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NAME
imapsync - Email IMAP tool for syncing, copying and migrating email
mailboxes.
The imapsync command synchronises mailboxes between two imap servers.
More than 69 different IMAP server softwares supported with success, few
failures.
$Revision: 1.727 $
SYNOPSIS
To synchronize the source imap account
"test1" on server "test1.lamiral.info" with password "secret1"
to the destination imap account
"test2" on server "test2.lamiral.info" with password "secret2"
do:
imapsync \
--host1 test1.lamiral.info --user1 test1 --password1 secret1 \
--host2 test2.lamiral.info --user2 test2 --password2 secret2
REQUIRED ARGUMENTS
The required argmuments are the six values, three on each sides, needed
to login into the IMAP servers, a host, a username, and a password, two
times.
INSTALL
Imapsync works under any Unix with perl.
Imapsync works under Windows (2000, XP, Vista, Seven)
as a standalone binary software called imapsync.exe
Imapsync works under OS X as a standalone binary
software called imapsync_bin_Darwin.
Purchase latest imapsync at
http://imapsync.lamiral.info/
You'll receive a link to a compressed tarball called imapsync-x.xx.tgz
where x.xx is the version number. Untar the tarball where
you want (on Unix):
tar xzvf imapsync-x.xx.tgz
Go into the directory imapsync-x.xx and read the INSTALL file.
As mentioned at http://imapsync.lamiral.info/#install
the INSTALL file can also be found at
http://imapsync.lamiral.info/INSTALL
It is now split in several files for each system
http://imapsync.lamiral.info/INSTALL.d/
CONFIGURATION
There is no specific configuration file for imapsync, everything is
specified by the command line parameteres and the default behavior.
USAGE
To get a description of each option just run imapsync with no argument,
like this:
imapsync
This description of options is also available at
http://imapsync.lamiral.info/OPTIONS and is reproduced here:
usage: ./imapsync [options]
Several options are mandatory.
str means string
int means integer
reg means regular expression
cmd means command
--dry : Makes imapsync doing nothing, just print what would
be done without --dry.
--host1 str : Source or "from" imap server. Mandatory.
--port1 int : Port to connect on host1. Default is 143, 993 if --ssl1
--user1 str : User to login on host1. Mandatory.
--showpasswords : Shows passwords on output instead of "MASKED".
Useful to restart a complete run by just reading the log.
--password1 str : Password for the user1.
--host2 str : "destination" imap server. Mandatory.
--port2 int : Port to connect on host2. Default is 143, 993 if --ssl2
--user2 str : User to login on host2. Mandatory.
--password2 str : Password for the user2.
--passfile1 str : Password file for the user1. It must contain the
password on the first line. This option avoids to show
the password on the command line like --password1 does.
--passfile2 str : Password file for the user2. Contains the password.
--ssl1 : Use a SSL connection on host1.
--ssl2 : Use a SSL connection on host2.
--tls1 : Use a TLS connection on host1.
--tls2 : Use a TLS connection on host2.
--debugssl int : SSL debug mode from 0 to 4.
--sslargs1 str : Pass any ssl parameter for host1 ssl or tls connection. Example:
--sslargs1 SSL_verify_mode=1 --sslargs1 SSL_version=SSLv3
See all possibilities in the new() method of IO::Socket::SSL
http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?IO::Socket::SSL#Description_Of_Methods
--sslargs2 str : Pass any ssl parameter for host2 ssl or tls connection.
See --sslargs1
--timeout1 int : Connection timeout in seconds for host1.
Default is 120 and 0 means no timeout at all.
--timeout2 int : Connection timeout in seconds for host2.
Default is 120 and 0 means no timeout at all.
--authmech1 str : Auth mechanism to use with host1:
PLAIN, LOGIN, CRAM-MD5 etc. Use UPPERCASE.
--authmech2 str : Auth mechanism to use with host2. See --authmech1
--authuser1 str : User to auth with on host1 (admin user).
Avoid using --authmech1 SOMETHING with --authuser1.
--authuser2 str : User to auth with on host2 (admin user).
--proxyauth1 : Use proxyauth on host1. Requires --authuser1.
Required by Sun/iPlanet/Netscape IMAP servers to
be able to use an administrative user.
--proxyauth2 : Use proxyauth on host2. Requires --authuser2.
--authmd51 : Use MD5 authentification for host1.
--authmd52 : Use MD5 authentification for host2.
--domain1 str : Domain on host1 (NTLM authentication).
--domain2 str : Domain on host2 (NTLM authentication).
--folder str : Sync this folder.
--folder str : and this one, etc.
