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37.5 Rmail Files and Inboxes
When you receive mail locally, the operating system places incoming
mail for you in a file that we call your inbox. When you start
up Rmail, it runs a C program called movemail
to copy the new
messages from your local inbox into your primary Rmail file, which
also contains other messages saved from previous Rmail sessions. It
is in this file that you actually read the mail with Rmail. This
operation is called getting new mail. You can get new mail at
any time in Rmail by typing g.
The variable rmail-primary-inbox-list
contains a list of the
files which are inboxes for your primary Rmail file. If you don't set
this variable explicitly, it is initialized from the MAIL
environment variable, or, as a last resort, set to nil
, which
means to use the default inbox. The default inbox file depends on
your operating system; often it is ‘/var/mail/username’,
‘/usr/spool/mail/username’, or
‘/usr/mail/username’.
You can specify the inbox file(s) for any Rmail file with the
command set-rmail-inbox-list
; see Multiple Rmail Files.
There are two reasons for having separate Rmail files and inboxes.
- The inbox file format varies between operating systems and according to the other mail software in use. Only one part of Rmail needs to know about the alternatives, and it need only understand how to convert all of them to Rmail's own format.
- It is very cumbersome to access an inbox file without danger of losing mail, because it is necessary to interlock with mail delivery. Moreover, different operating systems use different interlocking techniques. The strategy of moving mail out of the inbox once and for all into a separate Rmail file avoids the need for interlocking in all the rest of Rmail, since only Rmail operates on the Rmail file.
Rmail was written to use Babyl format as its internal format. Since then, we have recognized that the usual inbox format on Unix and GNU systems is adequate for the job, and we plan to change Rmail to use that as its internal format. However, the Rmail file will still be separate from the inbox file, even when their format is the same.
When getting new mail, Rmail first copies the new mail from the
inbox file to the Rmail file; then it saves the Rmail file; then it
clears out the inbox file. This way, a system crash may cause
duplication of mail between the inbox and the Rmail file, but cannot
lose mail. If rmail-preserve-inbox
is non-nil
, then
Rmail does not clear out the inbox file when it gets new mail. You
may wish to set this, for example, on a portable computer you use to
check your mail via POP while traveling, so that your mail will remain
on the server and you can save it later on your workstation.
In some cases, Rmail copies the new mail from the inbox file
indirectly. First it runs the movemail
program to move the mail
from the inbox to an intermediate file called
‘~/.newmail-inboxname’. Then Rmail merges the new mail from
that file, saves the Rmail file, and only then deletes the intermediate
file. If there is a crash at the wrong time, this file continues to
exist, and Rmail will use it again the next time it gets new mail from
that inbox.
If Rmail is unable to convert the data in ‘~/.newmail-inboxname’ into Babyl format, it renames the file to ‘~/RMAILOSE.n’ (n is an integer chosen to make the name unique) so that Rmail will not have trouble with the data again. You should look at the file, find whatever message confuses Rmail (probably one that includes the control-underscore character, octal code 037), and delete it. Then you can use 1 g to get new mail from the corrected file.
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