account.xml 7.7 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185
  1. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  2. <section id="ch_account">
  3. <title>Account customisation</title>
  4. <section id="account_basic">
  5. <title>Basic preferences</title>
  6. <para>
  7. The first tab of the account preferences, <quote>Basic</quote>,
  8. contains, as its name indicates, basic account data. In this tab you can
  9. specify your name, email address, organization and basic connection
  10. information. The name of the account is just the name Claws Mail
  11. will use when referring to this account, for example, in the account
  12. switcher at the lower right-hand corner of the main window. The server
  13. information lets you specify the receiving protocol to use (which is
  14. not modifiable for existing accounts), the server(s) used to receive or
  15. send your emails (usually pop.isp.com and smtp.isp.com) and your login
  16. on the receiving server.
  17. </para>
  18. <para>
  19. In the <quote>Receive</quote> tab you are able to change the default
  20. behaviour of Claws Mail. For example, leaving messages on the server
  21. for a while, preventing downloading of mails that are too large, or
  22. specifying whether you want the filtering rules to apply to this
  23. account's mails. The <quote>Receive size limit</quote> is used to limit
  24. the time spent downloading large emails. Whenever you receive a mail
  25. larger than this limit, it will be partially downloaded and you will
  26. later have the choice to either download it entirely or delete it from
  27. the server. This choice will be presented to you while viewing the
  28. email.
  29. </para>
  30. <para>
  31. The <quote>Send</quote> tab contains preferences for special headers
  32. that you might want to add to your outgoing emails, like X-Face or Face
  33. headers, and authentication information for sending emails. Most of the
  34. time, your ISP allows its subscribers to send email via the SMTP server
  35. without authenticating, but in some setups, you have to identify
  36. yourself before sending. There are different possibilities for doing
  37. that. The best one, when available, is SMTP AUTH. When not available,
  38. you'll usually use POP-before-SMTP, which connects to the POP server,
  39. (which is authenticated), disconnects, and sends the mail.
  40. </para>
  41. <para>
  42. The <quote>Compose</quote> tab holds options for changing the behaviour
  43. of the Composition window when used with the account. You can specify a
  44. signature to insert automatically, and set default Cc, Bcc or Reply-To
  45. addresses.
  46. </para>
  47. <para>
  48. In the <quote>Privacy</quote> tab you can choose the default level of
  49. paranoia for your account. You might want all outgoing emails to be
  50. digitally signed and/or encrypted. Signing all outgoing emails, not only
  51. important ones, will for example allow you to protect yourself from
  52. faked mails sent on your behalf to coworkers. This can help solve
  53. embarrassing situations.
  54. </para>
  55. <para>
  56. The <quote>SSL</quote> tab is also security related, although this time
  57. its settings apply to the transport of your emails and not their
  58. content. Basically, using SSL encrypts the connection between you and
  59. the server, which prevents people from snooping on your connection and
  60. being able to read your mails and your password. SSL should be used if
  61. it is available.
  62. </para>
  63. <para>
  64. Finally, the <quote>Advanced</quote> tab allows you to specify ports and
  65. domains if the defaults are not used. Normally you can leave these
  66. empty. You can also specify folders for sent, queued, draft, and deleted
  67. messages here.
  68. </para>
  69. </section>
  70. <section id="account_types">
  71. <title>Account types</title>
  72. <para>
  73. We saw earlier that once an account is created, you can't change its
  74. type (protocol) anymore. This is because preferences for these different
  75. types are not quite the same, most of the POP3 related options are
  76. irrelevant for IMAP, for example.
  77. </para>
  78. <section id="pop3">
  79. <title>POP3</title>
  80. <para>
  81. POP3 is one of the two most used protocols and is available at almost
  82. every ISP on Earth. Its advantage is that it allows you to download
  83. email to your computer, which means that accessing your mail will be
  84. really fast once you have it on your hard disk. The disadvantage of POP3
  85. is that it is more difficult to keep your mail synchronised on multiple
  86. computers, (you'll have to keep the mail on the server for a few days),
  87. and you won't be able to easily keep track of which mails you have read,
  88. or which mails you have replied to, etc., when using another computer.
  89. </para>
  90. <para>
  91. Mail received from a POP3 account will be stored in an MH mailbox in the
  92. folder tree.
  93. </para>
  94. </section>
  95. <section id="imap">
  96. <title>IMAP</title>
  97. <para>
  98. IMAP is the second most used protocol and its goal is to address the
  99. shortcomings of POP3. When using IMAP your folder list and your emails
  100. are all kept on a central server. This slows down navigation a little as
  101. each mail is downloaded on demand, but when you use another computer, or
  102. email client, your emails will be in the same state that you left them,
  103. including their status (read, unread, replied, etc.).
  104. </para>
  105. <para>
  106. When you create an IMAP account an IMAP mailbox is created for it in the
  107. folder tree.
  108. </para>
  109. </section>
  110. <section id="news">
  111. <title>News</title>
  112. <para>
  113. News (NNTP) is the protocol for sending and receiving USENET articles.
  114. Messages are held on a central server and downloaded on demand. They
  115. cannot be deleted by the user.
  116. </para>
  117. <para>
  118. When you create a News account a News mailbox is created for it in the
  119. folder tree.
  120. </para>
  121. </section>
  122. <section id="local">
  123. <title>Local</title>
  124. <para>
  125. The <quote>Local mbox file</quote> type of account can be used if you
  126. run an SMTP server on your computer and/or want to receive your logs
  127. easily.
  128. </para>
  129. <para>
  130. Mail received from a Local account is stored in an MH mailbox in the
  131. folder tree.
  132. </para>
  133. </section>
  134. <section id="smtp_only">
  135. <title>SMTP only</title>
  136. <para>
  137. The account type <quote>None, (SMTP only)</quote> is a special type of
  138. account that won't retrieve any mail, but will allow you to create
  139. different identities that can be used to send out emails with various
  140. aliases, for example.
  141. </para>
  142. </section>
  143. </section>
  144. <section id="account_multiple">
  145. <title>Multiple accounts</title>
  146. <para>
  147. You can easily create multiple accounts in Claws Mail. For POP
  148. accounts, you can choose to store all email from your different accounts
  149. in the same folder(s), using the Receive tab preference. IMAP and News
  150. accounts each get their own mailbox in the folder tree.
  151. </para>
  152. <para>
  153. You can choose which accounts get checked for new mail when using the
  154. <quote>Get All</quote> command (or "Get Mail" in the toolbar) by
  155. checking the relevant box in the Receive tab of their preferences or
  156. in the <quote>G</quote> column of your accounts list.
  157. </para>
  158. </section>
  159. <section id="account_morefilt">
  160. <title>More filtering</title>
  161. <para>
  162. By default filtering rules are global, but they can also be assigned to
  163. a specific account. When fetching mail, any rules that are assigned to
  164. a specific account will only be applied to mails that are retrieved from
  165. that account.
  166. </para>
  167. <para>
  168. Mail from any account can be filtered into another account's folders,
  169. for example, a mail received by POP3 could be filtered into an IMAP
  170. account's folder, and vice-versa. This is either a useful feature or an
  171. annoying one, depending on what you want to achieve. If you'd rather
  172. avoid that, but still want to automatically sort your incoming mail, the
  173. best thing to do is to disable Filtering on certain accounts, and use
  174. Processing rules in the Inbox folders that you specified, as Processing
  175. rules are applied when entering a folder.
  176. </para>
  177. </section>
  178. </section>