Parent: [f3d3f5] (diff)

Child: [e1a937] (diff)

Download this file

recoll.conf    891 lines (773 with data), 40.5 kB

# <filetitle>Recoll main configuration file, recoll.conf</filetitle>

# The XML tags in the comments are used to help produce the documentation
# from the sample/reference file, and not at all at run time, where
# comments are just comments. Edit at will.

# This typically lives in $prefix/share/recoll/examples and provides
# default values. You can override selected parameters by adding assigments
# to ~/.recoll/recoll.conf (or $RECOLL_CONFDIR/recoll.conf)
#
# Most of the important values in this file can be set from the GUI
# configuration menus, which may be an easier approach than direct editing.

# <grouptitle id="WHATDOCS">Parameters affecting what documents we
# index</grouptitle> 

# <var name="topdirs" type="string"><brief>Space-separated list of files or
# directories to recursively index.</brief><descr>Default to ~ (indexes
# $HOME). You can use symbolic links in the list, they will be followed,
# independantly of the value of the followLinks variable.</descr></var>
topdirs = ~

# <var name="monitordirs" type="string"><brief>(1.25) Space-separated list of
# files or directories to monitor for updates.</brief><descr>When running
# the real-time indexer, this allows monitoring only a subset of the whole
# indexed area. The elements must be included in the tree defined by the
# 'topdirs' members.</descr></var>
#monitordirs=

# <var name="skippedNames" type="string">
#
# <brief>Files and directories which should be ignored.</brief> <descr>
# White space separated list of wildcard patterns (simple ones, not paths,
# must contain no / ), which will be tested against file and directory
# names.  The list in the default configuration does not exclude hidden
# directories (names beginning with a dot), which means that it may index
# quite a few things that you do not want. On the other hand, email user
# agents like Thunderbird usually store messages in hidden directories, and
# you probably want this indexed. One possible solution is to have ".*" in
# "skippedNames", and add things like "~/.thunderbird" "~/.evolution" to
# "topdirs".  Not even the file names are indexed for patterns in this
# list, see the "noContentSuffixes" variable for an alternative approach
# which indexes the file names. Can be redefined for any
# subtree.</descr></var>
skippedNames = #* CVS  Cache cache* .cache caughtspam tmp \
     .thumbnails .svn \
     *~ .beagle .git .hg .bzr loop.ps .xsession-errors \
     .recoll* xapiandb recollrc recoll.conf

# <var name="skippedNames-" type="string">
#
# <brief>List of name endings to remove from the default skippedNames
# list.</brief><descr></descr></var>
skippedNames- =

# <var name="skippedNames+" type="string">
#
# <brief>List of name endings to add to the default skippedNames
# list.</brief><descr></descr></var>
skippedNames+ =

# <var name="noContentSuffixes" type="string">
#
# <brief>List of name endings (not necessarily dot-separated suffixes) for
# which we don't try MIME type identification, and don't uncompress or
# index content.</brief><descr>Only the names will be indexed. This
# complements the now obsoleted recoll_noindex list from the mimemap file,
# which will go away in a future release (the move from mimemap to
# recoll.conf allows editing the list through the GUI). This is different
# from skippedNames because these are name ending matches only (not
# wildcard patterns), and the file name itself gets indexed normally. This
# can be redefined for subdirectories.</descr></var>
noContentSuffixes = .md5 .map \
       .o .lib .dll .a .sys .exe .com \
       .mpp .mpt .vsd \
	   .img .img.gz .img.bz2 .img.xz .image .image.gz .image.bz2 .image.xz \
       .dat .bak .rdf .log.gz .log .db .msf .pid \
       ,v ~ #

# <var name="noContentSuffixes-" type="string">
#
# <brief>List of name endings to remove from the default noContentSuffixes
# list.</brief><descr></descr></var>
noContentSuffixes- =

# <var name="noContentSuffixes+" type="string">
#
# <brief>List of name endings to add to the default noContentSuffixes
# list.</brief><descr></descr></var>
noContentSuffixes+ =


# <var name="skippedPaths" type="string">
#
# <brief>Paths we should not go into.</brief><descr>Space-separated list of
# wildcard expressions for filesystem paths. Can contain files and
# directories. The database and configuration directories will
# automatically be added. The expressions are matched using 'fnmatch(3)'
# with the FNM_PATHNAME flag set by default. This means that '/' characters
# must be matched explicitely. You can set 'skippedPathsFnmPathname' to 0
# to disable the use of FNM_PATHNAME (meaning that '/*/dir3' will match
# '/dir1/dir2/dir3').  The default value contains the usual mount point for
# removable media to remind you that it is a bad idea to have Recoll work
# on these (esp. with the monitor: media gets indexed on mount, all data
# gets erased on unmount).  Explicitely adding '/media/xxx' to the topdirs
# will override this.</descr></var>
skippedPaths = /media

