plugins.xml 10 KB

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  1. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  2. <section id="ch_plugins">
  3. <title>Extending Claws Mail</title>
  4. <section id="plugins_default">
  5. <title>Provided plugins</title>
  6. <para>
  7. Claws Mail' capabilities are extended by plugins. It comes with
  8. the plugins listed below included, all of which are built automatically
  9. if the required libraries are present.
  10. </para><para>
  11. Plugins are installed in <filename class="directory"
  12. >$PREFIX/lib/claws-mail/plugins/</filename> and have a suffix of
  13. <quote>.so</quote>. To load a plugin go to
  14. <quote>Configuration/Plugins</quote> and click the
  15. <quote>Load Plugin</quote> button. Select the plugin that you want and
  16. click <quote>Open</quote> button.
  17. </para><para>
  18. If you don't find the plugin you're looking for, it is possible that
  19. your Operating System distribution provides it in a separate package.
  20. In this case, search for the plugin in your package manager.
  21. </para>
  22. <variablelist>
  23. <varlistentry>
  24. <term>Bogofilter</term>
  25. <listitem>
  26. <para>
  27. The Bogofilter plugin comes with two major features:
  28. </para><para>
  29. The ability to scan incoming mail received from a POP, IMAP or LOCAL
  30. account using Bogofilter. It can optionally delete mail identified
  31. as spam or save it to a designated folder. Mail scanning can be turned
  32. off.
  33. </para><para>
  34. The ability for users to teach Bogofilter to recognise spam or ham.
  35. You can train Bogofilter by marking messages as spam or ham from the
  36. Message List contextual menu, or using the relevant toolbar button in
  37. the main window or the message window (see
  38. <quote>Configuration/Preferences/Customize toolbars</quote>). Messages
  39. marked as spam are optionally saved to a designated folder.
  40. </para><para>
  41. Plugin preferences can be found in
  42. <quote>Configuration/Preferences/Plugins/Bogofilter</quote>.
  43. </para><para>
  44. Bogofilter's advantage over Spamassassin is its speed.
  45. </para><para>
  46. Bogofilter is available from <ulink
  47. url="http://bogofilter.sourceforge.net/"
  48. >http://bogofilter.sourceforge.net/</ulink>.
  49. </para>
  50. </listitem>
  51. </varlistentry>
  52. <varlistentry>
  53. <term>Clam Antivirus</term>
  54. <listitem>
  55. <para>
  56. Enables the scanning of message attachments in mail received from a
  57. POP, IMAP or LOCAL account using Clam AntiVirus. It can optionally
  58. delete the mail or save it to a designated folder. Preferences can be
  59. found in
  60. <quote>Configuration/Preferences/Plugins/Clam AntiVirus</quote>.
  61. Clam AntiVirus is available from <ulink
  62. url="http://clamav.sourceforge.net/"
  63. >http://clamav.sourceforge.net/</ulink>.
  64. </para>
  65. </listitem>
  66. </varlistentry>
  67. <varlistentry>
  68. <term>Dillo HTML Viewer</term>
  69. <listitem>
  70. <para>
  71. Enables the viewing of HTML messages using the Dillo web browser,
  72. version 0.7.0 or newer. It uses Dillo's <literal>--local</literal>
  73. option by default for safe browsing. Preferences can be found in
  74. <quote>/Configuration/Preferences/Plugins/Dillo Browser</quote>.
  75. Dillo is available from <ulink url="http://www.dillo.org/"
  76. >http://www.dillo.org/</ulink>.
  77. </para>
  78. </listitem>
  79. </varlistentry>
  80. <varlistentry>
  81. <term>PGP/Core, PGP/Inline and PGP/MIME</term>
  82. <listitem>
  83. <para>
  84. Handles PGP signed and/or encrypted mails. You can decrypt mails,
  85. verify signatures or sign and encrypt your own mails. Uses GnuPG/GPGME,
  86. <ulink url="ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/gpgme/"
  87. >ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/gpgme/</ulink>.
