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MU EXTRACT(1) General Commands Manual MU EXTRACT(1)

NAME

muextract - display and save message parts (attachments), and open them with other tools.

SYNOPSIS

mu [common-options] extract [options] <file>

mu [common-options] extract [options] <file> <pattern>

DESCRIPTION

mu extract is the mu sub-command for extracting MIME-parts (e.g., attachments) from mail messages. The sub-command works on message files, and does not require the message to be indexed in the database.

For attachments, the file name used when saving it is the name of the attachment in the message. If there is no such name, or when saving non-attachment MIME-parts, a name is derived from the message-id of the message.

If you specify a regular express pattern as the second argument, all attachments with filenames matching that pattern will be extracted. The regular expressions are basic PCRE, and are case-sensitive by default; see pcre(3) for more details.

Without any options, mu extract simply outputs the list of leaf MIME-parts in the message. Only 'leaf' MIME-parts (including RFC822 attachments) are considered, multipart/* etc. are ignored.

EXTRACT OPTIONS

-a, --save-attachments

save all MIME-parts that look like attachments.

--save-all

save all non-multipart MIME-parts.

--parts=<parts>

only consider the following numbered parts (comma-separated list). The numbers for the parts can be seen from running mu extract without any options but only the message file.

--target-dir=<dir>

save the parts in the target directory rather than the current working directory.

--overwrite

overwrite existing files with the same name; by default overwriting is not allowed.

-u,--uncooked

by default, mu transforms the attachment filenames a bit (such as by replacing spaces by dashes); with this option, leave that to the minimum for creating a legal filename in the target directory.

--play

Try to 'play' (open) the attachment with the default application for the particular file type. On MacOS, this uses the open program, on other platforms it uses xdg-open. You can choose a different program by setting the MUPLAYPROGRAM environment variable.

COMMON OPTIONS

-d, --debug

makes mu generate extra debug information, useful for debugging the program itself. By default, debug information goes to the log file, ~/.cache/mu/mu.log. It can safely be deleted when mu is not running. When running with --debug option, the log file can grow rather quickly. See the note on logging below.

-q, --quiet

causes mu not to output informational messages and progress information to standard output, but only to the log file. Error messages will still be sent to standard error. Note that mu index is much faster with --quiet, so it is recommended you use this option when using mu from scripts etc.

--log-stderr

causes mu to not output log messages to standard error, in addition to sending them to the log file.

--nocolor

do not use ANSI colors. The environment variable NOCOLOR can be used as an alternative to --nocolor.

-V, --version

prints mu version and copyright information.

-h, --help

lists the various command line options.

EXAMPLES

To display information about all the MIME-parts in a message file:

$ mu extract msgfile

To extract MIME-part 3 and 4 from this message, overwriting existing files with the same name:

$ mu extract --parts=3,4 --overwrite msgfile

To extract all files ending in '.jpg' (case-insensitive):

$ mu extract msgfile '.*.jpg'

To extract an mp3-file, and play it in the default mp3-playing application:

$ mu extract --play msgfile 'whoopsididitagain.mp3'

REPORTING BUGS

Please report bugs at https://github.com/djcb/mu/issues.

AUTHOR

Dirk-Jan C. Binnema <djcb@djcbsoftware.nl>

COPYRIGHT

This manpage is part of mu 1.10.8.

Copyright © 2022-2023 Dirk-Jan C. Binnema. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html. This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

SEE ALSO

mu(1)