How can I change the sender's name or e-mail address (From:
header) used by mutt
?
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1Do you want to change it once, in a configuration file, or you want to change it while composing an e-mail? By the way, this is probably better asked on SuperUser.– ArjunShankarAug 28, 2012 at 11:35
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echo "File $Filename not present" | mutt -s '$MailSubject' -c "abc@yahoo.com"."xyz.yahoo.com"– user1630087Aug 28, 2012 at 11:42
7 Answers
Normally, mutt sets the From:
header based on the from
configuration variable you set in ~/.muttrc
:
set from="Fubar <foo@bar>"
If this is not set, mutt
uses the EMAIL
environment variable by default. In which case, you can get away with calling mutt like this on the command line (as opposed to how you showed it in your comment):
EMAIL="foo@bar" mutt -s '$MailSubject' -c "abc@def"
However, if you want to be able to edit the From:
header while composing, you need to configure mutt
to allow you to edit headers first. This involves adding the following line in your ~/.muttrc
:
set edit_headers=yes
After that, next time you open up mutt and are composing an E-mail, your chosen text editor will pop up containing the headers as well, so you can edit them. This includes the From:
header.
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I'm new to shell scripting.. Can you explain how to change the configuration file?? and where it is available??? Aug 28, 2012 at 12:05
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2The file is
~/.muttrc
(i.e./home/$USERNAME/.muttrc
). You edit it with a text editor. If its not there, you create it. I wouldn't call it shell scripting, its just opening an editor, and writing a line in a file ;) Aug 28, 2012 at 12:39 -
6I'd like to add that even without
set edit_headers=yes
you can press theedit-from
shortcut (default: ESC f) to edit the from field. May 16, 2013 at 1:57 -
3Mutt also allows specifying an alternate muttrc file to use. Therefore for a one-shot change to the from address, create a new file:
echo set from="Fubar <foo@example.com>" > temprc
and then use it:mutt -s "my subject" -F testrc recipient@example.com
– BenNov 6, 2013 at 16:36 -
1Setting
set use_envelope_from = yes
in .muttrc finally worked for me. This adds the -f option when calling sendmail to deliver the mail, forcing it to use the same address for the envelope as for the From: header field.– elimMar 13, 2019 at 11:33
If you just want to change it once, you can specify the 'from' header in command line, eg:
mutt -e 'my_hdr From:obama@whitehouse.org'
my_hdr
is mutt's command of providing custom header value.
One last word, don't be evil!
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3It works thanks. e.g:
echo "I love you body" | mutt -a "/tmp/file.zip" -s "ZIP" -c friend1@email.com -e 'my_hdr From:sender@company.com' -- main@email.com
– user285594Jun 26, 2013 at 10:33 -
Note the default domain (user@domain.com) will be the system's
hostname
. Changing thehostname
on aws is easy, I think on other systems, it should be similar.– boboboboJan 16, 2014 at 1:01
before you send the email you can press <ESC> f
(Escape followed by f) to change the From:
Address.
Constraint: This only works if you use mutt in curses mode and do not wan't to script it or if you want to change the address permanent. Then the other solutions are way better!
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I wrote a response before realizing the
from
was wrong (I almost never use mutt). Saved my bacon, thanks!– CameronSep 14, 2016 at 20:07
One special case for this is if you have used a construction like the following in your ~/.muttrc:
# Reset From email to default
send-hook . "my_hdr From: Real Name <email@example.com>"
This send-hook will override either of these:
mutt -e "set from=email@example.com"
mutt -e "my_hdr From: Other Name <otheremail@example.com>"
Your emails will still go out with the header:
From: Real Name <email@example.com>
In this case, the only command line solution I've found is actually overriding the send-hook itself:
mutt -e "send-hook . \"my_hdr From: Other Name <otheremail@example.com>\""
For a one time change you can do this:
export EMAIL='sender@example.com'; mutt -s "Elvis is dead" receiver@bar.com
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Thanks. I put export EMAIL='sender@somewhere.com' in .bashrc and now it's permanent.– AndrewSep 23, 2014 at 14:42
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@Andrew How did you put it there? Did you just
nano
the file and append that one liner at the bottom of the file - or did you put other code around it?– 3kstcFeb 21, 2019 at 4:17 -
@3kstc just put the export statement as I wrote it in you .bashrc - but be sure .bashrc is being sourced or else the variable EMAIL will not be set. This may be the case when invoking mutt using cron or ssh or other shells (that are not bash) as all of the possible user profile related files may not be executed depending on how the shell is started– AndrewSep 8, 2019 at 16:08
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Note that
EMAIL='sender@example.com' mutt ...
is sufficient (noexport
, no;
). There is no need to export theEMAIL
environment variable permanently. The syntax I show sets the environment variable for a single program invocation. Nov 4, 2022 at 16:34
Step 1: Locate Muttrc which in case of Oracle Linux 7.6 could be found in /etc Step 2: Open the file in vi editor to add the below entries viz. vi /etc/Muttrc Step 3: Contents to be added or/and uncommented
set from = "user@domain.com" set realname = "Realname of the user"
Step4: Save the file and exit. Also attempt sending an email with the syntax that follows,
echo "$Body of the email" | mutt -a "$name_of_the_attachment" -s $subject_line_of_the_email" -- $USER@DOMAIN.com
100% Working!
To send HTML contents in the body of the mail on the go with Sender and Recipient mail address in single line, you may try the below,
export EMAIL="sender@example.com" && mutt -e "my_hdr Content-Type: text/html" -s "Test Mail" "recipient@example.com" < body_html.html
File: body_html.html
<HTML>
<HEAD> Test Mail </HEAD>
<BODY>
<p>This is a <strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">test mail!</span></strong></p>
</BODY>
</HTML>
Note: Tested in RHEL, CentOS, Ubuntu.
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1There is no error. It just doesn't work. The correct solution is to use
set from=email@example.com
in~/.muttrc
Apr 18, 2019 at 13:50