himalaya
CLI to manage emails via IMAP/SMTP. Use `himalaya` to list, read, write, reply, forward, search, and organize emails from the terminal. Supports multiple accounts and message composition with MML (MIME Meta Language).
Best use case
himalaya is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
CLI to manage emails via IMAP/SMTP. Use `himalaya` to list, read, write, reply, forward, search, and organize emails from the terminal. Supports multiple accounts and message composition with MML (MIME Meta Language).
Teams using himalaya should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/himalaya/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How himalaya Compares
| Feature / Agent | himalaya | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
CLI to manage emails via IMAP/SMTP. Use `himalaya` to list, read, write, reply, forward, search, and organize emails from the terminal. Supports multiple accounts and message composition with MML (MIME Meta Language).
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Himalaya Email CLI Himalaya is a CLI email client that lets you manage emails from the terminal using IMAP, SMTP, Notmuch, or Sendmail backends. ## References - `references/configuration.md` (config file setup + IMAP/SMTP authentication) - `references/message-composition.md` (MML syntax for composing emails) ## Prerequisites 1. Himalaya CLI installed (`himalaya --version` to verify) 2. A configuration file at `~/.config/himalaya/config.toml` 3. IMAP/SMTP credentials configured (password stored securely) ## Configuration Setup Run the interactive wizard to set up an account: ```bash himalaya account configure ``` Or create `~/.config/himalaya/config.toml` manually: ```toml [accounts.personal] email = "you@example.com" display-name = "Your Name" default = true backend.type = "imap" backend.host = "imap.example.com" backend.port = 993 backend.encryption.type = "tls" backend.login = "you@example.com" backend.auth.type = "password" backend.auth.cmd = "pass show email/imap" # or use keyring message.send.backend.type = "smtp" message.send.backend.host = "smtp.example.com" message.send.backend.port = 587 message.send.backend.encryption.type = "start-tls" message.send.backend.login = "you@example.com" message.send.backend.auth.type = "password" message.send.backend.auth.cmd = "pass show email/smtp" ``` ## Common Operations ### List Folders ```bash himalaya folder list ``` ### List Emails List emails in INBOX (default): ```bash himalaya envelope list ``` List emails in a specific folder: ```bash himalaya envelope list --folder "Sent" ``` List with pagination: ```bash himalaya envelope list --page 1 --page-size 20 ``` ### Search Emails ```bash himalaya envelope list from john@example.com subject meeting ``` ### Read an Email Read email by ID (shows plain text): ```bash himalaya message read 42 ``` Export raw MIME: ```bash himalaya message export 42 --full ``` ### Reply to an Email Interactive reply (opens $EDITOR): ```bash himalaya message reply 42 ``` Reply-all: ```bash himalaya message reply 42 --all ``` ### Forward an Email ```bash himalaya message forward 42 ``` ### Write a New Email Interactive compose (opens $EDITOR): ```bash himalaya message write ``` Send directly using template: ```bash cat << 'EOF' | himalaya template send From: you@example.com To: recipient@example.com Subject: Test Message Hello from Himalaya! EOF ``` Or with headers flag: ```bash himalaya message write -H "To:recipient@example.com" -H "Subject:Test" "Message body here" ``` ### Move/Copy Emails Move to folder: ```bash himalaya message move 42 "Archive" ``` Copy to folder: ```bash himalaya message copy 42 "Important" ``` ### Delete an Email ```bash himalaya message delete 42 ``` ### Manage Flags Add flag: ```bash himalaya flag add 42 --flag seen ``` Remove flag: ```bash himalaya flag remove 42 --flag seen ``` ## Multiple Accounts List accounts: ```bash himalaya account list ``` Use a specific account: ```bash himalaya --account work envelope list ``` ## Attachments Save attachments from a message: ```bash himalaya attachment download 42 ``` Save to specific directory: ```bash himalaya attachment download 42 --dir ~/Downloads ``` ## Output Formats Most commands support `--output` for structured output: ```bash himalaya envelope list --output json himalaya envelope list --output plain ``` ## Debugging Enable debug logging: ```bash RUST_LOG=debug himalaya envelope list ``` Full trace with backtrace: ```bash RUST_LOG=trace RUST_BACKTRACE=1 himalaya envelope list ``` ## Tips - Use `himalaya --help` or `himalaya <command> --help` for detailed usage. - Message IDs are relative to the current folder; re-list after folder changes. - For composing rich emails with attachments, use MML syntax (see `references/message-composition.md`). - Store passwords securely using `pass`, system keyring, or a command that outputs the password.
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