Excerpts from Marten Veldthuis's message of Mon Dec 07 17:55:24 -0500 2009: > On Mon, 07 Dec 2009 15:02:03 -0400, David Bremner <david@tethera.net> wrote: > > > > On Thu, 03 Dec 2009 14:27:05 -0800, Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org> wrote: > > It might be a bit blue sky, but if this daemon could (optionally) talk > > IMAP and translate tags into folders on the fly, this would be very > > useful for people who need imap access to their mail as well as from an > > custom notmuch client. > > For me, my IMAP needs are pretty much limited to my iPhone. I'm making > do for now, but to make notmuch viable in the long term, what I'd need > is: > > * notmuch shouldn't choke on mails I had in notmuch's database, and > then marked read or deleted on my iPhone (which renames them in the > maildir). This is coming with the moving/deleting patches. > * notmuch should sync back read/unread state to maildir > * notmuch should move read stuff out of my inbox. It would be > acceptable if it moved everything into a designated archive folder > unless it had the 'inbox' tag assigned, in which case it moved it > there. Note that we have the moving/deleting patches, then this could > even be done as a script and some searches. > > With this, my inbox would be usable from my iPhone. I dont have an iPhone, but this would be a *killer* feature for me, and I suspect for others as well. I have two fundamental problems with label-state clients (sup, notmuch) that I am still trying to come to terms with, this bluesky feature would change that radically. The first issue is that I do not have unlimited IMAP storage space on the server, in fact I have a quota. I know, lots of people have effectively unlimited space,and others POP/fetchmail things so its not stored on the server...but lots of us still do have upper limits that we have to deal with and many of us do use IMAP, for good reasons. With label-state clients (sup, notmuch) you have to accept the fact that your mail is going to grow on the IMAP server indefinitely. This is not a good thing for those of us with quotas, but it is also a bad thing for some IMAP servers who choke to death on very large IMAP stores (or consume an awful lot of memory dealing with them). Or you have to setup kludgy archive operations to periodically deal with the disk space issue. The second mind-bending problem is that sometimes I actually do have to use mutt, sometimes webmail (for various reasons, but one important one in the early stages of a new email client is that notmuch just doesn't have support for certain operations such as inline/pgp-mime handling of emails, which means I need to open those emails in other clients that do support that). Other people likely are going to need to use things like iphones or blackberries. Indeed, using other clients is not an unreasonable thing for people to do. However, switching between notmuch and these clients is. Because the message state is stored in a DB which is only useful for notmuch, its a dreadful nightmare to do anything outside of the notmuch world. Most importantly, having all of your email state in a notmuch database format means that it can only be parsed by those tools, and is no longer in a standard format. I think it is great that 'notmuch restore' can deal with the sup database format, which may signal the dawn of a new label-state standard....but still the problem is the glue to the underlying maildir structure which provides a lot of useful information contained in reasonably well-defined ways is totally thrown out the window. I've switched mail clients enough over the past few years to know that switching itself is a major pain. I've settled on Maildir as my storage method of choice and in a way it is a 'client'. I can serve it via IMAP if I need, I can read it with different mail clients and maintain state across those mail clients, there are tools to manipulate and convert maildirs that have matured over the years. If I switch to an 'all-in-one' label-state mail client, like notmuch, I want to be sure that in 2 years from now if I happen to decide to change to something else (I'm hoping this wont EVER happen because notmuch is very promising, but I need to be honest based on past experiences here), then I'm going to want to make sure that all of my mail is marked as read, deleted mail is deleted and even though I was using labels for organizational purposes in notmuch, things are still organized in some way appropriate to folders on the filesystem. The way it is now, if I switch to notmuch and then try to switch back, my life is a total mess because all of the state is contained within the notmuch database, that is frightening for the long-term, but it also makes me very worried about simple corruption of that data store. If I lose that state, I'm totally screwed. At least in a maildir scenario, if I got corruption in one place it might cause me to lose one email, but if I get corruption in my notmuch database, I had better have a recent backup or I am screwed. The important part is gluing the maildir capabilities in there, and not getting distracted by the transport (let offlineimap and its ilk handle this, maybe some eager python hacker might find a way to add this to offlineimap?!). I like to think that this concept of label-state, indexable storage-backed mail clients is the dawn of a new age, just as maildir was to mbox, but I'm still scared because there is no mb2md equivalent yet. micah