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diff --git a/README.org b/README.org new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a8b406 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.org @@ -0,0 +1,114 @@ +#+TITLE: Chotto +#+VERSION: 0.0.1 + +Chotto is an initial tagging script for Notmuch +- http://notmuchmail.org/ +- http://notmuchmail.org/initial_tagging/ + +Chotto is written in Ruby and had a (quite) nice DSL for configuration. + +* Naming & Afew +Notmuch ecosystem already has a great script for initial tagging - afew. +However it is written in Python and therefore it's always a gamble if it will consider the user worthy or running. + +Chotto, =a few= in Japanese. +Because afew refused to work on my system. +And because I love Ruby! + +* Prerequisites +Chotto expects: +- ruby 3x +- notmuch +- notmuch ruby bindings. + +While the first 2 are obvious, getting ruby bindings to work may be an adventure on its own. + +*FreeBSD* provides a ready package =ruby-notmuch=. + +*MacOS* requires compiling from source, which will be problematic due to linking difficulties. +It's not an OS designed for technical folks. + +Some *Linux* distros provide the bindings in their package managers, but otherwise compiling should be easy. + +If you use *Windows*, you have my sympathy. + +* Configuration +Chotto expects the configuration file to be present in + +=~/.config/chotto/config.rb= + +The user needs to add (at least) two blocks to the file: config & rule sets + +* Config +Presently, the only option Config expects is the absolute path to the Notmuch database: + +Chotto.configure do + config.database_path = =/home/<user>/mail= +end + +Please, adjust the path to the valid location + +* Rule sets +The actual magic happens in =Rule Sets= which are sets of filters & tag modifications. +A very simple rule set can look like: + +#+BEGIN_SRC ruby +Chotto.rule_set "notes" do + messages.filter(from: "<my email>").each do |msg| + msg.tags << "note" + msg.save! + end +end +#+END_SRC + +Let's break it down. + +First, we define a named =rule_set=. +The name can be a string or a hash and is currently not used anywhere. +It makes it easier to manager bigger rule sets. + +Then we search for messages. +In this case, we want all messages sent from =<my email>= . + +After, we loop over each found message. + +msg.tags returns a mutable array, and we can mutate is as such. + +Lastly, we save! the message in the database. + +Filter language +------------------------------------------ + +We can quite easily filter messages based. Chotto accepts filters as: +- Strings (from(=Subject:Hired!=)). + The string will not be modified. +- Hash with string values (from(subject: =Hired=)). + The key of each hash element is a modified header value - it's down cased, and =-= becomes =_=, therefore: + - =X-Spam-Id= becomes =x_spam_id= + - =X-Thread-Id= becomes =x_thread_id= + + The values on the other hand can be: + - String. + Kind of obvious. + - Array. + Arrays here are treated as the current conjunctions. + The default conjunction here is =OR=, so =k: [1,2]= will become =key:1 OR key:2= + + User can add multiple elements to the hash, and they will be join in the current conjunction mode. + By default the mode is =AND=, therefore: + + {key: 'val1', key2: 'val2'} are treated as =key:val1 AND key2:val2=. + + =filter= returns self, therefore we can combine multiple filters =filter(key1: 'val').filter(key2: 'val2')=. + Filters will be joined in the current conjunction mode. + + Conjunction mode can be changed using the =or= and =and= methods: filter(key1: =val1=).or.filter(key2: =val2=). + + The language is simple, but gives huge chances to go wrong. + You can test what is produced by calling =#to_query_string= on messages instance. + + + + + + |