# <var name="skippedPathsFnmPathname" type="bool"><brief>Set to 0 to
# override use of FNM_PATHNAME for matching skipped
# paths.</brief><descr></descr></var> 
#skippedPathsFnmPathname = 1

# <var name="daemSkippedPaths" type="string">
#
# <brief>skippedPaths equivalent specific to
# real time indexing.</brief><descr>This enables having parts of the tree
# which are initially indexed but not monitored. If daemSkippedPaths is
# not set, the daemon uses skippedPaths.</descr></var>
#daemSkippedPaths = 


# <var name="zipUseSkippedNames" type="bool">
#
# <brief>Use skippedNames inside Zip archives.</brief><descr>Fetched
# directly by the rclzip handler. Skip the patterns defined by skippedNames
# inside Zip archives. Can be redefined for subdirectories. 
# See https://www.lesbonscomptes.com/recoll/faqsandhowtos/FilteringOutZipArchiveMembers.html
# </descr></var>
#zipUseSkippedNames = 0

# <var name="zipSkippedNames" type="string">
#
# <brief>Space-separated list of wildcard expressions for names that should
# be ignored inside zip archives.</brief><descr>This is used directly by
# the zip handler. If zipUseSkippedNames is not set, zipSkippedNames
# defines the patterns to be skipped inside archives. If zipUseSkippedNames
# is set, the two lists are concatenated and used. Can be redefined for
# subdirectories. 
# See https://www.lesbonscomptes.com/recoll/faqsandhowtos/FilteringOutZipArchiveMembers.html
# </descr></var>
#zipSkippedNames =

# <var name="followLinks" type="bool"><brief>Follow symbolic links during
# indexing.</brief><descr>The default is to ignore symbolic links to avoid
# multiple indexing of linked files. No effort is made to avoid duplication
# when this option is set to true. This option can be set individually for
# each of the 'topdirs' members by using sections. It can not be changed
# below the 'topdirs' level. Links in the 'topdirs' list itself are always
# followed.</descr></var>
#followLinks = 0

# <var name="indexedmimetypes" type="string"><brief>Restrictive list of
# indexed mime types.</brief><descr>Normally not set (in which case all
# supported types are indexed). If it is set, only the types from the list
# will have their contents indexed. The names will be indexed anyway if
# indexallfilenames is set (default). MIME type names should be taken from
# the mimemap file (the values may be different from xdg-mime or file -i
# output in some cases). Can be redefined for subtrees.</descr></var>
#indexedmimetypes = 

# <var name="excludedmimetypes" type="string"><brief>List of excluded MIME
# types.</brief><descr>Lets you exclude some types from indexing. MIME type
# names should be taken from the mimemap file (the values may be different
# from xdg-mime or file -i output in some cases) Can be redefined for
# subtrees.</descr></var>
#excludedmimetypes = 

# <var name="nomd5mimetypes" type="string"><brief>Don't compute md5 for
# these types.</brief><descr>md5 checksums are used only for deduplicating
# results, and can be very expensive to compute on multimedia or other big
# files. This list lets you turn off md5 computation for selected types. It
# is global (no redefinition for subtrees). At the moment, it only has an
# effect for external handlers (exec and execm). The file types can be
# specified by listing either MIME types (e.g. audio/mpeg) or handler names
# (e.g. rclaudio).</descr></var>
nomd5types = rclaudio

# <var name="compressedfilemaxkbs" type="int"><brief>Size limit for compressed
# files.</brief><descr>We need to decompress these in a
# temporary directory for identification, which can be wasteful in some
# cases. Limit the waste. Negative means no limit. 0 results in no
# processing of any compressed file. Default 50 MB.</descr></var>
compressedfilemaxkbs = 50000

# <var name="textfilemaxmbs" type="int"><brief>Size limit for text
# files.</brief><descr>Mostly for skipping monster
# logs. Default 20 MB.</descr></var> 
textfilemaxmbs = 20

# <var name="indexallfilenames" type="bool"><brief>Index the file names of
# unprocessed files</brief><descr>Index the names of files the contents of
# which we don't index because of an excluded or unsupported MIME
# type.</descr></var>
indexallfilenames = 1

# <var name="usesystemfilecommand" type="bool"><brief>Use a system command
# for file MIME type guessing as a final step in file type
# identification</brief><descr>This is generally useful, but will usually
# cause the indexing of many bogus 'text' files. See 'systemfilecommand'
# for the command used.</descr></var>
usesystemfilecommand = 1

# <var name="systemfilecommand" type="string"><brief>Command used to guess
# MIME types if the internal methods fails</brief><descr>This should be a
# "file -i" workalike.  The file path will be added as a last parameter to
# the command line. 'xdg-mime' works better than the traditional 'file'
# command, and is now the configured default (with a hard-coded fallback to
# 'file')</descr></var>
systemfilecommand = xdg-mime query filetype

