MAILDIRMAKE(1) | Double Precision, Inc. | MAILDIRMAKE(1) |
NAME¶
maildirmake - create maildirs and maildir foldersSYNOPSIS¶
maildirmake
[options...] { maildir}
DESCRIPTION¶
The maildirmake command creates maildirs, and maildir folders. This documentation describes the maildirmake command from the Courier mail server, which creates an extended form of maildirs that implements additional extensions beyond the basic maildir properties that were first implemented in the Qmail mail server.OPTIONS¶
-Screate a "sharable" maildir. A
sharable maildir has slightly different permissions which allows creation of
publicly-shared folders.
-q quota
install a quota on the maildir. See
maildirquota(7)[1], below.
-f folder
do not create a maildir, but create a folder
in an existing maildir.
-s mode
create a publicly accessible folder in an
existing sharable maildir. First, use the -S option to create a
sharable maildir. Then, run maildirmake again with the -s option
to create publicly accessible folders. mode is a comma-separated list
of the following keywords: read - readonly folder, only you can write messages
to this folder; write - anyone can read and write messages to this folder;
group - only allow members of your own system group to access messages in this
folder (instead of everyone).
--add name=pathname, --del name
create or delete the directories and links
needed to access shared folders. See below for more information.
FOLDERS¶
This maildirmake command supports enhanced maildirs that contain folders. By itself, maildirmake makes a new subdirectory maildir, and creates all the necessary structures. The -f option creates a new "folder" within an existing maildir. maildir must already exist, and the maildirmake command will create a new folder in the maildir. Folders are simply subdirectories inside the main maildir whose names start with a period, and which are themselves maildirs. For example, the command " maildirmake -f Drafts mail/Maildir" creates mail/Maildir/.Drafts, that has the usual tmp, new and cur. You MUST use the -f option, instead of specifying mail/Maildir/.Drafts directly, in order to correctly initialize certain enhanced maildir features. Folders cannot be created directly within other folders. Running maildirmake -f Urgent mail/Maildir/.Drafts will not work. Instead, the period character is designated as a hierarchy separator, run maildirmake -f Drafts.Urgent mail/Maildir instead. This creates mail/Maildir/.Drafts.Urgent, and all mail software that supports enhanced maildirs will interpret it as a subfolder Urgent of the Drafts folder.SHARED FOLDERS¶
This is another extension to the Maildir format that allows folders to be shared between multiple clients.maildirmake -S /usr/local/share/maildirs/notices
maildirmake -s write -f Weekly /usr/local/share/maildirs/notices
maildirmake --add notices=/usr/local/share/maildirs/notices $HOME/Maildir
GLOBAL SHARED FOLDERS¶
Normally -add command must be run for every maildir which needs to access the sharable maildir. Alternatively the file /etc/courier/maildirshared can be created, to specify a default set of sharable maildirs. Each line in this file takes the following format:nick<tab>path
ACCESSING SHARED FOLDERS¶
You may have read or write access to a shared folder. If you have write access, you can add messages to the shared folder. You can also delete messages that you've added. Anyone can create a sharable maildir, so if the sharable maildir is actually created by you, can can delete any message, not just your own.SEE ALSO¶
AUTHOR¶
Sam VarshavchikAuthor
NOTES¶
- 1.
- maildirquota(7)
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildirquota.html
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildiracl.html
- 3.
- maildir(5)
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildir.html
- 4.
- maildirkw(1)
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildirkw.html
- 5.
- maildrop(1)
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildrop.html
- 6.
- deliverquota(8)
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/deliverquota.html
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildropfilter.html
08/31/2011 | Courier Mail Server |