agent-workflows: workspace-context-organization autonomous-ai-agents: hermes-agent computer-use devops: hermes-config-bulk-update, hermes-profile-management, holographic-memory, telegram-integration, webhook-subscriptions email: himalaya mcp: native-mcp, searxng-smart-search media: voice-systems, youtube-content mlops: local-vector-memory, qdrant-collection-management productivity: maps, notion, ocr-and-documents project-knowledge-base research: arxiv, blogwatcher, ecosystem-surveillance save-agents-md social-media: social-media-scraping, xurl software-development: agent-self-audit, simplify-code, spike, subagent-driven-development, systematic-debugging, test-driven-development, writing-plans user-response-style
10 KiB
name, description, version, author, license, platforms, metadata, prerequisites
| name | description | version | author | license | platforms | metadata | prerequisites | |||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| himalaya | Himalaya CLI: IMAP/SMTP email from terminal. | 1.1.0 | community | MIT |
|
|
|
Himalaya Email CLI
Himalaya is a CLI email client that lets you manage emails from the terminal using IMAP, SMTP, Notmuch, or Sendmail backends.
This skill is separate from the Hermes Email gateway adapter. The gateway
adapter lets people email the agent and uses Hermes' built-in IMAP/SMTP
adapter; this skill lets the agent operate a mailbox from terminal tools and
requires the external himalaya CLI.
References
references/configuration.md(config file setup + IMAP/SMTP authentication)references/message-composition.md(MML syntax for composing emails)references/attachment-extraction.md(Python recipe for extracting attachments from .eml files)
Scripts
scripts/bulk-export.py(multi-folder bulk export with folder-relative ID handling)
Prerequisites
- Himalaya CLI installed (
himalaya --versionto verify) - A configuration file at
~/.config/himalaya/config.toml - IMAP/SMTP credentials configured (password stored securely)
Installation
# Pre-built binary (Linux/macOS — recommended)
curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pimalaya/himalaya/master/install.sh | PREFIX=~/.local sh
# macOS via Homebrew
brew install himalaya
# Or via cargo (any platform with Rust)
cargo install himalaya --locked
Configuration Setup
Run the interactive wizard to set up an account:
himalaya account configure
Or create ~/.config/himalaya/config.toml manually:
[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"
# Folder aliases (himalaya v1.2.0+ syntax). Required whenever the
# server's folder names don't match himalaya's canonical names
# (inbox/sent/drafts/trash). Gmail is the common case — see
# `references/configuration.md` for the `[Gmail]/Sent Mail` mapping.
folder.aliases.inbox = "INBOX"
folder.aliases.sent = "Sent"
folder.aliases.drafts = "Drafts"
folder.aliases.trash = "Trash"
Heads up on the alias syntax. Pre-v1.2.0 docs used a
[accounts.NAME.folder.alias]sub-section (singularalias). v1.2.0 silently ignores that form — TOML parses fine, but the alias resolver never reads it, so every lookup falls through to the canonical name. On Gmail this means save-to-Sent fails after SMTP delivery succeeds, andhimalaya message sendexits non-zero. Any caller (agent, script, user) that retries on that exit code will re-run the entire send — including SMTP — producing duplicate emails to recipients. Always usefolder.aliases.X(plural, dotted keys, directly under[accounts.NAME]).
Hermes Integration Notes
- Reading, listing, searching, moving, deleting all work directly through the terminal tool
- Composing/replying/forwarding — piped input (
cat << EOF | himalaya template send) is recommended for reliability. Interactive$EDITORmode works withpty=true+ background + process tool, but requires knowing the editor and its commands - Use
--output jsonfor structured output that's easier to parse programmatically - The
himalaya account configurewizard requires interactive input — use PTY mode:terminal(command="himalaya account configure", pty=true)
Common Operations
List Folders
himalaya folder list
List Emails
List emails in INBOX (default):
himalaya envelope list
List emails in a specific folder:
himalaya envelope list --folder "Sent"
List with pagination:
himalaya envelope list --page 1 --page-size 20
Search Emails
himalaya envelope list from john@example.com subject meeting
Read an Email
Read email by ID (shows plain text):
himalaya message read 42
Export raw MIME:
himalaya message export 42 --full
Reply to an Email
To reply non-interactively from Hermes, read the original message, compose a reply, and pipe it:
# Get the reply template, edit it, and send
himalaya template reply 42 | sed 's/^$/\nYour reply text here\n/' | himalaya template send
Or build the reply manually:
cat << 'EOF' | himalaya template send
From: you@example.com
To: sender@example.com
Subject: Re: Original Subject
In-Reply-To: <original-message-id>
Your reply here.
