notmuch/lib/notmuch.h

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/* notmuch - Not much of an email library, (just index and search)
*
* Copyright © 2009 Carl Worth
*
* 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 https://www.gnu.org/licenses/ .
*
* Author: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
*/
/**
* @defgroup notmuch The notmuch API
*
* Not much of an email library, (just index and search)
*
* @{
*/
#ifndef NOTMUCH_H
#define NOTMUCH_H
#ifndef __DOXYGEN__
#ifdef __cplusplus
# define NOTMUCH_BEGIN_DECLS extern "C" {
# define NOTMUCH_END_DECLS }
#else
# define NOTMUCH_BEGIN_DECLS
# define NOTMUCH_END_DECLS
#endif
NOTMUCH_BEGIN_DECLS
#include <time.h>
#pragma GCC visibility push(default)
#ifndef FALSE
#define FALSE 0
#endif
#ifndef TRUE
#define TRUE 1
#endif
/*
* The library version number. This must agree with the soname
* version in Makefile.local.
*/
#define LIBNOTMUCH_MAJOR_VERSION 5
#define LIBNOTMUCH_MINOR_VERSION 2
#define LIBNOTMUCH_MICRO_VERSION 0
#if defined (__clang_major__) && __clang_major__ >= 3 \
|| defined (__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ >= 5 \
|| defined (__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 5
#define NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED(major, minor) \
__attribute__ ((deprecated ("function deprecated as of libnotmuch " #major "." #minor)))
#else
#define NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED(major, minor) __attribute__ ((deprecated))
#endif
#endif /* __DOXYGEN__ */
/**
* Check the version of the notmuch library being compiled against.
*
* Return true if the library being compiled against is of the
* specified version or above. For example:
*
* @code
* #if LIBNOTMUCH_CHECK_VERSION(3, 1, 0)
* (code requiring libnotmuch 3.1.0 or above)
* #endif
* @endcode
*
* LIBNOTMUCH_CHECK_VERSION has been defined since version 3.1.0; to
* check for versions prior to that, use:
*
* @code
* #if !defined(NOTMUCH_CHECK_VERSION)
* (code requiring libnotmuch prior to 3.1.0)
* #endif
* @endcode
*/
#define LIBNOTMUCH_CHECK_VERSION(major, minor, micro) \
(LIBNOTMUCH_MAJOR_VERSION > (major) || \
(LIBNOTMUCH_MAJOR_VERSION == (major) && LIBNOTMUCH_MINOR_VERSION > (minor)) || \
(LIBNOTMUCH_MAJOR_VERSION == (major) && LIBNOTMUCH_MINOR_VERSION == (minor) && \
LIBNOTMUCH_MICRO_VERSION >= (micro)))
/**
* Notmuch boolean type.
*/
typedef int notmuch_bool_t;
/**
* Status codes used for the return values of most functions.
*
* A zero value (NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS) indicates that the function
* completed without error. Any other value indicates an error.
*/
typedef enum _notmuch_status {
/**
* No error occurred.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS = 0,
/**
* Out of memory.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_OUT_OF_MEMORY,
/**
* An attempt was made to write to a database opened in read-only
* mode.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE,
/**
* A Xapian exception occurred.
*
* @todo We don't really want to expose this lame XAPIAN_EXCEPTION
* value. Instead we should map to things like DATABASE_LOCKED or
* whatever.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION,
/**
* An error occurred trying to read or write to a file (this could
* be file not found, permission denied, etc.)
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_FILE_ERROR,
/**
* A file was presented that doesn't appear to be an email
* message.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_FILE_NOT_EMAIL,
/**
* A file contains a message ID that is identical to a message
* already in the database.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_DUPLICATE_MESSAGE_ID,
/**
* The user erroneously passed a NULL pointer to a notmuch
* function.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER,
/**
* A tag value is too long (exceeds NOTMUCH_TAG_MAX).
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_TAG_TOO_LONG,
/**
* The notmuch_message_thaw function has been called more times
* than notmuch_message_freeze.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_UNBALANCED_FREEZE_THAW,
/**
* notmuch_database_end_atomic has been called more times than
* notmuch_database_begin_atomic.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_UNBALANCED_ATOMIC,
/**
* The operation is not supported.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION,
/**
* The operation requires a database upgrade.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_UPGRADE_REQUIRED,
/**
* There is a problem with the proposed path, e.g. a relative path
* passed to a function expecting an absolute path.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_PATH_ERROR,
/**
* The requested operation was ignored. Depending on the function,
* this may not be an actual error.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_IGNORED,
/**
* One of the arguments violates the preconditions for the
* function, in a way not covered by a more specific argument.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT,
/**
* A MIME object claimed to have cryptographic protection which
* notmuch tried to handle, but the protocol was not specified in
* an intelligible way.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_MALFORMED_CRYPTO_PROTOCOL,
/**
* Notmuch attempted to do crypto processing, but could not
* initialize the engine needed to do so.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_FAILED_CRYPTO_CONTEXT_CREATION,
/**
* A MIME object claimed to have cryptographic protection, and
* notmuch attempted to process it, but the specific protocol was
* something that notmuch doesn't know how to handle.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_UNKNOWN_CRYPTO_PROTOCOL,
/**
* Not an actual status value. Just a way to find out how many
* valid status values there are.
*/
NOTMUCH_STATUS_LAST_STATUS
} notmuch_status_t;
/**
* Get a string representation of a notmuch_status_t value.
*
* The result is read-only.
*/
const char *
notmuch_status_to_string (notmuch_status_t status);
/* Various opaque data types. For each notmuch_<foo>_t see the various
* notmuch_<foo> functions below. */
#ifndef __DOXYGEN__
typedef struct _notmuch_database notmuch_database_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_query notmuch_query_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_threads notmuch_threads_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_thread notmuch_thread_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_messages notmuch_messages_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_message notmuch_message_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_tags notmuch_tags_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_directory notmuch_directory_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_filenames notmuch_filenames_t;
typedef struct _notmuch_config_list notmuch_config_list_t;
reindex: drop notmuch_param_t, use notmuch_indexopts_t instead There are at least three places in notmuch that can trigger an indexing action: * notmuch new * notmuch insert * notmuch reindex I have plans to add some indexing options (e.g. indexing the cleartext of encrypted parts, external filters, automated property injection) that should properly be available in all places where indexing happens. I also want those indexing options to be exposed by (and constrained by) the libnotmuch C API. This isn't yet an API break because we've never made a release with notmuch_param_t. These indexing options are relevant in the listed places (and in the libnotmuch analogues), but they aren't relevant in the other kinds of functionality that notmuch offers (e.g. dump/restore, tagging, search, show, reply). So i think a generic "param" object isn't well-suited for this case. In particular: * a param object sounds like it could contain parameters for some other (non-indexing) operation. This sounds confusing -- why would i pass non-indexing parameters to a function that only does indexing? * bremner suggests online a generic param object would actually be passed as a list of param objects, argv-style. In this case (at least in the obvious argv implementation), the params might be some sort of generic string. This introduces a problem where the API of the library doesn't grow as new options are added, which means that when code outside the library tries to use a feature, it first has to test for it, and have code to handle it not being available. The indexopts approach proposed here instead makes it clear at compile time and at dynamic link time that there is an explicit dependency on that feature, which allows automated tools to keep track of what's needed and keeps the actual code simple. My proposal adds the notmuch_indexopts_t as an opaque struct, so that we can extend the list of options without causing ABI breakage. The cost of this proposal appears to be that the "boilerplate" API increases a little bit, with a generic constructor and destructor function for the indexopts struct. More patches will follow that make use of this indexopts approach.
2017-08-18 01:14:26 +02:00
typedef struct _notmuch_indexopts notmuch_indexopts_t;
#endif /* __DOXYGEN__ */
/**
* Create a new, empty notmuch database located at 'path'.
*
* The path should be a top-level directory to a collection of
* plain-text email messages (one message per file). This call will
* create a new ".notmuch" directory within 'path' where notmuch will
* store its data.
*
* After a successful call to notmuch_database_create, the returned
* database will be open so the caller should call
* notmuch_database_destroy when finished with it.
*
* The database will not yet have any data in it
* (notmuch_database_create itself is a very cheap function). Messages
* contained within 'path' can be added to the database by calling
database: add n_d_index_file (deprecates n_d_add_message) We need a way to pass parameters to the indexing functionality on the first index, not just on reindexing. The obvious place is in notmuch_database_add_message. But since modifying the argument list would break both API and ABI, we needed a new name. I considered notmuch_database_add_message_with_params(), but the functionality we're talking about doesn't always add a message. It tries to index a specific file, possibly adding a message, but possibly doing other things, like adding terms to an existing message, or failing to deal with message objects entirely (e.g. because the file didn't contain a message). So i chose the function name notmuch_database_index_file. I confess i'm a little concerned about confusing future notmuch developers with the new name, since we already have a private _notmuch_message_index_file function, and the two do rather different things. But i think the added clarity for people linking against the future libnotmuch and the capacity for using index parameters makes this a worthwhile tradeoff. (that said, if anyone has another name that they strongly prefer, i'd be happy to go with it) This changeset also adjusts the tests so that we test whether the new, preferred function returns bad values (since the deprecated function just calls the new one). We can keep the deprecated n_d_add_message function around as long as we like, but at the next place where we're forced to break API or ABI we can probably choose to drop the name relatively safely. NOTE: there is probably more cleanup to do in the ruby and go bindings to complete the deprecation directly. I don't know those languages well enough to attempt a fix; i don't know how to test them; and i don't know the culture around those languages about API additions or deprecations.
2017-08-18 01:14:25 +02:00
* notmuch_database_index_file.
*
* In case of any failure, this function returns an error status and
* sets *database to NULL (after printing an error message on stderr).
