Scripting ========= Many of khard's subcommands can be used for scripting purposes. The commands ``list``, ``birthdays``, ``email``, ``phone`` and ``postaddress`` feature a ``--parsable`` option which changes the output to be tab separated (normally the fields are visually aligned with spaces). They list several contacts at once. If the search terms are known to match one single contact the command ``khard show --format=yaml`` can also be used for scripting. It produces the contact in the yaml format that is also used for editing. But if the search terms produce more than one result the ``show`` command first asks the user to select one contact which is unsuitable for scripting. Specifying output fields ------------------------ The ``list`` command additionally features a ``--fields``/``-F`` options which allows to specify the fields of a contact that should be printed. The list of supported field names can be seen with ``khard list -F help``. Some fields can hold complex data structures like mappings and lists. These can be specified by dot-subscripting the field name. Lists are subscribed with numbers starting at zero. Subscripting can be nested. If the contact for somebody would contain several email addresses for example: .. code-block:: $ khard list --fields emails somebody Emails {'work': ['work@example.org'], 'home': ['some@example.org', 'body@example.org']} One could access these with different nested field descriptions like this: .. code-block:: $ khard list --fields emails.work somebody Emails ['work@example.org'] $ khard list --fields emails.home.1 somebody Emails body@example.org Integration =========== Khard can be used together with email or SIP clients or a synchronisation program like `vdirsyncer`_. For synchronisation programs it is important to note that khard expects the contacts in the configured address book directories to be stored in individual files. The files are expected to have a ``.vcf`` extension. .. _vdirsyncer: https://github.com/pimutils/vdirsyncer/ If you already have ``.vcf`` files containing multiple ``VCARD`` entries (i.e. from Android/MacOS Contacts app), below are some scripts that generate the corresponding single entry ``.vcf`` files: * `vcardtool`_ (processes one input file at a time) * `vcf-splitter`_ (needs to be used with the ``-u``/``--uid`` flag to generate the required UID entry) .. _vcardtool: https://github.com/jakeogh/vcardtool/ .. _vcf-splitter: https://framagit.org/rogarb/vcf-splitter/ You might need to preparse your ``.vcf`` input files with `vcard2to3`_ if they contain ``VERSION:2.1`` entries. .. _vcard2to3: https://github.com/jowave/vcard2to3 vdirsyncer ---------- Make sure to write the contacts into individual files as ``VCARD`` records and give them a ``.vcf`` file extension: .. code-block:: ini [storage local_storage_for_khard] type = "filesystem" fileext = "vcf" path = "..." mutt ---- Khard may be used as an external address book for the email client mutt. To accomplish that, add the following to your mutt config file (mostly ``~/.mutt/muttrc``): .. code-block:: set query_command = "khard email --parsable %s" bind editor complete-query bind editor ^T complete Then you can complete email addresses by pressing the Tab-key in mutt's new mail dialog. If your address books contain hundreds or even thousands of contacts and the query process is very slow, you may try the ``--search-in-source-files`` option to speed up the search: .. code-block:: set query_command = "khard email --parsable --search-in-source-files %s" If you want to complete multi-word search strings like "john smith" then you may try out the following instead: .. code-block:: set query_command = "echo %s | xargs khard email --parsable --" To add email addresses to khard's address book, you may also add the following lines to your muttrc file: .. code-block:: macro index,pager A \ "khard add-email" \ "add the sender email address to khard" If you want to search for email addresses in specific header fields, append the "--header" parameter: .. code-block:: macro index,pager A \ "khard add-email --headers=from,cc --skip-already-added" \ "add the sender and cc email addresses to khard" Then navigate to an email message in mutt's index view and press "A" to start the address import dialog. Alot ---- Add the following lines to your alot config file: .. code-block:: ini [accounts] [[youraccount]] [[[abook]]] type = shellcommand command = khard email --parsable regexp = '^(?P[^@]+@[^\t]+)\t+(?P[^\t]+)' ignorecase = True Twinkle ------- For those who also use the SIP client twinkle to take phone calls, khard can be used to query incoming numbers. The plugin tries to find the incoming caller id and speaks it together with the phone's ring tone. But it is more or less a proof of concept - feel free to extend. The plugin needs the following programs: .. code-block:: shell sudo aptitude install ffmpeg espeak sox mpc sox and ffmpeg are used to cut and convert the new ring tone and espeak speaks the caller id. mpc is a client for the music player daemon (mpd). It's required to stop music during an incoming call. Skip the last, if you don't use mpd. Don't forget to set the "stop_music"-parameter in the ``config.py`` file to ``False``, too. After the installation, copy the scripts and sounds folders to your twinkle config folder: .. code-block:: shell cp -R misc/twinkle/* ~/.twinkle/ Next convert the sound samples to wave: .. code-block:: shell ffmpeg -i incoming_call.ogg incoming_call.wav ffmpeg -i outgoing_call.ogg outgoing_call.wav ffmpeg -i ringtone_segment.ogg ringtone_segment.wav Then edit your twinkle config file (mostly ``~/.twinkle/twinkle.cfg``) like this: .. code-block:: ini # RING TONES # We need a default ring tone. Otherwise the phone would not ring at all, if # something with the custom ring tone creation goes wrong. ringtone_file=/home/USERNAME/.twinkle/sounds/incoming_call.wav ringback_file=/home/USERNAME/.twinkle/sounds/outgoing_call.wav # SCRIPTS script_incoming_call=/home/USERNAME/.twinkle/scripts/incoming_call.py script_in_call_answered= script_in_call_failed=/home/USERNAME/.twinkle/scripts/incoming_call_failed.py script_outgoing_call= script_out_call_answered= script_out_call_failed= script_local_release=/home/USERNAME/.twinkle/scripts/incoming_call_ended.py script_remote_release=/home/USERNAME/.twinkle/scripts/incoming_call_ended.py Zsh --- The file ``misc/zsh/_khard`` contains a khard cli completion function for the zsh and ``misc/zsh/_email-khard`` completes email addresses. Install by copying to a directory where zsh searches for completion functions (the ``$fpath`` array). If you, for example, put all completion functions into the folder ``~/.zsh/completions`` you must add the following to your zsh main config file: .. code-block:: zsh fpath=( $HOME/.zsh/completions $fpath ) autoload -U compinit compinit sdiff ----- Use the wrapper script ``misc/sdiff/sdiff_khard_wrapper.sh`` if you want to use sdiff as your contact merging tool. Just make the script executable and set it as your merge editor in khard's config file: .. code-block:: ini merge_editor = /path/to/sdiff_khard_wrapper.sh .. include:: davcontroller.rst