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pine(1)                                                                                   pine(1)



NAME
       pine - a Program for Internet News and Email

SYNTAX
       pine [ options ] [ address , address ]

       pinef [ options ] [ address , address ]

DESCRIPTION
       Pine  is  a  screen-oriented  message-handling  tool.   In its default configuration, Pine
       offers an intentionally limited set of functions geared toward the  novice  user,  but  it
       also  has a growing list of optional "power-user" and personal-preference features.  pinef
       is a variant of Pine that uses function keys rather than mnemonic single-letter  commands.
       Pine's basic feature set includes:

              View, Save, Export, Delete, Print, Reply and Forward messages.

              Compose  messages  in a simple editor (Pico) with word-wrap and a spelling checker.
              Messages may be postponed for later completion.

              Full-screen selection and management of message folders.

              Address book to keep a list of long or frequently-used addresses.  Personal distri-
              bution  lists  may  be  defined.  Addresses may be taken into the address book from
              incoming mail without retyping them.

              New mail checking and notification occurs automatically every 2.5 minutes and after
              certain commands, e.g. refresh-screen (Ctrl-L).

              On-line, context-sensitive help screens.

       Pine  supports MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions), an Internet Standard for rep-
       resenting multipart and multimedia data in email.  Pine allows you to save MIME objects to
       files,  and  in  some cases, can also initiate the correct program for viewing the object.
       It uses the system's mailcap configuration file to determine what program  can  process  a
       particular  MIME  object  type.  Pine's message composer does not have integral multimedia
       capability, but any type of data file --including multimedia-- can be attached to  a  text
       message  and  sent using MIME's encoding rules.  This allows any group of individuals with
       MIME-capable mail software (e.g. Pine, PC-Pine, or many other programs) to  exchange  for-
       matted documents, spread-sheets, image files, etc, via Internet email.

       Pine uses the c-client messaging API to access local and remote mail folders. This library
       provides a variety of low-level message-handling functions, including drivers for a  vari-
       ety  of  different  mail  file formats, as well as routines to access remote mail and news
       servers, using IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) and NNTP  (Network  News  Transport
       Protocol).   Outgoing  mail is usually handed-off to the Unix sendmail, program but it can
       optionally be posted directly via SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol).

OPTIONS
       The command line options/arguments are:

       address             Send mail to address.  This will cause Pine to go  directly  into  the
                           message composer.

       -attach file        Send mail with the listed file as an attachment.

       -attachlist file-list
                           Send mail with the listed file-list as an attachments.

       -attach_and_delete file
                           Send  mail  with the listed file as an attachment, and remove the file
                           after the message is sent.

       -aux local_directory
                           PC-Pine only. When using a remote configuration  (-p  <remote_config>)
                           this  tells  PC-Pine  the local directory to use for storing auxiliary
                           files, like debug files, address books, and signature files.

       -bail               Exit if the pinerc file does not exist. This might be  useful  if  the
                           config  file is accessed using some remote filesystem protocol. If the
                           remote mount is missing this will cause Pine to quit instead of creat-
                           ing a new pinerc.

       -c context-number   context-number is the number corresponding to the folder-collection to
                           which the -f command line argument should be applied.  By default  the
                           -f argument is applied to the first defined folder-collection.

       -conf               Produce  a  sample/fresh  copy  of the system-wide configuration file,
                           pine.conf, on the standard output. This is distinct from the  per-user
                           .pinerc file.

       -convert_sigs -p pinerc
                           Convert signature files into literal signatures.

       -copy_abook <local_abook> <remote_abook>
                           Copy the local address book file to a remote address book folder.

       -copy_pinerc <local_pinerc> <remote_pinerc>
                           Copy the local pinerc file to a remote pinerc folder.

       -create_lu addrbook sort-order
                           Creates auxiliary index (look-up) file for addrbook and sorts addrbook
                           in sort-order, which may be dont-sort, nickname,  fullname,  nickname-
                           with-lists-last,  or  fullname-with-lists-last.   Useful when creating
                           global or shared address books.  After creating the index file in this
                           way,  the  file should be moved or copied in a way which preserves the
                           mtime of the address book file.  The mtime of the address book file at
                           the  time the index file was built is stored inside the index file and
                           a comparison between that stored value and the current  mtime  of  the
                           address  book  file is done when somebody runs pine.  If the mtime has
                           changed since the index file was made, then pine will want to  rebuild
                           the  index file.  In other words, don't build the index file with this
                           option and then copy the address book to its final  destination  in  a
                           way which changes the file's mtime.

       -d debug-level      Output  diagnostic  info  at  debug-level  (0-9) to the current .pine-
                           debug[1-4] file.  A value of 0 turns debugging off and suppresses  the
                           .pine-debug file.

       -d key[=val]        Fine  tuned  output  of diagnostic messages where "flush" causes debug
                           file writing without buffering, "timestamp" appends each message  with
                           a  timestamp, "imap=n" where n is between 0 and 4 representing none to
                           verbose IMAP telemetry reporting, "numfiles=n" where n  is  between  0
                           and  31  corresponding  to  the number of debug files to maintain, and
                           "verbose=n" where n is between 0 and 9 indicating an inverse threshold
                           for message output.

       -f folder           Open  folder  (in first defined folder collection, use -c n to specify
                           another collection) instead of INBOX.

       -F file             Open named text file and view with Pine's browser.

       -h                  Help: list valid command-line options.

       -i                  Start up in the FOLDER INDEX screen.

       -I keystrokes       Initial (comma separated list of) keystrokes which Pine should execute
                           on startup.

       -install            For  PC-Pine only, this option causes PC-Pine to prompt for some basic
                           setup information, then exits.

       -k                  Use function keys for commands. This is the same as running  the  com-
                           mand pinef.

