-.TH "MYMAIL" "0.9" "February 2013" "Francois Fleuret" "User Commands"
+.TH "MYMAIL" "0.9.1" "February 2013" "Francois Fleuret" "User Commands"
\" This man page was written by Francois Fleuret <francois@fleuret.org>
\" and is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike
\fB-v\fR, \fB--version\fR
print the version number
.TP
+\fB-q\fR, \fB--quiet\fR
+do not write information during the search
+.TP
\fB-p <db filename pattern>\fR, \fB--db-pattern <db filename pattern>\fR
set the db filename pattern for recursive search
.TP
\fB-i\fR, \fB--index\fR
index mails in the mailboxes located recursively anywhere in the
directories following the options on the command lines
+.TP
+\fB-o <output filename>\fR, \fB--output <output filename>\fR
+set the db filename pattern for recursive search
.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
\fBd <regexp>\fR (date) selects mails whose field Date: matches the regexp.
.TP
\fBb <regexp>\fR (body) selects mails whose body matches the
-regexp. This needs to read fully the original mboxes and can take a
-long time. Other conditions have to be fulfilled before the body is
-read though.
+regexp. This requires reading the original mboxes completely, which
+can be slow. Header conditions have to be fulfilled before checking
+the body ones, which may speed things up.
.SH "EXAMPLES"