/etc/Muttrc is in mutt 1.9.4-3.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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# System configuration file for Mutt
#
# Default list of header fields to weed when displaying.
# Ignore all lines by default...
ignore *
# ... then allow these through.
unignore from: subject to cc date x-mailer x-url user-agent
# Display the fields in this order
hdr_order date from to cc subject
# emacs-like bindings
bind editor "\e<delete>" kill-word
bind editor "\e<backspace>" kill-word
# map delete-char to a sane value
bind editor <delete> delete-char
# some people actually like these settings
#set pager_stop
#bind pager <up> previous-line
#bind pager <down> next-line
# Specifies how to sort messages in the index menu.
set sort=threads
# The behavior of this option on the Debian mutt package is
# not the original one because exim4, the default SMTP on Debian
# does not strip bcc headers so this can cause privacy problems;
# see man muttrc for more info
#unset write_bcc
# Postfix and qmail use Delivered-To for detecting loops
unset bounce_delivered
set mixmaster="mixmaster-filter"
# System-wide CA file managed by the ca-certificates package
set ssl_ca_certificates_file="/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt"
# imitate the old search-body function
macro index \eb "<search>~b " "search in message bodies"
# simulate the old url menu
macro index,pager,attach,compose \cb "\
<enter-command> set my_pipe_decode=\$pipe_decode pipe_decode<Enter>\
<pipe-message> urlview<Enter>\
<enter-command> set pipe_decode=\$my_pipe_decode; unset my_pipe_decode<Enter>" \
"call urlview to extract URLs out of a message"
# Show documentation when pressing F1
macro generic,pager <F1> "<shell-escape> zcat /usr/share/doc/mutt/manual.txt.gz | sensible-pager<enter>" "show Mutt documentation"
# show the incoming mailboxes list (just like "mutt -y") and back when pressing "y"
macro index,pager y "<change-folder>?<toggle-mailboxes>" "show incoming mailboxes list"
bind browser y exit
# Handler for gzip compressed mailboxes
# open-hook '\.gz$' "gzip -cd '%f' > '%t'"
# close-hook '\.gz$' "gzip -c '%t' > '%f'"
# append-hook '\.gz$' "gzip -c '%t' >> '%f'"
# If Mutt is unable to determine your site's domain name correctly, you can
# set the default here. (better: fix /etc/mailname)
#
# set hostname=cs.hmc.edu
# If your sendmail supports the -B8BITMIME flag, enable the following
#
# set use_8bitmime
# Use mime.types to look up handlers for application/octet-stream. Can
# be undone with unmime_lookup.
mime_lookup application/octet-stream
# Upgrade the progress counter every 250ms, good for mutt over SSH
# see http://bugs.debian.org/537746
set time_inc=250
# Allow mutt to understand References, Cc and In-Reply-To as headers in mailto:
mailto_allow = cc in-reply-to references
##
## *** DEFAULT SETTINGS FOR THE ATTACHMENTS PATCH ***
##
##
## Please see the manual (section "attachments") for detailed
## documentation of the "attachments" command.
##
## Removing a pattern from a list removes that pattern literally. It
## does not remove any type matching the pattern.
##
## attachments +A */.*
## attachments +A image/jpeg
## unattachments +A */.*
##
## This leaves "attached" image/jpeg files on the allowed attachments
## list. It does not remove all items, as you might expect, because the
## second */.* is not a matching expression at this time.
##
## Remember: "unattachments" only undoes what "attachments" has done!
## It does not trigger any matching on actual messages.
## Qualify any MIME part with an "attachment" disposition, EXCEPT for
## text/x-vcard and application/pgp parts. (PGP parts are already known
## to mutt, and can be searched for with ~g, ~G, and ~k.)
##
## I've added x-pkcs7 to this, since it functions (for S/MIME)
## analogously to PGP signature attachments. S/MIME isn't supported
## in a stock mutt build, but we can still treat it specially here.
##
attachments +A */.*
attachments -A text/x-vcard application/pgp.*
attachments -A application/x-pkcs7-.*
## Discount all MIME parts with an "inline" disposition, unless they're
## text/plain. (Why inline a text/plain part unless it's external to the
## message flow?)
##
attachments +I text/plain
## These two lines make Mutt qualify MIME containers. (So, for example,
## a message/rfc822 forward will count as an attachment.) The first
## line is unnecessary if you already have "attach-allow */.*", of
## course. These are off by default! The MIME elements contained
## within a message/* or multipart/* are still examined, even if the
## containers themselves don't qualify.
##
#attachments +A message/.* multipart/.*
#attachments +I message/.* multipart/.*
## You probably don't really care to know about deleted attachments.
attachments -A message/external-body
attachments -I message/external-body
##
# See /usr/share/doc/mutt/README.Debian for details.
source /usr/lib/mutt/source-muttrc.d|
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