This file documents Message, the Emacs message composition mode.
Copyright © 1996–2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being “A GNU Manual”, and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”.
(a) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and modify this GNU manual.”
All message composition from Gnus (both mail and news) takes place in Message mode buffers.
Message is distributed with Gnus. The Gnus distribution corresponding to this manual is Gnus v5.13
When a program (or a person) wants to respond to a message—reply,
follow up, forward, cancel—the program (or person) should just put
point in the buffer where the message is and call the required command.
Message
will then pop up a new message
mode buffer with
appropriate headers filled out, and the user can edit the message before
sending it.
You can customize the Message Mode tool bar, see M-x customize-apropos RET message-tool-bar. This feature is only available in Emacs.
The message-mail
command pops up a new message buffer.
Two optional parameters are accepted: The first will be used as the
To
header and the second as the Subject
header. If these
are nil
, those two headers will be empty.
The message-news
command pops up a new message buffer.
This function accepts two optional parameters. The first will be used
as the Newsgroups
header and the second as the Subject
header. If these are nil
, those two headers will be empty.
The message-reply
function pops up a message buffer that’s a
reply to the message in the current buffer.
Message uses the normal methods to determine where replies are to go
(see Responses), but you can change the behavior to suit your needs
by fiddling with the message-reply-to-function
variable.
If you want the replies to go to the Sender
instead of the
From
, you could do something like this:
(setq message-reply-to-function (lambda () (cond ((equal (mail-fetch-field "from") "somebody") (list (cons 'To (mail-fetch-field "sender")))) (t nil))))
This function will be called narrowed to the head of the article that is being replied to.
As you can see, this function should return a list. In this case, it
returns ((To . "Whom"))
if it has an opinion as to what the To
header should be. If it does not, it should just return nil
, and
the normal methods for determining the To header will be used.
Each list element should be a cons, where the CAR should be the
name of a header (e.g., CC
) and the CDR should be the header
value (e.g., ‘larsi@ifi.uio.no’). All these headers will be
inserted into the head of the outgoing mail.
The message-wide-reply
pops up a message buffer that’s a wide
reply to the message in the current buffer. A wide reply is a
reply that goes out to all people listed in the To
, From
(or Reply-To
) and CC
headers.
Message uses the normal methods to determine where wide replies are to go,
but you can change the behavior to suit your needs by fiddling with the
message-wide-reply-to-function
. It is used in the same way as
message-reply-to-function
(see Reply).
Addresses that match the message-dont-reply-to-names
regular
expression (or list of regular expressions or a predicate function)
will be removed from the CC
header. A value of nil
means
to exclude only your email address.
message-prune-recipient-rules
is used to prune the addresses
used when doing a wide reply. It’s meant to be used to remove
duplicate addresses and the like. It’s a list of lists, where the
first element is a regexp to match the address to trigger the rule,
and the second is a regexp that will be expanded based on the first,
to match addresses to be pruned.
It’s complicated to explain, but it’s easy to use.
For instance, if you get an email from ‘foo@example.org’, but
‘foo@zot.example.org’ is also in the CC
list, then your
wide reply will go out to both these addresses, since they are unique.
To avoid this, do something like the following:
(setq message-prune-recipient-rules '(("^\\([^@]+\\)@\\(.*\\)" "\\1@.*[.]\\2")))
If, for instance, you want all wide replies that involve messages from ‘cvs@example.org’ to go to that address, and nowhere else (i.e., remove all other recipients if ‘cvs@example.org’ is in the recipient list:
(setq message-prune-recipient-rules '(("cvs@example.org" ".")))
If message-wide-reply-confirm-recipients
is non-nil
you
will be asked to confirm that you want to reply to multiple
recipients. The default is nil
.
The message-followup
command pops up a message buffer that’s a
followup to the message in the current buffer.
Message uses the normal methods to determine where followups are to go,
but you can change the behavior to suit your needs by fiddling with the
message-followup-to-function
. It is used in the same way as
message-reply-to-function
(see Reply).
The message-use-followup-to
variable says what to do about
Followup-To
headers. If it is use
, always use the value.
If it is ask
(which is the default), ask whether to use the
value. If it is t
, use the value unless it is ‘poster’. If
it is nil
, don’t use the value.
The message-cancel-news
command cancels the article in the
current buffer.
The value of message-cancel-message
is inserted in the body of
the cancel message. The default is ‘I am canceling my own
article.’.
When Message posts news messages, it inserts Cancel-Lock
headers by default. This is a cryptographic header that ensures that
only you can cancel your own messages, which is nice. The downside
is that if you lose your .emacs file (which is where Gnus
stores the secret cancel lock password (which is generated
automatically the first time you use this feature)), you won’t be
able to cancel your message. If you want to manage a password yourself,
you can put something like the following in your ~/.gnus.el file:
(setq canlock-password "geheimnis" canlock-password-for-verify canlock-password)
Whether to insert the header or not is controlled by the
message-insert-canlock
variable.
Not many news servers respect the Cancel-Lock
header yet, but
this is expected to change in the future.
The message-supersede
command pops up a message buffer that will
supersede the message in the current buffer.
Headers matching the message-ignored-supersedes-headers
are
removed before popping up the new message buffer. The default is
‘^Path:\\|^Date\\|^NNTP-Posting-Host:\\|^Xref:\\|^Lines:\\|
^Received:\\|^X-From-Line:\\|^X-Trace:\\|^X-Complaints-To:\\|
Return-Path:\\|^Supersedes:\\|^NNTP-Posting-Date:\\|^X-Trace:\\|
^X-Complaints-To:\\|^Cancel-Lock:\\|^Cancel-Key:\\|^X-Hashcash:\\|
^X-Payment:\\|^Approved:’.
The message-forward
command pops up a message buffer to forward
the message in the current buffer. If given a prefix, forward using
news.
message-forward-ignored-headers
¶In non-nil
, all headers that match this regexp will be deleted
when forwarding a message.
message-forward-included-headers
¶In non-nil
, only headers that match this regexp will be kept
when forwarding a message. This can also be a list of regexps.
message-forward-included-mime-headers
¶In non-nil
, headers that match this regexp will be kept when
forwarding a message as MIME, but MML isn’t used.
This can also be a list of regexps.
message-make-forward-subject-function
¶A list of functions that are called to generate a subject header for forwarded messages. The subject generated by the previous function is passed into each successive function.
The provided functions are:
message-forward-subject-author-subject
¶Source of article (author or newsgroup), in brackets followed by the subject.
message-forward-subject-fwd
Subject of article with ‘Fwd:’ prepended to it.
message-wash-forwarded-subjects
¶If this variable is t
, the subjects of forwarded messages have
the evidence of previous forwards (such as ‘Fwd:’, ‘Re:’,
‘(fwd)’) removed before the new subject is
constructed. The default value is nil
.
message-forward-as-mime
¶If this variable is t
, forwarded messages are included as
inline MIME RFC822 parts. If it’s nil
(the default),
forwarded messages will just be copied inline to the new message, like
previous, non MIME-savvy versions of Gnus would do.
message-forward-before-signature
¶If non-nil
, put forwarded message before signature, else after.
The message-resend
command will prompt the user for an address
and resend the message in the current buffer to that address.
Headers that match the message-ignored-resent-headers
regexp will
be removed before sending the message.
The message-bounce
command will, if the current buffer contains a
bounced mail message, pop up a message buffer stripped of the bounce
information. A bounced message is typically a mail you’ve sent
out that has been returned by some mailer-daemon
as
undeliverable.
Headers that match the message-ignored-bounced-headers
regexp
will be removed before popping up the buffer. The default is
‘^\\(Received\\|Return-Path\\|Delivered-To\\):’.
