1 [[!img notmuch-logo.png alt="Notmuch logo" class="left"]]
2 # Notmuch -- The mail indexer
6 Because dealing with your mail can be so much better.
8 * "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email
9 collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on
10 the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for
11 decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of
12 it. It's just plain not much mail.
14 * "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any
15 time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so
16 that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters
17 in your life, (which is surely not email).
19 * Notmuch is an answer to [Sup](http://sup.rubyforge.org/).
20 Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and
21 others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as
22 an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather
23 than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One
24 significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the
25 separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch
26 provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging
27 features can be integrated into any email program.)
29 * Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages
30 (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer,
31 no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that
32 work is provided by an external library,
33 [Xapian](http://xapian.org). So if Notmuch provides no user
34 interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left
37 If you've been looking for a fast, global-search and tag-based email
38 reader to use within your text editor or in a terminal, then Notmuch
39 may be exactly what you've been looking for.
41 If you're a developer of an existing email program and would love a
42 good library interface for fast, global search with support for
43 arbitrary tags, then Notmuch also may be exactly what you've been
48 [[The latest news from notmuch|news]]
52 To get started with notmuch, just run "notmuch" at the command line.
53 The configuration wizard will walk you through initial setup,
54 including specifying the location of your mail store and how to start
55 the initial indexing. After that, come back and checkout our docs:
57 * [[Notmuch manual pages|manpages]]
58 * [[General how-tos|howto]]
59 * [[Available frontends|frontends]]
61 * [[Excluding and deleting messages|excluding]]
62 * [[Initial tagging|Initial_Tagging]]
63 * [[Tips for using notmuch within Emacs|emacstips]]
64 * [[Remote usage|remoteusage]]
65 * [[Performance|performance]]
67 Apart from the wiki, help is available via email and on IRC (see
68 below). Join the mailing list. Read the archives. Ask questions.
72 * [[Emacs UI screenshots|screenshots]]
76 * [Debian](http://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=notmuch)
77 * [Fedora](https://community.dev.fedoraproject.org/packages/notmuch)
78 * [Gentoo](http://packages.gentoo.org/package/net-mail/notmuch)
79 * [Slackware](http://slackbuilds.org/repository/13.37/office/notmuch/)
80 * [Ubuntu](http://packages.ubuntu.com/search?keywords=notmuch)
84 All of the code for Notmuch is available as [free
85 software](http://www.fsf.org/licensing/essays/free-sw.html) released
86 under the GNU [GPL version
87 3](http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl.html). The latest
88 versions can be checked out via git with this command:
90 git clone git://notmuchmail.org/git/notmuch
93 [Notmuch code history online](http://git.notmuchmail.org/git/notmuch). And
95 [subscribe to the `notmuch-commits` list](http://notmuchmail.org/mailman/listinfo/notmuch-commits)
96 to watch every commit made to notmuch and the notmuchmail.org web
100 [source tar balls of notmuch releases](http://notmuchmail.org/releases/).
102 We have a [buildbot](http://buildbot.notmuchmail.org/grid) (here's
104 [configuration](https://github.com/tomprince/buildbot-configs/tree/notmuch)).
106 ## Bug-tracking and patches
108 Patches are most welcome and should be sent to notmuch@notmuchmail.org.
109 Please try to follow the [[patch submission guidelines|patchformatting]]
110 when submitting patches.
112 The tagging and filtering features of notmuch make it quite suitable
113 for use as a bug- and patch-tracker. We are currently experimenting
114 with using it for this purpose for notmuch development, using a
115 utility called [[nmbug]]. The status of current patches can also be
116 followed [online](http://nmbug.tethera.net/status).
118 ## Contact: Email & IRC
120 Comments? Please feel free to email the notmuch mailing list:
121 notmuch@notmuchmail.org (subscription is not required, but you can
122 also subscribe to the
123 [notmuch mailing list](http://notmuchmail.org/mailman/listinfo/notmuch)). You
125 [online list archives](http://notmuchmail.org/pipermail/notmuch/),
127 [web forum (nabble)](http://notmuch.198994.n3.nabble.com/), or
128 download an [mbox file](http://notmuchmail.org/archives/notmuch.mbox)
129 of the entire mailing-list.
131 The `mb2md` utility can be used to convert the archives to maildir
132 format which is convenient for reading the archives within notmuch
135 If you prefer real-time chat, there is often someone on the
136 [#notmuch](irc://chat.freenode.net/#notmuch)@irc.freenode.net IRC
141 We have started a [[feature requests|feature-requests]] page on this
142 wiki. No, things you add there won't automatically get implemented -
143 but it's a nice way to collect ideas.
147 This wiki is maintained using [ikiwiki](http://ikiwiki.info). Here are
148 [[instructions on how to edit the wiki|wikiwriteaccess]].