notmuch/devel/nmbug/nmbug-status

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#!/usr/bin/python
#
# Copyright (c) 2011-2012 David Bremner <david@tethera.net>
#
# dependencies
# - python 2.6 for json
# - argparse; either python 2.7, or install separately
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ .
"""Generate HTML for one or more notmuch searches.
Messages matching each search are grouped by thread. Each message
that contains both a subject and message-id will have the displayed
subject link to the Gmane view of the message.
"""
from __future__ import print_function
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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from __future__ import unicode_literals
import codecs
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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import collections
import datetime
import email.utils
try: # Python 3
from urllib.parse import quote
except ImportError: # Python 2
from urllib import quote
import json
import argparse
import os
import re
import sys
import subprocess
import xml.sax.saxutils
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_ENCODING = 'UTF-8'
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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_PAGES = {}
if not hasattr(collections, 'OrderedDict'): # Python 2.6 or earlier
class _OrderedDict (dict):
"Just enough of a stub to get through Page._get_threads"
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(_OrderedDict, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self._keys = [] # record key order
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
super(_OrderedDict, self).__setitem__(key, value)
self._keys.append(key)
def values(self):
for key in self._keys:
yield self[key]
collections.OrderedDict = _OrderedDict
class ConfigError (Exception):
"""Errors with config file usage
"""
pass
def read_config(path=None, encoding=None):
"Read config from json file"
if not encoding:
encoding = _ENCODING
if path:
try:
with open(path, 'rb') as f:
config_bytes = f.read()
except IOError as e:
raise ConfigError('Could not read config from {}'.format(path))
else:
nmbhome = os.getenv('NMBGIT', os.path.expanduser('~/.nmbug'))
branch = 'config'
filename = 'status-config.json'
# read only the first line from the pipe
sha1_bytes = subprocess.Popen(
['git', '--git-dir', nmbhome, 'show-ref', '-s', '--heads', branch],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE).stdout.readline()
sha1 = sha1_bytes.decode(encoding).rstrip()
if not sha1:
raise ConfigError(
("No local branch '{branch}' in {nmbgit}. "
'Checkout a local {branch} branch or explicitly set --config.'
).format(branch=branch, nmbgit=nmbhome))
p = subprocess.Popen(
['git', '--git-dir', nmbhome, 'cat-file', 'blob',
'{}:{}'.format(sha1, filename)],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
config_bytes, err = p.communicate()
status = p.wait()
if status != 0:
raise ConfigError(
("Missing status-config.json in branch '{branch}' of"
'{nmbgit}. Add the file or explicitly set --config.'
).format(branch=branch, nmbgit=nmbhome))
config_json = config_bytes.decode(encoding)
try:
return json.loads(config_json)
except ValueError as e:
if not path:
path = "{} in branch '{}' of {}".format(
filename, branch, nmbhome)
raise ConfigError(
'Could not parse JSON from the config file {}:\n{}'.format(
path, e))
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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class Thread (list):
def __init__(self):
self.running_data = {}
class Page (object):
def __init__(self, header=None, footer=None):
self.header = header
self.footer = footer
def write(self, database, views, stream=None):
if not stream:
try: # Python 3
byte_stream = sys.stdout.buffer
except AttributeError: # Python 2
byte_stream = sys.stdout
stream = codecs.getwriter(encoding=_ENCODING)(stream=byte_stream)
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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self._write_header(views=views, stream=stream)
for view in views:
self._write_view(database=database, view=view, stream=stream)
self._write_footer(views=views, stream=stream)
def _write_header(self, views, stream):
if self.header:
stream.write(self.header)
def _write_footer(self, views, stream):
if self.footer:
stream.write(self.footer)
def _write_view(self, database, view, stream):
if 'query-string' not in view:
query = view['query']
view['query-string'] = ' and '.join(query)
q = notmuch.Query(database, view['query-string'])
q.set_sort(notmuch.Query.SORT.OLDEST_FIRST)
threads = self._get_threads(messages=q.search_messages())
self._write_view_header(view=view, stream=stream)
self._write_threads(threads=threads, stream=stream)
def _get_threads(self, messages):
threads = collections.OrderedDict()
for message in messages:
thread_id = message.get_thread_id()
