RECOLL.CONF(5) File Formats Manual RECOLL.CONF(5)

recoll.conf - main personal configuration file for Recoll

This file defines the index configuration for the Recoll full-text search system.

The system-wide configuration file is normally located inside /usr/[local]/share/recoll/examples. Any parameter set in the common file may be overridden by setting it in the personal configuration file, by default: $HOME/.recoll/recoll.conf

Please note while I try to keep this manual page reasonably up to date, it will frequently lag the current state of the software. The best source of information about the configuration are the comments in the system-wide configuration file or the user manual which you can access from the recoll GUI help menu or on the recoll web site.

A short extract of the file might look as follows:

# Space-separated list of directories to index.
topdirs =  ~/docs /usr/share/doc
[~/somedirectory-with-utf8-txt-files]
defaultcharset = utf-8

There are three kinds of lines:

  • Comment or empty
  • Parameter affectation
  • Section definition

Empty lines or lines beginning with # are ignored.

Affectation lines are in the form 'name = value'.

Section lines allow redefining a parameter for a directory subtree. Some of the parameters used for indexing are looked up hierarchically from the more to the less specific. Not all parameters can be meaningfully redefined, this is specified for each in the next section.

The tilde character (~) is expanded in file names to the name of the user's home directory.

Where values are lists, white space is used for separation, and elements with embedded spaces can be quoted with double-quotes.

Space-separated list of files or directories to recursively index. Default to ~ (indexes $HOME). You can use symbolic links in the list, they will be followed, independently of the value of the followLinks variable.
Space-separated list of files or directories to monitor for updates. 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.
Files and directories which should be ignored. 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.
List of name endings to remove from the default skippedNames list.
List of name endings to add to the default skippedNames list.
Regular file name filter patterns If this is set, only the file names not in skippedNames and matching one of the patterns will be considered for indexing. Can be redefined per subtree. Does not apply to directories.
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. 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.
List of name endings to remove from the default noContentSuffixes list.
List of name endings to add to the default noContentSuffixes list.
Absolute paths we should not go into. Space-separated list of wildcard expressions for absolute filesystem paths. Must be defined at the top level of the configuration file, not in a subsection. 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 explicitly. 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). Explicitly adding '/media/xxx' to the 'topdirs' variable will override this.
Set to 0 to override use of FNM_PATHNAME for matching skipped paths.
File name which will cause its parent directory to be skipped. Any directory containing a file with this name will be skipped as if it was part of the skippedPaths list. Ex: .recoll-noindex
skippedPaths equivalent specific to real time indexing. This enables having parts of the tree which are initially indexed but not monitored. If daemSkippedPaths is not set, the daemon uses skippedPaths.
Use skippedNames inside Zip archives. Fetched directly by the rclzip.py handler. Skip the patterns defined by skippedNames inside Zip archives. Can be redefined for subdirectories. See https://www.recoll.org/faqsandhowtos/FilteringOutZipArchiveMembers.html
Space-separated list of wildcard expressions for names that should be ignored inside zip archives. 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.recoll.org/faqsandhowtos/FilteringOutZipArchiveMembers.html
Follow symbolic links during indexing. 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.
Restrictive list of indexed mime types. 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.
List of excluded MIME types. 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.
Don't compute md5 for these types. 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.py).
Size limit for compressed files. 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.
Size limit for text files. Mostly for skipping monster logs. Default 20 MB.
Index the file names of unprocessed files Index the names of files the contents of which we don't index because of an excluded or unsupported MIME type.
Use a system command for file MIME type guessing as a final step in file type identification This is generally useful, but will usually cause the indexing of many bogus 'text' files. See 'systemfilecommand' for the command used.
Command used to guess MIME types if the internal methods fails 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")
Decide if we process the Web queue. The queue is a directory where the Recoll Web browser plugins create the copies of visited pages.
Page size for text files. 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.
Size limit for archive members. This is passed to the filters in the environment as RECOLL_FILTER_MAXMEMBERKB.
Decide if we store character case and diacritics in the index. 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.
Decide if we store the documents' text content in the index. 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.
Decides if terms will be generated for numbers. 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.
Determines if we index 'coworker' also when the input is 'co-worker'. This is new in version 1.22, and on by default. Setting the variable to off allows restoring the previous behaviour.
Process backslash as normal letter. This may make sense for people wanting to index TeX commands as such but is not of much general use.
Process underscore as normal letter. This makes sense in so many cases that one wonders if it should not be the default.
Maximum term length. Words longer than this will be discarded. The default is 40 and used to be hard-coded, but it can now be adjusted. You need an index reset if you change the value.
Decides if specific East Asian (Chinese Korean Japanese) characters/word splitting is turned off. 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.
This lets you adjust the size of n-grams used for indexing CJK text. 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.
Languages for which to create stemming expansion data. Stemmer names can be found by executing 'recollindex -l', or this can also be set from a list in the GUI. The values are full language names, e.g. english, french...
Default character set. 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.
A list of characters, encoded in UTF-8, which should be handled specially when converting text to unaccented lowercase. 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
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
Overrides the default character set for email messages which don't specify one. This is mainly useful for readpst (libpst) dumps, which are utf-8 but do not say so.
Set fields on all files (usually of a specific fs area). 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.
Use mtime instead of ctime to test if a file has been modified. 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.
Disable extended attributes conversion to metadata fields. This probably needs to be set if testmodifusemtime is set.
Define commands to gather external metadata, e.g. tmsu tags. 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
Top directory for Recoll data. 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.
Maximum file system occupation over which we stop indexing. The value is a percentage, corresponding to what the "Capacity" df output column shows. The default value is 0, meaning no checking.
Xapian database directory location. 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/
Name of the scratch file where the indexer process updates its status. Default: idxstatus.txt inside the configuration directory.
Directory location for storing mbox message offsets cache files. 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.
Minimum mbox file size over which we cache the offsets. There is really no sense in caching offsets for small files. The default is 5 MB.
Maximum mbox member message size in megabytes. Size over which we assume that the mbox format is bad or we misinterpreted it, at which point we just stop processing the file.
Directory where we store the archived web pages. This is only used by the web history indexing code Default: cachedir/webcache if cachedir is set, else $RECOLL_CONFDIR/webcache
Maximum size in MB of the Web archive. This is only used by the web history indexing code. Default: 40 MB. Reducing the size will not physically truncate the file.
The path to the Web indexing queue. 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.
The path to browser downloads directory. This is where the new browser add-on extension has to create the files. They are then moved by a script to webqueuedir.
Aspell dictionary storage directory location. The aspell dictionary (aspdict.(lang).rws) is normally stored in the directory specified by cachedir if set, or under the configuration directory.
Directory location for executable input handlers. If RECOLL_FILTERSDIR is set in the environment, we use it instead. Defaults to $prefix/share/recoll/filters. Can be redefined for subdirectories.
Directory location for icons. 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
Threshold (megabytes of new data) where we flush from memory to disk index. 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 now 50 MB, and should be ok in many cases. You can set it as low as 10 to conserve memory, but 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.
Maximum external filter execution time in seconds. Default 1200 (20mn). Set to 0 for no limit. This is mainly to avoid infinite loops in postscript files (loop.ps)
Maximum virtual memory space for filter processes (setrlimit(RLIMIT_AS)), in megabytes. 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. The previous default value of 2000 would prevent java pdftk to work when executed from Python rclpdf.py.
Stage input queues configuration. 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.
Number of threads used for each indexing stage. 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).
Log file verbosity 1-6. 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.
Log file destination. Use 'stderr' (default) to write to the console.
Override loglevel for the indexer.
Override logfilename for the indexer.
Override loglevel for the indexer in real time mode. The default is to use the idx... values if set, else the log... values.
Override logfilename for the indexer in real time mode. The default is to use the idx... values if set, else the log... values.
Override loglevel for the python module.
Override logfilename for the python module.
Original location of the configuration directory. 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).
Current location of the configuration directory. 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'.
Indexing process current directory. 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.
Script used to heuristically check if we need to retry indexing files which previously failed. 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.
Additional places to search for helper executables. This is only used on Windows for now.
Length of abstracts we store while indexing. 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.
Truncation length of stored metadata fields. 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.
Truncation length for all document texts. 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.
Language definitions to use when creating the aspell dictionary. 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. The values are the 2-letter language codes (e.g. 'en', 'fr'...)
Additional option and parameter to aspell dictionary creation command. Some aspell packages may need an additional option (e.g. on Debian Jessie: --local-data-dir=/usr/lib/aspell). See Debian bug 772415.
Set this to have a look at aspell dictionary creation errors. There are always many, so this is mostly for debugging.
Disable aspell use. 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.
Auxiliary database update interval. 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.
Minimum interval (seconds) between processings of the indexing queue. 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.
Timing parameters for the real time indexing. 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"
"nice" process priority for the indexing processes. Default: 19 (lowest) Appeared with 1.26.5. Prior versions were fixed at 19.
ionice class for the indexing process. Despite the misleading name, and on platforms where this is supported, this affects all indexing processes, not only the real time/monitoring ones. The default value is 3 (use lowest "Idle" priority).
ionice class level parameter if the class supports it. The default is empty, as the default "Idle" class has no levels.
auto-trigger diacritics sensitivity (raw index only). 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.
auto-trigger case sensitivity (raw index only). 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.
Maximum query expansion count for a single term (e.g.: when using wildcards). 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.
Maximum number of clauses we add to a single Xapian query. 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.
Maximum number of positions we walk while populating a snippet for the result list. The default of 1,000,000 may be insufficient for very big documents, the consequence would be snippets with possibly meaning-altering missing words.
Attempt OCR of PDF files with no text content. This can be defined in subdirectories. The default is off because OCR is so very slow.
Enable PDF attachment extraction by executing pdftk (if available). This is normally disabled, because it does slow down PDF indexing a bit even if not one attachment is ever found.
Extract text from selected XMP metadata tags. 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.
Define name of XMP field editing script. 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.
OCR modules to try. The top OCR script will try to load the corresponding modules in order and use the first which reports being capable of performing OCR on the input file. Modules for tesseract (tesseract) and ABBYY FineReader (abbyy) are present in the standard distribution. For compatibility with the previous version, if this is not defined at all, the default value is "tesseract". Use an explicit empty value if needed. A value of "abbyy tesseract" will try everything.
Location for caching OCR data. The default if this is empty or undefined is to store the cached OCR data under $RECOLL_CONFDIR/ocrcache.
Language to assume for tesseract OCR. Important for improving the OCR accuracy. This can also be set through the contents of a file in the currently processed directory. See the rclocrtesseract.py script. Example values: eng, fra... See the tesseract documentation.
Path for the tesseract command. Do not quote. This is mostly useful on Windows, or for specifying a non-default tesseract command. E.g. on Windows. tesseractcmd = C:/Program Files (x86)/Tesseract-OCR/tesseract.exe
Language to assume for abbyy OCR. Important for improving the OCR accuracy. This can also be set through the contents of a file in the currently processed directory. See the rclocrabbyy.py script. Typical values: English, French... See the ABBYY documentation.
Path for the abbyy command The ABBY directory is usually not in the path, so you should set this.
Enable thunderbird/mozilla-seamonkey mbox format quirks Set this for the directory where the email mbox files are stored.

recollindex(1) recoll(1)

14 November 2012