emacs/lisp/mail/mspools.el

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EmacsLisp

;;; mspools.el --- show mail spools waiting to be read -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
;; Copyright (C) 1997, 2001-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Stephen Eglen <stephen@gnu.org>
;; Created: 22 Jan 1997
;; Keywords: mail
;; location: http://www.anc.ed.ac.uk/~stephen/emacs/
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
;; (at your option) any later version.
;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Commentary:
;; If you use a mail filter (e.g. procmail, filter) to put mail messages in
;; folders, this file will let you see which folders have mail waiting
;; to be read in them. It assumes that new mail for the file `folder'
;; is written by the filter to a file called `folder.spool'. (If the
;; file writes directly to `folder' you may lose mail if new mail
;; arrives whilst you are reading the folder in Emacs, hence the use
;; of a spool file.) For example, the following procmail recipe puts
;; any mail with `emacs' in the subject line into the spool file
;; `emacs.spool', ready to go into the folder `emacs'.
;:0:
;* ^Subject.*emacs
;emacs.spool
;; It also assumes that all of your spool files and mail folders live
;; in the directory pointed to by `mspools-folder-directory', so you must
;; set this (see Installation).
;; When you run `mspools-show', it creates a *spools* buffer containing
;; all of the spools in the folder directory that are waiting to be
;; read. On each line is the spool name and its size in bytes. Move
;; to the line of the folder that you would like to read, and then
;; press return or space. The mailer (VM or RMAIL) should then read
;; that folder and get the new mail for you. When you return to the
;; *spools* buffer, you will either see "*" to indicate that the spool
;; has been read, or the remaining unread spools, depending on the
;; value of `mspools-update'.
;; This file should work with both VM and RMAIL. See the variable
;; `mspools-using-vm' for details.
;;; Basic installation.
;; (setq mspools-folder-directory "~/MAIL/")
;;
;; If you use VM, mspools-folder-directory will default to vm-folder-directory
;; unless you have already given it a value.
;; Extras.
;;
;; (global-set-key '[S-f1] 'mspools-show) ;Bind mspools-show to Shift F1.
;; (setq mspools-update t) ;Automatically update buffer.
;; Interface with the mail filter.
;; We assume that the mail filter drops new mail into the spool
;; `folder.spool'. If your spool files are something like folder.xyz
;; for inbox `folder', then do:
;; (setq mspools-suffix "xyz")
;; If you use other conventions for your spool files, this code will
;; need rewriting.
;; Warning for VM users
;; Don't use if you are not sure what you are doing. The value of
;; vm-spool-files is altered, so you may not be able to read incoming
;; mail with VM if this is incorrectly set.
;; Useful settings for VM
;; vm-auto-get-new-mail should be t (the default).
;; Acknowledgments
;; Thanks to jond@mitre.org (Jonathan Doughty) for help with code for
;; setting up vm-spool-files.
;;; TODO
;; What if users have mail spools in more than one directory? Extend
;; mspools-folder-directory to be a list of directories? Currently,
;; if mail spools are in other directories, the way to read them is to
;; put a symbolic link to the spool into the mspools-folder-directory.
;; I was going to add mouse support so that you could click on a line
;; to visit the buffer. Tell me if you want it, and I can put the
;; code in (I don't use the mouse much, so I haven't bothered with it
;; so far).
;; Rather than showing size in bytes, could we see the number of msgs
;; waiting? (Could be more time demanding / system dependent).
;; Maybe just call a perl script to do all the hard work, and
;; visualize the results in the buffer.
;; Shrink wrap the buffer to remove excess white-space?
;;; Code:
(defvar rmail-inbox-list)
(defvar vm-crash-box)
(defvar vm-folder-directory)
(defvar vm-init-file)
(defvar vm-init-file-loaded)
(defvar vm-primary-inbox)
(defvar vm-spool-files)
;;; User Variables
(defgroup mspools nil
"Show mail spools waiting to be read."
:group 'mail
:link '(emacs-commentary-link :tag "Commentary" "mspools.el")
)
(defcustom mspools-update nil
"Non-nil means update *spools* buffer after visiting any folder."
:type 'boolean)
(defcustom mspools-suffix "spool"
"Extension used for spool files (not including full stop)."