  88. </para>
  89. </listitem>
  90. </varlistentry>
  91. <varlistentry>
  92. <term>SpamAssassin</term>
  93. <listitem>
  94. <para>
  95. The SpamAssassin plugin comes with two major features:
  96. </para><para>
  97. The ability to scan incoming mail received from a POP, IMAP or LOCAL
  98. account using SpamAssassin. It can optionally delete mail identified
  99. as spam or save it to a designated folder. Mail scanning can be turned
  100. off, which is useful if your email is scanned on your server.
  101. </para><para>
  102. The ability for users to teach SpamAssassin to recognise spam or ham.
  103. You can train SpamAssassin by marking messages as spam or ham from the
  104. Message List contextual menu, or using the relevant toolbar button in
  105. the main window or the message window (see
  106. <quote>Configuration/Preferences/Customize toolbars</quote>). Messages
  107. marked as spam are optionally saved to a designated folder.
  108. </para><para>
  109. Plugin preferences can be found in
  110. <quote>Configuration/Preferences/Plugins/SpamAssassin</quote>.
  111. </para><para>
  112. SpamAssassin's advantage over Bogofilter is that it's not only a bayesian
  113. filter, but it also performs various local and network tests to
  114. determine spaminess.
  115. </para><para>
  116. SpamAssassin is available from <ulink
  117. url="http://spamassassin.apache.org/"
  118. >http://spamassassin.apache.org/</ulink>. Version 3.1.x or higher is
  119. required to use the learning feature in TCP mode.
  120. </para>
  121. </listitem>
  122. </varlistentry>
  123. <varlistentry>
  124. <term>Trayicon</term>
  125. <listitem>
  126. <para>
  127. Places an icon in the system tray that indicates whether you have any
  128. new mail. A tooltip also shows the current new, unread and total number
  129. of messages.
  130. </para>
  131. </listitem>
  132. </varlistentry>
  133. </variablelist>
  134. </section>
  135. <section id="plugins_external">
  136. <title>More plugins</title>
  137. <para>
  138. Other plugins have been written too, which are available as separate
  139. downloads. At the time of this writing, there are a number of plugins
  140. available at <ulink url="http://www.claws-mail.org/plugins.php"
  141. >http://www.claws-mail.org/plugins.php</ulink>:
  142. </para>
  143. <variablelist>
  144. <varlistentry>
  145. <term>Acpi Notifier</term>
  146. <listitem>
  147. <para>
  148. Enables new mail notification via the LEDs found on some laptops like
  149. Acer, Asus, Fujitsu and IBM laptops.
  150. </para>
  151. </listitem>
  152. </varlistentry>
  153. <varlistentry>
  154. <term>AttRemover</term>
  155. <listitem>
  156. <para>
  157. This plugin lets you remove attachments from emails.
  158. </para>
  159. </listitem>
  160. </varlistentry>
  161. <varlistentry>
  162. <term>CacheSaver</term>
  163. <listitem>
  164. <para>
  165. Saves the caches every 60 seconds (or user-defined period). It helps
  166. avoiding the loss of metadata if your computer (<emphasis>or
  167. Claws Mail!</emphasis>) crashes.
  168. </para>
  169. </listitem>
  170. </varlistentry>
  171. <varlistentry>
  172. <term>etpan! Privacy</term>
  173. <listitem>
  174. <para>
  175. Handles signature verification and decryption of encrypted messages in
  176. S/MIME, OpenPGP and ascii-armored PGP formats. Doesn't handle
  177. passphrases.
  178. </para>
  179. </listitem>
  180. </varlistentry>
  181. <varlistentry>
  182. <term>Fetchinfo</term>
  183. <listitem>
  184. <para>
  185. Inserts headers containing some download information, like UIDL,
  186. Claws Mail' account name, POP server, user ID and retrieval time.
  187. </para>
  188. </listitem>
  189. </varlistentry>
  190. <varlistentry>
  191. <term>GtkHtml Viewer</term>
  192. <listitem>
  193. <para>
  194. Like Dillo, enables the viewing of HTML messages, but in a nicer way
  195. (antialiased fonts).
