Notmuch makes it very easy to access the underlying mail files
associated with specific search terms using the "file" output format
of notmuch search. To find all message files associated with the tag
-"foo" rung:
+"foo" run:
$ notmuch search --output=files tag:foo
It can also be used to purge mail files from disk:
- $ notmuch search --output=files tag:deleted | xargs -l rm
+ $ notmuch search --format=text0 --output=files tag:deleted | xargs -0 --no-run-if-empty rm
Make sure you run "notmuch new" after the last command so the database
becomes aware that the files have been removed and can remove the
$ notmuch config set search.exclude_tags deleted
-* Add a key binding to your favorite ui to add a "deleted" tag to
- messages that you want to delete. In [[emacs|emacstips]] that might
- be:
-
- (define-key notmuch-show-mode-map "d"
- (lambda ()
- (interactive)
- (notmuch-show-tag "+deleted")))
+* In emacs MUA use keybinding `k d` to add a "deleted" tag to messages
+ that you want to delete.
* And, finally, if you _really_ want the messages purged from disk,
you can delete them manually with:
$ notmuch search --output=files tag:deleted | xargs -l rm
+
+## <span id="exclude">**killing threads**</span>
+
+In a [[hook|manpages/notmuch-hooks-5]]
+
+ notmuch tag +muted $(notmuch search --output=threads tag:muted)"
+
+New messages in the thread get the muted tag. Make muted an excluded tag.
+To kill a thread, tag it with muted, run notmuch new.