X-Git-Url: http://cgit.sxemacs.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=texi%2Fmessage.texi;h=2960755e5f823fdfebcd6ef2974ce9db050cc791;hb=77d0c673aad416091abd5f9bc295917437898da5;hp=2a800a9da65b1efd045c921e4641378a2b811701;hpb=fff2f025a5cd42a85ac87b86b6e0d74aaba47d68;p=gnus diff --git a/texi/message.texi b/texi/message.texi index 2a800a9da..909292ff0 100644 --- a/texi/message.texi +++ b/texi/message.texi @@ -1,78 +1,65 @@ \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- +@include gnus-overrides.texi + @setfilename message -@settitle Message 5.8.7 Manual +@settitle Message Manual @synindex fn cp @synindex vr cp @synindex pg cp -@dircategory Editors -@direntry -* Message: (message). Mail and news composition mode that goes with Gnus. -@end direntry -@iftex -@finalout -@end iftex -@setchapternewpage odd - -@ifnottex - +@copying This file documents Message, the Emacs message composition mode. -Copyright (C) 1996,97,98,99,2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +Copyright @copyright{} 1996-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +@quotation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document -under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or +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'' in the Emacs manual. - -(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify -this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free -Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.'' - -This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free -Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document -separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the -license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license. -@end ifnottex +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''. -@tex +(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and +modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF supports it in +developing GNU and promoting software freedom.'' +@end quotation +@end copying + +@dircategory Emacs network features +@direntry +* Message: (message). Mail and news composition mode that + goes with Gnus. +@end direntry +@iftex +@finalout +@end iftex @titlepage -@title Message 5.8.7 Manual +@ifset WEBHACKDEVEL +@title Message Manual (DEVELOPMENT VERSION) +@end ifset +@ifclear WEBHACKDEVEL +@title Message Manual +@end ifclear @author by Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll -Copyright @copyright{} 1996,97,98,99,2000 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 1.1 or -any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the -Invariant Sections being none, 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'' in the Emacs manual. - -(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify -this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free -Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.'' - -This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free -Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document -separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the -license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license. +@insertcopying @end titlepage -@page -@end tex +@summarycontents +@contents @node Top @top Message +@ifnottex +@insertcopying +@end ifnottex + All message composition from Gnus (both mail and news) takes place in Message mode buffers. @@ -82,19 +69,22 @@ Message mode buffers. * Variables:: Customizing the message buffers. * Compatibility:: Making Message backwards compatible. * Appendices:: More technical things. +* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation. * Index:: Variable, function and concept index. * Key Index:: List of Message mode keys. @end menu -This manual corresponds to Message 5.8.7. Message is distributed with -the Gnus distribution bearing the same version number as this manual. +@c Adjust ../Makefile.in if you change the following lines: +Message is distributed with Gnus. The Gnus distribution +@c +corresponding to this manual is No Gnus v0.18 @node Interface @chapter Interface -When a program (or a person) wants to respond to a message -- reply, -follow up, forward, cancel -- the program (or person) should just put +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. @code{Message} will then pop up a new @code{message} mode buffer with appropriate headers filled out, and the user can edit the message before @@ -111,8 +101,12 @@ sending it. * Forwarding:: Forwarding a message via news or mail. * Resending:: Resending a mail message. * Bouncing:: Bouncing a mail message. +* Mailing Lists:: Send mail to mailing lists. @end menu +You can customize the Message Mode tool bar, see @kbd{M-x +customize-apropos RET message-tool-bar}. This feature is only available +in Emacs. @node New Mail Message @section New Mail Message @@ -163,16 +157,15 @@ If you want the replies to go to the @code{Sender} instead of the 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 string if it has an -opinion as to what the To header should be. If it does not, it should -just return @code{nil}, and the normal methods for determining the To -header will be used. +As you can see, this function should return a list. In this case, it +returns @code{((To . "Whom"))} if it has an opinion as to what the To +header should be. If it does not, it should just return @code{nil}, and +the normal methods for determining the To header will be used. -This function can also return a list. In that case, each list element -should be a cons, where the car should be the name of an header -(eg. @code{Cc}) and the cdr should be the header value -(eg. @samp{larsi@@ifi.uio.no}). All these headers will be inserted into -the head of the outgoing mail. +Each list element should be a cons, where the @sc{car} should be the +name of a header (e.g. @code{Cc}) and the @sc{cdr} should be the header +value (e.g. @samp{larsi@@ifi.uio.no}). All these headers will be +inserted into the head of the outgoing mail. @node Wide Reply @@ -190,10 +183,46 @@ but you can change the behavior to suit your needs by fiddling with the @code{message-wide-reply-to-function}. It is used in the same way as @code{message-reply-to-function} (@pxref{Reply}). -@findex message-dont-reply-to-names +@vindex message-dont-reply-to-names Addresses that match the @code{message-dont-reply-to-names} regular -expression will be removed from the @code{Cc} header. +expression (or list of regular expressions) will be removed from the +@code{Cc} header. A value of @code{nil} means exclude your name only. + +@vindex message-prune-recipient-rules +@code{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 @samp{foo@@example.org}, but +@samp{foo@@zot.example.org} is also in the @code{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: + +@lisp +(setq message-prune-recipient-rules + '(("^\\([^@@]+\\)@@\\(.*\\)" "\\1@@.*[.]\\2"))) +@end lisp + +If, for instance, you want all wide replies that involve messages from +@samp{cvs@@example.org} to go to that address, and nowhere else (i.e., +remove all other recipients if @samp{cvs@@example.org} is in the +recipient list: + +@lisp +(setq message-prune-recipient-rules + '(("cvs@@example.org" "."))) +@end lisp +@vindex message-wide-reply-confirm-recipients +If @code{message-wide-reply-confirm-recipients} is non-@code{nil} you +will be asked to confirm that you want to reply to multiple +recipients. The default is @code{nil}. @node Followup @section Followup @@ -223,6 +252,34 @@ it is @code{nil}, don't use the value. The @code{message-cancel-news} command cancels the article in the current buffer. +@vindex message-cancel-message +The value of @code{message-cancel-message} is inserted in the body of +the cancel message. The default is @samp{I am canceling my own +article.}. + +@cindex Cancel Locks +@vindex message-insert-canlock +@cindex canlock +When Message posts news messages, it inserts @code{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 @file{.