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successfully created the database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: The given 'path' argument is NULL.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_OUT_OF_MEMORY: Out of memory.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_FILE_ERROR: An error occurred trying to create the
* database file (such as permission denied, or file not found,
* etc.), or the database already exists.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_create (const char *path, notmuch_database_t **database);
/**
* Like notmuch_database_create, except optionally return an error
* message. This message is allocated by malloc and should be freed by
* the caller.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_create_verbose (const char *path,
notmuch_database_t **database,
char **error_message);
/**
* Database open mode for notmuch_database_open.
*/
typedef enum {
/**
* Open database for reading only.
*/
NOTMUCH_DATABASE_MODE_READ_ONLY = 0,
/**
* Open database for reading and writing.
*/
NOTMUCH_DATABASE_MODE_READ_WRITE
} notmuch_database_mode_t;
/**
* Open an existing notmuch database located at 'path'.
*
* The database should have been created at some time in the past,
* (not necessarily by this process), by calling
* notmuch_database_create with 'path'. By default the database should be
* opened for reading only. In order to write to the database you need to
* pass the NOTMUCH_DATABASE_MODE_READ_WRITE mode.
*
* An existing notmuch database can be identified by the presence of a
* directory named ".notmuch" below 'path'.
*
* The caller should call notmuch_database_destroy when finished with
* this database.
*
* In case of any failure, this function returns an error status and
* sets *database to NULL (after printing an error message on stderr).
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successfully opened the database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: The given 'path' argument is NULL.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_OUT_OF_MEMORY: Out of memory.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_FILE_ERROR: An error occurred trying to open the
* database file (such as permission denied, or file not found,
* etc.), or the database version is unknown.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_open (const char *path,
notmuch_database_mode_t mode,
notmuch_database_t **database);
/**
* Like notmuch_database_open, except optionally return an error
* message. This message is allocated by malloc and should be freed by
* the caller.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_open_verbose (const char *path,
notmuch_database_mode_t mode,
notmuch_database_t **database,
char **error_message);
/**
* Retrieve last status string for given database.
*
*/
const char *
notmuch_database_status_string (const notmuch_database_t *notmuch);
/**
* Commit changes and close the given notmuch database.
*
* After notmuch_database_close has been called, calls to other
* functions on objects derived from this database may either behave
* as if the database had not been closed (e.g., if the required data
* has been cached) or may fail with a
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION. The only further operation
* permitted on the database itself is to call
* notmuch_database_destroy.
*
* notmuch_database_close can be called multiple times. Later calls
* have no effect.
*
* For writable databases, notmuch_database_close commits all changes
* to disk before closing the database. If the caller is currently in
* an atomic section (there was a notmuch_database_begin_atomic
* without a matching notmuch_database_end_atomic), this will discard
* changes made in that atomic section (but still commit changes made
* prior to entering the atomic section).
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successfully closed the database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred; the
* database has been closed but there are no guarantees the
* changes to the database, if any, have been flushed to disk.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_close (notmuch_database_t *database);
/**
* A callback invoked by notmuch_database_compact to notify the user
* of the progress of the compaction process.
*/
typedef void (*notmuch_compact_status_cb_t)(const char *message, void *closure);
/**
* Compact a notmuch database, backing up the original database to the
* given path.
*
* The database will be opened with NOTMUCH_DATABASE_MODE_READ_WRITE
* during the compaction process to ensure no writes are made.
*
* If the optional callback function 'status_cb' is non-NULL, it will
* be called with diagnostic and informational messages. The argument
* 'closure' is passed verbatim to any callback invoked.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_compact (const char *path,
const char *backup_path,
notmuch_compact_status_cb_t status_cb,
void *closure);
/**
* Destroy the notmuch database, closing it if necessary and freeing
* all associated resources.
*
* Return value as in notmuch_database_close if the database was open;
* notmuch_database_destroy itself has no failure modes.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_destroy (notmuch_database_t *database);
/**
* Return the database path of the given database.
*
* The return value is a string owned by notmuch so should not be
* modified nor freed by the caller.
*/
const char *
notmuch_database_get_path (notmuch_database_t *database);
/**
* Return the database format version of the given database.
*/
unsigned int
notmuch_database_get_version (notmuch_database_t *database);
/**
* Can the database be upgraded to a newer database version?
*
* If this function returns TRUE, then the caller may call
* notmuch_database_upgrade to upgrade the database. If the caller
* does not upgrade an out-of-date database, then some functions may
* fail with NOTMUCH_STATUS_UPGRADE_REQUIRED. This always returns
* FALSE for a read-only database because there's no way to upgrade a
* read-only database.
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_database_needs_upgrade (notmuch_database_t *database);
/**
* Upgrade the current database to the latest supported version.
*
* This ensures that all current notmuch functionality will be
* available on the database. After opening a database in read-write
* mode, it is recommended that clients check if an upgrade is needed
* (notmuch_database_needs_upgrade) and if so, upgrade with this
* function before making any modifications. If
* notmuch_database_needs_upgrade returns FALSE, this will be a no-op.
*
* The optional progress_notify callback can be used by the caller to
* provide progress indication to the user. If non-NULL it will be
* called periodically with 'progress' as a floating-point value in
* the range of [0.0 .. 1.0] indicating the progress made so far in
* the upgrade process. The argument 'closure' is passed verbatim to
* any callback invoked.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_upgrade (notmuch_database_t *database,
void (*progress_notify)(void *closure,
double progress),
void *closure);
/**
* Begin an atomic database operation.
*
* Any modifications performed between a successful begin and a
* notmuch_database_end_atomic will be applied to the database
* atomically. Note that, unlike a typical database transaction, this
* only ensures atomicity, not durability; neither begin nor end
* necessarily flush modifications to disk.
*
* Atomic sections may be nested. begin_atomic and end_atomic must
* always be called in pairs.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successfully entered atomic section.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred;
* atomic section not entered.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_begin_atomic (notmuch_database_t *notmuch);
/**
* Indicate the end of an atomic database operation.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successfully completed atomic section.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred;
* atomic section not ended.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_UNBALANCED_ATOMIC: The database is not currently in
* an atomic section.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_end_atomic (notmuch_database_t *notmuch);
/**
* Return the committed database revision and UUID.
*
* The database revision number increases monotonically with each
* commit to the database. Hence, all messages and message changes
* committed to the database (that is, visible to readers) have a last
* modification revision <= the committed database revision. Any
* messages committed in the future will be assigned a modification
* revision > the committed database revision.
*
* The UUID is a NUL-terminated opaque string that uniquely identifies
* this database. Two revision numbers are only comparable if they
* have the same database UUID.
*/
unsigned long
notmuch_database_get_revision (notmuch_database_t *notmuch,
const char **uuid);
/**
* Retrieve a directory object from the database for 'path'.
*
* Here, 'path' should be a path relative to the path of 'database'
* (see notmuch_database_get_path), or else should be an absolute path
* with initial components that match the path of 'database'.
*
* If this directory object does not exist in the database, this
* returns NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS and sets *directory to NULL.
*
* Otherwise the returned directory object is owned by the database
* and as such, will only be valid until notmuch_database_destroy is
* called.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successfully retrieved directory.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: The given 'directory' argument is NULL.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred;
* directory not retrieved.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_UPGRADE_REQUIRED: The caller must upgrade the
* database to use this function.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_get_directory (notmuch_database_t *database,
const char *path,
notmuch_directory_t **directory);
/**
* Add a message file to a database, indexing it for retrieval by
* future searches. If a message already exists with the same message
* ID as the specified file, their indexes will be merged, and this
* new filename will also be associated with the existing message.
*
* Here, 'filename' should be a path relative to the path of
* 'database' (see notmuch_database_get_path), or else should be an
* absolute filename with initial components that match the path of
* 'database'.
*
* The file should be a single mail message (not a multi-message mbox)
* that is expected to remain at its current location, (since the
* notmuch database will reference the filename, and will not copy the
* entire contents of the file.
*
* If another message with the same message ID already exists in the
* database, rather than creating a new message, this adds the search
* terms from the identified file to the existing message's index, and
* adds 'filename' to the list of filenames known for the message.
*
* The 'indexopts' parameter can be NULL (meaning, use the indexing
* defaults from the database), or can be an explicit choice of
* indexing options that should govern the indexing of this specific
* 'filename'.
database: add n_d_index_file (deprecates n_d_add_message) We need a way to pass parameters to the indexing functionality on the first index, not just on reindexing. The obvious place is in notmuch_database_add_message. But since modifying the argument list would break both API and ABI, we needed a new name. I considered notmuch_database_add_message_with_params(), but the functionality we're talking about doesn't always add a message. It tries to index a specific file, possibly adding a message, but possibly doing other things, like adding terms to an existing message, or failing to deal with message objects entirely (e.g. because the file didn't contain a message). So i chose the function name notmuch_database_index_file. I confess i'm a little concerned about confusing future notmuch developers with the new name, since we already have a private _notmuch_message_index_file function, and the two do rather different things. But i think the added clarity for people linking against the future libnotmuch and the capacity for using index parameters makes this a worthwhile tradeoff. (that said, if anyone has another name that they strongly prefer, i'd be happy to go with it) This changeset also adjusts the tests so that we test whether the new, preferred function returns bad values (since the deprecated function just calls the new one). We can keep the deprecated n_d_add_message function around as long as we like, but at the next place where we're forced to break API or ABI we can probably choose to drop the name relatively safely. NOTE: there is probably more cleanup to do in the ruby and go bindings to complete the deprecation directly. I don't know those languages well enough to attempt a fix; i don't know how to test them; and i don't know the culture around those languages about API additions or deprecations.