# <var name="processwebqueue" type="bool"><brief>Decide if we process the
# Web queue.</brief><descr>The queue is a directory where the Recoll Web
# browser plugins create the copies of visited pages.</descr></var>
processwebqueue = 0

# <var name="textfilepagekbs" type="int"><brief>Page size for text
# files.</brief><descr>If this is set, text/plain files will be divided
# into documents of approximately this size. Will reduce memory usage at
# index time and help with loading data in the preview window at query
# time. Particularly useful with very big files, such as application or
# system logs. Also see textfilemaxmbs and
# compressedfilemaxkbs.</descr></var>
textfilepagekbs = 1000

# <var name="membermaxkbs" type="int"><brief>Size limit for archive
# members.</brief><descr>This is passed to the filters in the environment
# as RECOLL_FILTER_MAXMEMBERKB.</descr></var>
membermaxkbs = 50000



# <grouptitle id="TERMS">Parameters affecting how we generate
# terms and organize the index</grouptitle> 

# Changing some of these parameters will imply a full
# reindex. Also, when using multiple indexes, it may not make sense
# to search indexes that don't share the values for these parameters,
# because they usually affect both search and index operations.


# <var name="indexStripChars" type="bool"><brief>Decide if we store
# character case and diacritics in the index.</brief><descr>If we do,
# searches sensitive to case and diacritics can be performed, but the index
# will be bigger, and some marginal weirdness may sometimes occur. The
# default is a stripped index. When using multiple indexes for a search,
# this parameter must be defined identically for all. Changing the value
# implies an index reset.</descr></var>
indexStripChars = 1

# <var name="indexStoreDocText" type="bool"><brief>Decide if we store the
# documents' text content in the index.</brief><descr>Storing the text
# allows extracting snippets from it at query time, instead of building
# them from index position data.
#
# Newer Xapian index formats have rendered our use of positions list
# unacceptably slow in some cases. The last Xapian index format with good
# performance for the old method is Chert, which is default for 1.2, still
# supported but not default in 1.4 and will be dropped in 1.6.
#
# The stored document text is translated from its original format to UTF-8
# plain text, but not stripped of upper-case, diacritics, or punctuation
# signs. Storing it increases the index size by 10-20% typically, but also
# allows for nicer snippets, so it may be worth enabling it even if not
# strictly needed for performance if you can afford the space.
#
# The variable only has an effect when creating an index, meaning that the
# xapiandb directory must not exist yet. Its exact effect depends on the
# Xapian version.
#
# For Xapian 1.4, if the variable is set to 0, the Chert format will be
# used, and the text will not be stored. If the variable is 1, Glass will
# be used, and the text stored.
#
# For Xapian 1.2, and for versions after 1.5 and newer, the index format is
# always the default, but the variable controls if the text is stored or
# not, and the abstract generation method. With Xapian 1.5 and later, and
# the variable set to 0, abstract generation may be very slow, but this
# setting may still be useful to save space if you do not use abstract
# generation at all.
# </descr></var>
indexStoreDocText = 1

# <var name="nonumbers" type="bool"><brief>Decides if terms will be
# generated for numbers.</brief><descr>For example "123", "1.5e6",
# 192.168.1.4, would not be indexed if nonumbers is set ("value123" would
# still be). Numbers are often quite interesting to search for, and this
# should probably not be set except for special situations, ie, scientific
# documents with huge amounts of numbers in them, where setting nonumbers
# will reduce the index size. This can only be set for a whole index, not
# for a subtree.</descr></var>
#nonumbers = 0

# <var name="dehyphenate" type="bool"><brief>Determines if we index
# 'coworker' also when the input is 'co-worker'.</brief><descr>This is new
# in version 1.22, and on by default. Setting the variable to off allows
# restoring the previous behaviour.</descr></var>
#dehyphenate = 1

# <var name="nocjk" type="bool"><brief>Decides if specific East Asian
# (Chinese Korean Japanese) characters/word splitting is turned
# off.</brief><descr>This will save a small amount of CPU if you have no CJK
# documents. If your document base does include such text but you are not
# interested in searching it, setting nocjk may be a
# significant time and space saver.</descr></var>
#nocjk = 0

# <var name="cjkngramlen" type="int"><brief>This lets you adjust the size of
# n-grams used for indexing CJK text.</brief><descr>The default value of 2 is
# probably appropriate in most cases. A value of 3 would allow more precision
# and efficiency on longer words, but the index will be approximately twice
# as large.</descr></var>
#cjkngramlen = 2

# <var name="indexstemminglanguages" type="string">
#
# <brief>Languages for which to create stemming expansion
# data.</brief><descr>Stemmer names can be found by executing 'recollindex
# -l', or this can also be set from a list in the GUI.</descr></var>
indexstemminglanguages = english 