:type 'string)
(defcustom mspools-using-vm (fboundp 'vm)
"Non-nil if VM is used as mail reader, otherwise RMAIL is used."
:type 'boolean)
(defcustom mspools-folder-directory
(if (boundp 'vm-folder-directory)
vm-folder-directory
"~/MAIL/")
"Directory where mail folders are kept. Ensure it has a trailing /.
Defaults to `vm-folder-directory' if bound else to ~/MAIL/."
:type 'directory)
(defcustom mspools-vm-system-mail (or (getenv "MAIL")
(concat rmail-spool-directory
(user-login-name)))
"Spool file for main mailbox. Only used by VM.
This needs to be set to your primary mail spool - mspools will not run
without it. By default this will be set to the environment variable
$MAIL. Otherwise it will use `rmail-spool-directory' to guess where
your primary spool is. If this fails, set it to something like
/usr/spool/mail/login-name."
:type 'file)
;;; Internal Variables
(defvar mspools-files nil
"List of entries (SPOOL . SIZE) giving spool name and file size.")
(defvar mspools-files-len nil
"Length of `mspools-files' list.")
(defvar mspools-buffer "*spools*"
"Name of buffer for displaying spool info.")
(defvar-keymap mspools-mode-map
:doc "Keymap for the *spools* buffer."
"C-c C-c" #'mspools-visit-spool
"RET" #'mspools-visit-spool
"SPC" #'mspools-visit-spool
"n" #'next-line
"p" #'previous-line)
;;; VM Specific code
(if mspools-using-vm
;; set up vm if not already loaded.
(progn
(require 'vm-vars)
(if (and (not vm-init-file-loaded) (file-readable-p vm-init-file))
(load-file vm-init-file))
(if (not mspools-folder-directory)
(setq mspools-folder-directory vm-folder-directory))
))
(defun mspools-set-vm-spool-files ()
"Set value of `vm-spool-files'. Only needed for VM."
(if (not (file-readable-p mspools-vm-system-mail))
(error "Need to set mspools-vm-system-mail to the spool for primary inbox"))
(if (null mspools-folder-directory)
(error "Set `mspools-folder-directory' to where the spool files are"))
(setq
vm-spool-files
(append
(list
;; Main mailbox
(list vm-primary-inbox
mspools-vm-system-mail ; your mailbox
vm-crash-box ;crash for mailbox
))
;; Mailing list inboxes
;; must have VM already loaded to get vm-folder-directory.
(mapcar (lambda (s)
"make the appropriate entry for vm-spool-files"
(list
(concat mspools-folder-directory s)
(concat mspools-folder-directory s "." mspools-suffix)
(concat mspools-folder-directory s ".crash")))
;; So I create a vm-spool-files entry for each of those mail drops
(mapcar #'file-name-sans-extension
(directory-files mspools-folder-directory nil
(format "\\`[^.]+\\.%s" mspools-suffix)))
))
))
;;; MSPOOLS-SHOW -- the main function
;;;###autoload
(defun mspools-show (&optional noshow)
"Show the list of non-empty spool files in the *spools* buffer.
Buffer is not displayed if SHOW is non-nil."
(interactive)
(if (get-buffer mspools-buffer)
;; buffer exists
(progn
(set-buffer mspools-buffer)
(setq buffer-read-only nil)
(erase-buffer))
;; else buffer doesn't exist so create it
(get-buffer-create mspools-buffer))
;; generate the list of spool files
(if mspools-using-vm
(mspools-set-vm-spool-files))
(mspools-get-spool-files)
(if (not noshow) (pop-to-buffer mspools-buffer))
(setq buffer-read-only t)
(mspools-mode)
)
(declare-function rmail-get-new-mail "rmail" (&optional file-name))
;; External.
(declare-function vm-visit-folder "ext:vm-startup" (folder &optional read-only))
(defun mspools-visit-spool ()
"Visit the folder on the current line of the *spools* buffer."
(interactive)
(let ((spool-name (mspools-get-spool-name))
folder-name)
(if (null spool-name)
(message "No spool on current line")
(setq folder-name (mspools-get-folder-from-spool spool-name))
;; put in a little "*" to indicate spool file has been read.