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 @file{~/.gnus.el} file: + +@lisp +(setq canlock-password "geheimnis" + canlock-password-for-verify canlock-password) +@end lisp + +Whether to insert the header or not is controlled by the +@code{message-insert-canlock} variable. + +Not many news servers respect the @code{Cancel-Lock} header yet, but +this is expected to change in the future. + @node Superseding @section Superseding @@ -235,7 +292,10 @@ supersede the message in the current buffer. Headers matching the @code{message-ignored-supersedes-headers} are removed before popping up the new message buffer. The default is@* @samp{^Path:\\|^Date\\|^NNTP-Posting-Host:\\|^Xref:\\|^Lines:\\|@* -^Received:\\|^X-From-Line:\\|Return-Path:\\|^Supersedes:}. +^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:}. @@ -280,9 +340,14 @@ constructed. The default value is @code{nil}. @item message-forward-as-mime @vindex message-forward-as-mime If this variable is @code{t} (the default), forwarded messages are -included as inline MIME RFC822 parts. If it's @code{nil}, forwarded +included as inline @acronym{MIME} RFC822 parts. If it's @code{nil}, forwarded messages will just be copied inline to the new message, like previous, -non MIME-savvy versions of gnus would do. +non @acronym{MIME}-savvy versions of Gnus would do. + +@item message-forward-before-signature +@vindex message-forward-before-signature +If non-@code{nil}, put forwarded message before signature, else after. + @end table @@ -295,8 +360,7 @@ and resend the message in the current buffer to that address. @vindex message-ignored-resent-headers Headers that match the @code{message-ignored-resent-headers} regexp will -be removed before sending the message. The default is -@samp{^Return-receipt}. +be removed before sending the message. @node Bouncing @@ -312,34 +376,201 @@ undeliverable. @vindex message-ignored-bounced-headers Headers that match the @code{message-ignored-bounced-headers} regexp will be removed before popping up the buffer. The default is -@samp{^\\(Received\\|Return-Path\\):}. +@samp{^\\(Received\\|Return-Path\\|Delivered-To\\):}. + + +@node Mailing Lists +@section Mailing Lists + +@cindex Mail-Followup-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: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +A mailing list poster can use MFT to express that responses should be +sent to just the list, and not the poster as well. This will happen +if the poster is already subscribed to the list. + +@item +A mailing list poster can use MFT to express that responses should be +sent to the list and the poster as well. This will happen if the poster +is not subscribed to the list. + +@item +If a message is posted to several mailing lists, MFT may also be used +to direct the following discussion to one list only, because +discussions that are spread over several lists tend to be fragmented +and very difficult to follow. + +@end itemize + +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. + +@c @menu +@c * Honoring an MFT post:: What to do when one already exists +@c * Composing with a MFT header:: Creating one from scratch. +@c @end menu + +@c @node Composing with a MFT header +@subsection Composing a correct MFT header automagically + +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. + +@table @code + +@vindex message-subscribed-addresses +@item message-subscribed-addresses +This should be a list of addresses the user is subscribed to. Its +default value is @code{nil}. Example: +@lisp +(setq message-subscribed-addresses + '("ding@@gnus.org" "bing@@noose.org")) +@end lisp + +@vindex message-subscribed-regexps +@item message-subscribed-regexps +This should be a list of regexps denoting the addresses of mailing +lists subscribed to. Default value is @code{nil}. Example: If you +want to achieve the same result as above: +@lisp +(setq message-subscribed-regexps + '("\\(ding@@gnus\\)\\|\\(bing@@noose\\)\\.org") +@end lisp +@vindex message-subscribed-address-functions +@item 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 @code{nil}. + +There is a pre-defined function in Gnus that is a good candidate for +this variable. @code{gnus-find-subscribed-addresses} is a function +that returns a list of addresses corresponding to the groups that have +the @code{subscribed} (@pxref{Group Parameters, ,Group Parameters, +gnus, The Gnus Manual}) group parameter set to a non-@code{nil} value. +This is how you would do it. + +@lisp +(setq message-subscribed-address-functions + '(gnus-find-subscribed-addresses)) +@end lisp + +@vindex message-subscribed-address-file +@item 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. + +@end table + +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: + +@kindex C-c C-f C-a +@findex message-generate-unsubscribed-mail-followup-to +@kindex C-c C-f C-m +@findex message-goto-mail-followup-to +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 +@code{message-generate-unsubscribed-mail-followup-to} might come in +handy. It is bound to @kbd{C-c C-f C-a} by default. In any case, you +can insert a MFT of your own choice; @kbd{C-c C-f C-m} +(@code{message-goto-mail-followup-to}) will help you get started. + +@c @node Honoring an MFT post +@subsection Honoring an MFT post + +@vindex message-use-mail-followup-to +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 +@code{message-use-mail-followup-to}. This variable can be one of: + +@table @code +@item 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. + +@item nil + Always dishonor MFTs (just ignore the darned thing) + +@item ask +Gnus will prompt you for an action. + +@end table + +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. @node Commands @chapter Commands @menu -* Header Commands:: Commands for moving to headers. +* Buffer Entry:: Commands after entering a Message buffer. +* Header Commands:: Commands for moving headers or changing headers. * Movement:: Moving around in message buffers. * Insertion:: Inserting things into message buffers. -* MIME:: @sc{mime} considerations. +* MIME:: @acronym{MIME} considerations. +* IDNA:: Non-@acronym{ASCII} domain name considerations. +* Security:: Signing and encrypting messages. * Various Commands:: Various things. * Sending:: Actually sending the message. * Mail Aliases:: How to use mail aliases. +* Spelling:: Having Emacs check your spelling. @end menu +@node Buffer Entry +@section Buffer Entry +@cindex undo +@kindex C-_ + +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 @kbd{C-_}) a few +times, you will get back the un-edited message you're responding to. + + @node Header Commands @section Header Commands -All these commands move to the header in question. If it doesn't exist, -it will be inserted. +@subsection Commands for moving to headers + +These following commands move to the header in question. If it doesn't +exist, it will be inserted. @table @kbd @item C-c ? @kindex C-c ? -@findex message-goto-to +@findex describe-mode Describe the message mode. @item C-c C-f C-t @@ -347,13 +578,19 @@ Describe the message mode. @findex message-goto-to Go to the @code{To} header (@code{message-goto-to}). +@item C-c C-f C-o +@kindex C-c C-f C-o +@findex message-goto-from +Go to the @code{From} header (@code{message-goto-from}). (The ``o'' +in the key binding is for Originator.) + @item C-c C-f C-b @kindex C-c C-f C-b @findex message-goto-bcc Go to the @code{Bcc} header (@code{message-goto-bcc}). -@item C-c C-f C-f -@kindex C-c C-f C-f +@item C-c C-f C-w +@kindex C-c C-f C-w @findex message-goto-fcc Go to the @code{Fcc} header (@code{message-goto-fcc}). @@ -382,8 +619,8 @@ Go to the @code{Newsgroups} header (@code{message-goto-newsgroups}). @findex message-goto-distribution Go to the @code{Distribution} header (@code{message-goto-distribution}). -@item C-c C-f C-o -@kindex C-c C-f C-o +@item C-c C-f C-f +@kindex C-c C-f C-f @findex message-goto-followup-to Go to the @code{Followup-To} header (@code{message-goto-followup-to}). @@ -397,6 +634,137 @@ Go to the @code{Keywords} header (@code{message-goto-keywords}). @findex message-goto-summary Go to the @code{Summary} header (@code{message-goto-summary}). +@item C-c C-f C-i +@kindex C-c C-f C-i +@findex message-insert-or-toggle-importance +This inserts the @samp{Importance:} header with a value of +@samp{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: @samp{low}, @samp{normal} and @samp{high}. + +@item C-c C-f C-a +@kindex C-c C-f C-a +@findex message-generate-unsubscribed-mail-followup-to +Insert a reasonable @samp{Mail-Followup-To:} header +(@pxref{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 @samp{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 @samp{To:} header in the current mail +buffer, and appends the current @code{user-mail-address}. + +If the optional argument @code{include-cc} is non-@code{nil}, the +addresses in the @samp{Cc:} header are also put into the +@samp{Mail-Followup-To:} header. + +@end table + +@subsection Commands to change headers + +@table @kbd + +@item C-c C-o +@kindex C-c C-o +@findex message-sort-headers +@vindex message-header-format-alist +Sort headers according to @code{message-header-format-alist} +(@code{message-sort-headers}). + +@item C-c C-t +@kindex C-c C-t +@findex message-insert-to +Insert a @code{To} header that contains the @code{Reply-To} or +@code{From} header of the message you're following up +(@code{message-insert-to}). + +@item C-c C-n +@kindex C-c C-n +@findex message-insert-newsgroups +Insert a @code{Newsgroups} header that reflects the @code{Followup-To} +or @code{Newsgroups} header of the article you're replying to +(@code{message-insert-newsgroups}). + +@item C-c C-l +@kindex C-c C-l +@findex message-to-list-only +Send a message to the list only. Remove all addresses but the list +address