# <var name="defaultcharset" type="string"><brief>Default character
# set.</brief><descr>This is used for files which do not contain a
# character set definition (e.g.: text/plain). Values found inside files,
# e.g. a 'charset' tag in HTML documents, will override it. If this is not
# set, the default character set is the one defined by the NLS environment
# ($LC_ALL, $LC_CTYPE, $LANG), or ultimately iso-8859-1 (cp-1252 in fact).
# If for some reason you want a general default which does not match your
# LANG and is not 8859-1, use this variable. This can be redefined for any
# sub-directory.</descr></var>
#defaultcharset = iso-8859-1

# <var name="unac_except_trans" type="string"><brief>A list of characters,
# encoded in UTF-8, which should be handled specially 
# when converting text to unaccented lowercase.</brief><descr>For
# example, in Swedish, the letter a with diaeresis has full alphabet
# citizenship and should not be turned into an a. 
# Each element in the space-separated list has the special character as
# first element and the translation following. The handling of both the
# lowercase and upper-case versions of a character should be specified, as
# appartenance to the list will turn-off both standard accent and case
# processing. The value is global and affects both indexing and querying.
# Examples: 
# Swedish:
# unac_except_trans = ää Ää öö Öö üü Üü ßss œoe Œoe æae Æae ffff fifi flfl åå Åå
# . German:
# unac_except_trans = ää Ää öö Öö üü Üü ßss œoe Œoe æae Æae ffff fifi flfl
# In French, you probably want to decompose oe and ae and nobody would type
# a German ß
# unac_except_trans = ßss œoe Œoe æae Æae ffff fifi flfl
# . The default for all until someone protests follows. These decompositions
# are not performed by unac, but it is unlikely that someone would type the
# composed forms in a search.
# unac_except_trans = ßss œoe Œoe æae Æae ffff fifi flfl</descr></var>
unac_except_trans = ßss œoe Œoe æae Æae ffff fifi flfl

# <var name="maildefcharset" type="string"><brief>Overrides the default
# character set for email messages which don't specify
# one.</brief><descr>This is mainly useful for readpst (libpst) dumps,
# which are utf-8 but do not say so.</descr></var>
#maildefcharset=

# <var name="localfields" type="string"><brief>Set fields on all files
# (usually of a specific fs area).</brief><descr>Syntax is the usual:
# name = value ; attr1 = val1 ; [...]
# value is empty so this needs an initial semi-colon. This is useful, e.g.,
# for setting the rclaptg field for application selection inside
# mimeview.</descr></var>
#[/some/app/directory]
#localfields = ; rclaptg = someapp; otherfield = somevalue

# <var name="testmodifusemtime" type="bool"><brief>Use mtime instead of
# ctime to test if a file has been modified.</brief><descr>The time is used
# in addition to the size, which is always used.
# Setting this can reduce re-indexing on systems where extended attributes
# are used (by some other application), but not indexed, because changing
# extended attributes only affects ctime.
# Notes:
# - This may prevent detection of change in some marginal file rename cases
#   (the target would need to have the same size and mtime).
# - You should probably also set noxattrfields to 1 in this case, except if
#   you still prefer to perform xattr indexing, for example if the local
#   file update pattern makes it of value (as in general, there is a risk
#   for pure extended attributes updates without file modification to go
#   undetected). Perform a full index reset after changing this.
# </descr></var>
testmodifusemtime = 0

# <var name="noxattrfields" type="bool"><brief>Disable extended attributes
# conversion to metadata fields.</brief><descr>This probably needs to be
# set if testmodifusemtime is set.</descr></var>
noxattrfields = 0

# <var name="metadatacmds" type="string"><brief>Define commands to
# gather external metadata, e.g. tmsu tags.</brief><descr>
# There can be several entries, separated by semi-colons, each defining
# which field name the data goes into and the command to use. Don't forget the
# initial semi-colon. All the field names must be different. You can use
# aliases in the "field" file if necessary. 
# As a not too pretty hack conceded to convenience, any field name
# beginning with "rclmulti" will be taken as an indication that the command
# returns multiple field values inside a text blob formatted as a recoll
# configuration file ("fieldname = fieldvalue" lines). The rclmultixx name
# will be ignored, and field names and values will be parsed from the data.
# Example: metadatacmds = ; tags = tmsu tags %f; rclmulti1 = cmdOutputsConf %f
# </descr></var>
#[/some/area/of/the/fs]
#metadatacmds = ; tags = tmsu tags %f; rclmulti1 = cmdOutputsConf %f