EOF
Reply-all (interactive — needs $EDITOR, use template approach above instead):
himalaya message reply 42 --all
Forward an Email
# Get forward template and pipe with modifications
himalaya template forward 42 | sed 's/^To:.*/To: newrecipient@example.com/' | himalaya template send
Write a New Email
Non-interactive (use this from Hermes) — pipe the message via stdin:
cat << 'EOF' | himalaya template send
From: you@example.com
To: recipient@example.com
Subject: Test Message
Hello from Himalaya!
EOF
Or with headers flag:
himalaya message write -H "To:recipient@example.com" -H "Subject:Test" "Message body here"
Note: himalaya message write without piped input opens $EDITOR. This works with pty=true + background mode, but piping is simpler and more reliable.
Move/Copy Emails
Move to folder (target folder comes first, then the message ID):
himalaya message move "Archive" 42
Copy to folder (target folder comes first, then the message ID):
himalaya message copy "Important" 42
Delete an Email
himalaya message delete 42
Manage Flags
Add flag:
himalaya flag add 42 --flag seen
Remove flag:
himalaya flag remove 42 --flag seen
Multiple Accounts
List accounts:
himalaya account list
Use a specific account:
himalaya --account work envelope list
Attachments
Save attachments from a message:
himalaya attachment download 42
Save to specific directory:
himalaya attachment download 42 --downloads-dir ~/Downloads
Output Formats
Most commands support --output for structured output:
himalaya envelope list --output json
himalaya envelope list --output plain
Debugging
Enable debug logging:
RUST_LOG=debug himalaya envelope list
Full trace with backtrace:
RUST_LOG=trace RUST_BACKTRACE=1 himalaya envelope list
Bulk Export (Multi-Folder)
When exporting emails from multiple folders into a single directory, use a shell
script that pairs each ID with its source folder. Message IDs are
folder-relative — an ID from --folder "GirlsMom" will fail with "cannot
find message" unless you also pass --folder "GirlsMom" to message export.
#!/bin/bash
OUTDIR=/tmp/export
mkdir -p "$OUTDIR"
# For each folder, list then export with matching --folder
himalaya envelope list --folder "GirlsMom" --page-size 200 2>/dev/null \
| grep '^|' | grep -v '^|---' | grep -v '^| ID' \
| while read line; do
id=$(echo "$line" | awk -F'|' '{gsub(/ /,"",$2); print $2}')
himalaya message export "$id" --full --folder "GirlsMom" 2>/dev/null \
> "$OUTDIR/${id}.eml"
done
See scripts/bulk-export.py for a complete multi-folder Python template that handles folder-relative IDs, pagination, and empty-file verification.
Read-Only Gmail Setup
For read-only access (no SMTP), omit the message.send block entirely:
[accounts.personal]
email = "you@gmail.com"
display-name = "Your Name"
default = true
backend.type = "imap"
backend.host = "imap.gmail.com"
backend.port = 993
backend.encryption.type = "tls"
backend.login = "you@gmail.com"
backend.auth.type = "password"
backend.auth.cmd = "echo YOUR_APP_PASSWORD" # inline for quick setup
folder.aliases.inbox = "INBOX"
folder.aliases.sent = "[Gmail]/Sent Mail"
folder.aliases.drafts = "[Gmail]/Drafts"
folder.aliases.trash = "[Gmail]/Trash"
Generate an App Password at https://myaccount.google.com/apppasswords (select "Mail", name it "Himalaya").
Pitfalls
- Folder-relative IDs: Message IDs from
envelope list --folder "X"only work withmessage export --folder "X". Without--folder, you get "cannot find message". This is the #1 cause of silent empty exports. - Search query ordering: Flags like
--page-sizemust come BEFORE search terms.himalaya envelope list from foo@bar.com --page-size 5fails; usehimalaya envelope list --page-size 5 "from foo@bar.com"instead. --output jsonbreaks with search queries: When a search query returns no results or an error,--output jsonproduces empty output that failsjson.load(). Always test with plain-text output first, or wrap JSON parsing in try/except.[Gmail]/All Mailsearch syntax differs: The All Mail folder uses a different search parser than regular folders.himalaya envelope list --folder "[Gmail]/All Mail" "pandaneuro"fails with a parse error. Use specific folders (INBOX, Sent Mail) with explicitfrom/toqueries instead.- Gmail folder names: Gmail uses
[Gmail]/Sent Mail,[Gmail]/Drafts,[Gmail]/Trash— not plainSent/Drafts/Trash. The folder aliases handle this mapping. - Empty exports are silent:
himalaya message exportwrites nothing and exits 0 when it can't find a message. Always verify withwc -corfind -emptyafter bulk exports.
Tips
- Use
himalaya --helporhimalaya <command> --helpfor 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.