Skip to content

akissinger/dodo

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Dodo

Documentation Status

Dodo is a graphical email client written in Python/PyQt6, based on the command line email swiss-army-knife notmuch.

Dodo

It's main goals are to:

  • offer efficient, keyboard-oriented mail reading, sorting, and composing
  • give a mostly text-based email experience by default, but with HTML support a few keystrokes away
  • offload as much work as possible on existing, excellent command-line tools (UNIX philosphy-style)
  • be simple enough to customise and hack on yourself

This README has instructions on installation, usage, and basic configuration. For API documentation (which is also useful for configuration), check out the Read the Docs page.

As an email client, Dodo is pretty much feature-complete, but not yet extensively tested. Since it's based on notmuch, all of its features are non-destructive, so you shouldn't ever lose any email due to bugs. That being said, you might see some strange behaviour, so use at your own risk.

A lot of Dodo's design is inspired by two existing notmuch-based clients: alot and astroid.

Prerequisites

If you have already used notmuch for email, there's not much to do here :). If not, you'll need to set up some other programs first:

  • something to check mail and sync with a local Maildir (offlineimap is the default, but others like mbsync should work fine)
  • a sendmail-compatible SMTP client to send mail (msmtp is the default)
  • notmuch for email searching and tagging
  • w3m for translating HTML messages into plaintext
  • python-gnupg for pgp/mime support (optional)

All of this is pretty standard stuff, and should be installable via your package manager on Linux/Mac/etc. If you don't know how to set these things up already, see the respective websites or the "Setting up the prerequisites" section below for a quick reference.

Install and run

Dodo requires Python 3.7+ and PyQt6 6.2 or above. You can install the latest git version of Dodo and its dependencies using pip:

git clone https://github.com/akissinger/dodo.git
cd dodo
pip install .

Then, run Dodo with:

dodo

If you don't have it already, you may need to add ~/.local/bin to your PATH.

Basic use

Before you fire up Dodo for the first time, make sure you at least configure email_address and sent_dir in config.py (see next section).

Most functionality in Dodo comes from keyboard shortcuts. Press ? to get a full list of the key mappings at any time.

Dodo has 4 different kinds of view: search views, thread views, compose views, and the tag view. It opens initially with a search view with the query tag:inbox. Pressing enter or double-clicking a thread with open that thread in the thread view. Pressing c at any time or r while looking at a message in the thread view will open the compose view. Pressing T will open a list of all the known tags in a new tab.

In the compose view, press <enter> to edit the message on your chosen editor. Once you save and exit, the message will be updated. Press a to add attachments (or use the special A: header). Press S to send.

Configuration

Dodo is configured via ~/.config/dodo/config.py. This is just a Python file that gets eval-ed right before the main window is shown.

Settings and their default values are defined in settings.py. A complete list, with documentation, can be found here.

Most settings have reasonable defaults (assuming your are using offlineimap/msmtp). The only two things that must be set for Dodo to work properly are your email address and the location of your sent mail folder. Some things you probably also want to set up are the text editor (for composing messages) and the file browser (for viewing attachments).

Here is an example config.py, with some settings similar to the ones I use:

import dodo

# required
dodo.settings.email_address = 'First Last <[email protected]>'
dodo.settings.sent_dir = '/home/user/mail/Work/Sent'

# optional
dodo.settings.theme = dodo.themes.nord
dodo.settings.editor_command = "kitty nvim '{file}'"
dodo.settings.file_browser_command = "fman '{dir}' /home/user/Documents"

A theme is just a Python dictionary mapping some fixed color names to HTML color codes. Currently, the themes implemented in themes.py are catppuccin_macchiato, nord, solarized_light and solarized_dark. If you want more, feel free to roll your own, or (better) send me a pull request!

All of the settings of the form ..._command are given as shell command. The editor_command setting takes a placeholder {file} for the file to edit and file_browser_command takes the placeholder {dir} for the directory to browse.

The settings above replace the default text editor (xterm -e vim) with neovim run inside a new kitty terminal. I am also using Michael Herrmann's excellent dual-pane file manager fman instead of the default (nautilus). With these settings, showing attachments will open fman with a fixed directory in the right pane (/home/user/Documents) and a directory containing the attachments on the left. A similar effect can be obtained with ranger using the multipane view mode.