if thread_id in threads:
thread = threads[thread_id]
else:
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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thread = Thread()
threads[thread_id] = thread
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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thread.running_data, display_data = self._message_display_data(
running_data=thread.running_data, message=message)
thread.append(display_data)
return list(threads.values())
def _write_view_header(self, view, stream):
pass
def _write_threads(self, threads, stream):
for thread in threads:
for message_display_data in thread:
stream.write(
('{date:10.10s} {from:20.20s} {subject:40.40s}\n'
'{message-id-term:>72}\n'
).format(**message_display_data))
if thread != threads[-1]:
stream.write('\n')
def _message_display_data(self, running_data, message):
headers = ('thread-id', 'message-id', 'date', 'from', 'subject')
data = {}
for header in headers:
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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if header == 'thread-id':
value = message.get_thread_id()
elif header == 'message-id':
value = message.get_message_id()
data['message-id-term'] = 'id:"{0}"'.format(value)
elif header == 'date':
value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(
message.get_date()).date())
else:
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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value = message.get_header(header)
if header == 'from':
(value, addr) = email.utils.parseaddr(value)
if not value:
value = addr.split('@')[0]
data[header] = value
next_running_data = data.copy()
for header, value in data.items():
if header in ['message-id', 'subject']:
continue
if value == running_data.get(header, None):
data[header] = ''
return (next_running_data, data)
class HtmlPage (Page):
_slug_regexp = re.compile('\W+')
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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def _write_header(self, views, stream):
super(HtmlPage, self)._write_header(views=views, stream=stream)
stream.write('<ul>\n')
for view in views:
if 'id' not in view:
view['id'] = self._slug(view['title'])
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
stream.write(
'<li><a href="#{id}">{title}</a></li>\n'.format(**view))
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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stream.write('</ul>\n')
def _write_view_header(self, view, stream):
stream.write('<h3 id="{id}">{title}</h3>\n'.format(**view))
stream.write('<p>\n')
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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if 'comment' in view:
stream.write(view['comment'])
stream.write('\n')
for line in [
'The view is generated from the following query:',
'</p>',
'<p>',
' <code>',
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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view['query-string'],
' </code>',
'</p>',
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
]:
stream.write(line)
stream.write('\n')
def _write_threads(self, threads, stream):
if not threads:
return
stream.write('<table>\n')
for thread in threads:
2014-02-14 17:48:52 +01:00
stream.write(' <tbody>\n')
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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for message_display_data in thread:
stream.write((
' <tr class="message-first">\n'
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' <td>{date}</td>\n'
' <td><code>{message-id-term}</code></td>\n'
' </tr>\n'
' <tr class="message-last">\n'
2014-02-14 17:48:52 +01:00
' <td>{from}</td>\n'
' <td>{subject}</td>\n'
' </tr>\n'
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
).format(**message_display_data))
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stream.write(' </tbody>\n')
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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if thread != threads[-1]:
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stream.write(
' <tbody><tr><td colspan="2"><br /></td></tr></tbody>\n')
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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stream.write('</table>\n')
def _message_display_data(self, *args, **kwargs):
running_data, display_data = super(
HtmlPage, self)._message_display_data(
*args, **kwargs)
if 'subject' in display_data and 'message-id' in display_data:
d = {
'message-id': quote(display_data['message-id']),
'subject': xml.sax.saxutils.escape(display_data['subject']),
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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}
display_data['subject'] = (
'<a href="http://mid.gmane.org/{message-id}">{subject}</a>'
).format(**d)
for key in ['message-id', 'from']:
if key in display_data:
display_data[key] = xml.sax.saxutils.escape(display_data[key])
