Alpine's Setup/options menu for the current set.
72# e.g. feature-list= select-without-confirm, signature-at-bottom
73# Default condition for all of the features is no-.
74feature-list=
75
76# Alpine executes these keys upon startup (e.g. to view msg 13: i,j,1,3,CR,v)
77initial-keystroke-list=
78
79# Only show these headers (by default) when composing messages
80default-composer-hdrs=
81
82# Add these customized headers (and possible default values) when composing
83customized-hdrs=
84
85# When viewing messages, include this list of headers
86viewer-hdrs=
87
88# When viewing messages, number of blank spaces between left display edge and text
89viewer-margin-left=
90
91# When viewing messages, number of blank spaces between right display edge and text
92viewer-margin-right=
93
94# When viewing messages, number of lines of quote displayed before suppressing
95quote-suppression-threshold=
96
97# Determines default folder name for Saves...
98# Choices: default-folder, by-sender, by-from, by-recipient, last-folder-used.
99# Default: "default-folder", i.e. "saved-messages" (Unix) or "SAVEMAIL" (PC).
100saved-msg-name-rule=
101
102# Determines default name for Fcc...
103# Choices: default-fcc, by-recipient, last-fcc-used.
104# Default: "default-fcc" (see also "default-fcc=" variable.)
105fcc-name-rule=
106
107# Sets presentation order of messages in Index. Choices:
108# Subject, From, Arrival, Date, Size, To, Cc, OrderedSubj, Score, and Thread.
109# Order may be reversed by appending /Reverse. Default: "Arrival".
110sort-key=
111
112# Sets presentation order of address book entries. Choices: dont-sort,
113# fullname-with-lists-last, fullname, nickname-with-lists-last, nickname
114# Default: "fullname-with-lists-last".
115addrbook-sort-rule=
116
117# Sets presentation order of folder list entries. Choices: alphabetical,
118# alpha-with-dirs-last, alpha-with-dirs-first.
119# Default: "alpha-with-directories-last".
120folder-sort-rule=
121
122# Sets the default folder and collection offered at the Goto Command's prompt.
123goto-default-rule=
124
125# Sets message which cursor begins on. Choices: first-unseen, first-recent,
126# first-important, first-important-or-unseen, first-important-or-recent,
127# first, last. Default: "first-unseen".
128incoming-startup-rule=
129
130# Allows a default answer for the prune folder questions. Choices: yes-ask,
131# yes-no, no-ask, no-no, ask-ask, ask-no. Default: "ask-ask".
132pruning-rule=
133
134# Controls behavior when reopening an already open folder.
135folder-reopen-rule=
136
137# Style that MESSAGE INDEX is displayed in when threading.
138threading-display-style=
139
140# Style of THREAD INDEX or default MESSAGE INDEX when threading.
141threading-index-style=
142
143# When threading, character used to indicate collapsed messages underneath.
144threading-indicator-character=
145
146# When threading, character used to indicate expanded messages underneath.
147threading-expanded-character=
148
149# When threading, character used to indicate this is the last reply
150# to the parent of this message.
151threading-lastreply-character=
152
153# Reflects capabilities of the display you have.
154# If unset, the default is taken from your locale. That is usually the right
155# thing to use. Typical alternatives include UTF-8, ISO-8859-x, and EUC-JP
156# (where x is a number between 1 and 9).
157display-character-set=
158
159# Reflects capabilities of the keyboard you have.
160# If unset, the default is to use the same value
161# used for the display-character-set.
162keyboard-character-set=
163
164# Defaults to UTF-8. This is used for outgoing messages.
165# It is usually correct to leave this unset.
166posting-character-set=
167
168# Defaults to nothing, which is equivalent to US-ASCII. This is used for
169# unlabeled incoming messages. It is ok to leave this unset but if you receive
170# unlabeled mail that is usually in some known character set, set that here.
