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mu-cfind is meant to search for contacts within your contacts database and the emails that you have sent/received. The use of the --personal flag in that command is meant to filter for only emails that use your email addresses (which are all the ones you specify with the ${myAddresses} variable. Disregard what I said in #1623 (comment). --my-address=<my-email-address> specifies that some e-mail addresses are 'my-address' (--my-address can be used multiple times). This is used by mu cfind -- any e-mail address found in the address fields of a message which also has <my-email-address> in one of its address fields is considered a personal e-mail address. This allows you, for example, to filter out (mu cfind --personal) addresses which were merely seen in mailing list messages. To initialize the database with mu init, the ${myAddresses} is not required to be passed to successfully initialize the database, but it is heavily recommended to do so. To see the difference, in a safe location, run mu init --maildir=<path>, then mu index. You'll notice that "personal addresses" returns <none>, although the database will still work. However, mu cfind --personal will fail (as the personal contacts don't exist). Then run mu init --maildir=<path> --my-address=<address>, then mu index. Then you'll be able to search for contacts using mu cfind --personal. |
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.. | ||
accounts | ||
lib | ||
lib-bash | ||
misc | ||
programs | ||
services | ||
targets | ||
default.nix | ||
files.nix | ||
home-environment.nix | ||
manual.nix | ||
modules.nix | ||
systemd-activate.rb | ||
systemd-activate.sh | ||
systemd.nix | ||
xcursor.nix | ||
xresources.nix | ||
xsession.nix |