# <grouptitle id="STORE">Parameters affecting where and how we store
# things</grouptitle> 

# <var name="cachedir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Top directory for Recoll data.</brief><descr>Recoll data
# directories are normally located relative to the configuration directory
# (e.g. ~/.recoll/xapiandb, ~/.recoll/mboxcache). If 'cachedir' is set, the
# directories are stored under the specified value instead (e.g. if
# cachedir is ~/.cache/recoll, the default dbdir would be
# ~/.cache/recoll/xapiandb).  This affects dbdir, webcachedir,
# mboxcachedir, aspellDicDir, which can still be individually specified to
# override cachedir.  Note that if you have multiple configurations, each
# must have a different cachedir, there is no automatic computation of a
# subpath under cachedir.</descr></var>
#cachedir = ~/.cache/recoll

# <var name="maxfsoccuppc" type="int"><brief>Maximum file system occupation
# over which we stop indexing.</brief><descr>The value is a percentage,
# corresponding to what the "Capacity" df output column shows. The default
# value is 0, meaning no checking.</descr></var>
maxfsoccuppc = 0

# <var name="xapiandb" type="dfn"><brief>Xapian database directory
# location.</brief><descr>This will be created on first indexing. If the
# value is not an absolute path, it will be interpreted as relative to
# cachedir if set, or the configuration directory (-c argument or
# $RECOLL_CONFDIR).  If nothing is specified, the default is then
# ~/.recoll/xapiandb/</descr></var>
dbdir = xapiandb

# <var name="idxstatusfile" type="fn">
#
# <brief>Name of the scratch file where the indexer process updates its
# status.</brief><descr>Default: idxstatus.txt inside the configuration
# directory.</descr></var>
#idxstatusfile = idxstatus.txt

# <var name="mboxcachedir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Directory location for storing mbox message offsets cache
# files.</brief><descr>This is normally 'mboxcache' under cachedir if set,
# or else under the configuration directory, but it may be useful to share
# a directory between different configurations.</descr></var>
#mboxcachedir = mboxcache

# <var name="mboxcacheminmbs" type="int">
#
# <brief>Minimum mbox file size over which we cache the offsets.</brief>
# <descr>There is really no sense in caching offsets for small files. The
# default is 5 MB.</descr></var>
#mboxcacheminmbs = 5

# <var name="webcachedir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Directory where we store the archived web pages.</brief>
# <descr>This is only used by the web history indexing code
# Default: cachedir/webcache if cachedir is set, else
# $RECOLL_CONFDIR/webcache</descr></var>
webcachedir = webcache

# <var name="webcachemaxmbs" type="int">
# <brief>Maximum size in MB of the Web archive.</brief>
# <descr>This is only used by the web history indexing code.
# Default: 40 MB.
# Reducing the size will not physically truncate the file.</descr></var>
webcachemaxmbs = 40

# <var name="webqueuedir" type="fn">
#
# <brief>The path to the Web indexing queue.</brief><descr>This used to be
# hard-coded in the old plugin as ~/.recollweb/ToIndex so there would be no
# need or possibility to change it, but the WebExtensions plugin now downloads
# the files to the user Downloads directory, and a script moves them to
# webqueuedir. The script reads this value from the config so it has become
# possible to change it.</descr></var>
#webqueuedir = ~/.recollweb/ToIndex

# <var name="webdownloadsdir" type="fn">
#
# <brief>The path to browser downloads directory.</brief><descr>This is
# where the new browser add-on extension has to create the files. They are
# then moved by a script to webqueuedir.</descr></var>
#webdownloadsdir = ~/Downloads

# <var name="aspellDicDir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Aspell dictionary storage directory location.</brief> <descr>The
# aspell dictionary (aspdict.(lang).rws) is normally stored in the
# directory specified by cachedir if set, or under the configuration
# directory.</descr></var>
#aspellDicDir = 

# <var name="filtersdir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Directory location for executable input handlers.</brief><descr>If
# RECOLL_FILTERSDIR is set in the environment, we use it instead. Defaults
# to $prefix/share/recoll/filters. Can be redefined for
# subdirectories.</descr></var>
#filtersdir = /path/to/my/filters

# <var name="iconsdir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Directory location for icons.</brief><descr>The only reason to
# change this would be if you want to change the icons displayed in the
# result list. Defaults to $prefix/share/recoll/images</descr></var>
#iconsdir = /path/to/my/icons

# <grouptitle id="PERFS">Parameters affecting indexing performance and
# resource usage</grouptitle> 

# <var name="idxflushmb" type="int">
#
# <brief>Threshold (megabytes of new data) where we flush from memory to
# disk index.</brief> <descr>Setting this allows some control over memory
# usage by the indexer process. A value of 0 means no explicit flushing,
# which lets Xapian perform its own thing, meaning flushing every
# $XAPIAN_FLUSH_THRESHOLD documents created, modified or deleted: as memory
# usage depends on average document size, not only document count, the
# Xapian approach is is not very useful, and you should let Recoll manage
# the flushes. The program compiled value is 0. The configured default
# value (from this file) is 10 MB, and will be too low in many cases (it is
# chosen to conserve memory). If you are looking
# for maximum speed, you may want to experiment with values between 20 and
# 200. In my experience, values beyond this are always counterproductive. If
# you find otherwise, please drop me a note.</descr></var>
idxflushmb = 10