171unknown-character-set=
172
173# Specifies the program invoked by ^_ in the Composer,
174# or the "enable-alternate-editor-implicitly" feature.
175editor=
176
177# Specifies the program invoked by ^T in the Composer.
178speller=
179
180# Specifies the column of the screen where the composer should wrap.
181composer-wrap-column=
182
183# Specifies the string to insert when replying to a message.
184reply-indent-string=
185
186# Specifies the introduction to insert when replying to a message.
187reply-leadin=
188
189# Specifies the string to replace quotes with when viewing a message.
190quote-replace-string=
191
192# When these characters appear in the middle of a word in the composer
193# the forward word function will stop at the first text following (as happens
194# with SPACE characters by default)
195composer-word-separators=
196
197# Specifies the string to use when sending a message with no to or cc.
198empty-header-message=
199
200# Program to view images (e.g. GIF or TIFF attachments).
201image-viewer=
202
203# If "user-domain" not set, strips hostname in FROM address. (Unix only)
204use-only-domain-name=
205
206# This variable takes a list of programs that message text is piped into
207# after MIME decoding, prior to display.
208display-filters=
209
210# This defines a program that message text is piped into before MIME
211# encoding, prior to sending
212sending-filters=
213
214# A list of alternate addresses the user is known by
215alt-addresses=
216
217# A list of keywords for use in categorizing messages
218keywords=
219
220# Characters which surround keywords in SUBJKEY token.
221# Default is "{" "} "
222keyword-surrounding-chars=
223
224# Characters between subject and opening text in SUBJECTTEXT token.
225# Default is " - "
226opening-text-separator-chars=
227
228# This is a list of formats for address books. Each entry in the list is made
229# up of space-delimited tokens telling which fields are displayed and in
230# which order. See help text
231addressbook-formats=
232
233# This gives a format for displaying the index. It is made
234# up of space-delimited tokens telling which fields are displayed and in
235# which order. See help text
236index-format=
237
238# The number of lines of overlap when scrolling through message text
239viewer-overlap=
240
241# Number of lines from top and bottom of screen where single
242# line scrolling occurs.
243scroll-margin=
244
245# The number of seconds to sleep after writing a status message
246status-message-delay=
247
248# Number of times per-second to update busy cue messages
249busy-cue-rate=
250
251# UNIX ONLY (except MAC OSX): When an attachment is opened, this variable controls the number
252#of seconds to wait between checks if the user has ended viewing the attachment.
253#minimun value: 60 seconds, maximum value: 600 seconds (10 minutes). Default: 60 seconds
254mailcap-check-interval=
255
256# The approximate number of seconds between checks for new mail
257mail-check-interval=
258
259# The approximate number of seconds between checks for new mail in folders
260# other than the current folder and inbox.
261# Default is same as mail-check-interval
262mail-check-interval-noncurrent=
263
264# The minimum number of seconds between checks for new mail in a Mail Drop.
265# This is always effectively at least as large as the mail-check-interval
266maildrop-check-minimum=
267
268# For newsgroups accessed using NNTP, only messages numbered in the range
269# lastmsg-range+1 to lastmsg will be considered
270nntp-range=
271
272# Full path and name of NEWSRC file
273newsrc-path=
274
275# Path and filename of news configuration's active file.
276# The default is typically "/usr/lib/news/active".
277news-active-file-path=
278
279# Directory containing system's news data.
280# The default is typically "/usr/spool/news"
281news-spool-directory=
282
283# Path and filename of the program used to upload text from your terminal
284# emulator's into Alpine's composer.
285upload-command=
286
287# Text sent to terminal emulator prior to invoking the program defined by
288# the upload-command variable.
289# Note: _FILE_ will be replaced with the temporary file used in the upload.
290upload-command-prefix=
291
292# Path and filename of the program used to download text via your terminal
293# emulator from Alpine's export and save commands.
294download-command=
295
296# Text sent to terminal emulator prior to invoking the program defined by
297# the download-command variable.
