Johannes Hertenstein
Posted on May 16, 2019
I got a reusable notebook for Christmas which is accompanied by a simple app that makes scanning your notes really easy. Scans of your notes are converted into PDF files which you can send yourself via E-Mail.
All of that is near — but I would prefer having them in a special folder that is synced across my devices as that folder is part of my weekly review.
So an idea popped into my head: Could I configure a mail client that simply saves attachments sent to a special mail address into a folder automatically — similar to how there are special Kindle & Evernote E-Mail addresses that save the contents to the respective services? Turns out, there is.
What you need
- An always-on Linux computer such as a raspberry pi, a server or a NAS
-
getmail
- Package named
getmail4
on Debian.
- Package named
procmail
-
munpack
- Package named
mpack
on Debian.
- Package named
E-Mail is a pretty clearly defined system that works very unix-y on servers: Multiple tools are involved that all do a single thing — but they do that single thing very well. I this case our stack uses getmail
for fetching mail from a server via IMAP or SMTP, procmail
for filtering those mails and munpack
in order to extract attachments to those mails.
Setting up getmail
In order to use getmail, we will setup a configuration file in ~/.getmail/getmailrc
with the following contents:
[retriever]
type=SimpleIMAPSSLRetriever
server=imap.myserver.com
username=my_username
password=my_password
[destination]
type=MDA_external
path=/usr/bin/procmail
[options]
verbose=0
read_all=false
delete=false
delete_after=0
delete_bigger_than=0
max_bytes_per_session=0
max_message_size=0
max_messages_per_session=0
delivered=false
received=false
message_log=~/getmail.log
message_log_syslog=false
message_log_verbose=true
The [retriever]
section defines where the mails are being fetched from: In this case using IMAP over SSL from imap.myserver.com
using mys username
and my_password
. getmail
ships with retrievers for all major E-Mail protocols which can be seen in the documentation.
The [destination]
section then defines what is called an MDA — a M ail D elivery A gent: A different application that will deliver / process the mails. getmail
supports a couple of other different destinations but MDA_external
is what we need in order to pass on the fetched mails to procmail
.
At this point we have successfully configured getmail
in order to connect to the IMAP server and fetch E-Mails from it.
Sorting mails using procmail
procmail
is a simple application that can be used as an MDA in order to filter and sort Mails into different mailboxes or pass them on to other processes if they match certain criteria. It uses as configuration file in .procmailrc
which looks like this:
PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/bin:$HOME/bin:$PATH
# Process all mails that arrive for save-notes@mydomain.com
:0
* ^TOsave-notes@mydomain\.com
| munpack -q -t -C $HOME/dropping_area
The procmailrc
format takes some getting used to. - :0
denotes the beginning of a new rule - * ^TOsave-notes@mydomain\.com
defines conditions that must be matched. In this case all mails that are sent to save-notes@mydomain.com
are being processed. - | munpack -q -t -C $HOME/dropping_area
defines the action to take with that mail. I this case the mail is being piped to munpack
which extracts all attachments into ~/dropping_area
It’s done
Now, every time getmail
is being executed new mails will be fetched from the server, filtered and attachments will be extracted. To periodically execute getmail
a simple cronjob can be added for the current user:
*/5 * * * * getmail
Why not use fetchmail?
When researching this topic you will find a lot of solutions using fetchmail
instead of getmail
.
However, using fetchmail
has a major disadvantage: fetchmail
fetches all unread messages from the server and marks them as read. This behaviour is not wanted for situations with ‘catchall’ mail addresses, where only a small portion of the E-Mails are actually sent to this special mail address.
getmail
tracks which mails have already been processed by using the message id instead of relying on the ‘read’ state on the server thereby not modifying any state on the server itself.
Posted on May 16, 2019
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