Many Linux users are more productive when they work from the terminal. But there’s no denying that many of them use web based services like email regularly for communication. Gmail is undoubtedly the most popular email service available today. We were looking for ways to access Gmail from the console. There’s Mutt, which is a fantastic email client, but how about some other options which programmers may like, especially the vim lovers?

It’s as simple as it gets – a vim like interface to Gmail written in Ruby.

Features

Contact auto-completion

Starring, deleting, archiving, marking spam, marking read/unread

Compose messages and print

Checking for new messages, INBOX polling

Switching mailboxes, moving messages, copying messages to another mailbox

Limited attachment handling support

Opening hyperlinks and HTML parts in your web browser

Search queries

Use with MacVim or gvim

Customize colours

Secured password tranasfer using TLS encryption

Installation

Vmail needs vim (v7.3 and above) and Ruby (v1.9.2 and above). It also needs a text-mode bowser like w3m or elinks to view HTML parts. we will use elinks.

Run the following commands on Ubuntu:

$ sudo apt-get install vim ruby gem libsqlite3-dev sqlite3 elinks $ sudo gem install vmail

Before you start Vmail for the first time, make sure that you have enabled IMAP in Gmail. Add the following to your .bash_profile for using elinks:

export VMAIL_HTML_PART_READER='elinks -dump'

The Vmail configuration file is ~/.vmailrc and the contents should be something like:

username: neo@gmail.com password: password name: Neo signature: | -- Sent from TuxDiary. http://tuxdiary.com

Usage

Start Vmail

$ vmail

Check only a label

$ vmail important_label

Search a label

$ vmail important_label to vvip@gmail.com

Unlike Vmail, gmail.vim is not an application, it is a plugin for the vim editor to view Gmail within the editor. This tool also needs IMAP to be enabled in Gmail. One advantage of gvim.vim is it supports Two Factor Authentication.

Installation

To install on Ubuntu:

$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Shougo/neobundle.vim/master/bin/install.sh $ chmod +x install.sh $ ./install.sh

Add the following to your ~/.vimrc:

"NeoBundle Scripts----------------------------- if has('vim_starting') if &compatible set nocompatible " Be iMproved endif " Required: set runtimepath+=/home/neo/.vim/bundle/neobundle.vim/ endif " Required: call neobundle#begin(expand('/home/neo/.vim/bundle')) " Let NeoBundle manage NeoBundle " Required: NeoBundleFetch 'Shougo/neobundle.vim' " Add or remove your Bundles here: NeoBundle 'yuratomo/gmail.vim' NeoBundle 'Shougo/vimproc.vim', { \ 'build' : { \ 'windows' : 'tools\\update-dll-mingw', \ 'cygwin' : 'make -f make_cygwin.mak', \ 'mac' : 'make -f make_mac.mak', \ 'linux' : 'make', \ 'unix' : 'gmake', \ }, \ } " Required: call neobundle#end() " Required: filetype plugin indent on " If there are uninstalled bundles found on startup, " this will conveniently prompt you to install them. NeoBundleCheck "End NeoBundle Scripts------------------------- let g:gmail_user_name = 'neo@gmail.com'

Notes:

Replace /home/neo with your home directory absolute path in ~/.vimrc The plugin asks for the password when you fire it. Avoid adding it to plaintext for security

Usage

To check your mails, run the following in vim command mode:

:Gmail