Sometimes while posting to mailing lists, the poster needs to direct followups to the post to specific places. The Mail-Followup-To (MFT) was created to enable just this. Three example scenarios where this is useful:
Gnus honors the MFT header in other’s messages (i.e., while following up to someone else’s post) and also provides support for generating sensible MFT headers for outgoing messages as well.
The first step in getting Gnus to automagically generate a MFT header in posts you make is to give Gnus a list of the mailing lists addresses you are subscribed to. You can do this in more than one way. The following variables would come in handy.
message-subscribed-addresses
¶This should be a list of addresses the user is subscribed to. Its
default value is nil
. Example:
(setq message-subscribed-addresses '("ding@gnus.org" "bing@noose.org"))
message-subscribed-regexps
¶This should be a list of regexps denoting the addresses of mailing
lists subscribed to. Default value is nil
. Example: If you
want to achieve the same result as above:
(setq message-subscribed-regexps '("\\(ding@gnus\\)\\|\\(bing@noose\\)\\.org")
message-subscribed-address-functions
¶This can be a list of functions to be called (one at a time!!) to
determine the value of MFT headers. It is advisable that these
functions not take any arguments. Default value is nil
.
There is a pre-defined function in Gnus that is a good candidate for
this variable. gnus-find-subscribed-addresses
is a function
that returns a list of addresses corresponding to the groups that have
the subscribed
(see Group Parameters in The Gnus Manual) group parameter set to a non-nil
value.
This is how you would do it.
(setq message-subscribed-address-functions '(gnus-find-subscribed-addresses))
message-subscribed-address-file
¶You might be one organized human freak and have a list of addresses of all subscribed mailing lists in a separate file! Then you can just set this variable to the name of the file and life would be good.
You can use one or more of the above variables. All their values are “added” in some way that works :-)
Now you are all set. Just start composing a message as you normally do. And just send it; as always. Just before the message is sent out, Gnus’ MFT generation thingy kicks in and checks if the message already has a MFT field. If there is one, it is left alone. (Except if it’s empty; in that case, the field is removed and is not replaced with an automatically generated one. This lets you disable MFT generation on a per-message basis.) If there is none, then the list of recipient addresses (in the To: and CC: headers) is checked to see if one of them is a list address you are subscribed to. If none of them is a list address, then no MFT is generated; otherwise, a MFT is added to the other headers and set to the value of all addresses in To: and CC:
Hm. “So”, you ask, “what if I send an email to a list I am not
subscribed to? I want my MFT to say that I want an extra copy.” (This
is supposed to be interpreted by others the same way as if there were no
MFT, but you can use an explicit MFT to override someone else’s
to-address group parameter.) The function
message-generate-unsubscribed-mail-followup-to
might come in
handy. It is bound to C-c C-f C-a by default. In any case, you
can insert a MFT of your own choice; C-c C-f C-m
(message-goto-mail-followup-to
) will help you get started.
When you followup to a post on a mailing list, and the post has a MFT
header, Gnus’ action will depend on the value of the variable
message-use-mail-followup-to
. This variable can be one of:
use
Always honor MFTs. The To: and CC: headers in your followup will be derived from the MFT header of the original post. This is the default.
nil
Always dishonor MFTs (just ignore the darned thing)
ask
Gnus will prompt you for an action.
It is considered good netiquette to honor MFT, as it is assumed the fellow who posted a message knows where the followups need to go better than you do.
Emacs can be set up as the system mailer, so that Emacs is opened when you click on ‘mailto:’ links in other programs.
How this is done varies from system to system, but commonly there’s a way to set the default application for a MIME type, and the relevant type here is ‘x-scheme-handler/mailto;’.
The application to start should be ‘emacs -f message-mailto %u’.
This will start Emacs, and then run the message-mailto
command. It will parse the given URL, and set up a Message
buffer with the given parameters. If you prefer to use emacsclient,
use ‘emacsclient -e '(message-mailto "%u")'’ as the application.
For instance, ‘mailto:larsi@gnus.org?subject=This+is+a+test’ will open a Message buffer with the ‘To:’ header filled in with ‘"larsi@gnus.org"’ and the ‘Subject:’ header with ‘"This is a test"’.
You most often end up in a Message buffer when responding to some other message of some sort. Message does lots of handling of quoted text, and may remove signatures, reformat the text, or the like—depending on which used settings you’re using. Message usually gets things right, but sometimes it stumbles. To help the user unwind these stumblings, Message sets the undo boundary before each major automatic action it takes. If you press the undo key (usually located at C-_) a few times, you will get back the un-edited message you’re responding to.
These following commands move to the header in question. If it doesn’t exist, it will be inserted.
Describe the message mode.
Go to the To
header (message-goto-to
).
Go to the From
header (message-goto-from
). (The “o”
in the key binding is for Originator.)
Go to the BCC
header (message-goto-bcc
).
Go to the FCC
header (message-goto-fcc
).
Go to the CC
header (message-goto-cc
).
Go to the Subject
header (message-goto-subject
).
Go to the Reply-To
header (message-goto-reply-to
).
Go to the Newsgroups
header (message-goto-newsgroups
).
Go to the Distribution
header (message-goto-distribution
).
Go to the Followup-To
header (message-goto-followup-to
).
Go to the Keywords
header (message-goto-keywords
).
Go to the Summary
header (message-goto-summary
).
This inserts the ‘Importance:’ header with a value of ‘high’. This header is used to signal the importance of the message to the receiver. If the header is already present in the buffer, it cycles between the three valid values according to RFC 1376: ‘low’, ‘normal’ and ‘high’.
Insert a reasonable ‘Mail-Followup-To:’ header
(see Mailing Lists) in a post to an
unsubscribed list. When making original posts to a mailing list you are
not subscribed to, you have to type in a ‘Mail-Followup-To:’ header
by hand. The contents, usually, are the addresses of the list and your
own address. This function inserts such a header automatically. It
fetches the contents of the ‘To:’ header in the current mail
buffer, and appends the current user-mail-address
.
If the optional argument include-cc
is non-nil
, the
addresses in the ‘CC:’ header are also put into the
‘Mail-Followup-To:’ header.
Sort headers according to message-header-format-alist
(message-sort-headers
).
Insert a To
header that contains the Reply-To
or
From
header of the message you’re following up
(message-insert-to
).
Insert a Newsgroups
header that reflects the Followup-To
or Newsgroups
header of the article you’re replying to
(message-insert-newsgroups
).
Send a message to the list only. Remove all addresses but the list
address from To:
and CC:
headers.
Insert a request for a disposition
notification. (message-insert-disposition-notification-to
).
This means that if the recipient supports RFC 2298 she might send you a
notification that she received the message.
Insert an ‘Importance’ header with a value of ‘high’, deleting headers if necessary.
Insert an ‘Importance’ header with a value of ‘low’, deleting headers if necessary.
Change the current ‘Subject’ header. Ask for new ‘Subject’
header and append ‘(was: <Old Subject>)’. The old subject can be
stripped on replying, see message-subject-trailing-was-query
(see Message Headers).
Set up the ‘FollowUp-To’ header with a target newsgroup for a
cross-post, add that target newsgroup to the ‘Newsgroups’ header if
it is not a member of ‘Newsgroups’, and insert a note in the body.
If message-cross-post-default
is nil
or if this command is
called with a prefix-argument, only the ‘FollowUp-To’ header will
be set but the target newsgroup will not be added to the
‘Newsgroups’ header. The function to insert a note is controlled
by the message-cross-post-note-function
variable.
Replace contents of ‘To’ header with contents of ‘CC’ header (or the ‘BCC’ header, if there is no ‘CC’ header).
