Randy Dunlap | a6cd6bf | 2007-10-16 23:29:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Email clients info for Linux |
| 2 | ====================================================================== |
| 3 | |
| 4 | General Preferences |
| 5 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 6 | Patches for the Linux kernel are submitted via email, preferably as |
| 7 | inline text in the body of the email. Some maintainers accept |
| 8 | attachments, but then the attachments should have content-type |
| 9 | "text/plain". However, attachments are generally frowned upon because |
| 10 | it makes quoting portions of the patch more difficult in the patch |
| 11 | review process. |
| 12 | |
| 13 | Email clients that are used for Linux kernel patches should send the |
| 14 | patch text untouched. For example, they should not modify or delete tabs |
| 15 | or spaces, even at the beginning or end of lines. |
| 16 | |
| 17 | Don't send patches with "format=flowed". This can cause unexpected |
| 18 | and unwanted line breaks. |
| 19 | |
| 20 | Don't let your email client do automatic word wrapping for you. |
| 21 | This can also corrupt your patch. |
| 22 | |
| 23 | Email clients should not modify the character set encoding of the text. |
| 24 | Emailed patches should be in ASCII or UTF-8 encoding only. |
| 25 | If you configure your email client to send emails with UTF-8 encoding, |
| 26 | you avoid some possible charset problems. |
| 27 | |
| 28 | Email clients should generate and maintain References: or In-Reply-To: |
| 29 | headers so that mail threading is not broken. |
| 30 | |
| 31 | Copy-and-paste (or cut-and-paste) usually does not work for patches |
| 32 | because tabs are converted to spaces. Using xclipboard, xclip, and/or |
| 33 | xcutsel may work, but it's best to test this for yourself or just avoid |
| 34 | copy-and-paste. |
| 35 | |
| 36 | Don't use PGP/GPG signatures in mail that contains patches. |
| 37 | This breaks many scripts that read and apply the patches. |
| 38 | (This should be fixable.) |
| 39 | |
| 40 | It's a good idea to send a patch to yourself, save the received message, |
| 41 | and successfully apply it with 'patch' before sending patches to Linux |
| 42 | mailing lists. |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| 45 | Some email client (MUA) hints |
| 46 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 47 | Here are some specific MUA configuration hints for editing and sending |
| 48 | patches for the Linux kernel. These are not meant to be complete |
| 49 | software package configuration summaries. |
| 50 | |
| 51 | Legend: |
| 52 | TUI = text-based user interface |
| 53 | GUI = graphical user interface |
| 54 | |
| 55 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 56 | Alpine (TUI) |
| 57 | |
| 58 | Config options: |
| 59 | In the "Sending Preferences" section: |
| 60 | |
| 61 | - "Do Not Send Flowed Text" must be enabled |
| 62 | - "Strip Whitespace Before Sending" must be disabled |
| 63 | |
| 64 | When composing the message, the cursor should be placed where the patch |
| 65 | should appear, and then pressing CTRL-R let you specify the patch file |
| 66 | to insert into the message. |
| 67 | |
| 68 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 69 | Evolution (GUI) |
| 70 | |
| 71 | Some people use this successfully for patches. |
| 72 | |
| 73 | When composing mail select: Preformat |
| 74 | from Format->Heading->Preformatted (Ctrl-7) |
| 75 | or the toolbar |
| 76 | |
| 77 | Then use: |
| 78 | Insert->Text File... (Alt-n x) |
| 79 | to insert the patch. |
| 80 | |
| 81 | You can also "diff -Nru old.c new.c | xclip", select Preformat, then |
| 82 | paste with the middle button. |
| 83 | |
| 84 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 85 | Kmail (GUI) |
| 86 | |
| 87 | Some people use Kmail successfully for patches. |
| 88 | |
| 89 | The default setting of not composing in HTML is appropriate; do not |
| 90 | enable it. |
| 91 | |
| 92 | When composing an email, under options, uncheck "word wrap". The only |
| 93 | disadvantage is any text you type in the email will not be word-wrapped |
| 94 | so you will have to manually word wrap text before the patch. The easiest |
| 95 | way around this is to compose your email with word wrap enabled, then save |
| 96 | it as a draft. Once you pull it up again from your drafts it is now hard |
| 97 | word-wrapped and you can uncheck "word wrap" without losing the existing |
| 98 | wrapping. |
| 99 | |
| 100 | At the bottom of your email, put the commonly-used patch delimiter before |
| 101 | inserting your patch: three hyphens (---). |
| 102 | |
| 103 | Then from the "Message" menu item, select insert file and choose your patch. |
| 104 | As an added bonus you can customise the message creation toolbar menu |
| 105 | and put the "insert file" icon there. |
| 106 | |
| 107 | You can safely GPG sign attachments, but inlined text is preferred for |
| 108 | patches so do not GPG sign them. Signing patches that have been inserted |
| 109 | as inlined text will make them tricky to extract from their 7-bit encoding. |
| 110 | |
| 111 | If you absolutely must send patches as attachments instead of inlining |
| 112 | them as text, right click on the attachment and select properties, and |
| 113 | highlight "Suggest automatic display" to make the attachment inlined to |
| 114 | make it more viewable. |
| 115 | |
| 116 | When saving patches that are sent as inlined text, select the email that |
| 117 | contains the patch from the message list pane, right click and select |
| 118 | "save as". You can use the whole email unmodified as a patch if it was |
| 119 | properly composed. There is no option currently to save the email when you |
| 120 | are actually viewing it in its own window -- there has been a request filed |
| 121 | at kmail's bugzilla and hopefully this will be addressed. Emails are saved |
| 122 | as read-write for user only so you will have to chmod them to make them |
| 123 | group and world readable if you copy them elsewhere. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 126 | Lotus Notes (GUI) |
| 127 | |
| 128 | Run away from it. |
| 129 | |
| 130 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 131 | Mutt (TUI) |
| 132 | |
| 133 | Plenty of Linux developers use mutt, so it must work pretty well. |
| 134 | |
| 135 | Mutt doesn't come with an editor, so whatever editor you use should be |
| 136 | used in a way that there are no automatic linebreaks. Most editors have |
| 137 | an "insert file" option that inserts the contents of a file unaltered. |
| 138 | |
| 139 | To use 'vim' with mutt: |
| 140 | set editor="vi" |
| 141 | |
| 142 | If using xclip, type the command |
| 143 | :set paste |
| 144 | before middle button or shift-insert or use |
| 145 | :r filename |
| 146 | |
| 147 | if you want to include the patch inline. |
| 148 | (a)ttach works fine without "set paste". |
| 149 | |
| 150 | Config options: |
| 151 | It should work with default settings. |
| 152 | However, it's a good idea to set the "send_charset" to: |
| 153 | set send_charset="us-ascii:utf-8" |
| 154 | |
| 155 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 156 | Pine (TUI) |
| 157 | |
| 158 | Pine has had some whitespace truncation issues in the past, but these |
| 159 | should all be fixed now. |
| 160 | |
| 161 | Use alpine (pine's successor) if you can. |
| 162 | |
| 163 | Config options: |
| 164 | - quell-flowed-text is needed for recent versions |
| 165 | - the "no-strip-whitespace-before-send" option is needed |
| 166 | |
| 167 | |
| 168 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 169 | Sylpheed (GUI) |
| 170 | |
| 171 | - Works well for inlining text (or using attachments). |
| 172 | - Allows use of an external editor. |
| 173 | - Not good for IMAP. |
| 174 | - Is slow on large folders. |
| 175 | - Won't do TLS SMTP auth over a non-SSL connection. |
| 176 | - Has a helpful ruler bar in the compose window. |
| 177 | - Adding addresses to address book doesn't understand the display name |
| 178 | properly. |
| 179 | |
| 180 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 181 | Thunderbird (GUI) |
| 182 | |
| 183 | By default, thunderbird likes to mangle text, but there are ways to |
| 184 | coerce it into being nice. |
| 185 | |
| 186 | - Under account settings, composition and addressing, uncheck "Compose |
| 187 | messages in HTML format". |
| 188 | |
| 189 | - Edit your Thunderbird config settings to tell it not to wrap lines: |
| 190 | user_pref("mailnews.wraplength", 0); |
| 191 | |
| 192 | - Edit your Thunderbird config settings so that it won't use format=flowed: |
| 193 | user_pref("mailnews.send_plaintext_flowed", false); |
| 194 | |
| 195 | - You need to get Thunderbird into preformat mode: |
| 196 | . If you compose HTML messages by default, it's not too hard. Just select |
| 197 | "Preformat" from the drop-down box just under the subject line. |
| 198 | . If you compose in text by default, you have to tell it to compose a new |
| 199 | message in HTML (just as a one-off), and then force it from there back to |
| 200 | text, else it will wrap lines. To do this, use shift-click on the Write |
| 201 | icon to compose to get HTML compose mode, then select "Preformat" from |
| 202 | the drop-down box just under the subject line. |
| 203 | |
| 204 | - Allows use of an external editor: |
| 205 | The easiest thing to do with Thunderbird and patches is to use an |
| 206 | "external editor" extension and then just use your favorite $EDITOR |
| 207 | for reading/merging patches into the body text. To do this, download |
| 208 | and install the extension, then add a button for it using |
| 209 | View->Toolbars->Customize... and finally just click on it when in the |
| 210 | Compose dialog. |
| 211 | |
| 212 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 213 | TkRat (GUI) |
| 214 | |
| 215 | Works. Use "Insert file..." or external editor. |
| 216 | |
| 217 | ### |