+++ date = "2022-04-22" draft = false path = "/blog/oh-no-git-send-email" tags = ["git", "tools"] title = "Oh no, `git send-email`" +++ Say you have to contribute to some boomer project that doesn't believe in GitHub or GitLab or Gitea or <...> which would allow for just pushing some changes and filing a pull request. Instead, they want an *email*. Gross. For those who are unfamiliar with the email-patch infrastructure, git is *extremely* picky about emails being the exact format it likes and not getting modified at all by the client. This means that in practice, you need to send your patch emails using `git send-email` as your email client. The patch-emailing features of git are some of its most infamous for poor usability, which is saying something, because git as a whole is known for being hard to use. Theoretically, (by someone who made their own git source hosting service that strangely uses emails to submit patches) will tell you how to set it up. Well, except if `git send-email` has other ideas: it would not send through my email provider for reasons that must have been a bug: I seem to recall it was something to do with either a TLS or SMTP implementation being broken. I ended up needing to use a separate *Mail Transfer Agent* (SMTP-speak for "SMTP client") and plumb it into git. For this, I used `msmtp`. {% codesample(desc="`~/.msmtprc`") %} # Used to identify which account you are using in the msmtp command line account myaccountname # Tunneled-TLS email configuration. Probably correct for most modern servers, # but check your email provider documentation. This is correct for migadu. host smtp.migadu.com port 465 tls on tls_starttls off auth on user user@example.com # From address on the envelope. Probably your email, but not necessarily # (note that this is distinct from the "from" address in the message body that # will be shown to recipients. it needs to match the address subscribed to the # mailing list) from listsubscriber@example.com # Use kwallet-query to get the password because kwallet does not support the # freedesktop secrets protocol # "mail" is the folder on the left hand side of the "Wallet Manager" # and user@example.com is the name of the item passwordeval kwallet-query -r user@example.com kdewallet -f mail {% end %} Then configure git (I keep this in `~/.gitconfig` as I don't really want to check it in for spam reasons, whereas most of my git config is checked in and stored at `~/.config/git/config`): {% codesample(desc="`~/.gitconfig`") %} [sendemail] sendmailcmd = /usr/bin/msmtp smtpserveroption = -a smtpserveroption = myaccountname confirm = always {% end %} Finally, you can send an email: ``` /tmp/nya » git init Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/nya/.git/ /tmp/nya - [main] » echo nyaa > README.md /tmp/nya - [main●] » git add -A /tmp/nya - [main●] » git commit -m 'initial commit' [main (root-commit) 5e2e44d] initial commit 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) create mode 100644 README.md /tmp/nya - [main] » echo nyaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa >> README.md /tmp/nya - [main●] » git commit -am 'more nya' [main 3df1f2d] more nya 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) # NOTE: you probably want to use --compose to write a message to include with # your patch. You can also use --dry-run to do a dry run. /tmp/nya - [main] » git send-email --to='somepoorsoul@example.com' --from=message-from@example.com HEAD^ /tmp/jade/jKCO7nnORw/0001-more-nya.patch (mbox) Adding cc: Jade Lovelace from line 'From: Jade Lovelace ' From: message-from@example.com To: somepoorsoul@example.com Cc: Jade Lovelace Subject: [PATCH] more nya Date: Fri, 22 Apr 2022 20:45:30 -0700 Message-Id: <20220423034529.3057172-1-message-from@example.com> X-Mailer: git-send-email 2.35.2 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Send this email? ([y]es|[n]o|[e]dit|[q]uit|[a]ll): y OK. Log says: Sendmail: /usr/bin/msmtp -a message-from@example.com -i somepoorsoul@example.com commitauthor@example.com From: message-from@example.com To: somepoorsoul@example.com Cc: Jade Lovelace Subject: [PATCH] more nya Date: Fri, 22 Apr 2022 20:45:30 -0700 Message-Id: <20220423034529.3057172-1-message-from@example.com> X-Mailer: git-send-email 2.35.2 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Result: OK ``` And, yes, it was received: {% image(name="received.png", colocated=true) %} Screenshot of the email sent by git in an email client. It shows the patch as you'd see with the output of format-patch. {% end %} See? That was ~~sooooo easy~~ very hard for no reason.