2017-08-18 01:14:25 +02:00
*
* If 'message' is not NULL, then, on successful return
* (NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS or NOTMUCH_STATUS_DUPLICATE_MESSAGE_ID) '*message'
* will be initialized to a message object that can be used for things
* such as adding tags to the just-added message. The user should call
* notmuch_message_destroy when done with the message. On any failure
* '*message' will be set to NULL.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Message successfully added to database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred,
* message not added.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_DUPLICATE_MESSAGE_ID: Message has the same message
* ID as another message already in the database. The new
* filename was successfully added to the message in the database
* (if not already present) and the existing message is returned.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_FILE_ERROR: an error occurred trying to open the
* file, (such as permission denied, or file not found,
* etc.). Nothing added to the database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_FILE_NOT_EMAIL: the contents of filename don't look
* like an email message. Nothing added to the database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in read-only
* mode so no message can be added.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_UPGRADE_REQUIRED: The caller must upgrade the
* database to use this function.
database: add n_d_index_file (deprecates n_d_add_message) We need a way to pass parameters to the indexing functionality on the first index, not just on reindexing. The obvious place is in notmuch_database_add_message. But since modifying the argument list would break both API and ABI, we needed a new name. I considered notmuch_database_add_message_with_params(), but the functionality we're talking about doesn't always add a message. It tries to index a specific file, possibly adding a message, but possibly doing other things, like adding terms to an existing message, or failing to deal with message objects entirely (e.g. because the file didn't contain a message). So i chose the function name notmuch_database_index_file. I confess i'm a little concerned about confusing future notmuch developers with the new name, since we already have a private _notmuch_message_index_file function, and the two do rather different things. But i think the added clarity for people linking against the future libnotmuch and the capacity for using index parameters makes this a worthwhile tradeoff. (that said, if anyone has another name that they strongly prefer, i'd be happy to go with it) This changeset also adjusts the tests so that we test whether the new, preferred function returns bad values (since the deprecated function just calls the new one). We can keep the deprecated n_d_add_message function around as long as we like, but at the next place where we're forced to break API or ABI we can probably choose to drop the name relatively safely. NOTE: there is probably more cleanup to do in the ruby and go bindings to complete the deprecation directly. I don't know those languages well enough to attempt a fix; i don't know how to test them; and i don't know the culture around those languages about API additions or deprecations.
2017-08-18 01:14:25 +02:00
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.1 (notmuch 0.26)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_index_file (notmuch_database_t *database,
const char *filename,
reindex: drop notmuch_param_t, use notmuch_indexopts_t instead There are at least three places in notmuch that can trigger an indexing action: * notmuch new * notmuch insert * notmuch reindex I have plans to add some indexing options (e.g. indexing the cleartext of encrypted parts, external filters, automated property injection) that should properly be available in all places where indexing happens. I also want those indexing options to be exposed by (and constrained by) the libnotmuch C API. This isn't yet an API break because we've never made a release with notmuch_param_t. These indexing options are relevant in the listed places (and in the libnotmuch analogues), but they aren't relevant in the other kinds of functionality that notmuch offers (e.g. dump/restore, tagging, search, show, reply). So i think a generic "param" object isn't well-suited for this case. In particular: * a param object sounds like it could contain parameters for some other (non-indexing) operation. This sounds confusing -- why would i pass non-indexing parameters to a function that only does indexing? * bremner suggests online a generic param object would actually be passed as a list of param objects, argv-style. In this case (at least in the obvious argv implementation), the params might be some sort of generic string. This introduces a problem where the API of the library doesn't grow as new options are added, which means that when code outside the library tries to use a feature, it first has to test for it, and have code to handle it not being available. The indexopts approach proposed here instead makes it clear at compile time and at dynamic link time that there is an explicit dependency on that feature, which allows automated tools to keep track of what's needed and keeps the actual code simple. My proposal adds the notmuch_indexopts_t as an opaque struct, so that we can extend the list of options without causing ABI breakage. The cost of this proposal appears to be that the "boilerplate" API increases a little bit, with a generic constructor and destructor function for the indexopts struct. More patches will follow that make use of this indexopts approach.
2017-08-18 01:14:26 +02:00
notmuch_indexopts_t *indexopts,
database: add n_d_index_file (deprecates n_d_add_message) We need a way to pass parameters to the indexing functionality on the first index, not just on reindexing. The obvious place is in notmuch_database_add_message. But since modifying the argument list would break both API and ABI, we needed a new name. I considered notmuch_database_add_message_with_params(), but the functionality we're talking about doesn't always add a message. It tries to index a specific file, possibly adding a message, but possibly doing other things, like adding terms to an existing message, or failing to deal with message objects entirely (e.g. because the file didn't contain a message). So i chose the function name notmuch_database_index_file. I confess i'm a little concerned about confusing future notmuch developers with the new name, since we already have a private _notmuch_message_index_file function, and the two do rather different things. But i think the added clarity for people linking against the future libnotmuch and the capacity for using index parameters makes this a worthwhile tradeoff. (that said, if anyone has another name that they strongly prefer, i'd be happy to go with it) This changeset also adjusts the tests so that we test whether the new, preferred function returns bad values (since the deprecated function just calls the new one). We can keep the deprecated n_d_add_message function around as long as we like, but at the next place where we're forced to break API or ABI we can probably choose to drop the name relatively safely. NOTE: there is probably more cleanup to do in the ruby and go bindings to complete the deprecation directly. I don't know those languages well enough to attempt a fix; i don't know how to test them; and i don't know the culture around those languages about API additions or deprecations.
2017-08-18 01:14:25 +02:00
notmuch_message_t **message);
/**
* Deprecated alias for notmuch_database_index_file called with
* NULL indexopts.
*
* @deprecated Deprecated as of libnotmuch 5.1 (notmuch 0.26). Please
* use notmuch_database_index_file instead.
*
*/
NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED (5, 1)
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_add_message (notmuch_database_t *database,
const char *filename,
notmuch_message_t **message);
/**
* Remove a message filename from the given notmuch database. If the
* message has no more filenames, remove the message.
*
* If the same message (as determined by the message ID) is still
* available via other filenames, then the message will persist in the
* database for those filenames. When the last filename is removed for
* a particular message, the database content for that message will be
* entirely removed.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: The last filename was removed and the
* message was removed from the database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred,
* message not removed.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_DUPLICATE_MESSAGE_ID: This filename was removed but
* the message persists in the database with at least one other
* filename.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in read-only
* mode so no message can be removed.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_UPGRADE_REQUIRED: The caller must upgrade the
* database to use this function.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_remove_message (notmuch_database_t *database,
const char *filename);
/**
* Find a message with the given message_id.
*
* If a message with the given message_id is found then, on successful return
* (NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS) '*message' will be initialized to a message
* object. The caller should call notmuch_message_destroy when done with the
* message.
*
* On any failure or when the message is not found, this function initializes
* '*message' to NULL. This means, when NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS is returned, the
* caller is supposed to check '*message' for NULL to find out whether the
* message with the given message_id was found.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successful return, check '*message'.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: The given 'message' argument is NULL
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_OUT_OF_MEMORY: Out of memory, creating message object
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_find_message (notmuch_database_t *database,
const char *message_id,
notmuch_message_t **message);
/**
* Find a message with the given filename.
*
* If the database contains a message with the given filename then, on
* successful return (NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS) '*message' will be initialized to
* a message object. The caller should call notmuch_message_destroy when done
* with the message.
*
* On any failure or when the message is not found, this function initializes
* '*message' to NULL. This means, when NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS is returned, the
* caller is supposed to check '*message' for NULL to find out whether the
* message with the given filename is found.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Successful return, check '*message'
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: The given 'message' argument is NULL
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_OUT_OF_MEMORY: Out of memory, creating the message object
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception occurred
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_UPGRADE_REQUIRED: The caller must upgrade the
* database to use this function.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_find_message_by_filename (notmuch_database_t *notmuch,
const char *filename,
notmuch_message_t **message);
/**
* Return a list of all tags found in the database.
*
* This function creates a list of all tags found in the database. The
* resulting list contains all tags from all messages found in the database.
*
* On error this function returns NULL.
*/
notmuch_tags_t *
notmuch_database_get_all_tags (notmuch_database_t *db);
/**
* Create a new query for 'database'.
*
* Here, 'database' should be an open database, (see
* notmuch_database_open and notmuch_database_create).
*
* For the query string, we'll document the syntax here more
* completely in the future, but it's likely to be a specialized
* version of the general Xapian query syntax:
*
* https://xapian.org/docs/queryparser.html
*
* As a special case, passing either a length-zero string, (that is ""),
* or a string consisting of a single asterisk (that is "*"), will
* result in a query that returns all messages in the database.
*
* See notmuch_query_set_sort for controlling the order of results.
* See notmuch_query_search_messages and notmuch_query_search_threads
* to actually execute the query.
*
* User should call notmuch_query_destroy when finished with this
* query.
*
* Will return NULL if insufficient memory is available.
*/
notmuch_query_t *
notmuch_query_create (notmuch_database_t *database,
const char *query_string);
/**
* Sort values for notmuch_query_set_sort.
*/
typedef enum {
/**
* Oldest first.
*/
NOTMUCH_SORT_OLDEST_FIRST,
/**
* Newest first.
*/
NOTMUCH_SORT_NEWEST_FIRST,
/**
* Sort by message-id.
*/
NOTMUCH_SORT_MESSAGE_ID,
/**
* Do not sort.
*/
NOTMUCH_SORT_UNSORTED
} notmuch_sort_t;
/**
* Return the query_string of this query. See notmuch_query_create.
*/
const char *
notmuch_query_get_query_string (const notmuch_query_t *query);
/**
* Return the notmuch database of this query. See notmuch_query_create.
*/
notmuch_database_t *
notmuch_query_get_database (const notmuch_query_t *query);
/**
* Exclude values for notmuch_query_set_omit_excluded. The strange
* order is to maintain backward compatibility: the old FALSE/TRUE
* options correspond to the new
* NOTMUCH_EXCLUDE_FLAG/NOTMUCH_EXCLUDE_TRUE options.