# <var name="filtermaxseconds" type="int">
# 
# <brief>Maximum external filter execution time in
# seconds.</brief><descr>Default 1200 (20mn). Set to 0 for no limit. This
# is mainly to avoid infinite loops in postscript files
# (loop.ps)</descr></var>
filtermaxseconds = 1200

# <var name="filtermaxmbytes" type="int">
# 
# <brief>Maximum virtual memory space for filter processes
# (setrlimit(RLIMIT_AS)), in megabytes.</brief> <descr>Note that this
# includes any mapped libs (there is no reliable Linux way to limit the
# data space only), so we need to be a bit generous here. Anything over
# 2000 will be ignored on 32 bits machines.</descr></var>
filtermaxmbytes = 2000

# <var name="thrQSizes" type="string">
# 
# <brief>Stage input queues configuration.</brief> <descr>There are three
# internal queues in the indexing pipeline stages (file data extraction,
# terms generation, index update). This parameter defines the queue depths
# for each stage (three integer values). If a value of -1 is given for a
# given stage, no queue is used, and the thread will go on performing the
# next stage. In practise, deep queues have not been shown to increase
# performance. Default: a value of 0 for the first queue tells Recoll to
# perform autoconfiguration based on the detected number of CPUs (no need
# for the two other values in this case).  Use thrQSizes = -1 -1 -1 to
# disable multithreading entirely.</descr></var>
thrQSizes = 0

# <var name="thrTCounts" type="string">
#
# <brief>Number of threads used for each indexing stage.</brief> <descr>The
# three stages are: file data extraction, terms generation, index
# update). The use of the counts is also controlled by some special values
# in thrQSizes: if the first queue depth is 0, all counts are ignored
# (autoconfigured); if a value of -1 is used for a queue depth, the
# corresponding thread count is ignored. It makes no sense to use a value
# other than 1 for the last stage because updating the Xapian index is
# necessarily single-threaded (and protected by a mutex).</descr></var>
#thrTCounts = 4 2 1


# <grouptitle id="MISC">Miscellaneous parameters</grouptitle>

# <var name="loglevel" type="int">
#
# <brief>Log file verbosity 1-6.</brief> <descr>A value of 2 will print
# only errors and warnings. 3 will print information like document updates,
# 4 is quite verbose and 6 very verbose.</descr></var>
loglevel = 3

# <var name="logfilename" type="fn">
#
# <brief>Log file destination. Use 'stderr' (default) to write to the
# console.</brief><descr></descr></var>
logfilename = stderr

# <var name="idxloglevel" type="int">
#
# <brief>Override loglevel for the indexer.</brief><descr></descr></var>
#idxloglevel = 3

# <var name="idxlogfilename" type="fn">
#
# <brief>Override logfilename for the indexer.</brief><descr></descr></var>
#idxlogfilename = stderr

# <var name="daemloglevel" type="int">
#
# <brief>Override loglevel for the indexer in real time
# mode.</brief><descr>The default is to use the idx... values if set, else
# the log... values.</descr></var>
#daemloglevel = 3

# <var name="daemlogfilename" type="fn">
#
# <brief>Override logfilename for the indexer in real time
# mode.</brief><descr>The default is to use the idx... values if set, else
# the log... values.</descr></var>
#daemlogfilename = /dev/null

# <var name="orgidxconfdir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Original location of the configuration directory.</brief>
# <descr>This is used exclusively for movable datasets. Locating the
# configuration directory inside the directory tree makes it possible to
# provide automatic query time path translations once the data set has
# moved (for example, because it has been mounted on another
# location).</descr></var>
#orgidxconfdir = 

# <var name="curidxconfdir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Current location of the configuration directory.</brief>
# <descr>Complement orgidxconfdir for movable datasets. This should be used
# if the configuration directory has been copied from the dataset to
# another location, either because the dataset is readonly and an r/w copy
# is desired, or for performance reasons. This records the original moved
# location before copy, to allow path translation computations.  For
# example if a dataset originally indexed as '/home/me/mydata/config' has
# been mounted to '/media/me/mydata', and the GUI is running from a copied
# configuration, orgidxconfdir would be '/home/me/mydata/config', and
# curidxconfdir (as set in the copied configuration) would be
# '/media/me/mydata/config'.</descr></var>
#curidxconfdir = 