from @code{To:} and @code{Cc:} headers. + +@item C-c M-n +@kindex C-c M-n +@findex message-insert-disposition-notification-to +Insert a request for a disposition +notification. (@code{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. + +@item M-x message-insert-importance-high +@kindex M-x message-insert-importance-high +@findex message-insert-importance-high +@cindex Importance +Insert an @samp{Importance} header with a value of @samp{high}, +deleting headers if necessary. + +@item M-x message-insert-importance-low +@kindex M-x message-insert-importance-low +@findex message-insert-importance-low +@cindex Importance +Insert an @samp{Importance} header with a value of @samp{low}, deleting +headers if necessary. + +@item C-c C-f s +@kindex C-c C-f s +@findex message-change-subject +@cindex Subject +Change the current @samp{Subject} header. Ask for new @samp{Subject} +header and append @samp{(was: )}. The old subject can be +stripped on replying, see @code{message-subject-trailing-was-query} +(@pxref{Message Headers}). + +@item C-c C-f x +@kindex C-c C-f x +@findex message-cross-post-followup-to +@vindex message-cross-post-default +@vindex message-cross-post-note-function +@cindex X-Post +@cindex cross-post +Set up the @samp{FollowUp-To} header with a target newsgroup for a +cross-post, add that target newsgroup to the @samp{Newsgroups} header if +it is not a member of @samp{Newsgroups}, and insert a note in the body. +If @code{message-cross-post-default} is @code{nil} or if this command is +called with a prefix-argument, only the @samp{FollowUp-To} header will +be set but the target newsgroup will not be added to the +@samp{Newsgroups} header. The function to insert a note is controlled +by the @code{message-cross-post-note-function} variable. + +@item C-c C-f t +@kindex C-c C-f t +@findex message-reduce-to-to-cc +Replace contents of @samp{To} header with contents of @samp{Cc} or +@samp{Bcc} header. (Iff @samp{Cc} header is not present, @samp{Bcc} +header will be used instead.) + +@item C-c C-f w +@kindex C-c C-f w +@findex message-insert-wide-reply +Insert @samp{To} and @samp{Cc} headers as if you were doing a wide +reply even if the message was not made for a wide reply first. + +@item C-c C-f a +@kindex C-c C-f a +@findex message-add-archive-header +@vindex message-archive-header +@vindex message-archive-note +@cindex X-No-Archive +Insert @samp{X-No-Archive: Yes} in the header and a note in the body. +The header and the note can be customized using +@code{message-archive-header} and @code{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 @code{message-archive-note} to +@code{nil}. + @end table @@ -415,6 +783,15 @@ Move to the beginning of the body of the message @findex message-goto-signature Move to the signature of the message (@code{message-goto-signature}). +@item C-a +@kindex C-a +@findex message-beginning-of-line +@vindex message-beginning-of-line +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 @code{message-beginning-of-line}. + @end table @@ -429,8 +806,8 @@ Move to the signature of the message (@code{message-goto-signature}). Yank the message that's being replied to into the message buffer (@code{message-yank-original}). -@item C-c M-C-y -@kindex C-c M-C-y +@item C-c C-M-y +@kindex C-c C-M-y @findex message-yank-buffer Prompt for a buffer name and yank the contents of that buffer into the message buffer (@code{message-yank-buffer}). @@ -455,108 +832,353 @@ Insert a signature at the end of the buffer @findex message-insert-headers Insert the message headers (@code{message-insert-headers}). +@item C-c M-m +@kindex C-c M-m +@findex message-mark-inserted-region +Mark some region in the current article with enclosing tags. See +@code{message-mark-insert-begin} and @code{message-mark-insert-end}. +When called with a prefix argument, use slrn style verbatim marks +(@samp{#v+} and @samp{#v-}). + +@item C-c M-f +@kindex C-c M-f +@findex message-mark-insert-file +Insert a file in the current article with enclosing tags. +See @code{message-mark-insert-begin} and @code{message-mark-insert-end}. +When called with a prefix argument, use slrn style verbatim marks +(@samp{#v+} and @samp{#v-}). + @end table -@table @code -@item message-ignored-cited-headers -@vindex message-ignored-cited-headers -All headers that match this regexp will be removed from yanked -messages. The default is @samp{.}, which means that all headers will be -removed. -@item message-citation-line-function -@vindex message-citation-line-function -Function called to insert the citation line. The default is -@code{message-insert-citation-line}, which will lead to citation lines -that look like: +@node MIME +@section MIME +@cindex MML +@cindex MIME +@cindex multipart +@cindex attachment -@example -Hallvard B Furuseth writes: -@end example +Message is a @acronym{MIME}-compliant posting agent. The user generally +doesn't have to do anything to make the @acronym{MIME} happen---Message will +automatically add the @code{Content-Type} and +@code{Content-Transfer-Encoding} headers. -Point will be at the beginning of the body of the message when this -function is called. +@findex mml-attach-file +@kindex C-c C-a +The most typical thing users want to use the multipart things in +@acronym{MIME} for is to add ``attachments'' to mail they send out. +This can be done with the @kbd{C-c C-a} command (@kbd{M-x mml-attach-file}), +which will prompt for a file name and a @acronym{MIME} type. + +@vindex mml-dnd-protocol-alist +@vindex mml-dnd-attach-options +If your Emacs supports drag and drop, you can also drop the file in the +Message buffer. The variable @code{mml-dnd-protocol-alist} specifies +what kind of action is done when you drop a file into the Message +buffer. The variable @code{mml-dnd-attach-options} controls which +@acronym{MIME} options you want to specify when dropping a file. If it +is a list, valid members are @code{type}, @code{description} and +@code{disposition}. @code{disposition} implies @code{type}. If it is +@code{nil}, don't ask for options. If it is @code{t}, ask the user +whether or not to specify options. + +You can also create arbitrarily complex multiparts using the @acronym{MML} +language (@pxref{Composing, , Composing, emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME +Manual}). -@item message-yank-prefix -@vindex message-yank-prefix -@cindex yanking -@cindex quoting -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 -@dfn{yanking}, and each quoted line you yank will have -@code{message-yank-prefix} prepended to it. The default is @samp{> }. +@node IDNA +@section IDNA +@cindex IDNA +@cindex internationalized domain names +@cindex non-ascii domain names + +@acronym{IDNA} is a standard way to encode non-@acronym{ASCII} domain +names into a readable @acronym{ASCII} string. The details can be +found in RFC 3490. + +Message is a @acronym{IDNA}-compliant posting agent. The user +generally doesn't have to do anything to make the @acronym{IDNA} +happen---Message will encode non-@acronym{ASCII} domain names in @code{From}, +@code{To}, and @code{Cc} headers automatically. + +Until @acronym{IDNA} becomes more well known, Message queries you +whether @acronym{IDNA} encoding of the domain name really should +occur. Some users might not be aware that domain names can contain +non-@acronym{ASCII} now, so this gives them a safety net if they accidentally +typed a non-@acronym{ASCII} domain name. + +@vindex message-use-idna +The @code{message-use-idna} variable control whether @acronym{IDNA} is +used. If the variable is @code{nil} no @acronym{IDNA} encoding will +ever happen, if it is set to the symbol @code{ask} the user will be +queried, and if set to @code{t} (which is the default if @acronym{IDNA} +is fully available) @acronym{IDNA} encoding happens automatically. + +@findex message-idna-to-ascii-rhs +If you want to experiment with the @acronym{IDNA} encoding, you can +invoke @kbd{M-x message-idna-to-ascii-rhs RET} in the message buffer +to have the non-@acronym{ASCII} domain names encoded while you edit +the message. + +Note that you must have @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/libidn/, GNU +Libidn} installed in order to use this functionality. + +@node Security +@section Security +@cindex Security +@cindex S/MIME +@cindex PGP +@cindex PGP/MIME +@cindex sign +@cindex encrypt +@cindex secure + +Using the @acronym{MML} language, Message is able to create digitally +signed and digitally encrypted messages. Message (or rather +@acronym{MML}) currently support @acronym{PGP} (RFC 1991), +@acronym{PGP/MIME} (RFC 2015/3156) and @acronym{S/MIME}. -@item message-indentation-spaces -@vindex message-indentation-spaces -Number of spaces to indent yanked messages. +@menu +* Signing and encryption:: Signing and encrypting commands. +* Using S/MIME:: Using S/MIME +* Using PGP/MIME:: Using PGP/MIME +* PGP Compatibility:: Compatibility