*/
typedef enum {
NOTMUCH_EXCLUDE_FLAG,
NOTMUCH_EXCLUDE_TRUE,
NOTMUCH_EXCLUDE_FALSE,
NOTMUCH_EXCLUDE_ALL
} notmuch_exclude_t;
/**
* Specify whether to omit excluded results or simply flag them. By
* default, this is set to TRUE.
*
* If set to TRUE or ALL, notmuch_query_search_messages will omit excluded
* messages from the results, and notmuch_query_search_threads will omit
* threads that match only in excluded messages. If set to TRUE,
* notmuch_query_search_threads will include all messages in threads that
* match in at least one non-excluded message. Otherwise, if set to ALL,
* notmuch_query_search_threads will omit excluded messages from all threads.
*
* If set to FALSE or FLAG then both notmuch_query_search_messages and
* notmuch_query_search_threads will return all matching
* messages/threads regardless of exclude status. If set to FLAG then
* the exclude flag will be set for any excluded message that is
* returned by notmuch_query_search_messages, and the thread counts
* for threads returned by notmuch_query_search_threads will be the
* number of non-excluded messages/matches. Otherwise, if set to
* FALSE, then the exclude status is completely ignored.
*
* The performance difference when calling
* notmuch_query_search_messages should be relatively small (and both
* should be very fast). However, in some cases,
* notmuch_query_search_threads is very much faster when omitting
* excluded messages as it does not need to construct the threads that
* only match in excluded messages.
*/
void
notmuch_query_set_omit_excluded (notmuch_query_t *query,
notmuch_exclude_t omit_excluded);
/**
* Specify the sorting desired for this query.
*/
void
notmuch_query_set_sort (notmuch_query_t *query, notmuch_sort_t sort);
/**
* Return the sort specified for this query. See
* notmuch_query_set_sort.
*/
notmuch_sort_t
notmuch_query_get_sort (const notmuch_query_t *query);
/**
* Add a tag that will be excluded from the query results by default.
* This exclusion will be ignored if this tag appears explicitly in
* the query.
*
* @returns
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: excluded was added successfully.
*
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: a Xapian exception occurred.
* Most likely a problem lazily parsing the query string.
*
2017-07-18 00:16:02 +02:00
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_IGNORED: tag is explicitly present in the query, so
* not excluded.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_add_tag_exclude (notmuch_query_t *query, const char *tag);
/**
* Execute a query for threads, returning a notmuch_threads_t object
* which can be used to iterate over the results. The returned threads
* object is owned by the query and as such, will only be valid until
* notmuch_query_destroy.
*
* Typical usage might be:
*
* notmuch_query_t *query;
* notmuch_threads_t *threads;
* notmuch_thread_t *thread;
* notmuch_status_t stat;
*
* query = notmuch_query_create (database, query_string);
*
* for (stat = notmuch_query_search_threads (query, &threads);
* stat == NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS &&
* notmuch_threads_valid (threads);
* notmuch_threads_move_to_next (threads))
* {
* thread = notmuch_threads_get (threads);
* ....
* notmuch_thread_destroy (thread);
* }
*
* notmuch_query_destroy (query);
*
* Note: If you are finished with a thread before its containing
* query, you can call notmuch_thread_destroy to clean up some memory
* sooner (as in the above example). Otherwise, if your thread objects
* are long-lived, then you don't need to call notmuch_thread_destroy
* and all the memory will still be reclaimed when the query is
* destroyed.
*
* Note that there's no explicit destructor needed for the
* notmuch_threads_t object. (For consistency, we do provide a
* notmuch_threads_destroy function, but there's no good reason
* to call it if the query is about to be destroyed).
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.0 (notmuch 0.25)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_search_threads (notmuch_query_t *query,
notmuch_threads_t **out);
/**
* Deprecated alias for notmuch_query_search_threads.
*
* @deprecated Deprecated as of libnotmuch 5 (notmuch 0.25). Please
* use notmuch_query_search_threads instead.
*
*/
NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED (5, 0)
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_search_threads_st (notmuch_query_t *query, notmuch_threads_t **out);
/**
* Execute a query for messages, returning a notmuch_messages_t object
* which can be used to iterate over the results. The returned
* messages object is owned by the query and as such, will only be
* valid until notmuch_query_destroy.
*
* Typical usage might be:
*
* notmuch_query_t *query;
* notmuch_messages_t *messages;
* notmuch_message_t *message;
*
* query = notmuch_query_create (database, query_string);
*
* for (messages = notmuch_query_search_messages (query);
* notmuch_messages_valid (messages);
* notmuch_messages_move_to_next (messages))
* {
* message = notmuch_messages_get (messages);
* ....
* notmuch_message_destroy (message);
* }
*
* notmuch_query_destroy (query);
*
* Note: If you are finished with a message before its containing
* query, you can call notmuch_message_destroy to clean up some memory
* sooner (as in the above example). Otherwise, if your message
* objects are long-lived, then you don't need to call
* notmuch_message_destroy and all the memory will still be reclaimed
* when the query is destroyed.
*
* Note that there's no explicit destructor needed for the
* notmuch_messages_t object. (For consistency, we do provide a
* notmuch_messages_destroy function, but there's no good
* reason to call it if the query is about to be destroyed).
*
* If a Xapian exception occurs this function will return NULL.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5 (notmuch 0.25)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_search_messages (notmuch_query_t *query,
notmuch_messages_t **out);
/**
* Deprecated alias for notmuch_query_search_messages
*
* @deprecated Deprecated as of libnotmuch 5 (notmuch 0.25). Please use
* notmuch_query_search_messages instead.
*
*/
NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED (5, 0)
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_search_messages_st (notmuch_query_t *query,
notmuch_messages_t **out);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_query_t along with any associated resources.
*
* This will in turn destroy any notmuch_threads_t and
* notmuch_messages_t objects generated by this query, (and in
* turn any notmuch_thread_t and notmuch_message_t objects generated
* from those results, etc.), if such objects haven't already been
* destroyed.
*/
void
notmuch_query_destroy (notmuch_query_t *query);
/**
* Is the given 'threads' iterator pointing at a valid thread.
*
* When this function returns TRUE, notmuch_threads_get will return a
* valid object. Whereas when this function returns FALSE,
* notmuch_threads_get will return NULL.
*
* If passed a NULL pointer, this function returns FALSE
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_query_search_threads for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_threads_t object.
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_threads_valid (notmuch_threads_t *threads);
/**
* Get the current thread from 'threads' as a notmuch_thread_t.
*
* Note: The returned thread belongs to 'threads' and has a lifetime
* identical to it (and the query to which it belongs).
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_query_search_threads for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_threads_t object.
*
* If an out-of-memory situation occurs, this function will return
* NULL.
*/
notmuch_thread_t *
notmuch_threads_get (notmuch_threads_t *threads);
/**
* Move the 'threads' iterator to the next thread.
*
* If 'threads' is already pointing at the last thread then the
* iterator will be moved to a point just beyond that last thread,
* (where notmuch_threads_valid will return FALSE and
* notmuch_threads_get will return NULL).
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_query_search_threads for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_threads_t object.
*/
void
notmuch_threads_move_to_next (notmuch_threads_t *threads);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_threads_t object.
*
* It's not strictly necessary to call this function. All memory from
* the notmuch_threads_t object will be reclaimed when the
* containing query object is destroyed.
*/
void
notmuch_threads_destroy (notmuch_threads_t *threads);
/**
* Return the number of messages matching a search.
*
* This function performs a search and returns the number of matching
* messages.
*
* @returns
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: query completed successfully.
*
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: a Xapian exception occurred. The
* value of *count is not defined.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5 (notmuch 0.25)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_count_messages (notmuch_query_t *query, unsigned int *count);
/**
* Deprecated alias for notmuch_query_count_messages
*
*
* @deprecated Deprecated since libnotmuch 5.0 (notmuch 0.25). Please
* use notmuch_query_count_messages instead.
*/
NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED (5, 0)
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_count_messages_st (notmuch_query_t *query, unsigned int *count);
/**
* Return the number of threads matching a search.
*
* This function performs a search and returns the number of unique thread IDs
* in the matching messages. This is the same as number of threads matching a
* search.
*
* Note that this is a significantly heavier operation than
* notmuch_query_count_messages{_st}().
*
* @returns
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_OUT_OF_MEMORY: Memory allocation failed. The value
* of *count is not defined
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: query completed successfully.
*
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: a Xapian exception occurred. The
* value of *count is not defined.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5 (notmuch 0.25)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_count_threads (notmuch_query_t *query, unsigned *count);
/**
* Deprecated alias for notmuch_query_count_threads
*
* @deprecated Deprecated as of libnotmuch 5.0 (notmuch 0.25). Please
* use notmuch_query_count_threads_st instead.
*/
NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED (5, 0)
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_query_count_threads_st (notmuch_query_t *query, unsigned *count);
/**
* Get the thread ID of 'thread'.
*
* The returned string belongs to 'thread' and as such, should not be
* modified by the caller and will only be valid for as long as the
* thread is valid, (which is until notmuch_thread_destroy or until
* the query from which it derived is destroyed).
*/
const char *
notmuch_thread_get_thread_id (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the total number of messages in 'thread'.
*
* This count consists of all messages in the database belonging to
* this thread. Contrast with notmuch_thread_get_matched_messages() .
*/
int
notmuch_thread_get_total_messages (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the total number of files in 'thread'.
*
* This sums notmuch_message_count_files over all messages in the
* thread
* @returns Non-negative integer
* @since libnotmuch 5.0 (notmuch 0.25)
*/
int
notmuch_thread_get_total_files (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get a notmuch_messages_t iterator for the top-level messages in
* 'thread' in oldest-first order.
*
* This iterator will not necessarily iterate over all of the messages
* in the thread. It will only iterate over the messages in the thread
* which are not replies to other messages in the thread.
*
* The returned list will be destroyed when the thread is destroyed.
*/
notmuch_messages_t *
notmuch_thread_get_toplevel_messages (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get a notmuch_thread_t iterator for all messages in 'thread' in
* oldest-first order.
*
* The returned list will be destroyed when the thread is destroyed.
*/
notmuch_messages_t *
notmuch_thread_get_messages (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the number of messages in 'thread' that matched the search.
*
* This count includes only the messages in this thread that were
* matched by the search from which the thread was created and were
* not excluded by any exclude tags passed in with the query (see
* notmuch_query_add_tag_exclude). Contrast with
* notmuch_thread_get_total_messages() .
*/
int
notmuch_thread_get_matched_messages (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the authors of 'thread' as a UTF-8 string.
*
* The returned string is a comma-separated list of the names of the
* authors of mail messages in the query results that belong to this
* thread.
*
* The string contains authors of messages matching the query first, then
* non-matched authors (with the two groups separated by '|'). Within
* each group, authors are ordered by date.
*
* The returned string belongs to 'thread' and as such, should not be
* modified by the caller and will only be valid for as long as the
* thread is valid, (which is until notmuch_thread_destroy or until
* the query from which it derived is destroyed).
*/
const char *
notmuch_thread_get_authors (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the subject of 'thread' as a UTF-8 string.
*
* The subject is taken from the first message (according to the query
* order---see notmuch_query_set_sort) in the query results that
* belongs to this thread.
*
* The returned string belongs to 'thread' and as such, should not be
* modified by the caller and will only be valid for as long as the
* thread is valid, (which is until notmuch_thread_destroy or until
* the query from which it derived is destroyed).
*/
const char *
notmuch_thread_get_subject (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the date of the oldest message in 'thread' as a time_t value.
*/
time_t
notmuch_thread_get_oldest_date (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the date of the newest message in 'thread' as a time_t value.
*/
time_t
notmuch_thread_get_newest_date (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Get the tags for 'thread', returning a notmuch_tags_t object which
* can be used to iterate over all tags.
*
* Note: In the Notmuch database, tags are stored on individual
* messages, not on threads. So the tags returned here will be all
* tags of the messages which matched the search and which belong to
* this thread.
*
* The tags object is owned by the thread and as such, will only be
* valid for as long as the thread is valid, (for example, until
* notmuch_thread_destroy or until the query from which it derived is
* destroyed).
*
* Typical usage might be:
*
* notmuch_thread_t *thread;
* notmuch_tags_t *tags;
* const char *tag;
*
* thread = notmuch_threads_get (threads);
*
* for (tags = notmuch_thread_get_tags (thread);
* notmuch_tags_valid (tags);
* notmuch_tags_move_to_next (tags))
* {
* tag = notmuch_tags_get (tags);
* ....
* }
*
* notmuch_thread_destroy (thread);
*
* Note that there's no explicit destructor needed for the
* notmuch_tags_t object. (For consistency, we do provide a
* notmuch_tags_destroy function, but there's no good reason to call
* it if the message is about to be destroyed).
*/
notmuch_tags_t *
notmuch_thread_get_tags (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_thread_t object.
*/
void
notmuch_thread_destroy (notmuch_thread_t *thread);
/**
* Is the given 'messages' iterator pointing at a valid message.
*
* When this function returns TRUE, notmuch_messages_get will return a
* valid object. Whereas when this function returns FALSE,
* notmuch_messages_get will return NULL.
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_query_search_messages for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_messages_t object.
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_messages_valid (notmuch_messages_t *messages);
/**
* Get the current message from 'messages' as a notmuch_message_t.
*
* Note: The returned message belongs to 'messages' and has a lifetime
* identical to it (and the query to which it belongs).
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_query_search_messages for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_messages_t object.
*
* If an out-of-memory situation occurs, this function will return
* NULL.
*/
notmuch_message_t *
notmuch_messages_get (notmuch_messages_t *messages);
/**
* Move the 'messages' iterator to the next message.
*
* If 'messages' is already pointing at the last message then the
* iterator will be moved to a point just beyond that last message,
* (where notmuch_messages_valid will return FALSE and
* notmuch_messages_get will return NULL).
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_query_search_messages for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_messages_t object.
*/
void
notmuch_messages_move_to_next (notmuch_messages_t *messages);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_messages_t object.
*
* It's not strictly necessary to call this function. All memory from
2009-11-18 00:23:42 +01:00
* the notmuch_messages_t object will be reclaimed when the containing
* query object is destroyed.
*/
void
notmuch_messages_destroy (notmuch_messages_t *messages);
/**
* Return a list of tags from all messages.
*
* The resulting list is guaranteed not to contain duplicated tags.
*
* WARNING: You can no longer iterate over messages after calling this
* function, because the iterator will point at the end of the list.
* We do not have a function to reset the iterator yet and the only
* way how you can iterate over the list again is to recreate the
* message list.
*
* The function returns NULL on error.
*/
notmuch_tags_t *
notmuch_messages_collect_tags (notmuch_messages_t *messages);
/**
* Get the database associated with this message.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.2 (notmuch 0.27)
*/
notmuch_database_t *
notmuch_message_get_database (const notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Get the message ID of 'message'.
*
* The returned string belongs to 'message' and as such, should not be
* modified by the caller and will only be valid for as long as the
* message is valid, (which is until the query from which it derived
* is destroyed).
*
* This function will return NULL if triggers an unhandled Xapian
* exception.
*/
const char *
notmuch_message_get_message_id (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Get the thread ID of 'message'.
*
* The returned string belongs to 'message' and as such, should not be
* modified by the caller and will only be valid for as long as the
* message is valid, (for example, until the user calls
* notmuch_message_destroy on 'message' or until a query from which it
* derived is destroyed).
*
* This function will not return NULL since Notmuch ensures that every
* message belongs to a single thread.
*/
const char *
notmuch_message_get_thread_id (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Get a notmuch_messages_t iterator for all of the replies to
* 'message'.
*
* Note: This call only makes sense if 'message' was ultimately
* obtained from a notmuch_thread_t object, (such as by coming
* directly from the result of calling notmuch_thread_get_
* toplevel_messages or by any number of subsequent
* calls to notmuch_message_get_replies).
*
* If 'message' was obtained through some non-thread means, (such as
* by a call to notmuch_query_search_messages), then this function
* will return NULL.
*
* If there are no replies to 'message', this function will return
* NULL. (Note that notmuch_messages_valid will accept that NULL
* value as legitimate, and simply return FALSE for it.)
*
* This function also returns NULL if it triggers a Xapian exception.
*
* The returned list will be destroyed when the thread is
* destroyed.
*/
notmuch_messages_t *
notmuch_message_get_replies (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Get the total number of files associated with a message.
* @returns Non-negative integer
* @since libnotmuch 5.0 (notmuch 0.25)
*/
int
notmuch_message_count_files (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Get a filename for the email corresponding to 'message'.
*
* The returned filename is an absolute filename, (the initial
* component will match notmuch_database_get_path() ).
*
* The returned string belongs to the message so should not be
* modified or freed by the caller (nor should it be referenced after
* the message is destroyed).
*
* Note: If this message corresponds to multiple files in the mail
* store, (that is, multiple files contain identical message IDs),
* this function will arbitrarily return a single one of those
* filenames. See notmuch_message_get_filenames for returning the
* complete list of filenames.
*
* This function returns NULL if it triggers a Xapian exception.
*/
const char *
notmuch_message_get_filename (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Get all filenames for the email corresponding to 'message'.
*
* Returns a notmuch_filenames_t iterator listing all the filenames
* associated with 'message'. These files may not have identical
* content, but each will have the identical Message-ID.
*
* Each filename in the iterator is an absolute filename, (the initial
* component will match notmuch_database_get_path() ).
*
* This function returns NULL if it triggers a Xapian exception.
*/
notmuch_filenames_t *
notmuch_message_get_filenames (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Re-index the e-mail corresponding to 'message' using the supplied index options
*
* Returns the status of the re-index operation. (see the return
database: add n_d_index_file (deprecates n_d_add_message) We need a way to pass parameters to the indexing functionality on the first index, not just on reindexing. The obvious place is in notmuch_database_add_message. But since modifying the argument list would break both API and ABI, we needed a new name. I considered notmuch_database_add_message_with_params(), but the functionality we're talking about doesn't always add a message. It tries to index a specific file, possibly adding a message, but possibly doing other things, like adding terms to an existing message, or failing to deal with message objects entirely (e.g. because the file didn't contain a message). So i chose the function name notmuch_database_index_file. I confess i'm a little concerned about confusing future notmuch developers with the new name, since we already have a private _notmuch_message_index_file function, and the two do rather different things. But i think the added clarity for people linking against the future libnotmuch and the capacity for using index parameters makes this a worthwhile tradeoff. (that said, if anyone has another name that they strongly prefer, i'd be happy to go with it) This changeset also adjusts the tests so that we test whether the new, preferred function returns bad values (since the deprecated function just calls the new one). We can keep the deprecated n_d_add_message function around as long as we like, but at the next place where we're forced to break API or ABI we can probably choose to drop the name relatively safely. NOTE: there is probably more cleanup to do in the ruby and go bindings to complete the deprecation directly. I don't know those languages well enough to attempt a fix; i don't know how to test them; and i don't know the culture around those languages about API additions or deprecations.
2017-08-18 01:14:25 +02:00
* codes documented in notmuch_database_index_file)
*
* After reindexing, the user should discard the message object passed
* in here by calling notmuch_message_destroy, since it refers to the
* original message, not to the reindexed message.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_reindex (notmuch_message_t *message,
reindex: drop notmuch_param_t, use notmuch_indexopts_t instead There are at least three places in notmuch that can trigger an indexing action: * notmuch new * notmuch insert * notmuch reindex I have plans to add some indexing options (e.g. indexing the cleartext of encrypted parts, external filters, automated property injection) that should properly be available in all places where indexing happens. I also want those indexing options to be exposed by (and constrained by) the libnotmuch C API. This isn't yet an API break because we've never made a release with notmuch_param_t. These indexing options are relevant in the listed places (and in the libnotmuch analogues), but they aren't relevant in the other kinds of functionality that notmuch offers (e.g. dump/restore, tagging, search, show, reply). So i think a generic "param" object isn't well-suited for this case. In particular: * a param object sounds like it could contain parameters for some other (non-indexing) operation. This sounds confusing -- why would i pass non-indexing parameters to a function that only does indexing? * bremner suggests online a generic param object would actually be passed as a list of param objects, argv-style. In this case (at least in the obvious argv implementation), the params might be some sort of generic string. This introduces a problem where the API of the library doesn't grow as new options are added, which means that when code outside the library tries to use a feature, it first has to test for it, and have code to handle it not being available. The indexopts approach proposed here instead makes it clear at compile time and at dynamic link time that there is an explicit dependency on that feature, which allows automated tools to keep track of what's needed and keeps the actual code simple. My proposal adds the notmuch_indexopts_t as an opaque struct, so that we can extend the list of options without causing ABI breakage. The cost of this proposal appears to be that the "boilerplate" API increases a little bit, with a generic constructor and destructor function for the indexopts struct. More patches will follow that make use of this indexopts approach.
2017-08-18 01:14:26 +02:00
notmuch_indexopts_t *indexopts);
/**
* Message flags.
*/
typedef enum _notmuch_message_flag {
NOTMUCH_MESSAGE_FLAG_MATCH,
NOTMUCH_MESSAGE_FLAG_EXCLUDED,
/* This message is a "ghost message", meaning it has no filenames
* or content, but we know it exists because it was referenced by
* some other message. A ghost message has only a message ID and
* thread ID.
*/
NOTMUCH_MESSAGE_FLAG_GHOST,
} notmuch_message_flag_t;
/**
* Get a value of a flag for the email corresponding to 'message'.
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_message_get_flag (notmuch_message_t *message,
notmuch_message_flag_t flag);
/**
* Set a value of a flag for the email corresponding to 'message'.
*/
void
notmuch_message_set_flag (notmuch_message_t *message,
notmuch_message_flag_t flag, notmuch_bool_t value);
/**
* Get the date of 'message' as a time_t value.
*
* For the original textual representation of the Date header from the
* message call notmuch_message_get_header() with a header value of
* "date".
*/
time_t
notmuch_message_get_date (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Get the value of the specified header from 'message' as a UTF-8 string.
*
* Common headers are stored in the database when the message is
* indexed and will be returned from the database. Other headers will
* be read from the actual message file.
*
* The header name is case insensitive.
*
* The returned string belongs to the message so should not be
* modified or freed by the caller (nor should it be referenced after
* the message is destroyed).
*
* Returns an empty string ("") if the message does not contain a
* header line matching 'header'. Returns NULL if any error occurs.
*/
const char *
notmuch_message_get_header (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *header);
/**
* Get the tags for 'message', returning a notmuch_tags_t object which
* can be used to iterate over all tags.
*
* The tags object is owned by the message and as such, will only be
* valid for as long as the message is valid, (which is until the
* query from which it derived is destroyed).
*
* Typical usage might be:
*
* notmuch_message_t *message;
* notmuch_tags_t *tags;
* const char *tag;
*
* message = notmuch_database_find_message (database, message_id);
*
* for (tags = notmuch_message_get_tags (message);
* notmuch_tags_valid (tags);
* notmuch_tags_move_to_next (tags))
* {
* tag = notmuch_tags_get (tags);
* ....
* }
*
* notmuch_message_destroy (message);
*
* Note that there's no explicit destructor needed for the
* notmuch_tags_t object. (For consistency, we do provide a
* notmuch_tags_destroy function, but there's no good reason to call
* it if the message is about to be destroyed).
*/
notmuch_tags_t *
notmuch_message_get_tags (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* The longest possible tag value.
*/
#define NOTMUCH_TAG_MAX 200
/**
* Add a tag to the given message.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Tag successfully added to message
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: The 'tag' argument is NULL
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_TAG_TOO_LONG: The length of 'tag' is too long
* (exceeds NOTMUCH_TAG_MAX)
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in read-only
* mode so message cannot be modified.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_add_tag (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *tag);
/**
* Remove a tag from the given message.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Tag successfully removed from message
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: The 'tag' argument is NULL
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_TAG_TOO_LONG: The length of 'tag' is too long
* (exceeds NOTMUCH_TAG_MAX)
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in read-only
* mode so message cannot be modified.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_remove_tag (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *tag);
/**
* Remove all tags from the given message.
*
* See notmuch_message_freeze for an example showing how to safely
* replace tag values.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in read-only
* mode so message cannot be modified.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_remove_all_tags (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Add/remove tags according to maildir flags in the message filename(s).
*
* This function examines the filenames of 'message' for maildir
* flags, and adds or removes tags on 'message' as follows when these
* flags are present:
*
* Flag Action if present
* ---- -----------------
* 'D' Adds the "draft" tag to the message
* 'F' Adds the "flagged" tag to the message
* 'P' Adds the "passed" tag to the message
* 'R' Adds the "replied" tag to the message
* 'S' Removes the "unread" tag from the message
*
* For each flag that is not present, the opposite action (add/remove)
* is performed for the corresponding tags.
*
* Flags are identified as trailing components of the filename after a
* sequence of ":2,".
*
* If there are multiple filenames associated with this message, the
* flag is considered present if it appears in one or more
* filenames. (That is, the flags from the multiple filenames are
* combined with the logical OR operator.)
*
* A client can ensure that notmuch database tags remain synchronized
* with maildir flags by calling this function after each call to
database: add n_d_index_file (deprecates n_d_add_message) We need a way to pass parameters to the indexing functionality on the first index, not just on reindexing. The obvious place is in notmuch_database_add_message. But since modifying the argument list would break both API and ABI, we needed a new name. I considered notmuch_database_add_message_with_params(), but the functionality we're talking about doesn't always add a message. It tries to index a specific file, possibly adding a message, but possibly doing other things, like adding terms to an existing message, or failing to deal with message objects entirely (e.g. because the file didn't contain a message). So i chose the function name notmuch_database_index_file. I confess i'm a little concerned about confusing future notmuch developers with the new name, since we already have a private _notmuch_message_index_file function, and the two do rather different things. But i think the added clarity for people linking against the future libnotmuch and the capacity for using index parameters makes this a worthwhile tradeoff. (that said, if anyone has another name that they strongly prefer, i'd be happy to go with it) This changeset also adjusts the tests so that we test whether the new, preferred function returns bad values (since the deprecated function just calls the new one). We can keep the deprecated n_d_add_message function around as long as we like, but at the next place where we're forced to break API or ABI we can probably choose to drop the name relatively safely. NOTE: there is probably more cleanup to do in the ruby and go bindings to complete the deprecation directly. I don't know those languages well enough to attempt a fix; i don't know how to test them; and i don't know the culture around those languages about API additions or deprecations.
2017-08-18 01:14:25 +02:00
* notmuch_database_index_file. See also
* notmuch_message_tags_to_maildir_flags for synchronizing tag changes
* back to maildir flags.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_maildir_flags_to_tags (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* return TRUE if any filename of 'message' has maildir flag 'flag',
* FALSE otherwise.
*
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_message_has_maildir_flag (notmuch_message_t *message, char flag);
/**
* Rename message filename(s) to encode tags as maildir flags.
*
* Specifically, for each filename corresponding to this message:
*
* If the filename is not in a maildir directory, do nothing. (A
* maildir directory is determined as a directory named "new" or
* "cur".) Similarly, if the filename has invalid maildir info,
* (repeated or outof-ASCII-order flag characters after ":2,"), then
* do nothing.
*
* If the filename is in a maildir directory, rename the file so that
* its filename ends with the sequence ":2," followed by zero or more
* of the following single-character flags (in ASCII order):
*
2017-07-18 00:16:05 +02:00
* * flag 'D' iff the message has the "draft" tag
* * flag 'F' iff the message has the "flagged" tag
* * flag 'P' iff the message has the "passed" tag
* * flag 'R' iff the message has the "replied" tag
* * flag 'S' iff the message does not have the "unread" tag
*
* Any existing flags unmentioned in the list above will be preserved
* in the renaming.
*
* Also, if this filename is in a directory named "new", rename it to
* be within the neighboring directory named "cur".
*
* A client can ensure that maildir filename flags remain synchronized
* with notmuch database tags by calling this function after changing
* tags, (after calls to notmuch_message_add_tag,
* notmuch_message_remove_tag, or notmuch_message_freeze/
* notmuch_message_thaw). See also notmuch_message_maildir_flags_to_tags
* for synchronizing maildir flag changes back to tags.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_tags_to_maildir_flags (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Freeze the current state of 'message' within the database.
*
* This means that changes to the message state, (via
* notmuch_message_add_tag, notmuch_message_remove_tag, and
* notmuch_message_remove_all_tags), will not be committed to the
* database until the message is thawed with notmuch_message_thaw.
*
* Multiple calls to freeze/thaw are valid and these calls will
* "stack". That is there must be as many calls to thaw as to freeze
* before a message is actually thawed.
*
* The ability to do freeze/thaw allows for safe transactions to
* change tag values. For example, explicitly setting a message to
* have a given set of tags might look like this:
*
* notmuch_message_freeze (message);
*
* notmuch_message_remove_all_tags (message);
*
* for (i = 0; i < NUM_TAGS; i++)
* notmuch_message_add_tag (message, tags[i]);
*
* notmuch_message_thaw (message);
*
* With freeze/thaw used like this, the message in the database is
* guaranteed to have either the full set of original tag values, or
* the full set of new tag values, but nothing in between.