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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return (running_data, display_data)
def _slug(self, string):
return self._slug_regexp.sub('-', string)
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description=__doc__)
parser.add_argument('--text', help='output plain text format',
action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--config', help='load config from given file',
metavar='PATH')
parser.add_argument('--list-views', help='list views',
action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--get-query', help='get query for view',
metavar='VIEW')
args = parser.parse_args()
try:
config = read_config(path=args.config)
except ConfigError as e:
print(e)
sys.exit(1)
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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header_template = config['meta'].get('header', '''<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset={encoding}" />
<title>{title}</title>
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<style media="screen" type="text/css">
table {{
border-spacing: 0;
}}
tr.message-first td {{
padding-top: {inter_message_padding};
}}
tr.message-last td {{
padding-bottom: {inter_message_padding};
}}
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td {{
padding-left: {border_radius};
padding-right: {border_radius};
}}
tr:first-child td:first-child {{
border-top-left-radius: {border_radius};
}}
tr:first-child td:last-child {{
border-top-right-radius: {border_radius};
}}
tr:last-child td:first-child {{
border-bottom-left-radius: {border_radius};
}}
tr:last-child td:last-child {{
border-bottom-right-radius: {border_radius};
}}
tbody:nth-child(4n+1) tr td {{
background-color: #ffd96e;
}}
tbody:nth-child(4n+3) tr td {{
background-color: #bce;
}}
hr {{
border: 0;
height: 1px;
color: #ccc;
background-color: #ccc;
}}
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</style>
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
</head>
<body>
<h2>{title}</h2>
{blurb}
</p>
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
<h3>Views</h3>
''')
footer_template = config['meta'].get('footer', '''
<hr>
<p>Generated: {datetime}
</body>
</html>
''')
now = datetime.datetime.utcnow()
context = {
'date': now,
'datetime': now.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%SZ'),
'title': config['meta']['title'],
'blurb': config['meta']['blurb'],
'encoding': _ENCODING,
'inter_message_padding': '0.25em',
'border_radius': '0.5em',
}
_PAGES['text'] = Page()
_PAGES['html'] = HtmlPage(
header=header_template.format(**context),
footer=footer_template.format(**context),
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
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)
if args.list_views:
for view in config['views']:
print(view['title'])
sys.exit(0)
elif args.get_query != None:
for view in config['views']:
if args.get_query == view['title']:
print(' and '.join(view['query']))
sys.exit(0)
else:
# only import notmuch if needed
import notmuch
if args.text:
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
page = _PAGES['text']
else:
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
page = _PAGES['html']
db = notmuch.Database(mode=notmuch.Database.MODE.READ_ONLY)
nmbug-status: Add Page and HtmlPage for modular rendering I was having trouble understanding the logic of the longish print_view function, so I refactored the output generation into modular bits. The basic text rendering is handled by Page, which has enough hooks that HtmlPage can borrow the logic and slot-in HTML generators. By modularizing the logic it should also be easier to build other renderers if folks want to customize the layout for other projects. Timezones ========= This commit has not effect on the output, except that some dates have been converted from the sender's timezone to UTC due to: - val = m.get_header(header) - ... - if header == 'date': - val = str.join(' ', val.split(None)[1:4]) - val = str(datetime.datetime.strptime(val, '%d %b %Y').date()) ... + value = str(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp( + message.get_date()).date()) I also tweaked the HTML header date to be utcnow instead of the local now() to make all times independent of the generator's local time. This matches Gmane, which converts all Date headers to UTC (although they use a 'GMT' suffix). Notmuch uses g_mime_utils_header_decode_date to calculate the UTC timestamps, but uses a NULL tz_offset which drops the information we'd need to get back to the sender's local time [1]. With the generator's local time arbitrarily different from the sender's and viewer's local time, sticking with UTC seems the best bet. [1]: https://developer.gnome.org/gmime/stable/gmime-gmime-utils.html#g-mime-utils-header-decode-date
2014-02-10 19:40:31 +01:00
page.write(database=db, views=config['views'])