Insert ‘To’ and ‘CC’ headers as if you were doing a wide reply even if the message was not made for a wide reply first.
Insert ‘X-No-Archive: Yes’ in the header and a note in the body.
The header and the note can be customized using
message-archive-header
and message-archive-note
. When
called with a prefix argument, ask for a text to insert. If you don’t
want the note in the body, set message-archive-note
to
nil
.
Move to the beginning of the body of the message
(message-goto-body
).
Move to the signature of the message (message-goto-signature
).
If at beginning of header value, go to beginning of line, else go to
beginning of header value. (The header value comes after the header
name and the colon.) This behavior can be disabled by toggling
the variable message-beginning-of-line
.
Yank the message that’s being replied to into the message buffer
(message-yank-original
).
Prompt for a buffer name and yank the contents of that buffer into the
message buffer (message-yank-buffer
).
Fill the yanked message (message-fill-yanked-message
). Warning:
Can severely mess up the yanked text if its quoting conventions are
strange. You’ll quickly get a feel for when it’s safe, though. Anyway,
just remember that C-x u (undo
) is available and you’ll be
all right.
Insert a signature at the end of the buffer
(message-insert-signature
).
Insert the message headers (message-insert-headers
).
Mark some region in the current article with enclosing tags. See
message-mark-insert-begin
and message-mark-insert-end
.
When called with a prefix argument, use slrn style verbatim marks
(‘#v+’ and ‘#v-’).
Insert a file in the current article with enclosing tags.
See message-mark-insert-begin
and message-mark-insert-end
.
When called with a prefix argument, use slrn style verbatim marks
(‘#v+’ and ‘#v-’).
Message is a MIME-compliant posting agent. The user generally
doesn’t have to do anything to make the MIME happen—Message will
automatically add the Content-Type
and
Content-Transfer-Encoding
headers.
The most typical thing users want to use the multipart things in MIME for is to add “attachments” to mail they send out. This can be done with the C-c C-a command (M-x mml-attach-file), which will prompt for a file name and a MIME type.
If your Emacs supports drag and drop, you can also drop the file in the
Message buffer. The variable mml-dnd-protocol-alist
specifies
what kind of action is done when you drop a file into the Message
buffer. The variable mml-dnd-attach-options
controls which
MIME options you want to specify when dropping a file. If it
is a list, valid members are type
, description
and
disposition
. disposition
implies type
. If it is
nil
, don’t ask for options. If it is t
, ask the user
whether or not to specify options.
If your system supports it, you can also insert screenshots directly
into the Message buffer. The C-c C-p
(message-insert-screenshot
) command inserts the image into the
buffer as an MML part, and puts an image text property on
top. The message-screenshot-command
variable says what
external command to use to take the screenshot. It defaults to
"import png:-"
, which is an ImageMagick command.
You can also create arbitrarily complex multiparts using the MML language (see Composing in The Emacs MIME Manual).
IDNA is a standard way to encode non-ASCII domain names into a readable ASCII string. The details can be found in RFC 3490.
Message is a IDNA-compliant posting agent. The user
generally doesn’t have to do anything to make the IDNA
happen—Message will encode non-ASCII domain names in From
,
To
, and CC
headers automatically.
Until IDNA becomes more well known, Message queries you whether IDNA encoding of the domain name really should occur. Some users might not be aware that domain names can contain non-ASCII now, so this gives them a safety net if they accidentally typed a non-ASCII domain name.
The message-use-idna
variable control whether IDNA is
used. If the variable is nil
no IDNA encoding will
ever happen, if it is set to the symbol ask
the user will be
queried, and if set to t
(which is the default if IDNA
is fully available) IDNA encoding happens automatically.
If you want to experiment with the IDNA encoding, you can invoke M-x message-idna-to-ascii-rhs RET in the message buffer to have the non-ASCII domain names encoded while you edit the message.
Note that you must have GNU Libidn installed in order to use this functionality.
By default, e-mails are transmitted without any protection around the Internet, which implies that they can be read and changed by lots of different parties. In particular, they are analyzed under bulk surveillance, which violates basic human rights. To defend those rights, digital self-defense is necessary (in addition to legal changes), and encryption and digital signatures are powerful techniques for self-defense. In essence, encryption ensures that only the intended recipient will be able to read a message, while digital signatures make sure that modifications to messages can be detected by the recipient.
Nowadays, there are two major incompatible e-mail encryption standards, namely OpenPGP and S/MIME. Both of these standards are implemented by the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG), which needs to be installed as external software in addition to GNU Emacs. Before you can start to encrypt, decrypt, and sign messages, you need to create a so-called key-pair, which consists of a private key and a public key. Your public key (also known as certificate, in particular with S/MIME), is used by others (a) to encrypt messages intended for you and (b) to verify digital signatures created by you. In contrast, you use your private key (a) to decrypt messages and (b) to sign messages. (You may want to think of your public key as an open safe that you offer to others such that they can deposit messages and lock the door, while your private key corresponds to the opening combination for the safe.)
Thus, you need to perform the following steps for e-mail encryption, typically outside Emacs. See, for example, The GNU Privacy Handbook for details covering the standard OpenPGP with GnuPG.
Whether to use the standard OpenPGP or S/MIME is beyond the scope of this documentation. Actually, you can use one standard for one set of recipients and the other standard for different recipients (depending their preferences or capabilities).
In case you are not familiar with all those acronyms: The standard
OpenPGP is also called PGP (Pretty Good Privacy).
The command line tools offered by GnuPG for
OpenPGP are called gpg
and gpg2
, while
the one for S/MIME is called gpgsm
. An
alternative, but discouraged, tool for S/MIME is
openssl
. To make matters worse, e-mail messages can be
formed in two different ways with OpenPGP, namely
PGP (RFC 1991/4880) and PGP/MIME (RFC 2015/3156).
The good news, however, is the following: In GNU Emacs, Message supports all those variants, comes with reasonable defaults that can be customized according to your needs, and invokes the proper command line tools behind the scenes for encryption, decryption, as well as creation and verification of digital signatures.
Message uses the MML language for the creation of signed and/or encrypted messages as explained in the following.
Instructing MML to perform security operations on a MIME part is done using the C-c C-m s key map for signing and the C-c C-m c key map for encryption, as follows.
Digitally sign current message using S/MIME.
Digitally sign current message using PGP.
Digitally sign current message using PGP/MIME.
Digitally encrypt current message using S/MIME.
Digitally encrypt current message using PGP.
Digitally encrypt current message using PGP/MIME.
Remove security related MML tags from message.
These commands do not immediately sign or encrypt the message, they merely insert the proper MML secure tag to instruct the MML engine to perform that operation when the message is actually sent. They may perform other operations too, such as locating and retrieving a S/MIME certificate of the person you wish to send encrypted mail to. When the mml parsing engine converts your MML into a properly encoded MIME message, the secure tag will be replaced with either a part or a multipart tag. If your message contains other mml parts, a multipart tag will be used; if no other parts are present in your message a single part tag will be used. This way, message mode will do the Right Thing (TM) with signed/encrypted multipart messages.
Since signing and especially encryption often is used when sensitive
information is sent, you may want to have some way to ensure that your
mail is actually signed or encrypted. After invoking the above
sign/encrypt commands, it is possible to preview the raw article by
using C-u C-c RET P (mml-preview
). Then you can
verify that your long rant about what your ex-significant other or
whomever actually did with that funny looking person at that strange
party the other night, actually will be sent encrypted.
Note! Neither PGP/MIME nor S/MIME encrypt/signs RFC822 headers. They only operate on the MIME object. Keep this in mind before sending mail with a sensitive Subject line.