# <var name="idxrundir" type="dfn">
#
# <brief>Indexing process current directory.</brief> <descr>The input
# handlers sometimes leave temporary files in the current directory, so it
# makes sense to have recollindex chdir to some temporary directory. If the
# value is empty, the current directory is not changed. If the
# value is (literal) tmp, we use the temporary directory as set by the
# environment (RECOLL_TMPDIR else TMPDIR else /tmp). If the value is an
# absolute path to a directory, we go there.</descr></var>
idxrundir = tmp

# <var name="checkneedretryindexscript" type="fn">
#
# <brief>Script used to heuristically check if we need to retry indexing
# files which previously failed. </brief> <descr>The default script checks
# the modified dates on /usr/bin and /usr/local/bin. A relative path will
# be looked up in the filters dirs, then in the path. Use an absolute path
# to do otherwise.</descr></var>
checkneedretryindexscript = rclcheckneedretry.sh

# <var name="recollhelperpath" type="string">
#
# <brief>Additional places to search for helper executables.</brief>
# <descr>This is only used on Windows for now.</descr></var>
#recollhelperpath = c:/someprog/bin;c:/someotherprog/bin

# <var name="idxabsmlen" type="int">
#
# <brief>Length of abstracts we store while indexing.</brief>
# <descr>Recoll stores an abstract for each indexed file.
# The text can come from an actual 'abstract' section in the
# document or will just be the beginning of the document. It is stored in
# the index so that it can be displayed inside the result lists without
# decoding the original file. The idxabsmlen parameter
# defines the size of the stored abstract. The default value is 250
# bytes. The search interface gives you the choice to display this stored
# text or a synthetic abstract built by extracting text around the search
# terms. If you always prefer the synthetic abstract, you can reduce this
# value and save a little space.</descr></var>
#idxabsmlen = 250

# <var name="idxmetastoredlen" type="int">
#
# <brief>Truncation length of stored metadata fields.</brief><descr>This
# does not affect indexing (the whole field is processed anyway), just the
# amount of data stored in the index for the purpose of displaying fields
# inside result lists or previews. The default value is 150 bytes which
# may be too low if you have custom fields.</descr></var> 
#idxmetastoredlen = 150

# <var name="idxtexttruncatelen" type="int">
#
# <brief>Truncation length for all document texts.</brief><descr>Only index
# the beginning of documents. This is not recommended except if you are
# sure that the interesting keywords are at the top and have severe disk
# space issues.</descr></var> 
#idxtexttruncatelen = 0

# <var name="aspellLanguage" type="string">
#
# <brief>Language definitions to use when creating the aspell
# dictionary.</brief><descr>The value must match a set of aspell language
# definition files. You can type "aspell dicts"  to see a list The default
# if this is not set is to use the NLS environment to guess the
# value.</descr></var>
#aspellLanguage = en

# <var name="aspellAddCreateParam" type="string">
#
# <brief>Additional option and parameter to aspell dictionary creation
# command.</brief><descr>Some aspell packages may need an additional option
# (e.g. on Debian Jessie: --local-data-dir=/usr/lib/aspell). See Debian bug
# 772415.</descr></var>
#aspellAddCreateParam = --local-data-dir=/usr/lib/aspell

# <var name="aspellKeepStderr" type="bool">
#
# <brief>Set this to have a look at aspell dictionary creation
# errors.</brief><descr>There are always many, so this is mostly for 
# debugging.</descr></var>
#aspellKeepStderr = 1

# <var name="noaspell" type="bool">
#
# <brief>Disable aspell use.</brief><descr>The aspell dictionary generation
# takes time, and some combinations of aspell version, language, and local
# terms, result in aspell crashing, so it sometimes makes sense to just
# disable the thing.</descr></var>
#noaspell = 1

# <var name="monauxinterval" type="int">
#
# <brief>Auxiliary database update interval.</brief><descr>The real time
# indexer only updates the auxiliary databases (stemdb, aspell)
# periodically, because it would be too costly to do it for every document
# change. The default period is one hour.</descr></var>
#monauxinterval = 3600

# <var name="monixinterval" type="int">
# 
# <brief>Minimum interval (seconds) between processings of the indexing
# queue.</brief><descr>The real time indexer does not process each event
# when it comes in, but lets the queue accumulate, to diminish overhead and
# to aggregate multiple events affecting the same file. Default 30
# S.</descr></var>
#monixinterval = 30

# <var name="mondelaypatterns" type="string">
#
# <brief>Timing parameters for the real time indexing.</brief>
# <descr>Definitions for files which get a longer delay before reindexing
# is allowed. This is for fast-changing files, that should only be
# reindexed once in a while. A list of wildcardPattern:seconds pairs. The
# patterns are matched with fnmatch(pattern, path, 0) You can quote entries
# containing white space with double quotes (quote the whole entry, not the
# pattern). The default is empty.
# Example: mondelaypatterns = *.log:20 "*with spaces.*:30"</descr></var>
#mondelaypatterns = *.log:20  "*with spaces.*:30"