--folderrec str : Sync this folder recursively.
--folderrec str : and this one, etc.
--folderfirst str : Sync this folder first. --folderfirst "Work"
--folderfirst str : then this one, etc.
--folderlast str : Sync this folder last. --folderlast "[Gmail]/All Mail"
--folderlast str : then this one, etc.
--nomixfolders : Do not merge folders when host1 is case sensitive
while host2 is not (like Exchange). Only the first
similar folder is synced (ex: Sent SENT sent -> Sent).
--skipemptyfolders : Empty host1 folders are not created on host2.
--f1f2 str1=str2 : Force folder str1 to be synced to str2.
--include reg : Sync folders matching this regular expression
--include reg : or this one, etc.
in case both --include --exclude options are
use, include is done before.
--exclude reg : Skips folders matching this regular expression
Several folders to avoid:
--exclude 'fold1|fold2|f3' skips fold1, fold2 and f3.
--exclude reg : or this one, etc.
--subfolder2 str : Move whole host1 folders hierarchy under this
host2 folder str .
It does it by adding two --regextrans2 options before
all others. Add --debug to see what's really going on.
--regextrans2 reg : Apply the whole regex to each destination folders.
--regextrans2 reg : and this one. etc.
When you play with the --regextrans2 option, first
add also the safe options --dry --justfolders
Then, when happy, remove --dry, remove --justfolders.
Have in mind that --regextrans2 is applied after prefix
and separator inversion.
--tmpdir str : Where to store temporary files and subdirectories.
Will be created if it doesn't exist.
Default is system specific, Unix is /tmp but
it's often small and deleted at reboot.
--tmpdir /var/tmp should be better.
--pidfile str : The file where imapsync pid is written.
--pidfilelocking : Abort if pidfile already exists. Usefull to avoid
concurrent transfers on the same mailbox.
--nolog : Turn off logging on file
--logfile str : Change the default log filename (can be dirname/filename).
--logdir str : Change the default log directory. Default is LOG_imapsync
--prefix1 str : Remove prefix to all destination folders
(usually INBOX. or INBOX/ or an empty string "")
you have to use --prefix1 if host1 imap server
does not have NAMESPACE capability, so imapsync
suggests to use it. All other cases are bad.
--prefix2 str : Add prefix to all host2 folders. See --prefix1
--sep1 str : Host1 separator in case NAMESPACE is not supported.
--sep2 str : Host2 separator in case NAMESPACE is not supported.
--skipmess reg : Skips messages maching the regex.
Example: 'm/[\x80-ff]/' # to avoid 8bits messages.
--skipmess is applied before --regexmess
--skipmess reg : or this one, etc.
--pipemess cmd : Apply this cmd command to each message content
before the copy.
--pipemess cmd : and this one, etc.
--disarmreadreceipts : Disarms read receipts (host2 Exchange issue)
--regexmess reg : Apply the whole regex to each message before transfer.
Example: 's/\000/ /g' # to replace null by space.
--regexmess reg : and this one, etc.
--regexflag reg : Apply the whole regex to each flags list.
Example: 's/"Junk"//g' # to remove "Junk" flag.
--regexflag reg : and this one, etc.
--delete : Deletes messages on host1 server after a successful
transfer. Option --delete has the following behavior:
it marks messages as deleted with the IMAP flag
\Deleted, then messages are really deleted with an
EXPUNGE IMAP command.
--delete2 : Delete messages in host2 that are not in
host1 server. Useful for backup or pre-sync.
--delete2duplicates : Delete messages in host2 that are duplicates.
Works only without --useuid since duplicates are
detected with an header part of each message.
--delete2folders : Delete folders in host2 that are not in host1 server.
For safety, first try it like this (it is safe):
--delete2folders --dry --justfolders --nofoldersizes
--delete2foldersonly reg : Deleted only folders matching regex.
Example: --delete2foldersonly "/^Junk$|^INBOX.Junk$/"
--delete2foldersbutnot reg : Do not delete folders matching regex.
Example: --delete2foldersbutnot "/Tasks$|Contacts$|Foo$/"
--noexpunge : Do not expunge messages on host1.
Expunge really deletes messages marked deleted.
Expunge is made at the beginning, on host1 only.
Newly transferred messages are also expunged if
option --delete is given.
No expunge is done on host2 account (unless --expunge2)
--expunge1 : Expunge messages on host1 after messages transfer.
--expunge2 : Expunge messages on host2 after messages transfer.
--uidexpunge2 : uidexpunge messages on the host2 account
that are not on the host1 account, requires --delete2
--nomixfolders : Avoid merging folders that are considered different on
host1 but the same on destination host2 because of
case sensitivities and insensitivities.
