muttdown(1) | General Commands Manual | muttdown(1) |
muttdown - Sendmail replacement that compiles markdown into HTML
muttdown [-c config_file] [-p] -f
from_address [-s] to_address ...
muttdown [-h]
muttdown is a sendmail-replacement designed for use with the mutt email client which will transparently compile annotated text/plain mail into text/html using the Markdown standard.
It expects a RFC-822 formatted mail on STDIN.
It will recursively walk the MIME tree and compile any text/plain or text/markdown part which begins with the sigil "!m" into Markdown, which it will insert alongside the original in a multipart/alternative container.
It's also smart enough not to break multipart/signed.
For example, the following tree before parsing:
Will get compiled into:
Muttdown's configuration file is written using YAML. Example:
If you prefer not to put your password in plaintext in a configuration file, you can instead specify the smtp_password_command parameter to invoke a shell command to lookup your password. The command should output your password, followed by a newline, and no other text. On OS X, the following invocation will extract a generic "Password" entry with the application set to mutt and the title set to foo@bar.com:
NOTE: If smtp_ssl is set to False, muttdown will do a non-SSL session and then invoke STARTTLS. If smtp_ssl is set to True, muttdown will do an SSL session from the get-go. There is no option to send mail in plaintext.
The css_file should be regular CSS styling blocks; we use pynliner to inline all CSS rules for maximum client compatibility.
muttdown can also send its mail using the native sendmail if you have that set up (instead of doing SMTP itself). To do so, just leave the smtp options in the config file blank, set the sendmail option to the fully-qualified path to your sendmail binary, and run muttdown with the -s flag
muttdown was written by James Brown <Roguelazer@gmail.com>.
This man page was adapted from muttdown's README by Stephen Gelman <ssgelm@gmail.com> for the Debian project and may be used by others.
August 2018 |