       -n number           Start up with current message-number set to number.

       -o                  Open first folder read-only.

       -p config-file      Use  config-file  as  the  personal  configuration file instead of the
                           default .pinerc.

       -P config-file      Use config-file as the configuration file instead of  default  system-
                           wide configuration file pine.conf.

       -pinerc file        Output  fresh pinerc configuration to file, preserving the settings of
                           variables that the user has made.  Use file set to ``-'' to make  out-
                           put  go to standard out.  <IP> -registry cmd 20 For PC-Pine only, this
                           option affects the values of Pine's registry entries.  Possible values
                           for  cmd  are set, clear, and dump.  Set will always reset Pine's reg-
                           istry entries according to its current settings.  Clear will clear the
                           registry values.  Clearsilent will silently clear the registry values.
                           Dump will display the values of current registry settings.  Note  that
                           the dump command is currently disabled.  Without the -registry option,
                           PC-Pine will write values into the registry only  if  there  currently
                           aren't any values set.

       -r                  Use  restricted/demo  mode.   Pine  will  only send mail to itself and
                           functions like save and export are restricted.

       -sort order         Sort the FOLDER INDEX display in one of the following orders: arrival,
                           date,  subject,  orderedsubj,  thread,  from,  size, score, to, cc, or
                           reverse. Arrival order is the default.  The OrderedSubj  choice  simu-
                           lates a threaded sort.  Any sort may be reversed by adding /reverse to
                           it.  Reverse by itself is the same as arrival/reverse.

       -supported          Some options may or may not be supported depending  on  how  Pine  was
                           compiled.   This  is a way to determine which options are supported in
                           the particular copy of Pine you are using.

       -url url            Open the given url.  Cannot be used with -f or -F options.

       -v                  Version: Print version information.

       -version            Version: Print version information.

       -x config           Use configuration exceptions in config.  Exceptions are used to  over-
                           ride  your default pinerc settings for a particular platform, can be a
                           local file or a remote folder.

       -z                  Enable ^Z and SIGTSTP so pine may be suspended.

       -option=value       Assign value to the config option option e.g. -signature-file=sig1  or
                           -feature-list=signature-at-bottom (Note: feature-list values are addi-
                           tive)

CONFIGURATION
       There are several levels of Pine configuration.  Configuration values  at  a  given  level
       over-ride corresponding values at lower levels.  In order of increasing precedence:

        o built-in defaults.
        o system-wide pine.conf file.
        o personal .pinerc file (may be set via built-in Setup/Config menu.)
        o command-line options.
        o system-wide pine.conf.fixed file.

       There  is one exception to the rule that configuration values are replaced by the value of
       the same option in a higher-precedence file: the feature-list variable has values that are
       additive,  but  can be negated by prepending "no-" in front of an individual feature name.
       Unix Pine also uses the following environment variables:

         TERM
         DISPLAY     (determines if Pine can display IMAGE attachments.)
         SHELL       (if not set, default is /bin/sh )
         MAILCAPS    (semicolon delimited list of path names to mailcap files)

FILES
       /var/mail/xxxx              Default folder for incoming mail.
       ~/mail                      Default directory for mail folders.
       ~/.addressbook              Default address book file.
       ~/.addressbook.lu           Default address book index file.
       ~/.pine-debug[1-4]          Diagnostic log for debugging.
       ~/.pinerc                   Personal pine config file.
       ~/.newsrc                   News subscription/state file.
       ~/.signature                Default signature file.
       ~/.mailcap                  Personal mail capabilities file.
       ~/.mime.types               Personal file extension to MIME type mapping
       /etc/mailcap                System-wide mail capabilities file.
       /etc/mime.types             System-wide file ext. to MIME type mapping
       /etc/pine.info              Local pointer to system administrator.
       /etc/pine.conf              System-wide configuration file.
       /etc/pine.conf.fixed         Non-overridable configuration file.
       /tmp/.\var\mail\xxxx        Per-folder mailbox lock files.
       ~/.pine-interrupted-mail    Message which was interrupted.
       ~/mail/postponed-msgs       For postponed messages.
       ~/mail/sent-mail            Outgoing message archive (FCC).
       ~/mail/saved-messages       Default destination for Saving messages.

SEE ALSO
       pico(1), binmail(1), aliases(5), mailaddr(7), sendmail(8), spell(1), imapd(8)

       Newsgroup:  comp.mail.pine
       Pine Information Center:  http://www.washington.edu/pine
       Source distribution:  ftp://ftp.cac.washington.edu/pine/pine.tar.Z
       Pine Technical Notes, included in the source distribution.
       C-Client messaging API library, included in the source distribution.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
       The University of Washington Pine development team (part of the UW Office
       of Computing & Communications) includes:

        Project Leader:           Mike Seibel
        Principal authors:        Mike Seibel, Steve Hubert, Laurence Lundblade*
        C-Client library & IMAPd: Mark Crispin
        Pico, the PIne COmposer:  Mike Seibel
        Documentation:            Many people!
        PC-Pine for Windows:      Tom Unger, Mike Seibel
        Project oversight:        Terry Gray, Lori Stevens
        Principal Patrons:        Ron Johnson, Mike Bryant
        Additional support:       NorthWestNet
        Initial Pine code base:   Elm, by Dave Taylor & USENET Community Trust
        Initial Pico code base:   MicroEmacs 3.6, by Dave G. Conroy
        User Interface design:    Inspired by UCLA's "Ben" mailer for MVS
        Suggestions/fixes/ports:  Folks from all over!

          *Emeritus

       Copyright 1989-2005 by the University of Washington.
       Pine and Pico are trademarks of the University of Washington.

       $Date: 2005-09-15 14:01:32 -0700 (Thu, 15 Sep 2005) $



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