--syncinternaldates : Sets the internal dates on host2 same as host1.
Turned on by default. Internal date is the date
a message arrived on a host (mtime).
--idatefromheader : Sets the internal dates on host2 same as the
"Date:" headers.
--maxsize int : Skip messages larger (or equal) than int bytes
--minsize int : Skip messages smaller (or equal) than int bytes
--maxage int : Skip messages older than int days.
final stats (skipped) don't count older messages
see also --minage
--minage int : Skip messages newer than int days.
final stats (skipped) don't count newer messages
You can do (+ are the messages selected):
past|----maxage+++++++++++++++>now
past|+++++++++++++++minage---->now
past|----maxage+++++minage---->now (intersection)
past|++++minage-----maxage++++>now (union)
--search str : Selects only messages returned by this IMAP SEARCH
command. Applied on both sides.
--search1 str : Same as --search for selecting host1 messages only.
--search2 str : Same as --search for selecting host2 messages only.
--search CRIT equals --search1 CRIT --search2 CRIT
--exitwhenover int : Stop syncing when total bytes transferred reached.
Gmail per day allows
2500000000 = 2.5 GB downloaded from Gmail as host2
500000000 = 500 MB uploaded to Gmail as host1.
--maxlinelength int : skip messages with a line length longer than int bytes.
RFC 2822 says it must be no more than 1000 bytes.
--useheader str : Use this header to compare messages on both sides.
Ex: Message-ID or Subject or Date.
--useheader str and this one, etc.
--subscribed : Transfers subscribed folders.
--subscribe : Subscribe to the folders transferred on the
host2 that are subscribed on host1. On by default.
--subscribeall : Subscribe to the folders transferred on the
host2 even if they are not subscribed on host1.
--nofoldersizes : Do not calculate the size of each folder in bytes
and message counts. Default is to calculate them.
--nofoldersizesatend: Do not calculate the size of each folder in bytes
and message counts at the end. Default is on.
--justfoldersizes : Exit after having printed the folder sizes.
--syncacls : Synchronises acls (Access Control Lists).
--nosyncacls : Does not synchronize acls. This is the default.
Acls in IMAP are not standardized, be careful.
--usecache : Use cache to speedup.
--nousecache : Do not use cache. Caveat: --useuid --nousecache creates
duplicates on multiple runs.
--useuid : Use uid instead of header as a criterium to recognize
messages. Option --usecache is then implied unless
--nousecache is used.
--debug : Debug mode.
--debugfolders : Debug mode for the folders part only.
--debugcontent : Debug content of the messages transfered. Huge ouput.
--debugflags : Debug mode for flags.
--debugimap1 : IMAP debug mode for host1. Very verbose.
--debugimap2 : IMAP debug mode for host2. Very verbose.
--debugimap : IMAP debug mode for host1 and host2.
--debugmemory : Debug mode showing memory consumption after each copy.
--errorsmax int : Exit when int number of errors is reached. Default is 50.
--tests : Run local non-regression tests. Exit code 0 means all ok.
--testslive : Run a live test with test1.lamiral.info imap server.
Useful to check the basics. Needs internet connexion.
--version : Print only software version.
--noreleasecheck : Do not check for new imapsync release (a http request).
--releasecheck : Check for new imapsync release (a http request).
--noid : Do not send/receive ID command to imap servers.
--justconnect : Just connect to both servers and print useful
information. Need only --host1 and --host2 options.
--justlogin : Just login to both host1 and host2 with users
credentials, then exit.
--justfolders : Do only things about folders (ignore messages).
--help : print this help.
Example:
To synchronize the source imap account
"test1" on server "test1.lamiral.info" with password "secret1"
to the destination imap account
"test2" on server "test2.lamiral.info" with password "secret2"
do:
imapsync \
--host1 test1.lamiral.info --user1 test1 --password1 secret1 \
--host2 test2.lamiral.info --user2 test2 --password2 secret2
DESCRIPTION
Imapsync command is a tool allowing incremental and recursive imap
transfers from one mailbox to another.
By default all folders are transferred, recursively, all possible flags
(\Seen \Answered \Flagged etc.) are synced too.
We sometimes need to transfer mailboxes from one imap server to another.
This is called migration.
Imapsync reduces the amount of data transferred by not transferring a
given message if it resides already on both sides. Same specific headers
and the transfer is done only once; taken into account are by default
Message-Id and Received header lines. All flags are preserved, unread
will stay unread, read will stay read, deleted will stay deleted. You
can stop the transfer at any time and restart it later, imapsync works
well with bad connections and interruptions.