*
* Imagine the example above without freeze/thaw and the operation
* somehow getting interrupted. This could result in the message being
* left with no tags if the interruption happened after
* notmuch_message_remove_all_tags but before notmuch_message_add_tag.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Message successfully frozen.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in read-only
* mode so message cannot be modified.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_freeze (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Thaw the current 'message', synchronizing any changes that may have
* occurred while 'message' was frozen into the notmuch database.
*
* See notmuch_message_freeze for an example of how to use this
* function to safely provide tag changes.
*
* Multiple calls to freeze/thaw are valid and these calls with
* "stack". That is there must be as many calls to thaw as to freeze
* before a message is actually thawed.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: Message successfully thawed, (or at least
* its frozen count has successfully been reduced by 1).
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_UNBALANCED_FREEZE_THAW: An attempt was made to thaw
* an unfrozen message. That is, there have been an unbalanced
* number of calls to notmuch_message_freeze and
* notmuch_message_thaw.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_thaw (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_message_t object.
*
* It can be useful to call this function in the case of a single
* query object with many messages in the result, (such as iterating
* over the entire database). Otherwise, it's fine to never call this
* function and there will still be no memory leaks. (The memory from
* the messages get reclaimed when the containing query is destroyed.)
*/
void
notmuch_message_destroy (notmuch_message_t *message);
/**
* @name Message Properties
*
* This interface provides the ability to attach arbitrary (key,value)
* string pairs to a message, to remove such pairs, and to iterate
* over them. The caller should take some care as to what keys they
* add or delete values for, as other subsystems or extensions may
* depend on these properties.
*
* Please see notmuch-properties(7) for more details about specific
* properties and conventions around their use.
*
*/
/**@{*/
/**
* Retrieve the value for a single property key
*
* *value* is set to a string owned by the message or NULL if there is
* no such key. In the case of multiple values for the given key, the
* first one is retrieved.
*
* @returns
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: *value* may not be NULL.
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: No error occurred.
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_get_property (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *key, const char **value);
/**
* Add a (key,value) pair to a message
*
* @returns
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT: *key* may not contain an '=' character.
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: Neither *key* nor *value* may be NULL.
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: No error occurred.
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_add_property (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *key, const char *value);
/**
* Remove a (key,value) pair from a message.
*
* It is not an error to remove a non-existant (key,value) pair
*
* @returns
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT: *key* may not contain an '=' character.
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_NULL_POINTER: Neither *key* nor *value* may be NULL.
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: No error occurred.
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_remove_property (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *key, const char *value);
/**
* Remove all (key,value) pairs from the given message.
*
* @param[in,out] message message to operate on.
* @param[in] key key to delete properties for. If NULL, delete
* properties for all keys
* @returns
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in
* read-only mode so message cannot be modified.
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: No error occurred.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_remove_all_properties (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *key);
/**
* Remove all (prefix*,value) pairs from the given message
*
* @param[in,out] message message to operate on.
* @param[in] prefix delete properties with keys that start with prefix.
* If NULL, delete all properties
* @returns
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in
* read-only mode so message cannot be modified.
2018-01-02 16:32:38 +01:00
* - NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: No error occurred.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.1 (notmuch 0.26)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_remove_all_properties_with_prefix (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *prefix);
/**
* Opaque message property iterator
*/
typedef struct _notmuch_string_map_iterator notmuch_message_properties_t;
/**
* Get the properties for *message*, returning a
* notmuch_message_properties_t object which can be used to iterate
* over all properties.
*
* The notmuch_message_properties_t object is owned by the message and
* as such, will only be valid for as long as the message is valid,
* (which is until the query from which it derived is destroyed).
*
* @param[in] message The message to examine
* @param[in] key key or key prefix
* @param[in] exact if TRUE, require exact match with key. Otherwise
* treat as prefix.
*
* Typical usage might be:
*
* notmuch_message_properties_t *list;
*
* for (list = notmuch_message_get_properties (message, "testkey1", TRUE);
* notmuch_message_properties_valid (list); notmuch_message_properties_move_to_next (list)) {
* printf("%s\n", notmuch_message_properties_value(list));
* }
*
* notmuch_message_properties_destroy (list);
*
* Note that there's no explicit destructor needed for the
* notmuch_message_properties_t object. (For consistency, we do
* provide a notmuch_message_properities_destroy function, but there's
* no good reason to call it if the message is about to be destroyed).
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_message_properties_t *
notmuch_message_get_properties (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *key, notmuch_bool_t exact);
/**
* Return the number of properties named "key" belonging to the specific message.
*
* @param[in] message The message to examine
* @param[in] key key to count
* @param[out] count The number of matching properties associated with this message.
*
* @returns
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: successful count, possibly some other error.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.2 (notmuch 0.27)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_message_count_properties (notmuch_message_t *message, const char *key, unsigned int *count);
/**
* Is the given *properties* iterator pointing at a valid (key,value)
* pair.
*
* When this function returns TRUE,
* notmuch_message_properties_{key,value} will return a valid string,
* and notmuch_message_properties_move_to_next will do what it
* says. Whereas when this function returns FALSE, calling any of
* these functions results in undefined behaviour.
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_message_get_properties for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_message_properties_t
* object.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_message_properties_valid (notmuch_message_properties_t *properties);
/**
* Move the *properties* iterator to the next (key,value) pair
*
* If *properties* is already pointing at the last pair then the iterator
* will be moved to a point just beyond that last pair, (where
* notmuch_message_properties_valid will return FALSE).
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_message_get_properties for example
* code showing how to iterate over a notmuch_message_properties_t object.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
void
notmuch_message_properties_move_to_next (notmuch_message_properties_t *properties);
/**
* Return the key from the current (key,value) pair.
*
* this could be useful if iterating for a prefix
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
const char *
notmuch_message_properties_key (notmuch_message_properties_t *properties);
/**
* Return the value from the current (key,value) pair.
*
* This could be useful if iterating for a prefix.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
const char *
notmuch_message_properties_value (notmuch_message_properties_t *properties);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_message_properties_t object.
*
* It's not strictly necessary to call this function. All memory from
* the notmuch_message_properties_t object will be reclaimed when the
* containing message object is destroyed.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
void
notmuch_message_properties_destroy (notmuch_message_properties_t *properties);
/**@}*/
/**
* Is the given 'tags' iterator pointing at a valid tag.
*
* When this function returns TRUE, notmuch_tags_get will return a
* valid string. Whereas when this function returns FALSE,
* notmuch_tags_get will return NULL.
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_message_get_tags for example code
* showing how to iterate over a notmuch_tags_t object.
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_tags_valid (notmuch_tags_t *tags);
/**
* Get the current tag from 'tags' as a string.
*
* Note: The returned string belongs to 'tags' and has a lifetime
2009-11-18 00:23:42 +01:00
* identical to it (and the query to which it ultimately belongs).
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_message_get_tags for example code
* showing how to iterate over a notmuch_tags_t object.
*/
const char *
notmuch_tags_get (notmuch_tags_t *tags);
/**
* Move the 'tags' iterator to the next tag.
*
* If 'tags' is already pointing at the last tag then the iterator
* will be moved to a point just beyond that last tag, (where
* notmuch_tags_valid will return FALSE and notmuch_tags_get will
* return NULL).
*
* See the documentation of notmuch_message_get_tags for example code
* showing how to iterate over a notmuch_tags_t object.
*/
void
notmuch_tags_move_to_next (notmuch_tags_t *tags);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_tags_t object.
*
* It's not strictly necessary to call this function. All memory from
2009-11-18 00:23:42 +01:00
* the notmuch_tags_t object will be reclaimed when the containing
* message or query objects are destroyed.
*/
void
notmuch_tags_destroy (notmuch_tags_t *tags);
/**
* Store an mtime within the database for 'directory'.
*
* The 'directory' should be an object retrieved from the database
* with notmuch_database_get_directory for a particular path.
*
* The intention is for the caller to use the mtime to allow efficient
* identification of new messages to be added to the database. The
* recommended usage is as follows:
*
* o Read the mtime of a directory from the filesystem
*
database: add n_d_index_file (deprecates n_d_add_message) We need a way to pass parameters to the indexing functionality on the first index, not just on reindexing. The obvious place is in notmuch_database_add_message. But since modifying the argument list would break both API and ABI, we needed a new name. I considered notmuch_database_add_message_with_params(), but the functionality we're talking about doesn't always add a message. It tries to index a specific file, possibly adding a message, but possibly doing other things, like adding terms to an existing message, or failing to deal with message objects entirely (e.g. because the file didn't contain a message). So i chose the function name notmuch_database_index_file. I confess i'm a little concerned about confusing future notmuch developers with the new name, since we already have a private _notmuch_message_index_file function, and the two do rather different things. But i think the added clarity for people linking against the future libnotmuch and the capacity for using index parameters makes this a worthwhile tradeoff. (that said, if anyone has another name that they strongly prefer, i'd be happy to go with it) This changeset also adjusts the tests so that we test whether the new, preferred function returns bad values (since the deprecated function just calls the new one). We can keep the deprecated n_d_add_message function around as long as we like, but at the next place where we're forced to break API or ABI we can probably choose to drop the name relatively safely. NOTE: there is probably more cleanup to do in the ruby and go bindings to complete the deprecation directly. I don't know those languages well enough to attempt a fix; i don't know how to test them; and i don't know the culture around those languages about API additions or deprecations.
2017-08-18 01:14:25 +02:00
* o Call index_file for all mail files in the directory
*
* o Call notmuch_directory_set_mtime with the mtime read from the
* filesystem.
*
* Then, when wanting to check for updates to the directory in the
* future, the client can call notmuch_directory_get_mtime and know
* that it only needs to add files if the mtime of the directory and
* files are newer than the stored timestamp.
*
* Note: The notmuch_directory_get_mtime function does not allow the
* caller to distinguish a timestamp of 0 from a non-existent
* timestamp. So don't store a timestamp of 0 unless you are
* comfortable with that.