By default, when encrypting a message, Gnus will use the
“signencrypt” mode, which means the message is both signed and
encrypted. If you would like to disable this for a particular
message, give the mml-secure-message-encrypt-*
command a prefix
argument, e.g., C-u C-c C-m c p.
Actually using the security commands above is not very difficult. At least not compared with making sure all involved programs talk with each other properly. Thus, we now describe what external libraries or programs are required to make things work, and some small general hints.
S/MIME requires an external implementation, such as
GNU Privacy Guard or
OpenSSL. The default Emacs interface
to the S/MIME implementation is EasyPG (see EasyPG Assistant
User’s Manual in EasyPG Assistant User’s Manual), which is
included in Emacs and relies on the command line tool gpgsm
provided by GnuPG. That tool implements certificate
management, including certificate revocation and expiry, while such
tasks need to be performed manually, if OpenSSL is used.
The choice between EasyPG and OpenSSL is controlled by the variable
mml-smime-use
, which needs to be set to the value epg
for EasyPG. Depending on your version of Emacs that value may be the
default; if not, you can either customize that variable or place the
following line in your .emacs file (that line needs to be
placed above other code related to message/gnus/encryption):
(require 'epg)
Moreover, you may want to customize the variables
mml-default-encrypt-method
and
mml-default-sign-method
to the string "smime"
.
That’s all if you want to use S/MIME with EasyPG, and that’s the recommended way of using S/MIME with Message.
If you think about using OpenSSL instead of EasyPG, please read the
BUGS section in the manual for the smime
command coming with
OpenSSL first. If you still want to use OpenSSL, the following
applies.
Note! The remainder of this section assumes you have a basic familiarity with modern cryptography, S/MIME, various PKCS standards, OpenSSL and so on.
The S/MIME support in Message (and MML) can use OpenSSL. OpenSSL performs the actual S/MIME sign/encrypt operations. OpenSSL can be found at https://www.openssl.org/. OpenSSL 0.9.6 and later should work. Version 0.9.5a cannot extract mail addresses from certificates, and it insert a spurious CR character into MIME separators so you may wish to avoid it if you would like to avoid being regarded as someone who send strange mail. (Although by sending S/MIME messages you’ve probably already lost that contest.)
To be able to send encrypted mail, a personal certificate is not
required. Message (MML) need a certificate for the person to whom you
wish to communicate with though. You’re asked for this when you type
C-c C-m c s. Currently there are two ways to retrieve this
certificate, from a local file or from DNS. If you chose a local
file, it need to contain a X.509 certificate in PEM format.
If you chose DNS, you’re asked for the domain name where the
certificate is stored, the default is a good guess. To my belief,
Message (MML) is the first mail agent in the world to support
retrieving S/MIME certificates from DNS, so you’re not
likely to find very many certificates out there. At least there
should be one, stored at the domain simon.josefsson.org
. LDAP
is a more popular method of distributing certificates, support for it
is planned. (Meanwhile, you can use ldapsearch
from the
command line to retrieve a certificate into a file and use it.)
As for signing messages, OpenSSL can’t perform signing operations
without some kind of configuration. Especially, you need to tell it
where your private key and your certificate is stored. MML
uses an Emacs interface to OpenSSL, aptly named smime.el
, and it
contain a custom
group used for this configuration. So, try
M-x customize-group RET smime RET and look around.
Currently there is no support for talking to a CA (or RA) to create your own certificate. None is planned either. You need to do this manually with OpenSSL or using some other program. I used Netscape and got a free S/MIME certificate from one of the big CA’s on the net. Netscape is able to export your private key and certificate in PKCS #12 format. Use OpenSSL to convert this into a plain X.509 certificate in PEM format as follows.
$ openssl pkcs12 -in ns.p12 -clcerts -nodes > key+cert.pem
The key+cert.pem file should be pointed to from the
smime-keys
variable. You should now be able to send signed mail.
Note! Your private key is now stored unencrypted in the file,
so take care in handling it. Storing encrypted keys on the disk are
supported, and Gnus will ask you for a passphrase before invoking
OpenSSL. Read the OpenSSL documentation for how to achieve this. If
you use unencrypted keys (e.g., if they are on a secure storage, or if
you are on a secure single user machine) simply press RET
at
the passphrase prompt.
Use of OpenPGP requires an external software, such as GNU Privacy Guard. Pre-OpenPGP implementations such as PGP 2.x and PGP 5.x are also supported. The default Emacs interface to the PGP implementation is EasyPG (see EasyPG Assistant User’s Manual in EasyPG Assistant User’s Manual), but Mailcrypt is also supported. See Compatibility with older implementations.
As stated earlier, messages encrypted with OpenPGP can be formatted
according to two different standards, namely PGP or
PGP/MIME. The variables
mml-default-encrypt-method
and
mml-default-sign-method
determine which variant to prefer,
PGP/MIME by default.
The ‘OpenPGP’ header can be used to provide information about the sender’s OpenPGP key. This is a formalization and modernization of the non-standard ‘X-PGP-Key’ (etc.) headers that have been in use for a long time. For more details, see https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-josefsson-openpgp-mailnews-header.
To use this in Message, say:
(add-hook 'message-header-setup-hook 'message-add-openpgp-header)
then customize the message-openpgp-header
variable according to
your PGP setup. The variable is a list of the key ID, the key URL or
ASCII armored key, and the protection preference, one of
‘"unprotected"’, ‘"sign"’, ‘"encrypt"’ or
‘"signencrypt"’.
Message with EasyPG internally calls GnuPG (the gpg
or
gpgsm
command) to perform
data encryption, and in certain cases (decrypting or signing for
example), gpg
/gpgsm
requires user’s passphrase.
Currently the recommended way to supply your passphrase is to use the
gpg-agent
program.
In particular, the gpg-agent
program supports passphrase
caching so that you do not need to enter your passphrase for every
decryption/sign operation. See Agent Options in Using the
GNU Privacy Guard.
How to use gpg-agent
in Emacs depends on your version of
GnuPG. With GnuPG version 2.1, gpg-agent
is started
automatically if necessary. With older versions you may need to run
the following command from the shell before starting Emacs.
eval `gpg-agent --daemon`
This will invoke gpg-agent
and set the environment variable
GPG_AGENT_INFO
to allow gpg
to communicate with it.
It might be good idea to put this command in your .xsession or
.bash_profile. See Invoking GPG-AGENT in Using the
GNU Privacy Guard.
Once your gpg-agent
is set up, it will ask you for a
passphrase as needed for gpg
. Under the X Window System,
you will see a new passphrase input dialog appear. The dialog is
provided by PIN Entry (the pinentry
command), reasonably
recent versions of which can also cooperate with Emacs on a text
console. If that does not work, you may need to put a passphrase into
gpg-agent’s cache beforehand. The following command does the trick.
gpg --use-agent --sign < /dev/null > /dev/null
Note, if you are using the gpg.el
you must make sure that the
directory specified by gpg-temp-directory
have permissions
0700.
Creating your own key is described in detail in the documentation of your PGP implementation, so we refer to it.
If you have imported your old PGP 2.x key into GnuPG, and want to send
signed and encrypted messages to your fellow PGP 2.x users, you’ll
discover that the receiver cannot understand what you send. One
solution is to use PGP 2.x instead. You could also convince your
fellow PGP 2.x users to convert to GnuPG.
As a final workaround, you can make the sign and encryption work in
two steps; separately sign, then encrypt a message. If you would like
to change this behavior you can customize the
mml-signencrypt-style-alist
variable. For example:
(setq mml-signencrypt-style-alist '(("smime" separate) ("pgp" separate) ("pgpauto" separate) ("pgpmime" separate)))
This causes to sign and encrypt in two passes, thus generating a message that can be understood by PGP version 2.
(Refer to https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/pgp2x.html for more information about the problem.)
By default, messages are encrypted to all recipients (To
,
CC
, BCC
headers). Thus, you will not be able to decrypt
your own messages. To make sure that messages are also encrypted to
your own key(s), several alternative solutions exist:
encrypt-to
option in the file gpg.conf (for
OpenPGP) or gpgsm.conf (for S/MIME with EasyPG).
See Invoking GPG in Using the GNU Privacy Guard, or
See Invoking GPGSM in Using the GNU Privacy Guard.
mml-secure-openpgp-encrypt-to-self
(for
OpenPGP) or mml-secure-smime-encrypt-to-self
(for
S/MIME with EasyPG).
The BCC
header is meant to hide recipients of messages.
However, when encrypted messages are used, the e-mail addresses of all
BCC
-headers are given away to all recipients without
warning, which is a bug.
But now Message got to warn if BCC
recipients are found in an
encrypted message when you are just about to send it. If you are sure
those BCC
addresses are safe to expose, set the
mml-secure-safe-bcc-list
variable, that is a list of e-mail
addresses. See
https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=18718.
Caesar rotate (aka. rot13) the current message
(message-caesar-buffer-body
). If narrowing is in effect, just
rotate the visible portion of the buffer. A numerical prefix says how
many places to rotate the text. The default is 13.
Elide the text between point and mark (message-elide-region
).
The text is killed and replaced with the contents of the variable
message-elide-ellipsis
. The default value is to use an ellipsis
(‘[...]’).
This is a format-spec string, and you can use ‘%l’ to say how many lines were removed, and ‘%c’ to say how many characters were removed.
Kill the address under point.
Kill all the text up to the signature, or if that’s missing, up to the
end of the message (message-kill-to-signature
).
Delete all text in the body of the message that is outside the region
(message-delete-not-region
).
Insert four newlines, and then reformat if inside quoted text.
Here’s an example:
> This is some quoted text. And here's more quoted text.
If point is before ‘And’ and you press M-RET, you’ll get:
> This is some quoted text. * > And here's more quoted text.
‘*’ says where point will be placed.
Rename the buffer (message-rename-buffer
). If given a prefix,
prompt for a new buffer name.
If message-tab-body-function
is non-nil
, execute the
function it specifies. Otherwise use the function bound to TAB in
text-mode-map
or global-map
.
Send the message and bury the current buffer
(message-send-and-exit
).
Send the message (message-send
).
Bury the message buffer and exit (message-dont-send
).
Kill the message buffer and exit (message-kill-buffer
).
The message-mail-alias-type
variable controls what type of mail
alias expansion to use. Currently two forms are supported:
mailabbrev
and ecomplete
. If this variable is
nil
, no mail alias expansion will be performed.
mailabbrev
works by parsing the /etc/mailrc and
~/.mailrc files. These files look like:
alias lmi "Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen <larsi@ifi.uio.no>" alias ding "ding@ifi.uio.no (ding mailing list)"
After adding lines like this to your ~/.mailrc file, you should
be able to just write ‘lmi’ in the To
or CC
(and so
on) headers and press SPC to expand the alias.
No expansion will be performed upon sending of the message—all expansions have to be done explicitly.
If you’re using ecomplete
, all addresses from To
and
CC
headers will automatically be put into the
~/.ecompleterc file. When you enter text in the To
and
CC
headers, ecomplete
will check out the values stored
there and “electrically” say what completions are possible. To
choose one of these completions, use the M-n command to move
down to the list. Use DOWN or M-n and
UP or M-p to move down and up the list, and
RET to choose a completion.
The ecomplete-sort-predicate
variable controls how
ecomplete
matches are sorted.
There are two popular ways to have Emacs spell-check your messages:
ispell
and flyspell
. ispell
is the older and
probably more popular package. You typically first write the message,
and then run the entire thing through ispell
and fix all the
typos. To have this happen automatically when you send a message, put
something like the following in your .emacs file:
(add-hook 'message-send-hook 'ispell-message)
If you’re in the habit of writing in different languages, this can be
controlled by the ispell-message-dictionary-alist
variable:
(setq ispell-message-dictionary-alist '(("^Newsgroups:.*\\bde\\." . "deutsch8") (".*" . "default")))
ispell
depends on having the external ‘ispell’ command
installed.
The other popular method is using flyspell
. This package checks
your spelling while you’re writing, and marks any mis-spelled words in
various ways.
To use flyspell
, put something like the following in your
.emacs file:
(defun my-message-setup-routine () (flyspell-mode 1)) (add-hook 'message-setup-hook 'my-message-setup-routine)
flyspell
depends on having the external ‘ispell’ command
installed.
Message is quite aggressive on the message generation front. It has to be—it’s a combined news and mail agent. To be able to send combined messages, it has to generate all headers itself (instead of letting the mail/news system do it) to ensure that mail and news copies of messages look sufficiently similar.
message-generate-headers-first
¶If t
, generate all required headers before starting to
compose the message. This can also be a list of headers to generate:
(setq message-generate-headers-first '(References))
The variables message-required-headers
,
message-required-mail-headers
and
message-required-news-headers
specify which headers are
required.
Note that some headers will be removed and re-generated before posting,
because of the variable message-deletable-headers
(see below).
message-draft-headers
¶When running Message from Gnus, the message buffers are associated
with a draft group. message-draft-headers
says which headers
should be generated when a draft is written to the draft group.
message-from-style
¶Specifies how From
headers should look. There are four valid
values:
nil
Just the address—‘king@grassland.com’.
parens
‘king@grassland.com (Elvis Parsley)’.
angles
‘Elvis Parsley <king@grassland.com>’.
default
Look like angles
if that doesn’t require quoting, and
parens
if it does. If even parens
requires quoting, use
angles
anyway.
message-deletable-headers
¶Headers in this list that were previously generated by Message will be
deleted before posting. Let’s say you post an article. Then you decide
to post it again to some other group, you naughty boy, so you jump back
to the *post-buf* buffer, edit the Newsgroups
line, and
ship it off again. By default, this variable makes sure that the old
generated Message-ID
is deleted, and a new one generated. If
this isn’t done, the entire empire would probably crumble, anarchy would
prevail, and cats would start walking on two legs and rule the world.
Allegedly.
message-default-headers
¶Header lines to be inserted in outgoing messages before you edit the message, so you can edit or delete their lines. If set to a string, it is directly inserted. If set to a function, it is called and its result is inserted.
message-subject-re-regexp
¶Responses to messages have subjects that start with ‘Re: ’. This is not an abbreviation of the English word “response”, but it comes from the Latin “res”, and means “in the matter of”. Some illiterate nincompoops have failed to grasp this fact, and have “internationalized” their software to use abominations like ‘Aw: ’ (“antwort”) or ‘Sv: ’ (“svar”) instead, which is meaningless and evil. However, you may have to deal with users that use these evil tools, in which case you may set this variable to a regexp that matches these prefixes. Myself, I just throw away non-compliant mail.
Here’s an example of a value to deal with these headers when responding to a message:
(setq message-subject-re-regexp (concat "^[ \t]*" "\\(" "\\(" "[Aa][Nn][Tt][Ww]\\.?\\|" ; antw "[Aa][Ww]\\|" ; aw "[Ff][Ww][Dd]?\\|" ; fwd "[Oo][Dd][Pp]\\|" ; odp "[Rr][Ee]\\|" ; re "[Rr][\311\351][Ff]\\.?\\|" ; ref "[Ss][Vv]" ; sv "\\)" "\\(\\[[0-9]*\\]\\)" "*:[ \t]*" "\\)" "*[ \t]*" ))
message-subject-trailing-was-query
¶Controls what to do with trailing ‘(was: <old subject>)’ in subject
lines. If nil
, leave the subject unchanged. If it is the symbol
ask
, query the user what to do. In this case, the subject is
matched against message-subject-trailing-was-ask-regexp
. If
message-subject-trailing-was-query
is t
, always strip the
trailing old subject. In this case,
message-subject-trailing-was-regexp
is used.
message-alternative-emails
¶Regexp or predicate function matching alternative email addresses. The first address in the To, CC or From headers of the original article matching this variable is used as the From field of outgoing messages, replacing the default From value.
For example, if you have two secondary email addresses john@home.net and john.doe@work.com and want to use them in the From field when composing a reply to a message addressed to one of them, you could set this variable like this:
(setq message-alternative-emails (regexp-opt '("john@home.net" "john.doe@work.com")))
This variable has precedence over posting styles and anything that runs
off message-setup-hook
.
message-allow-no-recipients
¶Specifies what to do when there are no recipients other than
Gcc
or FCC
. If it is always
, the posting is
allowed. If it is never
, the posting is not allowed. If it is
ask
(the default), you are prompted.
message-hidden-headers
¶A regexp, a list of regexps, or a list where the first element is
not
and the rest are regexps. It says which headers to keep
hidden when composing a message.
(setq message-hidden-headers '(not "From" "Subject" "To" "CC" "Newsgroups"))
Headers are hidden using narrowing, you can use M-x widen to expose them in the buffer.
message-header-synonyms
¶A list of lists of header synonyms. E.g., if this list contains a
member list with elements CC
and To
, then
message-carefully-insert-headers
will not insert a To
header when the message is already CC
ed to the recipient.
message-syntax-checks
¶Controls what syntax checks should not be performed on outgoing posts. To disable checking of long signatures, for instance, add
(signature . disabled)
to this list.
Valid checks are:
approved
¶Check whether the article has an Approved
header, which is
something only moderators should include.
continuation-headers
Check whether there are continuation header lines that don’t begin with whitespace.
control-chars
Check for invalid characters.
empty
Check whether the article is empty.
existing-newsgroups
Check whether the newsgroups mentioned in the Newsgroups
and
Followup-To
headers exist.
from
Check whether the From
header seems nice.
illegible-text
Check whether there is any non-printable character in the body.
invisible-text
Check whether there is any invisible text in the buffer.
long-header-lines
Check for too long header lines.
long-lines
¶Check for too long lines in the body.
message-id
Check whether the Message-ID
looks syntactically ok.
multiple-headers
Check for the existence of multiple equal headers.
new-text
Check whether there is any new text in the messages.
newsgroups
Check whether the Newsgroups
header exists and is not empty.
quoting-style
Check whether text follows last quoted portion.
repeated-newsgroups
Check whether the Newsgroups
and Followup-To
headers
contains repeated group names.
reply-to
Check whether the Reply-To
header looks ok.
sender
¶Insert a new Sender
header if the From
header looks odd.
sendsys
¶Check for the existence of version and sendsys commands.
shoot
Check whether the domain part of the Message-ID
header looks ok.
shorten-followup-to
Check whether to add a Followup-To
header to shorten the number
of groups to post to.
signature
Check the length of the signature.
size
Check for excessive size.
subject
Check whether the Subject
header exists and is not empty.
subject-cmsg
Check the subject for commands.
valid-newsgroups
Check whether the Newsgroups
and Followup-To
headers
are valid syntactically.
All these conditions are checked by default, except for sender
for which the check is disabled by default if
message-insert-canlock
is non-nil
(see Canceling News).
message-required-mail-headers
¶See News Headers, for the syntax of this variable. It is
(From Subject Date (optional . In-Reply-To) Message-ID
(optional . User-Agent))
by default.
message-ignored-mail-headers
¶Regexp of headers to be removed before mailing. The default is
‘^[GF]cc:\\|^Resent-FCC:\\|^Xref:\\|^X-Draft-From:\\|
^X-Gnus-Agent-Meta-Information:’.
message-default-mail-headers
¶This string is inserted at the end of the headers in all message buffers that are initialized as mail.
message-generate-hashcash
¶Variable that indicates whether ‘X-Hashcash’ headers
should be computed for the message. See Hashcash in The Gnus Manual. If opportunistic
, only generate the headers
when it doesn’t lead to the user having to wait.
message-send-mail-function
¶Function used to send the current buffer as mail. The default is
message-send-mail-with-sendmail
, or smtpmail-send-it
according to the system. Other valid values include
message-send-mail-with-mailclient
,
message-send-mail-with-mh
, message-send-mail-with-qmail
,
message-smtpmail-send-it
and feedmail-send-it
.
The function
message-send-mail-with-sendmail
pipes your article to the
sendmail
binary for further queuing and sending. When your local
system is not configured for sending mail using sendmail
, and you
have access to a remote SMTP server, you can set
message-send-mail-function
to smtpmail-send-it
and make
sure to setup the smtpmail
package correctly. An example:
(setq message-send-mail-function 'smtpmail-send-it smtpmail-default-smtp-server "YOUR SMTP HOST")
To the thing similar to this, there is
message-smtpmail-send-it
. It is useful if your ISP
requires the POP-before-SMTP authentication.
See POP before SMTP in The Gnus Manual.
If you have a complex SMTP setup, and want some messages to go via one mail server, and other messages to go through another, you can use the ‘X-Message-SMTP-Method’ header. These are the supported values:
X-Message-SMTP-Method: smtp smtp.fsf.org 587
This will send the message via ‘smtp.fsf.org’, using port 587.
X-Message-SMTP-Method: smtp smtp.fsf.org 587 other-user
This is the same as the above, but uses ‘other-user’ as the user name when authenticating. This is handy if you have several SMTP accounts on the same server.
X-Message-SMTP-Method: sendmail
This will send the message via the locally installed sendmail/exim/etc installation.
message-mh-deletable-headers
¶Most versions of MH doesn’t like being fed messages that contain the
headers in this variable. If this variable is non-nil
(which is
the default), these headers will be removed before mailing when sending
messages via MH. Set it to nil
if your MH can handle these
headers.
message-qmail-inject-program
¶Location of the qmail-inject program.
message-qmail-inject-args
¶Arguments passed to qmail-inject programs. This should be a list of strings, one string for each argument. It may also be a function.
E.g., if you wish to set the envelope sender address so that bounces
go to the right place or to deal with listserv’s usage of that address, you
might set this variable to '("-f" "you@some.where")
.
message-sendmail-f-is-evil
¶Non-nil
means don’t add ‘-f username’ to the sendmail
command line. Doing so would be even more evil than leaving it out.
message-sendmail-envelope-from
¶When message-sendmail-f-is-evil
is nil
, this specifies
the address to use in the SMTP envelope. If it is
nil
, use user-mail-address
. If it is the symbol
header
, use the ‘From’ header of the message.
message-mailer-swallows-blank-line
¶Set this to non-nil
if the system’s mailer runs the header and
body together. (This problem exists on SunOS 4 when sendmail is run
in remote mode.) The value should be an expression to test whether
the problem will actually occur.
message-send-mail-partially-limit
¶The limitation of messages sent as message/partial. The lower bound
of message size in characters, beyond which the message should be sent
in several parts. If it is nil
(which is the default), the
size is unlimited.
message-required-news-headers
a list of header symbols. These
headers will either be automatically generated, or, if that’s
impossible, they will be prompted for. The following symbols are valid:
From
¶This required header will be filled out with the result of the
message-make-from
function, which depends on the
message-from-style
, user-full-name
,
user-mail-address
variables.
Subject
¶This required header will be prompted for if not present already.
Newsgroups
¶This required header says which newsgroups the article is to be posted to. If it isn’t present already, it will be prompted for.
Organization
¶This optional header will be filled out depending on the
message-user-organization
variable.
message-user-organization-file
will be used if this variable is
t
. This variable can also be a string (in which case this string
will be used), or it can be a function (which will be called with no
parameters and should return a string to be used).
Lines
¶This optional header will be computed by Message.
Message-ID
¶This required header will be generated by Message. A unique ID will be
created based on the date, time, user name (for the local part) and the
domain part. For the domain part, message will look (in this order) at
message-user-fqdn
, system-name
, mail-host-address
and message-user-mail-address
(i.e., user-mail-address
)
until a probably valid fully qualified domain name (FQDN) was found.
User-Agent
¶This optional header will be filled out according to the
message-newsreader
local variable.
In-Reply-To
This optional header is filled out using the Date
and From
header of the article being replied to.
Expires
¶This extremely optional header will be inserted according to the
message-expires
variable. It is highly deprecated and shouldn’t
be used unless you know what you’re doing.
Distribution
¶This optional header is filled out according to the
message-distribution-function
variable. It is a deprecated and
much misunderstood header.
Path
¶This extremely optional header should probably never be used.
However, some very old servers require that this header is
present. message-user-path
further controls how this
Path
header is to look. If it is nil
, use the server name
as the leaf node. If it is a string, use the string. If it is neither
a string nor nil
, use the user name only. However, it is highly
unlikely that you should need to fiddle with this variable at all.
In addition, you can enter conses into this list. The CAR of this cons
should be a symbol. This symbol’s name is the name of the header, and
the CDR can either be a string to be entered verbatim as the value of
this header, or it can be a function to be called. This function should
take no arguments, and return a string to be inserted. For
instance, if you want to insert Mime-Version: 1.0
, you should
enter (Mime-Version . "1.0")
into the list.
If the list contains a cons where the CAR of the cons is
optional
, the CDR of this cons will only be inserted if it is
non-nil
.
If you want to delete an entry from this list, the following Lisp snippet might be useful. Adjust accordingly if you want to remove another element.
(setq message-required-news-headers (delq 'Message-ID message-required-news-headers))
Other variables for customizing outgoing news articles:
message-ignored-news-headers
¶Regexp of headers to be removed before posting. The default is
‘^NNTP-Posting-Host:\\|^Xref:\\|^[BGF]cc:\\|^Resent-FCC:\\|
^X-Draft-From:\\|^X-Gnus-Agent-Meta-Information:’.
message-default-news-headers
¶This string is inserted at the end of the headers in all message buffers that are initialized as news.
message-send-news-function
¶Function used to send the current buffer as news. The default is
message-send-news
.
message-post-method
¶Gnusish select method (see the Gnus manual for details) used for posting a prepared news message.
message-cite-style
¶The overall style to be used when replying to messages. This controls things like where the reply should be put relative to the original, how the citation is formatted, where the signature goes, etc.
Value is either nil
(no variable overrides) or a let-style list
of pairs (VARIABLE VALUE)
to override default values.
See gnus-posting-styles
to set this variable for specific
groups. Presets to impersonate popular mail agents are available in the
message-cite-style-*
variables.
message-cite-reply-position
¶Where the reply should be positioned. Available styles are
traditional
to reply inline, above
for top-posting, and
below
for bottom-posting
message-ignored-cited-headers
¶All headers that match this regexp will be removed from yanked messages. The default is ‘.’, which means that all headers will be removed.
message-cite-prefix-regexp
¶Regexp matching the longest possible citation prefix on a line.
message-citation-line-function
¶Function called to insert the citation line. The default is
message-insert-citation-line
, which will lead to citation lines
that look like:
Hallvard B Furuseth <h.b.furuseth@usit.uio.no> writes:
Point will be at the beginning of the body of the message when this function is called.
Note that Gnus provides a feature where clicking on ‘writes:’ hides the
cited text. If you change the citation line too much, readers of your
messages will have to adjust their Gnus, too. See the variable
gnus-cite-attribution-suffix
. See Article Highlighting in The Gnus Manual, for details.
message-yank-prefix
¶When you are replying to or following up an article, you normally want
to quote the person you are answering. Inserting quoted text is done by
yanking, and each line you yank will have
message-yank-prefix
prepended to it (except for quoted lines
which use message-yank-cited-prefix
and empty lines which use
message-yank-empty-prefix
). The default is ‘> ’.
message-yank-cited-prefix
¶When yanking text from an article which contains already cited text,
each line will be prefixed with the contents of this variable. The
default is ‘>’. See also message-yank-prefix
.
message-yank-empty-prefix
¶When yanking text from an article, each empty line will be prefixed with
the contents of this variable. The default is ‘>’. You can set
this variable to an empty string to split the cited text into paragraphs
automatically. See also message-yank-prefix
.
message-indentation-spaces
¶Number of spaces to indent yanked messages.
message-cite-function
¶Function for citing an original message. The default is
message-cite-original
, which simply inserts the original message
and prepends ‘> ’ to each line.
message-cite-original-without-signature
does the same, but elides
the signature.
message-indent-citation-function
¶Function for modifying a citation just inserted in the mail buffer.
This can also be a list of functions. Each function can find the
citation between (point)
and (mark t)
. And each function
should leave point and mark around the citation text as modified.
message-mark-insert-begin
¶String to mark the beginning of some inserted text.
message-mark-insert-end
¶String to mark the end of some inserted text.
message-signature
¶String to be inserted at the end of the message buffer. If t
(which is the default), the message-signature-file
file will be
inserted instead. If a function, the result from the function will be
used instead. If a form, the result from the form will be used
instead. If this variable is nil
, no signature will be
inserted at all, but you can still insert your
message-signature-file
by hand when desired, using the
C-c C-w (message-insert-signature
) command.
message-signature-file
¶File containing the signature to be inserted at the end of the buffer.
If a path is specified, the value of
message-signature-directory
is ignored, even if set.
The default is ~/.signature.
message-signature-directory
¶Name of directory containing signature files. Comes in handy if you
have many such files, handled via Gnus posting styles for instance.
If nil
(the default), message-signature-file
is expected
to specify the directory if needed.
message-signature-insert-empty-line
¶If t
(the default value) an empty line is inserted before the
signature separator.
Note that RFC1036bis says that a signature should be preceded by the three characters ‘-- ’ on a line by themselves. This is to make it easier for the recipient to automatically recognize and process the signature. So don’t remove those characters, even though you might feel that they ruin your beautiful design, like, totally.
Also note that no signature should be more than four lines long. Including ASCII graphics is an efficient way to get everybody to believe that you are silly and have nothing important to say.
message-default-charset
¶Symbol naming a MIME charset. Non-ASCII characters
in messages are assumed to be encoded using this charset. The default
is iso-8859-1
on non-MULE Emacsen; otherwise nil
,
which means ask the user. (This variable is used only on non-MULE
Emacsen.) See Charset Translation in Emacs MIME Manual, for details on the MULE-to-MIME
translation process.
message-fill-column
¶Local value for the column beyond which automatic line-wrapping should
happen for message buffers. If non-nil
(the default), also turn on
auto-fill in message buffers.
message-signature-separator
¶Regexp matching the signature separator. It is ‘^-- *$’ by default.
mail-header-separator
¶String used to separate the headers from the body. It is ‘--text follows this line--’ by default.
message-directory
¶Directory used by many mailish things. The default is ~/Mail/.
All other mail file variables are derived from message-directory
.
message-auto-save-directory
¶Directory where Message auto-saves buffers if Gnus isn’t running. If
nil
, Message won’t auto-save. The default is ~/Mail/drafts/.
message-signature-setup-hook
¶Hook run when initializing the message buffer. It is run after the headers have been inserted but before the signature has been inserted.
message-setup-hook
¶Hook run as the last thing when the message buffer has been initialized, but before yanked text is inserted.
message-header-setup-hook
¶Hook called narrowed to the headers after initializing the headers.