If you are using a file browser that supports it, you can also set a custom file_picker_command for choosing attachments. This setting is None by default, which tells Dodo to use the built-in file picker. This accepts a {tempfile} placeholder, where the names of the chosen files should be written after running the command. Here's an example using ranger --choosefiles:

dodo.settings.file_picker_command = "kitty ranger --choosefiles='{tempfile}'"

While Javascript is disabled in the HTML email viewer, you may want to set up a custom HTML sanitizer function as follows:

dodo.util.html2html = dodo.util.clean_html2html

The above function passes the HTML through the Cleaner object of the bleach library. Note this still allows some dodgy stuff, such as calling home via embedded img tags, so remote requests from HTML messages are disabled by default via the setting html_block_remote_requests. Javascript is also disabled.

Key mapping

Key mappings can be customised by changing the dictionaries defined in keymap.py. These map a key to a pair consisting of a description string and a Python function. For the global_keymap, this function takes the Dodo object defined in app.py as its argument. The other maps take the relevant "local" widget (SearchView, ThreadView, ComposeView, or CommandBar).

To bind a single key, you can write something like this in config.py:

dodo.keymap.search_keymap['t'] = (
  'toggle todo',
  lambda p: p.toggle_thread_tag('todo'))

or you can replace the keymap completely from config.py, e.g.:

dodo.keymap.search_keymap = {
  'C-n': ('next thread', lambda p: p.next_thread()),
  'C-p': ('previous thread', lambda p: p.previous_thread()),
  # ...
}

The keymaps used by Dodo are global_keymap, search_keymap, thread_keymap, and command_bar_keymap. All the keymaps except command_bar_keymap also support keychords, which are represented as space-separated sequences of keypresses, e.g.

dodo.keymap.global_keymap['C-x C-c'] = (
  'exit emacs ... erm, I mean Dodo',
  lambda a: a.quit())

You can unmap a single key by deleting it from the dictionary:

del dodo.keymap.global_keymap['Q']

Multiple accounts

If you are using something like msmtp to send emails, it is possible to send mail from multiple accounts. To set this up, simply set a list of account names your SMTP client recognises in config.py. You can also provide per-account email addresses and sent directories by passing dictionaries to email_address and sent_dir settings, respectively.

import dodo

dodo.settings.smtp_accounts = ['work', 'fun']

dodo.settings.email_address = {'work': 'First Last <[email protected]>',
                               'fun': 'First Last <[email protected]>'}
dodo.settings.sent_dir =      {'work': '/home/user/mail/Work/Sent',
                               'fun': '/home/user/mail/Fun/Sent'}

By default, you can use the [ and ] keys to cycle through different accounts in the Compose panel. The first account in the list is selected by default.

For multiple incoming mail accounts, just sync all accounts into subdirectories of a single directory and point notmuch to the main directory.

Custom commands with the command bar

By default, the command bar can be opened in two modes, 'search' and 'tag', for searching and tagging messages, respectively. You can create more modes on-the-fly from config.py by passing a new name and a Python callback function to CommandBar.open. Here's an example which creates a new mode called 'notmuch' for running arbitrary notmuch commands:

import dodo
import subprocess

def run_notmuch(app):
    def callback(cmd):
        subprocess.run('notmuch ' + cmd, shell=True)
        app.refresh_panels()
    app.command_bar.open('notmuch', callback)

dodo.keymap.global_keymap['N'] = ('run notmuch from command bar', run_notmuch)

Custom layouts

You can customise the layout of the thread view by replacing the method ThreadPanel.layout_panel with your own version in config.py. This method is responsible for displaying three widgets: self.thread_list, self.message_info, and self.message_view. Normally, it draws the first two side-by-side, then places this above the third with an adjustable splitter.

Here's an example, making thread list twice as wide and putting the message view on top instead:

def my_layout(self):
    splitter = QSplitter(Qt.Orientation.Vertical)
    info_area = QWidget()
    info_area.setLayout(QHBoxLayout())
    self.thread_list.setFixedWidth(500)
    info_area.layout().addWidget(self.thread_list)
    info_area.layout().addWidget(self.message_info)
    splitter.addWidget(self.message_view)
    splitter.addWidget(info_area)
    self.layout().addWidget(splitter)

    # save splitter position
    window_settings = QSettings("dodo", "dodo")
    state = window_settings.value("thread_splitter_state")
    splitter.splitterMoved.connect(
            lambda x: window_settings.setValue("thread_splitter_state", splitter.saveState()))
    if state: splitter.restoreState(state)

dodo.thread.ThreadPanel.layout_panel = my_layout

Note that everything in PyQt6.QtCore and PyQt6.QtWidgets is already imported before config.py is exec'ed.

Snooze

Snoozing lets you temporarily hide messages to help clear your inbox (and your mind) for a few days at a time. After the snooze is up, they pop back into the inbox as unread messages again. Using notmuch hooks and Dodo, it is easy to set up some basic snooze functionality. Here's how I do it.