with older implementations +@end menu -@item message-cite-function -@vindex message-cite-function -@findex message-cite-original -@findex sc-cite-original -@findex message-cite-original-without-signature -@cindex Supercite -Function for citing an original message. The default is -@code{message-cite-original}, which simply inserts the original message -and prepends @samp{> } to each line. -@code{message-cite-original-without-signature} does the same, but elides -the signature. You can also set it to @code{sc-cite-original} to use -Supercite. +@node Signing and encryption +@subsection Signing and encrypting commands -@item message-indent-citation-function -@vindex 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 @code{(point)} and @code{(mark t)}. And each function -should leave point and mark around the citation text as modified. +Instructing @acronym{MML} to perform security operations on a +@acronym{MIME} part is done using the @kbd{C-c C-m s} key map for +signing and the @kbd{C-c C-m c} key map for encryption, as follows. +@table @kbd -@item message-signature -@vindex message-signature -String to be inserted at the end of the message buffer. If @code{t} -(which is the default), the @code{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 @code{nil}, no signature will be inserted at all. +@item C-c C-m s s +@kindex C-c C-m s s +@findex mml-secure-message-sign-smime -@item message-signature-file -@vindex message-signature-file -File containing the signature to be inserted at the end of the buffer. -The default is @samp{~/.signature}. +Digitally sign current message using @acronym{S/MIME}. + +@item C-c C-m s o +@kindex C-c C-m s o +@findex mml-secure-message-sign-pgp + +Digitally sign current message using @acronym{PGP}. + +@item C-c C-m s p +@kindex C-c C-m s p +@findex mml-secure-message-sign-pgpmime + +Digitally sign current message using @acronym{PGP/MIME}. + +@item C-c C-m c s +@kindex C-c C-m c s +@findex mml-secure-message-encrypt-smime + +Digitally encrypt current message using @acronym{S/MIME}. + +@item C-c C-m c o +@kindex C-c C-m c o +@findex mml-secure-message-encrypt-pgp + +Digitally encrypt current message using @acronym{PGP}. + +@item C-c C-m c p +@kindex C-c C-m c p +@findex mml-secure-message-encrypt-pgpmime + +Digitally encrypt current message using @acronym{PGP/MIME}. + +@item C-c C-m C-n +@kindex C-c C-m C-n +@findex mml-unsecure-message +Remove security related @acronym{MML} tags from message. @end table -Note that RFC1036bis says that a signature should be preceded by the three -characters @samp{-- } 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. +These commands do not immediately sign or encrypt the message, they +merely insert the proper @acronym{MML} secure tag to instruct the +@acronym{MML} engine to perform that operation when the message is +actually sent. They may perform other operations too, such as locating +and retrieving a @acronym{S/MIME} certificate of the person you wish to +send encrypted mail to. When the mml parsing engine converts your +@acronym{MML} into a properly encoded @acronym{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 @kbd{C-u C-c RET P} (@code{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. + +@emph{Note!} Neither @acronym{PGP/MIME} nor @acronym{S/MIME} encrypt/signs +RFC822 headers. They only operate on the @acronym{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 @code{mml-secure-message-encrypt-*} command a prefix +argument, e.g., @kbd{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. + +@node Using S/MIME +@subsection Using S/MIME + +@emph{Note!} This section assume you have a basic familiarity with +modern cryptography, @acronym{S/MIME}, various PKCS standards, OpenSSL and +so on. + +The @acronym{S/MIME} support in Message (and @acronym{MML}) require +OpenSSL. OpenSSL performs the actual @acronym{S/MIME} sign/encrypt +operations. OpenSSL can be found at @uref{http://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 +@acronym{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 @acronym{S/MIME} messages you've probably already lost that +contest.) + +To be able to send encrypted mail, a personal certificate is not +required. Message (@acronym{MML}) need a certificate for the person to whom you +wish to communicate with though. You're asked for this when you type +@kbd{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 @acronym{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 (@acronym{MML}) is the first mail agent in the world to support +retrieving @acronym{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 @code{simon.josefsson.org}. LDAP +is a more popular method of distributing certificates, support for it +is planned. (Meanwhile, you can use @code{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. @acronym{MML} +uses an Emacs interface to OpenSSL, aptly named @code{smime.el}, and it +contain a @code{custom} group used for this configuration. So, try +@kbd{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 @acronym{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. -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. +@example +$ openssl pkcs12 -in ns.p12 -clcerts -nodes > key+cert.pem +@end example +The @file{key+cert.pem} file should be pointed to from the +@code{smime-keys} variable. You should now be able to send signed mail. + +@emph{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 @code{RET} at +the passphrase prompt. + +@node Using PGP/MIME +@subsection Using PGP/MIME + +@acronym{PGP/MIME} requires an external OpenPGP implementation, such +as @uref{http://www.gnupg.org/, GNU Privacy Guard}. Pre-OpenPGP +implementations such as PGP 2.x and PGP 5.x are also supported. One +Emacs interface to the PGP implementations, PGG (@pxref{Top, ,PGG, +pgg, PGG Manual}), is included, but Mailcrypt is also supported. +@xref{PGP Compatibility}. + +@cindex gpg-agent +Message internally calls GnuPG (the @command{gpg} command) to perform +data encryption, and in certain cases (decrypting or signing for +example), @command{gpg} requires user's passphrase. Currently the +recommended way to supply your passphrase to @command{gpg} is to use the +@command{gpg-agent} program. + +To use @command{gpg-agent} in Emacs, you need to run the following +command from the shell before starting Emacs. -@node MIME -@section MIME -@cindex MML -@cindex MIME -@cindex multipart -@cindex attachment +@example +eval `gpg-agent --daemon` +@end example -Message is a @sc{mime}-compliant posting agent. The user generally -doesn't have to do anything to make the @sc{mime} happen---Message will -automatically add the @code{Content-Type} and -@code{Content-Transfer-Encoding} headers. +This will invoke @command{gpg-agent} and set the environment variable +@code{GPG_AGENT_INFO} to allow @command{gpg} to communicate with it. +It might be good idea to put this command in your @file{.xsession} or +@file{.bash_profile}. @xref{Invoking GPG-AGENT, , , gnupg, Using the +GNU Privacy Guard}. + +Once your @command{gpg-agent} is set up, it will ask you for a +passphrase as needed for @command{gpg}. Under the X Window System, +you will see a new passphrase input dialog appear. The dialog is +provided by PIN Entry (the @command{pinentry} command), and as of +version 0.7.2, @command{pinentry} cannot cooperate with Emacs on a +single tty. So, if you are using a text console, you may need to put +a passphrase into gpg-agent's cache beforehand. The following command +does the trick. -The most typical thing users want to use the multipart things in -@sc{mime} for is to add ``attachments'' to mail they send out. This can -be done with the @code{C-c C-a} command, which will prompt for a file -name and a @sc{mime} type. +@example +gpg --use-agent --sign < /dev/null > /dev/null +@end example -You can also create arbitrarily complex multiparts using the MML -language (@pxref{Composing, , Composing, emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME -Manual}). +The Lisp variable @code{pgg-gpg-use-agent} controls whether to use +@command{gpg-agent}. See also @xref{Caching passphrase, , , pgg, The +PGG Manual}. + + +@node PGP Compatibility +@subsection Compatibility with older implementations + +@vindex gpg-temp-directory +Note, if you are using the @code{gpg.el} you must make sure that the +directory specified by @code{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 (i.e., if you use @code{pgg}, set +@code{pgg-default-scheme} to @code{pgp}). You could also convince your +fellow PGP 2.x users to convert to GnuPG. +@vindex mml-signencrypt-style-alist +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 +@code{mml-signencrypt-style-alist} variable. For example: + +@lisp +(setq mml-signencrypt-style-alist '(("smime" separate) + ("pgp" separate) + ("pgpauto" separate) + ("pgpmime" separate))) +@end lisp + +This causes to sign and encrypt in two passes, thus generating a +message that can be understood by PGP version 2. + +(Refer to @uref{http://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/pgp2x.html} for more +information about the problem.) @node Various Commands @section Various Commands @@ -574,13 +1196,23 @@ many places to rotate the text. The default is 13. @item C-c C-e @kindex C-c C-e @findex message-elide-region +@vindex message-elide-ellipsis Elide the text between point and mark (@code{message-elide-region}). The text is killed and replaced with the contents of the variable -@code{message-elide-ellipsis}. The default value is to use an ellipsis +@code{message-elide-ellipsis}. The default value is to use an ellipsis (@samp{[...]}). +This is a format-spec string, and you can use @samp{%l} to say how +many lines were removed, and @samp{%c} to say how many characters were +removed. + +@item C-c M-k +@kindex C-c M-k +@findex message-kill-address +Kill the address under point. + @item C-c C-z -@kindex C-c C-x +@kindex C-c C-z @findex message-kill-to-signature Kill all the text up to the signature, or if that's missing, up to the end of the message (@code{message-kill-to-signature}). @@ -593,7 +1225,7 @@ Delete all text in the body of the message that is outside the region @item M-RET @kindex M-RET -@kindex message-newline-and-reformat +@findex message-newline-and-reformat Insert four newlines, and then reformat if inside quoted text. Here's an example: @@ -614,26 +1246,20 @@ If point is before @samp{And} and you press @kbd{M-RET}, you'll get: @samp{*} says where point will be placed. -@item C-c C-t -@kindex C-c C-t -@findex message-insert-to -Insert a @code{To} header that contains the @code{Reply-To} or -@code{From} header of the message you're following up -(@code{message-insert-to}). - -@item C-c C-n -@kindex C-c C-n -@findex message-insert-newsgroups -Insert a @code{Newsgroups} header that reflects the @code{Followup-To} -or @code{Newsgroups} header of the article you're replying to -(@code{message-insert-newsgroups}). - @item C-c M-r @kindex C-c M-r @findex message-rename-buffer Rename the buffer (@code{message-rename-buffer}). If given a prefix, prompt for a new buffer name. +@item TAB +@kindex TAB +@findex message-tab +@vindex message-tab-body-function +If @code{message-tab-body-function} is non-@code{nil}, execute the +function it specifies. Otherwise use the function bound to @kbd{TAB} in +@code{text-mode-map} or @code{global-map}. + @end table @@ -670,11 +1296,13 @@ Kill the message buffer and exit (@code{message-kill-buffer}). @section Mail Aliases @cindex mail aliases @cindex aliases +@cindex completion +@cindex ecomplete @vindex message-mail-alias-type The @code{message-mail-alias-type} variable controls what type of mail -alias expansion to use. Currently only one form is supported---Message -uses @code{mailabbrev} to handle mail aliases. If this variable is +alias expansion to use. Currently two forms are supported: +@code{mailabbrev} and @code{ecomplete}. If this variable is @code{nil}, no mail alias expansion will be performed. @code{mailabbrev} works by parsing the @file{/etc/mailrc} and @@ -692,6 +1320,59 @@ on) headers and press @kbd{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 @code{ecomplete}, all addresses from @code{To} and +@code{Cc} headers will automatically be put into the +@file{~/.ecompleterc} file. When you enter text in the @code{To} and +@code{Cc} headers, @code{ecomplete} will check out the values stored +there and ``electrically'' say what completions are possible. To +choose one of these completions, use the @kbd{M-n} command to move +down to the list. Use @kbd{M-n} and @kbd{M-p} to move down and up the +list, and @kbd{RET} to choose a completion. + +@node Spelling +@section Spelling +@cindex spelling +@findex ispell-message + +There are two popular ways to have Emacs spell-check your messages: +@code{ispell} and @code{flyspell}. @code{ispell} is the older and +probably more popular package. You typically first write the message, +and then run the entire thing through @code{ispell} and fix all the +typos. To have this happen automatically when you send a message, put +something like the following in your @file{.emacs} file: + +@lisp +(add-hook 'message-send-hook 'ispell-message) +@end lisp + +@vindex ispell-message-dictionary-alist +If you're in the habit of writing in different languages, this can be +controlled by the @code{ispell-message-dictionary-alist} variable: + +@lisp +(setq ispell-message-dictionary-alist + '(("^Newsgroups:.*\\bde\\." . "deutsch8") + (".*" . "default"))) +@end lisp + +@code{ispell} depends on having the external @samp{ispell} command +installed. + +The other popular method is using @code{flyspell}. This package checks +your spelling while you're writing, and marks any mis-spelled words in +various ways. + +To use @code{flyspell}, put something like the following in your +@file{.emacs} file: + +@lisp +(defun my-message-setup-routine () + (flyspell-mode 1)) +(add-hook 'message-setup-hook 'my-message-setup-routine) +@end lisp + +@code{flyspell} depends on having the external @samp{ispell} command +installed. @node Variables @@ -703,6 +1384,7 @@ expansions have to be done explicitly. * Mail Variables:: Other mail variables. * News Headers:: Customizing news headers. * News Variables:: Other news variables. +* Insertion Variables:: Customizing how things are inserted. * Various Message Variables:: Other message variables. * Sending Variables:: Variables for sending. * Message Buffers:: How Message names its buffers. @@ -714,7 +1396,7 @@ expansions have to be done explicitly. @section Message Headers 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 +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. @@ -723,8 +1405,28 @@ look sufficiently similar. @item message-generate-headers-first @vindex message-generate-headers-first -If non-@code{nil}, generate all headers before starting to compose the -message. +If @code{t}, generate all required headers before starting to +compose the message. This can also be a list of headers to generate: + +@lisp +(setq message-generate-headers-first + '(References)) +@end lisp + +@vindex message-required-headers +The variables @code{message-required-headers}, +@code{message-required-mail-headers} and +@code{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 @code{message-deletable-headers} (see below). + +@item message-draft-headers +@vindex message-draft-headers +When running Message from Gnus, the message buffers are associated +with a draft group. @code{message-draft-headers} says which headers +should be generated when a draft is written to the draft group. @item message-from-style @vindex message-from-style @@ -733,7 +1435,7 @@ values: @table @code @item nil -Just the address -- @samp{king@@grassland.com}. +Just the address---@samp{king@@grassland.com}. @item parens @samp{king@@grassland.com (Elvis Parsley)}. @@ -762,25 +1464,109 @@ Allegedly. @item message-default-headers @vindex message-default-headers -This string is inserted at the end of the headers in all message -buffers. +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. @item message-subject-re-regexp @vindex message-subject-re-regexp +@cindex Aw +@cindex Sv +@cindex Re Responses to messages have subjects that start with @samp{Re: }. This -is @emph{not} an abbreviation of the English word ``response'', but in +is @emph{not} an abbreviation of the English word ``response'', but is Latin, and means ``in response to''. Some illiterate nincompoops have failed to grasp this fact, and have ``internationalized'' their software -to use abonimations like @samp{Aw: } (``antwort'') or @samp{Sv: } +to use abominations like @samp{Aw: } (``antwort'') or @samp{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: + +@lisp +(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]*" + )) +@end lisp + +@item message-subject-trailing-was-query +@vindex message-subject-trailing-was-query +@vindex message-subject-trailing-was-ask-regexp +@vindex message-subject-trailing-was-regexp +Controls what to do with trailing @samp{(was: )} in subject +lines. If @code{nil}, leave the subject unchanged. If it is the symbol +@code{ask}, query the user what to do. In this case, the subject is +matched against @code{message-subject-trailing-was-ask-regexp}. If +@code{message-subject-trailing-was-query} is @code{t}, always strip the +trailing old subject. In this case, +@code{message-subject-trailing-was-regexp} is used. + @item message-alternative-emails @vindex message-alternative-emails -A regexp to match the alternative email addresses. The first matched -address (not primary one) is used in the @code{From} field. +Regexp 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: + +@lisp +(setq message-alternative-emails + (regexp-opt '("john@@home.net" "john.doe@@work.com"))) +@end lisp + +This variable has precedence over posting styles and anything that runs +off @code{message-setup-hook}. + +@item message-allow-no-recipients +@vindex message-allow-no-recipients +Specifies what to do when there are no recipients other than +@code{Gcc} or @code{Fcc}. If it is @code{always}, the posting is +allowed. If it is @code{never}, the posting is not allowed. If it is +@code{ask} (the default), you are prompted. + +@item message-hidden-headers +@vindex message-hidden-headers +A regexp, a list of regexps, or a list where the first element is +@code{not} and the rest are regexps. It says which headers to keep +hidden when composing a message. + +@lisp +(setq message-hidden-headers + '(not "From" "Subject" "To" "Cc" "Newsgroups")) +@end lisp + +Headers are hidden using narrowing, you can use @kbd{M-x widen} to +expose them in the buffer. + +@item message-header-synonyms +@vindex message-header-synonyms +A list of lists of header synonyms. E.g., if this list contains a +member list with elements @code{Cc} and @code{To}, then +@code{message-carefully-insert-headers} will not insert a @code{To} +header when the message is already @code{Cc}ed to the recipient. @end table @@ -792,19 +1578,27 @@ address (not primary one) is used in the @code{From} field. @item message-required-mail-headers @vindex message-required-mail-headers @xref{News Headers}, for the syntax of this variable. It is -@code{(From Date Subject (optional . In-Reply-To) Message-ID Lines -(optional . X-Mailer))} by default. +@code{(From Subject Date (optional . In-Reply-To) Message-ID +(optional . User-Agent))} by default. @item message-ignored-mail-headers @vindex message-ignored-mail-headers -Regexp of headers to be removed before mailing. The default is -@samp{^[GF]cc:\\|^Resent-Fcc:}. +Regexp of headers to be removed before mailing. The default is@* +@samp{^[GF]cc:\\|^Resent-Fcc:\\|^Xref:\\|^X-Draft-From:\\|@* +^X-Gnus-Agent-Meta-Information:}. @item message-default-mail-headers @vindex message-default-mail-headers This string is inserted at the end of the headers in all message buffers that are initialized as mail. +@item message-generate-hashcash +@vindex message-generate-hashcash +Variable that indicates whether @samp{X-Hashcash} headers +should be computed for the message. @xref{Hashcash, ,Hashcash,gnus, +The Gnus Manual}. If @code{opportunistic}, only generate the headers +when it doesn't lead to the user having to wait. + @end table @@ -814,9 +1608,38 @@ buffers that are initialized as mail. @table @code @item message-send-mail-function @vindex message-send-mail-function +@findex message-send-mail-function +@findex message-send-mail-with-sendmail +@findex message-send-mail-with-mh +@findex message-send-mail-with-qmail +@findex message-smtpmail-send-it +@findex smtpmail-send-it +@findex feedmail-send-it +@findex message-send-mail-with-mailclient Function used to send the current buffer as mail. The default is -@code{message-send-mail-with-sendmail}. If you prefer using MH -instead, set this variable to @code{message-send-mail-with-mh}. +@code{message-send-mail-with-sendmail}, or @code{smtpmail-send-it} +according to the system. Other valid values include +@code{message-send-mail-with-mailclient}, +@code{message-send-mail-with-mh}, @code{message-send-mail-with-qmail}, +@code{message-smtpmail-send-it} and @code{feedmail-send-it}. + +The function +@code{message-send-mail-with-sendmail} pipes your article to the +@code{sendmail} binary for further queuing and sending. When your local +system is not configured for sending mail using @code{sendmail}, and you +have access to a remote @acronym{SMTP} server, you can set +@code{message-send-mail-function} to @code{smtpmail-send-it} and make +sure to setup the @code{smtpmail} package correctly. An example: + +@lisp +(setq message-send-mail-function 'smtpmail-send-it + smtpmail-default-smtp-server "YOUR SMTP HOST") +@end lisp + +To the thing similar to this, there is +@code{message-smtpmail-send-it}. It is useful if your @acronym{ISP} +requires the @acronym{POP}-before-@acronym{SMTP} authentication. +@xref{POP before SMTP, , POP before SMTP, gnus, The Gnus Manual}. @item message-mh-deletable-headers @vindex message-mh-deletable-headers @@ -826,6 +1649,49 @@ the default), these headers will be removed before mailing when sending messages via MH. Set it to @code{nil} if your MH can handle these headers. +@item message-qmail-inject-program +@vindex message-qmail-inject-program +@cindex qmail +Location of the qmail-inject program. + +@item message-qmail-inject-args +@vindex 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. + +For 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 @code{'("-f" "you@@some.where")}. + +@item message-sendmail-f-is-evil +@vindex message-sendmail-f-is-evil +@cindex sendmail +Non-@code{nil} means don't add @samp{-f username} to the sendmail +command line. Doing so would be even more evil than leaving it out. + +@item message-sendmail-envelope-from +@vindex message-sendmail-envelope-from +When @code{message-sendmail-f-is-evil} is @code{nil}, this specifies +the address to use in the @acronym{SMTP} envelope. If it is +@code{nil}, use @code{user-mail-address}. If it is the symbol +@code{header}, use the @samp{From} header of the message. + +@item message-mailer-swallows-blank-line +@vindex message-mailer-swallows-blank-line +Set this to non-@code{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. + +@item message-send-mail-partially-limit +@vindex message-send-mail-partially-limit +@cindex split large message +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 @code{nil} (which is the default), the +size is unlimited. + @end table @@ -859,6 +1725,8 @@ to. If it isn't present already, it will be prompted for. @item Organization @cindex organization +@vindex message-user-organization +@vindex message-user-organization-file This optional header will be filled out depending on the @code{message-user-organization} variable. @code{message-user-organization-file} will be used if this variable is @@ -872,43 +1740,45 @@ This optional header will be computed by Message. @item Message-ID @cindex Message-ID +@vindex message-user-fqdn @vindex mail-host-address +@vindex user-mail-address @findex system-name @cindex Sun +@cindex i-did-not-set--mail-host-address--so-tickle-me This required header will be generated by Message. A unique ID will be -created based on the date, time, user name and system name. Message -will use @code{system-name} to determine the name of the system. If -this isn't a fully qualified domain name (FQDN), Message will use -@code{mail-host-address} as the FQDN of the machine. - -@item X-Newsreader -@cindex X-Newsreader +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 +@code{message-user-fqdn}, @code{system-name}, @code{mail-host-address} +and @code{message-user-mail-address} (i.e. @code{user-mail-address}) +until a probably valid fully qualified domain name (FQDN) was found. + +@item User-Agent +@cindex User-Agent This optional header will be filled out according to the @code{message-newsreader} local variable. -@item X-Mailer -This optional header will be filled out according to the -@code{message-mailer} local variable, unless there already is an -@code{X-Newsreader} header present. - @item In-Reply-To This optional header is filled out using the @code{Date} and @code{From} header of the article being replied to. @item Expires @cindex Expires +@vindex message-expires This extremely optional header will be inserted according to the @code{message-expires} variable. It is highly deprecated and shouldn't be used unless you know what you're doing. @item Distribution @cindex Distribution +@vindex message-distribution-function This optional header is filled out according to the @code{message-distribution-function} variable. It is a deprecated and much misunderstood header. @item Path @cindex path +@vindex message-user-path This extremely optional header should probably never be used. However, some @emph{very} old servers require that this header is present. @code{message-user-path} further controls how this @@ -920,9 +1790,9 @@ unlikely that you should need to fiddle with this variable at all. @findex yow @cindex Mime-Version -In addition, you can enter conses into this list. The car of this cons +In addition, you can enter conses into this list. The @sc{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 +the @sc{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 return a string to be inserted. For instance, if you want to insert @code{Mime-Version: 1.0}, you should enter @code{(Mime-Version . "1.0")} @@ -930,10 +1800,19 @@ into the list. If you want to insert a funny quote, you could enter something like @code{(X-Yow . yow)} into the list. The function @code{yow} will then be called without any arguments. -If the list contains a cons where the car of the cons is -@code{optional}, the cdr of this cons will only be inserted if it is +If the list contains a cons where the @sc{car} of the cons is +@code{optional}, the @sc{cdr} of this cons will only be inserted if it is non-@code{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. + +@lisp +(setq message-required-news-headers + (delq 'Message-ID message-required-news-headers)) +@end lisp + Other variables for customizing outgoing news articles: @table @code @@ -952,61 +1831,79 @@ to this list. Valid checks are: @table @code -@item subject-cmsg -Check the subject for commands. -@item sender -@cindex Sender -Insert a new @code{Sender} header if the @code{From} header looks odd. -@item multiple-headers -Check for the existence of multiple equal headers. -@item sendsys -@cindex sendsys -Check for the existence of version and sendsys commands. -@item message-id -Check whether the @code{Message-ID} looks ok. -@item from -Check whether the @code{From} header seems nice. -@item long-lines -@cindex long lines -Check for too long lines. -@item control-chars -Check for invalid characters. -@item size -Check for excessive size. -@item new-text -Check whether there is any new text in the messages. -@item signature -Check the length of the signature. @item approved @cindex approved Check whether the article has an @code{Approved} header, which is something only moderators should include. +@item continuation-headers +Check whether there are continuation header lines that don't begin with +whitespace. +@item control-chars +Check for invalid characters. @item empty Check whether the article is empty. -@item invisible-text -Check whether there is any invisible text in the buffer. -@item empty-headers -Check whether any of the headers are empty. @item existing-newsgroups Check whether the newsgroups mentioned in the @code{Newsgroups} and @code{Followup-To} headers exist. -@item valid-newsgroups -Check whether the @code{Newsgroups} and @code{Followup-to} headers -are valid syntactically. +@item from +Check whether the @code{From} header seems nice. +@item illegible-text +Check whether there is any non-printable character in the body. +@item invisible-text +Check whether there is any invisible text in the buffer. +@item long-header-lines +Check for too long header lines. +@item long-lines +@cindex long lines +Check for too long lines in the body. +@item message-id +Check whether the @code{Message-ID} looks syntactically ok. +@item multiple-headers +Check for the existence of multiple equal headers. +@item new-text +Check whether there is any new text in the messages. +@item newsgroups +Check whether the @code{Newsgroups} header exists and is not empty. +@item quoting-style +Check whether text follows last quoted portion. @item repeated-newsgroups Check whether the @code{Newsgroups} and @code{Followup-to} headers contains repeated group names. +@item reply-to +Check whether the @code{Reply-To} header looks ok. +@item sender +@cindex Sender +Insert a new @code{Sender} header if the @code{From} header looks odd. +@item sendsys +@cindex sendsys +Check for the existence of version and sendsys commands. +@item shoot +Check whether the domain part of the @code{Message-ID} header looks ok. @item shorten-followup-to Check whether to add a @code{Followup-to} header to shorten the number of groups to post to. +@item signature +Check the length of the signature. +@item size +Check for excessive size. +@item subject +Check whether the @code{Subject} header exists and is not empty. +@item subject-cmsg +Check the subject for commands. +@item valid-newsgroups +Check whether the @code{Newsgroups} and @code{Followup-to} headers +are valid syntactically. @end table -All these conditions are checked by default. +All these conditions are checked by default, except for @code{sender} +for which the check is disabled by default if +@code{message-insert-canlock} is non-@code{nil} (@pxref{Canceling News}). @item message-ignored-news-headers @vindex message-ignored-news-headers Regexp of headers to be removed before posting. The default is@* -@samp{^NNTP-Posting-Host:\\|^Xref:\\|^[BGF]cc:\\|^Resent-Fcc:}. +@samp{^NNTP-Posting-Host:\\|^Xref:\\|^[BGF]cc:\\|^Resent-Fcc:\\|@* +^X-Draft-From:\\|^X-Gnus-Agent-Meta-Information:}. @item message-default-news-headers @vindex message-default-news-headers @@ -1033,6 +1930,162 @@ posting a prepared news message. @end table +@node Insertion Variables +@section Insertion Variables + +@table @code +@item message-cite-style +@vindex 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 @code{nil} (no variable overrides) or a let-style list +of pairs @code{(VARIABLE VALUE)} to override default values. + +See @code{gnus-posting-styles} to set this variable for specific +groups. Presets to impersonate popular mail agents are available in the +@code{message-cite-style-*} variables. + +@item message-cite-reply-position +@vindex message-cite-reply-position +Where the reply should be positioned. Available styles are +@code{traditional} to reply inline, @code{above} for top-posting, and +@code{below} for bottom-posting + +@item message-ignored-cited-headers +@vindex message-ignored-cited-headers +All headers that match this regexp will be removed from yanked +messages. The default is @samp{.}, which means that all headers will be +removed. + +@item message-cite-prefix-regexp +@vindex message-cite-prefix-regexp +Regexp matching the longest possible citation prefix on a line. + +@item message-citation-line-function +@vindex message-citation-line-function +@cindex attribution line +Function called to insert the citation line. The default is +@code{message-insert-citation-line}, which will lead to citation lines +that look like: + +@example +Hallvard B Furuseth writes: +@end example + +@c FIXME: Add `message-insert-formated-citation-line' and +@c `message-citation-line-format' + +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 +@code{gnus-cite-attribution-suffix}. @xref{Article Highlighting, , +Article Highlighting, gnus, The Gnus Manual}, for details. + +@item message-yank-prefix +@vindex message-yank-prefix +@cindex yanking +@cindex quoting +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 +@dfn{yanking}, and each line you yank will have +@code{message-yank-prefix} prepended to it (except for quoted lines +which use @code{message-yank-cited-prefix} and empty lines which use +@code{message-yank-empty-prefix}). The default is @samp{> }. + +@item message-yank-cited-prefix +@vindex message-yank-cited-prefix +@cindex yanking +@cindex cited +@cindex quoting +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 @samp{>}. See also @code{message-yank-prefix}. + +@item message-yank-empty-prefix +@vindex message-yank-empty-prefix +@cindex yanking +@cindex quoting +When yanking text from an article, each empty line will be prefixed with +the contents of this variable. The default is @samp{>}. You can set +this variable to an empty string to split the cited text into paragraphs +automatically. See also @code{message-yank-prefix}. + +@item message-indentation-spaces +@vindex message-indentation-spaces +Number of spaces to indent yanked messages. + +@item message-cite-function +@vindex message-cite-function +@findex message-cite-original +@findex message-cite-original-without-signature +Function for citing an original message. The default is +@code{message-cite-original}, which simply inserts the original message +and prepends @samp{> } to each line. +@code{message-cite-original-without-signature} does the same, but elides +the signature. + +@item message-indent-citation-function +@vindex 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 @code{(point)} and @code{(mark t)}. And each function +should leave point and mark around the citation text as modified. + +@item message-mark-insert-begin +@vindex message-mark-insert-begin +String to mark the beginning of some inserted text. + +@item message-mark-insert-end +@vindex message-mark-insert-end +String to mark the end of some inserted text. + +@item message-signature +@vindex message-signature +String to be inserted at the end of the message buffer. If @code{t} +(which is the default), the @code{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 @code{nil}, no signature will be inserted at all. + +@item message-signature-file +@vindex message-signature-file +File containing the signature to be inserted at the end of the buffer. +If a path is specified, the value of +@code{message-signature-directory} is ignored, even if set. +The default is @file{~/.signature}. + +@item message-signature-directory +@vindex 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 @code{nil} (the default), @code{message-signature-file} is expected +to specify the directory if needed. + + +@item message-signature-insert-empty-line +@vindex message-signature-insert-empty-line +If @code{t} (the default value) an empty line is inserted before the +signature separator. + +@end table + +Note that RFC1036bis says that a signature should be preceded by the three +characters @samp{-- } 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 @acronym{ASCII} graphics is an efficient way to get +everybody to believe that you are silly and have nothing important to +say. + + @node Various Message Variables @section Various Message Variables @@ -1040,14 +2093,21 @@ posting a prepared news message. @item message-default-charset @vindex message-default-charset @cindex charset -Symbol naming a @sc{mime} charset. Non-ASCII characters in messages are -assumed to be encoded using this charset. The default is @code{nil}, +Symbol naming a @acronym{MIME} charset. Non-@acronym{ASCII} characters +in messages are assumed to be encoded using this charset. The default +is @code{iso-8859-1} on non-@sc{mule} Emacsen; otherwise @code{nil}, which means ask the user. (This variable is used only on non-@sc{mule} -Emacsen. -@xref{Charset Translation, , Charset Translation, emacs-mime, - Emacs MIME Manual}, for details on the @sc{mule}-to-@sc{mime} +Emacsen.) @xref{Charset Translation, , Charset Translation, emacs-mime, +Emacs MIME Manual}, for details on the @sc{mule}-to-@acronym{MIME} translation process. +@item message-fill-column +@vindex message-fill-column +@cindex auto-fill +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. + @item message-signature-separator @vindex message-signature-separator Regexp matching the signature separator. It is @samp{^-- *$} by @@ -1060,7 +2120,13 @@ follows this line--} by default. @item message-directory @vindex message-directory -Directory used by many mailey things. The default is @file{~/Mail/}. +Directory used by many mailish things. The default is @file{~/Mail/}. +All other mail file variables are derived from @code{message-directory}. + +@item message-auto-save-directory +@vindex message-auto-save-directory +Directory where Message auto-saves buffers if Gnus isn't running. If +@code{nil}, Message won't auto-save. The default is @file{~/Mail/drafts/}. @item message-signature-setup-hook @vindex message-signature-setup-hook @@ -1103,36 +2169,59 @@ If you want to add certain headers before sending, you can use the @lisp (add-hook 'message-send-hook 'my-message-add-content) (defun my-message-add-content () - (message-add-header - "X-In-No-Sense: Nonsense" - "X-Whatever: no")) + (message-add-header "X-In-No-Sense: Nonsense") + (message-add-header "X-Whatever: no")) @end lisp This function won't add the header if the header is already present. @item message-send-mail-hook @vindex message-send-mail-hook -Hook run before sending mail messages. +Hook run before sending mail messages. This hook is run very late -- +just before the message is actually sent as mail. @item message-send-news-hook @vindex message-send-news-hook -Hook run before sending news messages. +Hook run before sending news messages. This hook is run very late -- +just before the message is actually sent as news. @item message-sent-hook @vindex message-sent-hook Hook run after sending messages. +@item message-cancel-hook +@vindex message-cancel-hook +Hook run when canceling news articles. + @item message-mode-syntax-table @vindex message-mode-syntax-table Syntax table used in message mode buffers. +@item message-cite-articles-with-x-no-archive +@vindex message-cite-articles-with-x-no-archive +If non-@code{nil}, don't strip quoted text from articles that have +@samp{X-No-Archive} set. Even if this variable isn't set, you can +undo the stripping by hitting the @code{undo} keystroke. + +@item message-strip-special-text-properties +@vindex 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. + @item message-send-method-alist @vindex message-send-method-alist - -Alist of ways to send outgoing messages. Each element has the form +@findex message-mail-p +@findex message-news-p +@findex message-send-via-mail +@findex message-send-via-news +Alist of ways to send outgoing messages. Each element has the form: @lisp -(TYPE PREDICATE FUNCTION) +(@var{type} @var{predicate} @var{function}) @end lisp @table @var @@ -1141,20 +2230,32 @@ A symbol that names the method. @item predicate A function called without any parameters to determine whether the -message is a message of type @var{type}. +message is a message of type @var{type}. The function will be called in +the buffer where the message is. @item function A function to be called if @var{predicate} returns non-@code{nil}. -@var{function} is called with one parameter -- the prefix. +@var{function} is called with one parameter---the prefix. @end table +The default is: + @lisp ((news message-news-p message-send-via-news) (mail message-mail-p message-send-via-mail)) @end lisp - - +The @code{message-news-p} function returns non-@code{nil} if the message +looks like news, and the @code{message-send-via-news} function sends the +message according to the @code{message-send-news-function} variable +(@pxref{News Variables}). The @code{message-mail-p} function returns +non-@code{nil} if the message looks like mail, and the +@code{message-send-via-mail} function sends the message according to the +@code{message-send-mail-function} variable (@pxref{Mail Variables}). + +All the elements in this alist will be tried in order, so a message +containing both a valid @samp{Newsgroups} header and a valid @samp{To} +header, for example, will be sent as news, and then as mail. @end table @@ -1177,7 +2278,22 @@ the mailed copy. If the string contains the format spec @samp{%s}, the newsgroups the article has been posted to will be inserted there. If this variable is @code{nil}, no such courtesy message will be added. The default value is @samp{"The following message is a courtesy copy of -an article\nthat has been posted to %s as well.\n\n"}. +an article\\nthat has been posted to %s as well.\\n\\n"}. + +@item message-fcc-externalize-attachments +@vindex message-fcc-externalize-attachments +If @code{nil}, attach files as normal parts in Fcc copies; if it is +non-@code{nil}, attach local files as external parts. + +@item message-interactive +@vindex message-interactive +If non-@code{nil} wait for and display errors when sending a message; +if @code{nil} let the mailer mail back a message to report errors. + +@item message-confirm-send +@vindex message-confirm-send +When non-@code{nil}, Gnus will ask for confirmation when sending a +message. @end table @@ -1193,10 +2309,35 @@ message buffers are kept alive. @table @code @item message-generate-new-buffers @vindex message-generate-new-buffers -If non-@code{nil}, generate new buffers. The default is @code{t}. 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 @code{nil}.) -The function should return the new buffer name. +Controls whether to create a new message buffer to compose a message. +Valid values include: + +@table @code +@item 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. + +@item unique +@item t +Create the new buffer with the name generated in the Message way. + +@item unsent +Similar to @code{unique} but the buffer name begins with "*unsent ". + +@item standard +Similar to @code{nil} but the buffer name is simpler like *mail +message*. +@end table +@table @var +@item function +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 +@code{nil}). The function should return the new buffer name. +@end table + +The default value is @code{unsent}. @item message-max-buffers @vindex message-max-buffers @@ -1260,7 +2401,7 @@ This restores the Gnus window configuration when the message buffer is killed, postponed or exited. An @dfn{action} can be either: a normal function, or a list where the -@code{car} is a function and the @code{cdr} is the list of arguments, or +@sc{car} is a function and the @sc{cdr} is the list of arguments, or a form to be @code{eval}ed. @@ -1270,7 +2411,7 @@ a form to be @code{eval}ed. Message uses virtually only its own variables---older @code{mail-} variables aren't consulted. To force Message to take those variables -into account, you can put the following in your @code{.emacs} file: +into account, you can put the following in your @file{.emacs} file: @lisp (require 'messcompat) @@ -1310,7 +2451,7 @@ consulted, in turn: @item wide reply A @dfn{wide reply} is a mail response that includes @emph{all} entities -mentioned in the message you are responded to. All mailboxes from the +mentioned in the message you are responding to. All mailboxes from the following headers will be concatenated to form the outgoing @code{To}/@code{Cc} headers: @@ -1348,6 +2489,9 @@ basis of the new @code{Cc} header, except if this header is @end table +@node GNU Free Documentation License +@chapter GNU Free Documentation License +@include doclicense.texi @node Index @chapter Index @@ -1357,8 +2501,6 @@ basis of the new @code{Cc} header, except if this header is @chapter Key Index @printindex ky -@summarycontents -@contents @bye @c End: