THUNDERBIRD(1) | Linux User's Manual | THUNDERBIRD(1) |
thunderbird - Mail User Agent (MUA) and newsgroup/RSS client for X11 derived from the Mozilla Thunderbird.
/usr/lib/thunderbird/thunderbird [OPTIONS] [URL]
/usr/lib/thunderbird/thunderbird-bin [OPTIONS] [URL]
Thunderbird provides IMAP/POP support, a built-in RSS reader, support for HTML mail, powerful quick search, saved search folders, advanced message filtering, junk mail controls, message grouping, labels, return receipts, smart address book, LDAP address completion, import tools and the ability to manage multiple identities in email and newsgroup accounts.
Thunderbird provides enterprise and government grade security such as S/MIME, digital signing, message encryption, and support for certificates and security devices.
thunderbird is a executable file that will set up the environment for the starting executable, thunderbird-bin. If there is an Thunderbird mail client already running, thunderbird will arrange for it to create a new mail client window; otherwise it will start the Thunderbird application.
A summary of the options supported by thunderbird is included below.
MOZILLA_DISABLE_PLUGINS - when set, totally disables loading plugins.
/usr/bin/thunderbird - shell script wrapping thunderbird-bin
/usr/lib/thunderbird/thunderbird-bin - thunderbird executable
Starting Thunderbird without any extra options, useful to any messages from thunderbird in case something went not o.k.:
thunderbird
Starting Thunderbird without any extensions or themes, useful if extensions may make some trouble:
thunderbird --safe-mode
Starting Thunderbird with a composing window:
thunderbird -compose
Starting Thunderbird with the default debugger:
/usr/lib/thunderbird/run-mozilla.sh -debug /usr/lib/thunderbird/thunderbird-bin
Starting Thunderbird with the specific debugger:
/usr/lib/thunderbird/run-mozilla.sh --debugger /foo/bar/debugger /usr/lib/thunderbird/thunderbird-bin
To report a bug, please visit http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/ and/or report bugs to the Debian Bug Tracking System, as usual.
February 27, 2010 | Christoph Göhre |