-User's guide - Using PGP/GnuPG with Mutt-ng
+User's guide - Using PGP/GnuPG with Madmutt
===========================================
How do I use mutt with PGP, PGP5, or GnuPG?
contain ready-to-use configurations for using mutt with pgp2, pgp5,
and gpg.
-Include one of these files with your Mutt-ng config file (e.g. ~/.muttngrc),
+Include one of these files with your Madmutt config file (e.g. ~/.madmuttrc),
and things should work out fine.
You may wish to verify that all paths and the language parameters
Frequently Asked Questions and Tips
-----------------------------------
-Q: "People are sending PGP messages which Mutt-ng doesn't
+Q: "People are sending PGP messages which Madmutt doesn't
recognize. What can I do?"
A: The new way is to leave headers alone and use mutt's
Q: "I don't like that PGP/MIME stuff, but want to use the
old way of PGP-signing my mails. Can't you include
- that with Mutt-ng?"
+ that with Madmutt?"
A: No. Application/pgp is not really suited to a world with MIME,
non-textual body parts and similar things. Anyway, if you really
want to generate these old-style attachments, include the
- following macro in your ~/.muttngrc (line breaks for readability,
+ following macro in your ~/.madmuttrc (line breaks for readability,
this is actually one line):
macro compose S "Fpgp +verbose=0 -fast
There's a new answer, though: Set the pgp_autoinline
configuration variable (it's a quad-option) to something different
-from "no" (that's the default). Mutt-ng will then try to use
+from "no" (that's the default). Madmutt will then try to use
application/pgp whereever it makes sense. In particular, it does
not make any sense with multiparts, or non-ASCII or non-text bodies.
In all other cases, PGP/MIME is used unconditionally.
Auxiliary Programs
------------------
-Mutt-ng needs two auxiliary programs for its PGP support: pgpewrapng and
+Madmutt needs two auxiliary programs for its PGP support: pgpewrapng and
pgpringng.
The Configuration Interface
---------------------------
-As usual within Mutt-ng, the configuration interface for the PGP
+As usual within Madmutt, the configuration interface for the PGP
commands relies on printf-like formats. For all PGP commands, the
following %-sequences are defined.