298# Note: _FILE_ will be replaced with the temporary file used in the download.
299download-command-prefix=
300
301# Sets the search path for the mailcap configuration file.
302# NOTE: colon delimited under UNIX, semi-colon delimited under DOS/Windows/OS2.
303mailcap-search-path=
304
305# Sets the search path for the mimetypes configuration file.
306# NOTE: colon delimited under UNIX, semi-colon delimited under DOS/Windows/OS2.
307mimetype-search-path=
308
309# List of programs to open Internet URLs (e.g. http or ftp references).
310url-viewers=
311
312# The maximum number of non-stayopen remote connections that Alpine will use
313max-remote-connections=
314
315# A list of folders that should be left open once opened (INBOX is implicit)
316stay-open-folders=
317
318# Sets the time in seconds that Alpine will attempt to open a network
319# connection when checking for new unseen messages in an incoming folder.
320# The default is 5.
321incoming-check-timeout=
322
323# Sets the approximate number of seconds between checks for unseen messages
324# in incoming folders. The default is 180.
325incoming-check-interval=
326
327# Sets the approximate number of seconds between checks for unseen messages
328# for other than local or IMAP folders. The default is 180.
329incoming-check-interval-secondary=
330
331# List of incoming folders to check for unseen messages. The default if left
332# blank is to check all incoming folders.
333incoming-check-list=
334
335# Specifies the number of dead letter files to keep when canceling.
336dead-letter-files=
337
338# Sets the filename for the newmail fifo (named pipe). Unix only.
339newmail-fifo-path=
340
341# Sets the width for the NewMail screen.
342newmail-window-width=
343
344# List of incoming msg folders besides INBOX, e.g. ={host2}inbox, {host3}inbox
345# Syntax: optnl-label {optnl-imap-host-name}folder-path
346incoming-folders=
347
348# List of directories where saved-message folders may be. First one is
349# the default for Saves. Example: Main {host1}mail/[], Desktop mail\[]
350# Syntax: optnl-label {optnl-imap-hostname}optnl-directory-path[]
351folder-collections=
352
353# List, only needed if nntp-server not set, or news is on a different host
354# than used for NNTP posting. Examples: News *[] or News *{host3/nntp}[]
355# Syntax: optnl-label *{news-host/protocol}[]
356news-collections=
357
358# List of file or path names for personal addressbook(s).
359# Default: ~/.addressbook (Unix) or \PINE\ADDRBOOK (PC)
360# Syntax: optnl-label path-name
361address-book=
362
363# List of file or path names for global/shared addressbook(s).
364# Default: none
365# Syntax: optnl-label path-name
366global-address-book=
367
368# Set by Alpine; controls beginning-of-month sent-mail pruning.
369last-time-prune-questioned=117.4
370
371# Set by Alpine; controls display of "new version" message.
372last-version-used=6.20
373
374# This names the path to an alternative program, and any necessary arguments,
375# to be used in posting mail messages. Example:
376# /usr/lib/sendmail -oem -t -oi
377# or,
378# /usr/local/bin/sendit.sh
379# The latter a script found in Alpine distribution's contrib/util directory.
380# NOTE: The program MUST read the message to be posted on standard input,
381# AND operate in the style of sendmail's "-t" option.
382sendmail-path=
383
384# This names the root of the tree to which the user is restricted when reading
385# and writing folders and files. For example, on Unix ~/work confines the
386# user to the subtree beginning with their work subdirectory.
387# (Note: this alone is not sufficient for preventing access. You will also
388# need to restrict shell access and so on, see Alpine Technical Notes.)
389# Default: not set (so no restriction)
390operating-dir=
391
392# If no user input for this many hours, Alpine will exit if in an idle loop
393# waiting for a new command. If set to zero (the default), then there will
394# be no timeout.
