Configuring aerc for git via email April 20, 2020 on Drew DeVault's blog

I use aerc as my email client (naturally — I wrote it, after all), and I use git send-email to receive patches to many of my projects. I designed aerc specifically to be productive for this workflow, but there are a few extra things that I use in my personal aerc configuration that I thought were worth sharing briefly. This blog post will be boring and clerical, feel free to skip it unless it’s something you’re interested in.

When I want to review a patch, I first tell aerc to :cd sources/<that project>, then I open up the patch and give it a read. If it needs work, I’ll use “rq” (“reply quoted”), a keybinding which is available by default, to open my editor with the patch pre-quoted to trim down and reply with feedback inline. If it looks good, I use the first of my custom keybindings: “ga”, short for git am. The entry in ~/.config/aerc/binds.conf is:

ga = :pipe -mb git am -3<Enter>

This pipes the entire message (-m, in case I’m viewing a message part) into git am -3 (-3 uses a three-way merge, in case of conflicts), in the background (-b). Then I’ll use C-t (ctrl-T), another keybinding which is included by default, to open a terminal tab in that directory, where I can compile the code, run the tests, and so on. When I’m done, I use the “gp” keybinding to push the changes:

gp = :term git push<Enter>

This runs the command in a new terminal, so I can monitor the progress. Finally, I like to reply to the patch, letting the contributor know their work was merged and thanking them for the contribution. I have a keybinding for this, too:

rt = :reply -Tthanks<Enter>

My “thanks” template is at ~/.config/aerc/templates/thanks and looks like this:

Thanks!

{% raw %}
{{exec "{ git remote get-url --push origin;
    git reflog -2 origin/master --pretty=format:%h; }
  | xargs printf 'To %s\n   %s..%s  master -> master\n'" ""}}
{% endraw %}

That git command prints a summary of the most recent push to master. The result is that my editor is pre-filled with something like this:

Thanks!

To git@git.sr.ht:~sircmpwn/builds.sr.ht
   7aabe74..191f4a0  master -> master

I occasionally append a few lines asking questions about follow-up work or clarifying the deployment schedule for the change.

Articles from blogs I read Generated by openring

You cannot have our user's data

As you may have noticed, SourceHut has deployed Anubis to parts of our services to protect ourselves from aggressive LLM crawlers.1 Much ink has been spilled on the subject of the LLM problem elsewhere, and we needn’t revisit that here. I do want to take thi…

via Blogs on Sourcehut April 15, 2025

FOSS tools for infrastructure testing

updated on 2025-04-04: added SPFToolbox Running even a single server connected to the internet can be a challenge these days. There are many technologies involved - some are arcane (DNS), some are constantly evolving (TLS), and some look simple but are amazi…

via blogfehler! April 4, 2025

Building a browser game based on KiCad

I've been making boards in KiCad for a while now. I really enjoy figuring out how to route all the components in the PCB editor, especially the weird "hard" things like differential high speed signals. I'm probably not very good at it but …

via BrixIT Blog April 3, 2025