*
* Return value:
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS: mtime successfully stored in database.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_XAPIAN_EXCEPTION: A Xapian exception
* occurred, mtime not stored.
*
* NOTMUCH_STATUS_READ_ONLY_DATABASE: Database was opened in read-only
* mode so directory mtime cannot be modified.
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_directory_set_mtime (notmuch_directory_t *directory,
time_t mtime);
/**
* Get the mtime of a directory, (as previously stored with
* notmuch_directory_set_mtime).
*
* Returns 0 if no mtime has previously been stored for this
* directory.
*/
time_t
notmuch_directory_get_mtime (notmuch_directory_t *directory);
/**
* Get a notmuch_filenames_t iterator listing all the filenames of
* messages in the database within the given directory.
*
* The returned filenames will be the basename-entries only (not
* complete paths).
*/
notmuch_filenames_t *
notmuch_directory_get_child_files (notmuch_directory_t *directory);
/**
2015-10-23 20:37:26 +02:00
* Get a notmuch_filenames_t iterator listing all the filenames of
* sub-directories in the database within the given directory.
*
* The returned filenames will be the basename-entries only (not
* complete paths).
*/
notmuch_filenames_t *
notmuch_directory_get_child_directories (notmuch_directory_t *directory);
/**
* Delete directory document from the database, and destroy the
* notmuch_directory_t object. Assumes any child directories and files
* have been deleted by the caller.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.3 (notmuch 0.21)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_directory_delete (notmuch_directory_t *directory);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_directory_t object.
*/
void
notmuch_directory_destroy (notmuch_directory_t *directory);
/**
* Is the given 'filenames' iterator pointing at a valid filename.
*
* When this function returns TRUE, notmuch_filenames_get will return
* a valid string. Whereas when this function returns FALSE,
* notmuch_filenames_get will return NULL.
*
* It is acceptable to pass NULL for 'filenames', in which case this
* function will always return FALSE.
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_filenames_valid (notmuch_filenames_t *filenames);
/**
* Get the current filename from 'filenames' as a string.
*
* Note: The returned string belongs to 'filenames' and has a lifetime
* identical to it (and the directory to which it ultimately belongs).
*
* It is acceptable to pass NULL for 'filenames', in which case this
* function will always return NULL.
*/
const char *
notmuch_filenames_get (notmuch_filenames_t *filenames);
/**
* Move the 'filenames' iterator to the next filename.
*
* If 'filenames' is already pointing at the last filename then the
* iterator will be moved to a point just beyond that last filename,
* (where notmuch_filenames_valid will return FALSE and
* notmuch_filenames_get will return NULL).
*
* It is acceptable to pass NULL for 'filenames', in which case this
* function will do nothing.
*/
void
notmuch_filenames_move_to_next (notmuch_filenames_t *filenames);
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_filenames_t object.
*
* It's not strictly necessary to call this function. All memory from
* the notmuch_filenames_t object will be reclaimed when the
* containing directory object is destroyed.
*
* It is acceptable to pass NULL for 'filenames', in which case this
* function will do nothing.
*/
void
notmuch_filenames_destroy (notmuch_filenames_t *filenames);
/**
* set config 'key' to 'value'
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_set_config (notmuch_database_t *db, const char *key, const char *value);
/**
* retrieve config item 'key', assign to 'value'
*
* keys which have not been previously set with n_d_set_config will
* return an empty string.
*
* return value is allocated by malloc and should be freed by the
* caller.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_get_config (notmuch_database_t *db, const char *key, char **value);
/**
* Create an iterator for all config items with keys matching a given prefix
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_database_get_config_list (notmuch_database_t *db, const char *prefix, notmuch_config_list_t **out);
/**
* Is 'config_list' iterator valid (i.e. _key, _value, _move_to_next can be called).
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_config_list_valid (notmuch_config_list_t *config_list);
/**
* return key for current config pair
*
* return value is owned by the iterator, and will be destroyed by the
* next call to notmuch_config_list_key or notmuch_config_list_destroy.
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
const char *
notmuch_config_list_key (notmuch_config_list_t *config_list);
/**
* return 'value' for current config pair
*
* return value is owned by the iterator, and will be destroyed by the
* next call to notmuch_config_list_value or notmuch config_list_destroy
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
const char *
notmuch_config_list_value (notmuch_config_list_t *config_list);
/**
* move 'config_list' iterator to the next pair
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
void
notmuch_config_list_move_to_next (notmuch_config_list_t *config_list);
/**
* free any resources held by 'config_list'
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
void
notmuch_config_list_destroy (notmuch_config_list_t *config_list);
reindex: drop notmuch_param_t, use notmuch_indexopts_t instead There are at least three places in notmuch that can trigger an indexing action: * notmuch new * notmuch insert * notmuch reindex I have plans to add some indexing options (e.g. indexing the cleartext of encrypted parts, external filters, automated property injection) that should properly be available in all places where indexing happens. I also want those indexing options to be exposed by (and constrained by) the libnotmuch C API. This isn't yet an API break because we've never made a release with notmuch_param_t. These indexing options are relevant in the listed places (and in the libnotmuch analogues), but they aren't relevant in the other kinds of functionality that notmuch offers (e.g. dump/restore, tagging, search, show, reply). So i think a generic "param" object isn't well-suited for this case. In particular: * a param object sounds like it could contain parameters for some other (non-indexing) operation. This sounds confusing -- why would i pass non-indexing parameters to a function that only does indexing? * bremner suggests online a generic param object would actually be passed as a list of param objects, argv-style. In this case (at least in the obvious argv implementation), the params might be some sort of generic string. This introduces a problem where the API of the library doesn't grow as new options are added, which means that when code outside the library tries to use a feature, it first has to test for it, and have code to handle it not being available. The indexopts approach proposed here instead makes it clear at compile time and at dynamic link time that there is an explicit dependency on that feature, which allows automated tools to keep track of what's needed and keeps the actual code simple. My proposal adds the notmuch_indexopts_t as an opaque struct, so that we can extend the list of options without causing ABI breakage. The cost of this proposal appears to be that the "boilerplate" API increases a little bit, with a generic constructor and destructor function for the indexopts struct. More patches will follow that make use of this indexopts approach.
2017-08-18 01:14:26 +02:00
/**
* get the current default indexing options for a given database.
*
* This object will survive until the database itself is destroyed,
* but the caller may also release it earlier with
* notmuch_indexopts_destroy.
*
* This object represents a set of options on how a message can be
* added to the index. At the moment it is a featureless stub.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.1 (notmuch 0.26)
*/
notmuch_indexopts_t *
notmuch_database_get_default_indexopts (notmuch_database_t *db);
/**
* Stating a policy about how to decrypt messages.
*
* See index.decrypt in notmuch-config(1) for more details.
*/
typedef enum {
NOTMUCH_DECRYPT_FALSE,
NOTMUCH_DECRYPT_TRUE,
NOTMUCH_DECRYPT_AUTO,
NOTMUCH_DECRYPT_NOSTASH,
} notmuch_decryption_policy_t;
/**
* Specify whether to decrypt encrypted parts while indexing.
*
* Be aware that the index is likely sufficient to reconstruct the
* cleartext of the message itself, so please ensure that the notmuch
* message index is adequately protected. DO NOT SET THIS FLAG TO TRUE
* without considering the security of your index.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.1 (notmuch 0.26)
*/
notmuch_status_t
notmuch_indexopts_set_decrypt_policy (notmuch_indexopts_t *indexopts,
notmuch_decryption_policy_t decrypt_policy);
/**
* Return whether to decrypt encrypted parts while indexing.
* see notmuch_indexopts_set_decrypt_policy.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.1 (notmuch 0.26)
*/
notmuch_decryption_policy_t
notmuch_indexopts_get_decrypt_policy (const notmuch_indexopts_t *indexopts);
reindex: drop notmuch_param_t, use notmuch_indexopts_t instead There are at least three places in notmuch that can trigger an indexing action: * notmuch new * notmuch insert * notmuch reindex I have plans to add some indexing options (e.g. indexing the cleartext of encrypted parts, external filters, automated property injection) that should properly be available in all places where indexing happens. I also want those indexing options to be exposed by (and constrained by) the libnotmuch C API. This isn't yet an API break because we've never made a release with notmuch_param_t. These indexing options are relevant in the listed places (and in the libnotmuch analogues), but they aren't relevant in the other kinds of functionality that notmuch offers (e.g. dump/restore, tagging, search, show, reply). So i think a generic "param" object isn't well-suited for this case. In particular: * a param object sounds like it could contain parameters for some other (non-indexing) operation. This sounds confusing -- why would i pass non-indexing parameters to a function that only does indexing? * bremner suggests online a generic param object would actually be passed as a list of param objects, argv-style. In this case (at least in the obvious argv implementation), the params might be some sort of generic string. This introduces a problem where the API of the library doesn't grow as new options are added, which means that when code outside the library tries to use a feature, it first has to test for it, and have code to handle it not being available. The indexopts approach proposed here instead makes it clear at compile time and at dynamic link time that there is an explicit dependency on that feature, which allows automated tools to keep track of what's needed and keeps the actual code simple. My proposal adds the notmuch_indexopts_t as an opaque struct, so that we can extend the list of options without causing ABI breakage. The cost of this proposal appears to be that the "boilerplate" API increases a little bit, with a generic constructor and destructor function for the indexopts struct. More patches will follow that make use of this indexopts approach.
2017-08-18 01:14:26 +02:00
/**
* Destroy a notmuch_indexopts_t object.
*
* @since libnotmuch 5.1 (notmuch 0.26)
*/
void
notmuch_indexopts_destroy (notmuch_indexopts_t *options);
/**
* interrogate the library for compile time features
*
* @since libnotmuch 4.4 (notmuch 0.23)
*/
notmuch_bool_t
notmuch_built_with (const char *name);
/**@}*/
#pragma GCC visibility pop
NOTMUCH_END_DECLS
#endif