395user-input-timeout=
396
397# Sets the time in seconds that Alpine will attempt to open a network
398# connection. The default is 30, the minimum is 5, and the maximum is
399# system defined (typically 75).
400tcp-open-timeout=
401
402# Network read warning timeout. The default is 15, the minimum is 5, and the
403# maximum is 1000.
404tcp-read-warning-timeout=
405
406# Network write warning timeout. The default is 0 (unset), the minimum
407# is 5 (if not 0), and the maximum is 1000.
408tcp-write-warning-timeout=
409
410# If this much time has elapsed at the time of a tcp read or write
411# timeout, Alpine will ask if you want to break the connection.
412# Default is 60 seconds, minimum is 5, maximum is 1000.
413tcp-query-timeout=
414
415# Sets the format of the command used to open a UNIX remote
416# shell connection. The default is "%s %s -l %s exec /etc/r%sd"
417# NOTE: the 4 (four) "%s" entries MUST exist in the provided command
418# where the first is for the command's path, the second is for the
419# host to connect to, the third is for the user to connect as, and the
420# fourth is for the connection method (typically "imap")
421rsh-command=
422
423# Sets the name of the command used to open a UNIX remote shell connection.
424# The default is typically /usr/ucb/rsh.
425rsh-path=
426
427# Sets the time in seconds that Alpine will attempt to open a UNIX remote
428# shell connection. The default is 15, min is 5, and max is unlimited.
429# Zero disables rsh altogether.
430rsh-open-timeout=
431
432# Sets the format of the command used to open a UNIX secure
433# shell connection. The default is "%s %s -l %s exec /etc/r%sd"
434# NOTE: the 4 (four) "%s" entries MUST exist in the provided command
435# where the first is for the command's path, the second is for the
436# host to connect to, the third is for the user to connect as, and the
437# fourth is for the connection method (typically "imap")
438ssh-command=
439
440# Sets the name of the command used to open a UNIX secure shell connection.
441# Typically this is /usr/bin/ssh.
442ssh-path=
443
444# Sets the time in seconds that Alpine will attempt to open a UNIX secure
445# shell connection. The default is 15, min is 5, and max is unlimited.
446# Zero disables ssh altogether.
447ssh-open-timeout=
448
449# Sets the version number Alpine will use as a threshold for offering
450# its new version message on startup.
451new-version-threshold=
452
453# List of mail drivers to disable.
454disable-these-drivers=
455
456# List of SASL authenticators to disable.
457disable-these-authenticators=
458
459# Set by Alpine; contains data for caching remote address books.
460remote-abook-metafile=
461
462# How many extra copies of remote address book should be kept. Default: 3
463remote-abook-history=
464
465# Minimum number of minutes between checks for remote address book changes.
466# 0 means never check except when opening a remote address book.
467# -1 means never check. Default: 5
468remote-abook-validity=
469
470# Your default printer selection
471printer=
472
473# List of special print commands
474personal-print-command=
475
476# Which category default print command is in
477personal-print-category=
478
479# Patterns and their actions are stored here.
480patterns-roles=
481
482# Patterns and their actions are stored here.
483patterns-filters2=
484
485# Patterns and their actions are stored here.
486patterns-scores2=
487
488# Patterns and their actions are stored here.
489patterns-indexcolors=
490
491# Patterns and their actions are stored here.
492patterns-other=
493
494# Patterns and their actions are stored here.
495patterns-search=
496
497# Controls display of color
498color-style=force-xterm-256color
499
500# Controls display of color for current index line
501current-indexline-style=flip-colors
502
503# Controls display of color for the titlebar at top of screen
504titlebar-color-style=
505
506# Choose: black, blue, green, cyan, red, magenta, yellow, or white.