(if (not mspools-update)
(save-excursion
(beginning-of-line)
(let ((inhibit-read-only t))
(insert "*")
(delete-char 1))))
(message "folder %s spool %s" folder-name spool-name)
(forward-line (if (eq (count-lines (point-min) (line-end-position))
mspools-files-len)
;; FIXME: Why use `mspools-files-len' instead
;; of looking if we're on the last line and
;; jumping to the first one if so?
(- 1 mspools-files-len) ;back to top of list
;; else just on to next line
1))
;; Choose whether to use VM or RMAIL for reading folder.
(if mspools-using-vm
(vm-visit-folder (concat mspools-folder-directory folder-name))
;; else using RMAIL
(rmail (concat mspools-folder-directory folder-name))
(setq rmail-inbox-list
(list (concat mspools-folder-directory spool-name)))
(rmail-get-new-mail))
(if mspools-update
;; generate new list of spools.
(save-excursion ;;FIXME: Why?
(mspools-revert-buffer))))))
(defun mspools-get-folder-from-spool (name)
"Return folder name corresponding to the spool file NAME."
;; Simply strip of the extension.
(file-name-sans-extension name))
;; Alternative version if you have more complicated mapping of spool name
;; to file name.
;(defun get-folder-from-spool-safe (name)
; "Return the folder name corresponding to the spool file NAME."
; (if (string-match "^\\(.*\\)\\.spool$" name)
; (substring name (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))
; (error "Could not extract folder name from spool name %s" name)))
; test
;(mspools-get-folder-from-spool "happy.spool")
;(mspools-get-folder-from-spool "happy.sp")
(defun mspools-get-spool-name ()
"Return the name of the spool on the current line."
(let ((line-num (1- (count-lines (point-min) (line-end-position)))))
;; FIXME: Why not extract the name directly from the current line's text?
(car (nth line-num mspools-files))))
;;; Spools mode functions
(defun mspools-revert-buffer (&optional _ignore _noconfirm)
"Re-run `mspools-show' to revert the *spools* buffer."
(mspools-show 'noshow))
(defun mspools-show-again (&optional noshow)
"Update the *spools* buffer.
This is useful if `mspools-update' is nil."
(declare (obsolete revert-buffer "28.1"))
(interactive)
(mspools-show noshow))
(defun mspools-help ()
"Show help for `mspools-mode'."
(declare (obsolete describe-mode "28.1"))
(interactive)
(describe-function 'mspools-mode))
(defun mspools-quit ()
"Quit the *spools* buffer."
(declare (obsolete quit-window "28.1"))
(interactive)
(kill-buffer mspools-buffer))
(define-derived-mode mspools-mode special-mode "MSpools"
"Major mode for output from `mspools-show'.
\\<mspools-mode-map>Move point to one of the items in this buffer, then use
\\[mspools-visit-spool] to go to the spool that the current line refers to.
\\[revert-buffer] to regenerate the list of spools.
\\{mspools-mode-map}"
(setq-local revert-buffer-function 'mspools-revert-buffer))
(defun mspools-get-spool-files ()
"Find the list of spool files and display them in *spools* buffer."
(if (null mspools-folder-directory)
(error "Set `mspools-folder-directory' to where the spool files are"))
(let* ((folders (directory-files mspools-folder-directory nil
(format "\\`[^.]+\\.%s\\'" mspools-suffix)))
(folders (delq nil (mapcar #'mspools-size-folder folders)))
;; beg end
)
(setq mspools-files folders)
(setq mspools-files-len (length mspools-files))
(with-current-buffer mspools-buffer
(pcase-dolist (`(,spool . ,len) folders)
;; (setq beg (point))
(insert (format " %10d %s" len spool))
;; (setq end (point))
(insert "\n")
;;(put-text-property beg end 'mouse-face 'highlight)
)
(if (not (bolp))
(delete-char -1)) ;delete last RET
(goto-char (point-min)))))
(defun mspools-size-folder (spool)
"Return (SPOOL . SIZE ), if SIZE of spool file is non-zero."
;; 7th file attribute is the size of the file in bytes.
(let ((file (concat mspools-folder-directory spool))
size)
(setq file (or (file-symlink-p file) file))
(setq size (file-attribute-size (file-attributes file)))
;; size could be nil if the sym-link points to a non-existent file
;; so check this first.
(if (and size (> size 0))
(cons spool size)
;; else SPOOL is empty
nil)))
(provide 'mspools)
;;; mspools.el ends here