The basic idea is to tag messages with zzz- plus the date you want to see them again, then archive them. To make sure they pop back into the inbox on the correct date, add the following ~/MAILDIR/.notmuch/hooks/pre-new:

#!/bin/bash

notmuch tag -zzz-`date -I` +inbox +unread -- tag:zzz-`date -I`

This will automatically un-snooze messages tagged zzz-CURRENT-DATE whenever you refresh your email. Now, all you need to do is set up some keyboard shortcuts for snoozing messages. You can do this by adding the following to your config.py:

def snooze(days, mode='tag'):
    import datetime
    d = datetime.date.today() + datetime.timedelta(days=days)
    def f(search):
        search.tag_thread(f'-inbox -unread +zzz-{d}', mode)
    return f

dodo.keymap.search_keymap['z z'] = ("snooze for 1 day", snooze(days=1))
dodo.keymap.search_keymap['z w'] = ("snooze for 1 week", snooze(days=7))
dodo.keymap.search_keymap['z Z'] = ("snooze marked for 1 day", snooze(days=1, mode='tag marked'))
dodo.keymap.search_keymap['z W'] = ("snooze marked for 1 week", snooze(days=7, mode='tag marked'))

This allows snoozing single messages or bulk snoozing all marked messages (by default, you can (un)mark messages with <space>).

Note this doesn't return messages to the top, since it doesn't change the date they were received. Hence, it will work best if you keep your inbox relatively empty.

Setting up the prerequisites

Since there's a lot of little bits to configure, I've also included some minimal configurations for offlineimap, msmtp, and notmuch, just to have it all in one place.

Note the offlineimap and msmtp configurations below simply read the password from a plaintext file. More secure options are available, which are explained in the respective docs.

Incoming mail

Assuming your system configuration directory is ~/.config/, the configuration file for offlineimap is located in ~/.config/offlineimap/config. Here is a template for syncing one IMAP account named "Work":

[general]
accounts = Work

[Account Work]
localrepository = WorkLocal
remoterepository = WorkRemote

[Repository WorkLocal]
type = Maildir
localfolders = ~/mail/Work

[Repository WorkRemote]
type = IMAP
remotehost = (IMAP SERVER)
remoteuser = (USER NAME)
remotepassfile = (PASSWORD FILE)
sslcacertfile = OS-DEFAULT

If you want to set up multiple IMAP accounts, just put them all in the ~/mail folder and set ~/mail as your database path for notmuch.

Outgoing mail

Here is a sample ~/.config/msmtp/config, setting up a single SMTP server (also named "Work") with TLS:

defaults
auth           on
tls            on
tls_trust_file /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
logfile        ~/.msmtp.log
account        Work
host           (SMTP SERVER)
port           587
from           (EMAIL ADRESS)
user           (USER NAME)
passwordeval   cat (PASSWORD FILE)
account        default : Work

You may need to change the 4th line if your system stores CA certificates in a different location.

Mail indexing

Once offlineimap is set up, just run notmuch from the command line to do some initial setup, which gets saved in ~/.notmuch-config by default. You can set ~/mail as your database path. notmuch has lots of options, the ability to set up various hooks and filters, and to sync certain IMAP markers with notmuch tags.

Here's a ~/.notmuch-config which is roughly like the one I use:

[database]
path=/home/user/mail

[user]
name=First Last
[email protected]

[new]
tags=new
ignore=

[search]
exclude_tags=deleted;killed;spam;

[maildir]
synchronize_flags=true

Initial PGP/MIME support

Signing

The thread view panel will show the signature status of pgp-signed messages as reported by notmuch. notmuch tags them with te automatic tag signed.

Outgoing mail can be signed by setting dodo.settings.gnupg_keyid to the id of the key which will be used to do the signing. It can be disabled/enabled on a per-message basis in the comopose view by pressing the 's' key (or the key that is mapped to the toggle_pgp_sign function).

You might also have to set dodo.settings.gnupg_home.

Encryption

Encrypted mail has the encrypted automatic tag set by notmuch. The latter is also responsible for the decryption. (--decrypt=True option of notmuch show)

Outging mail can be encrypted by toggling the PGPEncrypt flag in the compose panel (mapped to the 'e' key). It is encrypted using the public keys found in the GnuPG database of all reciepients. Recepients without a public key in the GnuPG dataabse will not be able to decrypt the message.

More Screenshots

Searching:

Search

Thread view:

Thread

Composition:

Compose

Various themes:

Nord Solarized Dark Solarized Light

About

A graphical, hackable email client based on notmuch

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages