Man page - larch(1)
Packages contains this manual
Manual
LARCH
NAMESYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
Server options
Copy options
General options
CONFIGURATION
FILES
NOTES
Server compatibility
Gmail quirks
Yahoo! mail quirks
BUGS
EXAMPLE
AUTHORS
NAME
larch - copy messages from one IMAP server to another
SYNOPSIS
larch [ options ]
larch [ --from URI ] [ --to URI ]
DESCRIPTION
Larch is a tool to copy messages from one IMAP server to another quickly and safely. Itâs smart enough not to copy messages that already exist on the destination and robust enough to deal with interruptions caused by flaky connections or misbehaving servers.
Larch is particularly well-suited for copying email to, from, or between Gmail accounts.
OPTIONS
Server options
--from , -f URI
URI of the source IMAP server.
--from-folder , -F FOLDER
Source folder to copy from. Default is INBOX.
--from-pass , -p PASSWD
Source server password. Default is to prompt the user.
--from-user , -u USER
Source server username. Default is to prompt the user.
--to , -t URI
URI of the destination IMAP server.
--to-folder , -T FOLDER
Destination folder to copy to. Default is INBOX.
--to-pass , -P PASSWD
Destination server password. Default is to prompt the user.
--to-user , -U USER
Destination server username. Default is to prompt the user.
Copy options
--all , -a
Copy all folders recursively.
--all-subscribed , -s
Copy all subscribed folders recursively.
--delete , -d
Delete messages from the source after copying them, or if they already exist at the destination.
--exclude PATTERN [ PATTERN ... ]
List of mailbox names/patterns that shouldnât be copied.
--exclude-file FILE
Filename containing mailbox names/patterns that shouldnât be copied.
--expunge , -x
Expunge deleted messages from the source.
--sync-flags , -S
Sync message flags from the source to the destination for messages that already exist at the destination.
General options
--config , -c FILE
Specify a non-default config file to use. Default is Ë/.larch/config.yaml.
--database FILE
Specify a non-default message database to use. Default is Ë/.larch/larch.db.
--dry-run , -n
Donât actually make any changes.
--max-retries NUM
Maximum number of times to retry after a recoverable error. Default is 3.
--no-create-folder
Donât create destination folders that donât already exist.
--ssl-certs FILE
Path to a trusted certificate bundle to use to verify server SSL certificates.
--ssl-verify
Verify server SSL certificates.
--verbosity , -V STR
Output verbosity: debug, info, warn, error, or fatal. Default is info.
--version , -v
Print version and exit.
--help , -h
Show a help message.
CONFIGURATION
While itâs possible to control Larch entirely from the command line, this can be inconvenient if you need to specify a lot of options or if you run Larch frequently and canât always remember which options to use. Using a configuration file can simplify things.
By default, Larch looks for a config file at Ë/.larch/config.yaml and uses it if found. You may specify a custom config file using the --config command line option.
The Larch configuration file is a simple YAML ⨠URL: http://yaml.org/ ⊠file that may contain multiple sections, each with a different set of options, as well as a special default section. The options in the default section will be used unless theyâre overridden either in another config section or on the command line.
Hereâs a sample Larch config file:
# Copy all
subscribed folders by default
default:
all-subscribed: true
# Copy mail
from Gmail to my server, excluding stuff I donât want.
gmail to my server:
from: imaps://imap.gmail.com
from-user: example
from-pass: secret
to:
imaps://mail.example.com
to-user: example
to-pass: secret
exclude:
- "[Gmail]/Sent Mail"
- "[Gmail]/Spam"
- "[Gmail]/Trash"
# Copy mail
from my INBOX to Gmailâs INBOX
my inbox to gmail inbox:
all-subscribed: false
from:
imaps://mail.example.com
from-folder: INBOX
from-user: example
from-pass: secret
to:
imaps://imap.gmail.com
to-folder: INBOX
to-user: example
to-pass: secret
This file contains three sections. The options from default will be used in all other sections as well unless theyâre overridden.
To specify which config section you want Larch to use, just pass its name on the command line (use quotes if the name contains spaces):
larch 'gmail to my server'
If you specify additional command line options, theyâll override options in the config file:
larch 'gmail to my server' --from-user anotheruser
Running Larch with no command line arguments will cause the default section to be used. With the example above, this will result in an error since the default section doesnât contain the required from and to options, but if you only need to use Larch with a single configuration, you could use the default section for everything and save yourself some typing on the command line.
FILES
Ë/.larch/config.yaml
NOTES
Server compatibility
Larch should work well with any server that properly supports IMAP4rev1 ⨠URL: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3501 ⊠, and does its best to get along with servers that have buggy, unreliable, or incomplete IMAP implementations.
Larch has been tested on and is known to work well with the following IMAP servers:
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⢠|
Dovecot |
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⢠|
Gmail |
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Microsoft Exchange 2003 |
The following servers are known to work, but with caveats:
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Yahoo! Mail |
The following servers do not work well with Larch:
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BlitzMail Buggy server implementation; fails to properly quote or escape some IMAP responses, which can cause Net::IMAP to hang waiting for a terminating character that will never arrive. |
Gmail quirks
Gmailâs IMAP implementation is quirky. Larch does its best to work around these quirks whenever possible, but here are a few things to watch out for:
Some messages could not be FETCHed error
This error indicates that a message on Gmail is corrupt, and Gmail itself is unable to read it. The message will continue to show up in the mailbox, but all attempts to access it via IMAP, POP, or the Gmail web interface will result in errors. Larch will try to skip these messages and continue processing others if possible.
Itâs not clear how this corruption occurs or exactly what kind of corruption causes these errors, although in every case Iâm aware of, the corrupt message has originated outside of Gmail (Gmail itself does not corrupt the message). There is currently no known solution for this problem apart from deleting the corrupted messages.
Folder names cannot contain leading or trailing whitespace
Most IMAP servers allow folder names to contain leading and trailing whitespace, such as " folder ". Gmail does not. When copying folders to Gmail, Larch will automatically remove leading and trailing whitespace in folder names to prevent errors.
Yahoo! mail quirks
Yahoo! doesnât officially support IMAP access for general usage, but Larch is able to connect to imap.mail.yahoo.com and imap-ssl.mail.yahoo.com by using a fairly well-known trick. That said, as with anything tricky, there are caveats.
No hierarchical folders
Similar to Gmail, Yahoo! Mail doesnât allow hierarchical (nested) folders. If you try to copy a folder hierarchy to Yahoo!, it will work, but youâll end up with a set of folders named "folder" and "folder.subfolder" rather than seeing "subfolder" as an actual subfolder of "folder".
No custom flags
Yahoo! Mail IMAP doesnât support custom message flags, such as the tags and junk/not junk flags used by Thunderbird. When transferring messages with custom flags to a Yahoo! Mail IMAP account, the custom flags will be lost.
Here there be dragons
Larchâs support for Yahoo! Mail is very new and very lightly tested. Given its newness and the fact that Yahoo!âs IMAP gateway isnât official, there are likely to be other quirks weâre not yet aware of. Thereâs also no guarantee that Yahoo! wonât shut down its IMAP gateway, deprecate the trick Larch uses to connect, or just outright block Larch. Use at your own risk.
BUGS
Larch uses Rubyâs Net::IMAP standard library for all IMAP operations. While Net::IMAP is generally a very solid library, it contains a bug that can cause a deadlock to occur if a connection drops unexpectedly (either due to network issues or because the server closed the connection without warning) when the server has already begun sending a response and Net::IMAP is waiting to receive more data. If this happens, Net::IMAP will continue waiting forever without passing control back to Larch, and you will need to manually kill and restart Larch.
Net::IMAP in Ruby 1.8 has also been known to hang when it canât parse a server response, either because the response itself is malformed or because of a bug in Net::IMAPâs parser. This is rare, but it happens. Unfortunately thereâs nothing Larch can do about this.
EXAMPLE
Larch is run from the command line. The following examples demonstrate how to run Larch using only command line arguments, but you may also place these options in a config file and run Larch without any arguments if you prefer.
At a minimum, you must specify a source server and a destination server in the form of IMAP URIs:
larch --from
imap://mail.example.com \
--to imap://imap.gmail.com
Larch will prompt you for the necessary usernames and passwords, then sync the contents of the sourceâs INBOX folder to the destinationâs INBOX folder.
To connect using SSL , specify a URI beginning with imaps:// :
larch --from
imaps://mail.example.com \
--to imaps://imap.gmail.com
If youâd like to sync a specific folder other than INBOX, specify the source and destination folders using --from-folder and --to-folder . Folder names containing spaces must be enclosed in quotes:
larch --from
imaps://mail.example.com \
--to imaps://imap.gmail.com \
--from-folder 'Sent Mail' --to-folder 'Sent Mail'
To sync all folders , use the --all option (or --all-subscribed if you only want to sync subscribed folders ):
larch --from
imaps://mail.example.com \
--to imaps://imap.gmail.com --all
By default Larch will create folders on the destination server if they donât already exist. To prevent this, add the --no-create-folder option:
larch --from
imaps://mail.example.com \
--to imaps://imap.gmail.com --all \
--no-create-folder
You can prevent Larch from syncing one or more folders by using the --exclude option, which accepts multiple arguments:
larch --from
imaps://mail.example.com \
--to imaps://imap.gmail.com --all \
--exclude Spam Trash Drafts "[Gmail]/*"
If your exclusion list is long or complex, create a text file with one exclusion pattern per line and tell Larch to load it with the --exclude-file option:
larch --from
imaps://mail.example.com \
--to imaps://imap.gmail.com --all \
--exclude-file exclude.txt
The wildcard characters * and ? are supported in exclusion lists. You may also use a regular expression by enclosing a pattern in forward slashes, so the previous example could be achieved with the pattern /(Spam|Trash|Drafts|\[Gmail]\/.*)/
AUTHORS
Adapted from the programâs documentation for Debian by MartĂn Ferrari <tincho@tincho.org>.