For instance, if you’re running Gnus and wish to insert a ‘Mail-Copies-To’ header in all your news articles and all messages you send to mailing lists, you could do something like the following:
(defun my-message-header-setup-hook () (let ((group (or gnus-newsgroup-name ""))) (when (or (message-fetch-field "newsgroups") (gnus-group-find-parameter group 'to-address) (gnus-group-find-parameter group 'to-list)) (insert "Mail-Copies-To: never\n")))) (add-hook 'message-header-setup-hook 'my-message-header-setup-hook)
message-send-hook
¶Hook run before sending messages.
If you want to add certain headers before sending, you can use the
message-add-header
function in this hook. For instance:
(add-hook 'message-send-hook 'my-message-add-content) (defun my-message-add-content () (message-add-header "X-In-No-Sense: Nonsense") (message-add-header "X-Whatever: no"))
This function won’t add the header if the header is already present.
message-send-mail-hook
¶Hook run before sending mail messages. This hook is run very late: just before the message is actually sent as mail.
message-send-news-hook
¶Hook run before sending news messages. This hook is run very late: just before the message is actually sent as news.
message-sent-hook
¶Hook run after sending messages.
message-cancel-hook
¶Hook run when canceling news articles.
message-mode-syntax-table
¶Syntax table used in message mode buffers.
message-cite-articles-with-x-no-archive
¶If non-nil
, don’t strip quoted text from articles that have
‘X-No-Archive’ set. Even if this variable isn’t set, you can
undo the stripping by hitting the undo
keystroke.
message-strip-special-text-properties
¶Emacs has a number of special text properties which can break message composing in various ways. If this option is set, message will strip these properties from the message composition buffer. However, some packages requires these properties to be present in order to work. If you use one of these packages, turn this option off, and hope the message composition doesn’t break too bad.
message-send-method-alist
¶Alist of ways to send outgoing messages. Each element has the form:
(type predicate function)
A symbol that names the method.
A function called without any parameters to determine whether the message is a message of type type. The function will be called in the buffer where the message is.
A function to be called if predicate returns non-nil
.
function is called with one parameter—the prefix.
The default is:
((news message-news-p message-send-via-news) (mail message-mail-p message-send-via-mail))
The message-news-p
function returns non-nil
if the message
looks like news, and the message-send-via-news
function sends the
message according to the message-send-news-function
variable
(see News Variables). The message-mail-p
function returns
non-nil
if the message looks like mail, and the
message-send-via-mail
function sends the message according to the
message-send-mail-function
variable (see Mail Variables).
All the elements in this alist will be tried in order, so a message containing both a valid ‘Newsgroups’ header and a valid ‘To’ header, for example, will be sent as news, and then as mail.
message-fcc-handler-function
¶A function called to save outgoing articles. This function will be
called with the name of the file to store the article in. The default
function is message-output
which saves in Unix mailbox format.
message-courtesy-message
¶When sending combined messages, this string is inserted at the start of
the mailed copy. If the string contains the format spec ‘%s’, the
newsgroups the article has been posted to will be inserted there. If
this variable is nil
, no such courtesy message will be added.
The default value is ‘"The following message is a courtesy copy of
an article\\nthat has been posted to %s as well.\\n\\n"’.
message-fcc-externalize-attachments
¶If nil
, attach files as normal parts in FCC copies; if it is
non-nil
, attach local files as external parts.
message-interactive
¶If non-nil
wait for and display errors when sending a message;
if nil
let the mailer mail back a message to report errors.
message-confirm-send
¶When non-nil
, Gnus will ask for confirmation when sending a
message.
message-server-alist
¶An alist describing the rules for generating the
X-Message-SMTP-Method
header to insert before sending out a new
message, if the message doesn’t yet have such a header. Each element
of the alist should be of the form
(cond . method)
. If cond is a string, it
will be compared with the From
header, and if they compare
equal, the corresponding method will be inserted as a string
into the message headers as the SMTP Method. If cond is a
function, it will be called in the message buffer without any
arguments, and the corresponding method will be inserted into
the message headers as the SMTP Method if the function returns a
non-nil
value; if method is nil, the value returned by
the function cond
is used instead.
Message will generate new buffers with unique buffer names when you request a message buffer. When you send the message, the buffer isn’t normally killed off. Its name is changed and a certain number of old message buffers are kept alive.
message-generate-new-buffers
¶Controls whether to create a new message buffer to compose a message. Valid values include:
nil
Generate the buffer name in the Message way (e.g., *mail*, *news*, *mail to whom*, *news on group*, etc.) and continue editing in the existing buffer of that name. If there is no such buffer, it will be newly created.
unique
t
Create the new buffer with the name generated in the Message way.
unsent
Similar to unique
but the buffer name begins with "*unsent ".
standard
Similar to nil
but the buffer name is simpler like *mail
message*.
If this is a function, call that function with three parameters: The
type, the To address and the group name (any of these may be
nil
). The function should return the new buffer name.
The default value is unsent
.
message-max-buffers
¶This variable says how many old message buffers to keep. If there are
more message buffers than this, the oldest buffer will be killed. The
default is 10. If this variable is nil
, no old message buffers
will ever be killed.
message-send-rename-function
¶After sending a message, the buffer is renamed from, for instance, ‘*reply to Lars*’ to ‘*sent reply to Lars*’. If you don’t like this, set this variable to a function that renames the buffer in a manner you like. If you don’t want to rename the buffer at all, you can say:
(setq message-send-rename-function 'ignore)
message-kill-buffer-on-exit
¶If non-nil
, kill the buffer immediately on exit.
When Message is being used from a news/mail reader, the reader is likely to want to perform some task after the message has been sent. Perhaps return to the previous window configuration or mark an article as replied.
The user may exit from the message buffer in various ways. The most
common is C-c C-c, which sends the message and exits. Other
possibilities are C-c C-s which just sends the message, C-c
C-d which postpones the message editing and buries the message buffer,
and C-c C-k which kills the message buffer. Each of these actions
have lists associated with them that contains actions to be executed:
message-send-actions
, message-exit-actions
,
message-postpone-actions
, and message-kill-actions
.
Message provides a function to interface with these lists:
message-add-action
. The first parameter is the action to be
added, and the rest of the arguments are which lists to add this action
to. Here’s an example from Gnus:
(message-add-action `(set-window-configuration ,(current-window-configuration)) 'exit 'postpone 'kill)
This restores the Gnus window configuration when the message buffer is killed, postponed or exited.
An action can be either: a normal function, or a list where the
CAR is a function and the CDR is the list of arguments, or
a form to be eval
ed.
To determine where a message is to go, the following algorithm is used by default.
A reply is when you want to respond just to the person who sent the message via mail. There will only be one recipient. To determine who the recipient will be, the following headers are consulted, in turn:
Reply-To
From
A wide reply is a mail response that includes all entities
mentioned in the message you are responding to. All mailboxes from the
following headers will be concatenated to form the outgoing
To
/CC
headers:
From
(unless there’s a Reply-To
, in which case that is used instead).
CC
To
If a Mail-Copies-To
header is present, it will also be included
in the list of mailboxes. If this header is ‘never’, that means
that the From
(or Reply-To
) mailbox will be suppressed.
A followup is a response sent via news. The following headers (listed in order of precedence) determine where the response is to be sent:
Followup-To
Newsgroups
If a Mail-Copies-To
header is present, it will be used as the
basis of the new CC
header, except if this header is
‘never’.
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