# <var name="monioniceclass" type="int">
#
# <brief>ionice class for the real time indexing process</brief>
# <descr>On platforms where this is supported. The default value is
# 3.</descr></var> 
# monioniceclass = 3

# <var name="monioniceclassdata" type="string">
#
# <brief>ionice class parameter for the real time indexing process.</brief>
# <descr>On platforms where this is supported. The default is
# empty.</descr></var>
#monioniceclassdata = 



# <grouptitle id="QUERY">Query-time parameters (no impact on the
# index)</grouptitle> 

# <var name="autodiacsens" type="bool">
#
# <brief>auto-trigger diacritics sensitivity (raw index only).</brief>
# <descr>IF the index is not stripped, decide if we automatically trigger
# diacritics sensitivity if the search term has accented characters (not in
# unac_except_trans). Else you need to use the query language and the "D"
# modifier to specify diacritics sensitivity. Default is no.</descr></var>
autodiacsens = 0

# <var name="autocasesens" type="bool">
#
# <brief>auto-trigger case sensitivity (raw index only).</brief><descr>IF
# the index is not stripped (see indexStripChars), decide if we
# automatically trigger character case sensitivity if the search term has
# upper-case characters in any but the first position. Else you need to use
# the query language and the "C" modifier to specify character-case
# sensitivity. Default is yes.</descr></var>
autocasesens = 1

# <var name="maxTermExpand" type="int"><brief>Maximum query expansion count
# for a single term (e.g.: when using wildcards).</brief><descr>This only
# affects queries, not indexing. We used to not limit this at all (except
# for filenames where the limit was too low at 1000), but it is
# unreasonable with a big index. Default 10000.</descr></var>
maxTermExpand = 10000

# <var name="maxXapianClauses" type="int"><brief>Maximum number of clauses
# we add to a single Xapian query.</brief><descr>This only affects queries,
# not indexing. In some cases, the result of term expansion can be
# multiplicative, and we want to avoid eating all the memory. Default
# 50000.</descr></var>
maxXapianClauses = 50000

# <var name="snippetMaxPosWalk" type="int">
#
# <brief>Maximum number of positions we walk while populating a snippet for
# the result list.</brief><descr>The default of 1,000,000 may be
# insufficient for very big documents, the consequence would be snippets
# with possibly meaning-altering missing words.</descr></var>
snippetMaxPosWalk = 1000000


# <grouptitle id="PDF">Parameters for the PDF input script</grouptitle>

# <var name="pdfocr" type="bool">
#
# <brief>Attempt OCR of PDF files with no text content if both tesseract and
# pdftoppm are installed.</brief><descr>The default is off because OCR is so
# very slow.</descr></var>
#pdfocr = 0

# <var name="pdfattach" type="bool">
#
# <brief>Enable PDF attachment extraction by executing pdftk (if
# available).</brief><descr>This is
# normally disabled, because it does slow down PDF indexing a bit even if
# not one attachment is ever found.</descr></var>
#pdfattach = 0

# <var name="pdfextrameta" type="string">
#
# <brief>Extract text from selected XMP metadata tags.</brief><descr>This
# is a space-separated list of qualified XMP tag names. Each element can also
# include a translation to a Recoll field name, separated by a '|'
# character. If the second element is absent, the tag name is used as the
# Recoll field names. You will also need to add specifications to the
# 'fields' file to direct processing of the extracted data.</descr></var>
#pdfextrameta =  bibtex:location|location bibtex:booktitle bibtex:pages

# <var name="pdfextrametafix" type="fn">
#
# <brief>Define name of XMP field editing script.</brief><descr>This
# defines the name of a script to be loaded for editing XMP field
# values. The script should define a 'MetaFixer' class with a metafix()
# method which will be called with the qualified tag name and value of each
# selected field, for editing or erasing. A new instance is created for
# each document, so that the object can keep state for, e.g. eliminating
# duplicate values.</descr></var>
#pdfextrametafix =  /path/to/fixerscript.py


# <grouptitle id="SPECLOCATIONS">Parameters set for specific
# locations</grouptitle> 

# You could specify different parameters for a subdirectory like this:
#[~/hungariandocs/plain]
#defaultcharset = iso-8859-2

[/usr/share/man]
followLinks = 1

# <var name="mhmboxquirks" type="string">
#
# <brief>Enable thunderbird/mozilla-seamonkey mbox format quirks</brief>
# <descr>Set this for the directory where the email mbox files are
# stored.</descr></var>
[~/.thunderbird]
mhmboxquirks = tbird
[~/.mozilla]
mhmboxquirks = tbird

# pidgin / purple directories for irc chats have names beginning with #
[~/.purple]
skippedNames =