You can decide to delete the messages from the source mailbox after a
successful transfer, it can be a good feature when migrating live
mailboxes since messages will be only on one side. In that case, use the
--delete option. Option --delete implies also option --expunge so all
messages marked deleted on host1 will be really deleted. (you can use
--noexpunge to avoid this but I don't see any good real world scenario
for the combination --delete --noexpunge).
A different scenario is synchronizing a mailbox B from another mailbox A
in case you just want to keep a "live" copy of A in B. In that case
--delete2 has to be used, it deletes messages in host2 folder B that are
not in host1 folder A. If you also need to destroy host2 folders that
are not in host1 then use --delete2folders (see also
--delete2foldersonly and --delete2foldersbutnot).
Imapsync is not adequate for maintaining two active imap accounts in
synchronization when the user plays independently on both sides. Use
offlineimap (written by John Goerzen) or mbsync (written by Michael R.
Elkins) for 2 ways synchronizations.
OPTIONS
To get a description of each option just invoke:
imapsync
or read the previous section named USAGE,
or read http://imapsync.lamiral.info/OPTIONS
HISTORY
I wrote imapsync because an enterprise (basystemes) paid me to install a
new imap server without losing huge old mailboxes located on a far away
remote imap server accessible by a low bandwidth link. The tool imapcp
(written in python) could not help me because I had to verify every
mailbox was well transferred and delete it after a good transfer.
imapsync started its life as a copy_folder.pl patch. The tool
copy_folder.pl comes from the Mail-IMAPClient-2.1.3 perl module tarball
source (in the examples/ directory of the tarball).
EXAMPLE
While working on imapsync parameters please run imapsync in dry mode (no
modification induced) with the --dry option. Nothing bad can be done
this way.
To synchronize the imap account "buddy" (with password "secret1") on
host "imap.src.fr" to the imap account "max" (with password "secret2")
on host "imap.dest.fr":
imapsync --host1 imap.src.fr --user1 buddy --password1 secret1 \
--host2 imap.dest.fr --user2 max --password2 secret2
Then you will have max's mailbox updated from buddy's mailbox.
SECURITY
You can use --passfile1 instead of --password1 to give the password
since it is safer. With --password1 option any user on your host can see
the password by using the 'ps auxwwww' command. Using a variable (like
$PASSWORD1) is also dangerous because of the 'ps auxwwwwe' command. So,
saving the password in a well protected file (600 or rw-------) is the
best solution.
imasync is not totally protected against sniffers on the network since
passwords may be transferred in plain text if CRAM-MD5 is not supported
by your imap servers. Use --ssl1 (or --tls1) and --ssl2 (or --tls2) to
enable encryption on host1 and host2.
You may authenticate as one user (typically an admin user), but be
authorized as someone else, which means you don't need to know every
user's personal password. Specify --authuser1 "adminuser" to enable this
on host1. In this case, --authmech1 PLAIN will be used by default since
it is the only way to go for now. So don't use --authmech1 SOMETHING
with --authuser1 "adminuser", it will not work. Same behavior with the
--authuser2 option. Authenticate with an admin account must be supported
by your imap server to work with imapsync.
When working on Sun/iPlanet/Netscape IMAP servers you must use
--proxyauth1 to enable administrative user to masquerade as another
user. Can also be used on destination server with --proxyauth2
You can authenticate with OAUTH when transfering from Google Apps. The
consumer key will be the domain part of the --user, and the --password
will be used as the consumer secret. It does not work with Google Apps
free edition.
EXIT STATUS
imapsync will exit with a 0 status (return code) if everything went
good. Otherwise, it exits with a non-zero status.
So if you have an unreliable internet connection, you can use this loop
in a Bourne shell:
while ! imapsync ...; do
echo imapsync not complete
done
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
imapsync is free, open, public but not always gratis software cover by
the NOLIMIT Public License. See the LICENSE file included in the
distribution or just read this simple sentence as it is the licence
text:
"No limit to do anything with this work and this license."
In case it is not long enough I repeat:
"No limit to do anything with this work and this license."
MAILING-LIST
The public mailing-list may be the best way to get free support.
To write on the mailing-list, the address is:
To subscribe, send any message (even empty) to:
<[email protected]> then just reply to the
confirmation message.
To unsubscribe, send a message to:
To contact the person in charge for the list:
The list archives are available at:
http://www.linux-france.org/prj/imapsync_list/ So consider that the list
is public, anyone can see your post. Use a pseudonym or do not post to
this list if you want to stay private.
Thank you for your participation.