507normal-foreground-color=
508normal-background-color=
509reverse-foreground-color=
510reverse-background-color=
511title-foreground-color=
512title-background-color=
513title-closed-foreground-color=
514title-closed-background-color=
515folder-foreground-color=
516folder-background-color=
517directory-foreground-color=
518directory-background-color=
519folder-list-text-foreground-color=
520folder-list-text-background-color=
521status-foreground-color=
522status-background-color=
523keylabel-foreground-color=
524keylabel-background-color=
525keyname-foreground-color=
526keyname-background-color=
527selectable-item-foreground-color=
528selectable-item-background-color=
529meta-message-foreground-color=
530meta-message-background-color=
531quote1-foreground-color=
532quote1-background-color=
533quote2-foreground-color=
534quote2-background-color=
535quote3-foreground-color=
536quote3-background-color=
537incoming-unseen-foreground-color=
538incoming-unseen-background-color=
539signature-foreground-color=
540signature-background-color=
541prompt-foreground-color=
542prompt-background-color=
543header-general-foreground-color=
544header-general-background-color=
545index-to-me-foreground-color=
546index-to-me-background-color=
547index-important-foreground-color=
548index-important-background-color=
549index-deleted-foreground-color=
550index-deleted-background-color=
551index-answered-foreground-color=
552index-answered-background-color=
553index-new-foreground-color=
554index-new-background-color=
555index-recent-foreground-color=
556index-recent-background-color=
557index-forward-foreground-color=
558index-forward-background-color=
559index-unseen-foreground-color=
560index-unseen-background-color=
561index-highpriority-foreground-color=
562index-highpriority-background-color=
563index-lowpriority-foreground-color=
564index-lowpriority-background-color=
565index-arrow-foreground-color=
566index-arrow-background-color=
567index-subject-foreground-color=
568index-subject-background-color=
569index-from-foreground-color=
570index-from-background-color=
571index-opening-foreground-color=
572index-opening-background-color=
573
574# Colors in which tokens will be displayed in the index screen
575index-token-colors=
576
577# When viewing messages, these are the header colors
578viewer-hdr-colors=
579
580# Colors used to display keywords in the index
581keyword-colors=
582
583# RSS News feed
584rss-news=
585
586# RSS Weather feed
587rss-weather=
588
589# Web Alpine index table row height
590wp-indexheight=
591
592# Web Alpine number of index lines in table
593wp-indexlines=
594
595# Web Alpine aggregate operations tab state
596wp-aggstate=
597
598# Web Alpine various aspects of cross-session state
599wp-state=
600
601# Web Alpine preferred width for message display in characters
602wp-columns=
603
604# Public certificates are kept in files in this directory. The files should
605# contain certificates in PEM format. The name of each file should look
606# like <emailaddress>.crt. The default directory is .alpine-smime/public.
607smime-public-cert-directory=
608
609# If this option is set then public certificates are kept in a single container
610# "file" similar to a remote configuration file instead of in the
611# smime-publiccert-directory. The value can be a remote or local folder
612# specification like for a non-standard pinerc value. The default
613# is that it is not set.
614smime-public-cert-container=
615
616# Private keys are kept in files in this directory. The files are in PEM format.
617# The name of a file should look like <emailaddress>.key.
618# The default directory is .alpine-smime/private.
619smime-private-key-directory=
620
621# If this option is set then private keys are kept in a single container
622# "file" similar to a remote configuration file instead of in the
623# private-key-directory. The value can be a remote or local folder
624# specification like for a non-standard pinerc value. The default
625# is that it is not set.
626smime-private-key-container=
627
628# Certificate Authority certificates (in addition to the normal CACerts for the
629# system) are kept in files in this directory. The files are in PEM format.
630# Filenames should end with .crt. The default directory is .alpine-smime/ca.
631smime-cacert-directory=
632
633# If this option is set then CAcerts are kept in a single container
634# "file" similar to a remote configuration file instead of in the
635# ca-cert-directory. The value can be a remote or local folder
636# specification like for a non-standard pinerc value. The default
637# is that it is not set.
638smime-cacert-container=
639
640# LDAP servers for looking up addresses.
641ldap-servers=