  196. </para>
  197. </listitem>
  198. </varlistentry>
  199. <varlistentry>
  200. <term>Maildir</term>
  201. <listitem>
  202. <para>
  203. Provides direct support for Maildir++ mailboxes. With this plugin you
  204. can share your Maildir++ mailbox with other mailers or IMAP servers.
  205. </para>
  206. </listitem>
  207. </varlistentry>
  208. <varlistentry>
  209. <term>mailMBOX</term>
  210. <listitem>
  211. <para>
  212. Handles mailboxes in MBox format.
  213. </para>
  214. </listitem>
  215. </varlistentry>
  216. <varlistentry>
  217. <term>Perl</term>
  218. <listitem>
  219. <para>
  220. Intended to extend the filtering possibilities of Claws Mail. It
  221. provides a Perl interface to Claws Mail' filtering mechanism,
  222. allowing the use of full Perl power in email filters.
  223. </para>
  224. </listitem>
  225. </varlistentry>
  226. <varlistentry>
  227. <term>S/MIME</term>
  228. <listitem>
  229. <para>
  230. Handles S/MIME signed and/or encrypted mails. You can decrypt mails,
  231. verify signatures or sign and encrypt your own mails. Uses GnuPG/GPGME
  232. and GpgSM, <ulink url="ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/gpgme/"
  233. >ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/gpgme/</ulink>.
  234. </para>
  235. </listitem>
  236. </varlistentry>
  237. <varlistentry>
  238. <term>SynCE</term>
  239. <listitem>
  240. <para>
  241. Assists in keeping the address book of a Windows CE device (Pocket
  242. PC, iPAQ, Smartphone, etc.) in sync with Claws Mail' address book,
  243. with respect to email addresses.
  244. </para>
  245. </listitem>
  246. </varlistentry>
  247. <varlistentry>
  248. <term>vCalendar</term>
  249. <listitem>
  250. <para>
  251. Enables vCalendar message handling like that produced by Evolution or
  252. Outlook, and Webcal subscriptions.
  253. </para>
  254. </listitem>
  255. </varlistentry>
  256. <varlistentry>
  257. <term>RSSyl</term>
  258. <listitem>
  259. <para>
  260. Allows you to read your favorite newsfeeds in Claws. RSS 1.0, 2.0 and
  261. Atom feeds are currently supported.
  262. </para>
  263. </listitem>
  264. </varlistentry>
  265. </variablelist>
  266. <para>
  267. If you're a developer, writing a plugin to extend Claws Mail'
  268. capabilities is probably the best and easiest solution. We will
  269. provide hosting to your code, and will be glad to answer your questions
  270. in the mailing-list or on the IRC channels,
  271. <literal>#claws-mail</literal> on Freenode or IRCnet.
  272. </para>
  273. </section>
  274. <section id="plugins_network">
  275. <title>Network access from the plugins</title>
  276. <para>
  277. Some of the external plugins, for example RSSyl, vCalendar or GtkHtml
  278. Viewer, need Internet access for their operations (retrieving feeds in
  279. the case of RSSyl or vCalendar, and fetching images in the case of
  280. GtkHtml Viewer). These plugins use the Curl library. Hence, if your
  281. Internet access is restricted by a proxy, you will need to tell libCurl
  282. to use this proxy. This is done by setting an environment variable,
  283. <literal>http_proxy</literal>. For example,
  284. <literal>http_proxy=http://user:passwd@myproxy.example.com:8080</literal>
  285. will tell libCurl to connect to port 8080 of the machine
  286. myproxy.example.com, with the user <quote>user</quote> and password
  287. <quote>passwd</quote> to connect to the Internet.
  288. </para><para>
  289. You can either set this variable before starting Claws Mail, by
  290. using for example
  291. <command>http_proxy=http://user:passwd@myproxy.example.com:8080
  292. claws-mail</command>, or set it in your
  293. <filename>~/.bashrc</filename> file (or your shell equivalent), by
  294. adding the following line<footnote><para>Other shells may have
  295. diferent syntaxes, check your shell's manual page.</para></footnote>:
  296. <command>export http_proxy=http://user:passwd@myproxy.example.com:8080</command>
  297. (you'll have to reconnect to have it taken into account).
  298. </para>
  299. </section>
  300. </section>