AUTHOR
Gilles LAMIRAL <[email protected]>
Feedback good or bad is very often welcome.
Gilles LAMIRAL earns his living by writing, installing, configuring and
teaching free, open and often gratis softwares. It used to be "always
gratis" but now it is "often" because imapsync is sold by its author, a
good way to stay maintening and supporting free open public softwares
(see the license) over decades.
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
Help me to help you: follow the following guidelines.
Report any bugs or feature requests to the public mailing-list or to the
author.
Before reporting bugs, read the FAQs, the README and the TODO files.
http://imapsync.lamiral.info/
Upgrade to last imapsync release, maybe the bug is already fixed.
Upgrade to last Mail-IMAPClient Perl module.
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Mail-IMAPClient/ maybe the bug is already
fixed there.
Make a good title with word "imapsync" in it (my spam filters won't
filter it), Try to write an email title with more words than just
"imapsync" or "problem", a good title is made of keywords summary, but
not too long (one visible line).
Help us to help you: in your report, please include:
- imapsync version.
- output near the first failures, a few lines before is good to get the context
of the issue. First failures messages are often more significant than
the last ones.
- if the issue is always related to the same messages, include the output
with --debug --debugimap, near the failure point. For example,
Isolate a buggy message or two in a folder 'BUG' and use
imapsync ... --folder 'BUG' --debug --debugimap
- imap server softwares on both sides and their version number.
- imapsync with all the options you use, the full command line
you use (except the passwords of course).
- IMAPClient.pm version.
- the run context. Do you run imapsync.exe, a unix binary
or the perl script imapsync.
- operating system running imapsync.
- virtual software context (vmware, xen etc.)
- operating systems on both sides and the third side in case
you run imapsync on a foreign host from the both.
Most of those values can be found as a copy/paste at the begining of the
output, so a carbon copy of the output is a very easy and very good
debug report for me.
One time in your life, read the paper "How To Ask Questions The Smart
Way" http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html and then forget
it.
IMAP SERVERS
See http://imapsync.lamiral.info/S/imapservers.shtml
HUGE MIGRATION
Pay special attention to options --subscribed --subscribe --delete
--delete2 --delete2folders --maxage --minage --maxsize --useuid
--usecache
If you have many mailboxes to migrate think about a little shell
program. Write a file called file.txt (for example) containing users and
passwords. The separator used in this example is ';'
The file.txt file contains:
user001_1;password001_1;user001_2;password001_2
user002_1;password002_1;user002_2;password002_2
user003_1;password003_1;user003_2;password003_2
user004_1;password004_1;user004_2;password004_2
user005_1;password005_1;user005_2;password005_2 ...
On Unix the shell program can be:
{ while IFS=';' read u1 p1 u2 p2; do
imapsync --host1 imap.side1.org --user1 "$u1" --password1 "$p1" \
--host2 imap.side2.org --user2 "$u2" --password2 "$p2" ...
done ; } < file.txt
On Windows the batch program can be:
FOR /F "tokens=1,2,3,4 delims=; eol=#" %%G IN (file.txt) DO imapsync ^
--host1 imap.side1.org --user1 %%G --password1 %%H ^
--host2 imap.side2.org --user2 %%I --password2 %%J ...
The ... have to be replaced by nothing or any imapsync option. Welcome
in shell programming !
You will find already written scripts at
http://imapsync.lamiral.info/examples/
HACKING
Feel free to hack imapsync as the NOLIMIT license permits it.
LINKS
Entries for imapsync:
https://web.archive.org/web/20070202005121/http://www.imap.org/products/
showall.php
SIMILAR SOFTWARES
imap_tools : http://www.athensfbc.com/imap_tools
offlineimap : https://github.com/nicolas33/offlineimap
mbsync : http://isync.sourceforge.net/
mailsync : http://mailsync.sourceforge.net/
mailutil : http://www.washington.edu/imap/
part of the UW IMAP tookit.
imaprepl : http://www.bl0rg.net/software/
http://freecode.com/projects/imap-repl/
imapcopy : http://home.arcor.de/armin.diehl/imapcopy/imapcopy.html
migrationtool : http://sourceforge.net/projects/migrationtool/
imapmigrate : http://sourceforge.net/projects/cyrus-utils/
wonko_imapsync: http://wonko.com/article/554
see also file W/tools/wonko_ruby_imapsync
exchange-away : http://exchange-away.sourceforge.net/
pop2imap : http://www.linux-france.org/prj/pop2imap/
Feedback (good or bad) will often be welcome.
$Id: imapsync,v 1.727 2016/08/19 10:30:36 gilles Exp gilles $