2009-10-27 18:04:48 +01:00
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Write a "notmuch tag" command to add/remove tags from messages
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matching a search query.
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2009-10-26 07:18:05 +01:00
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Write a "notmuch show" that displays a single thread.
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Fix to use the *last* Message-ID header if multiple such headers are
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encountered, (I noticed this is one thing that kept me from seeing the
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same message-ID values as sup).
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2009-10-27 18:04:48 +01:00
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Think about this race condition:
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A client executes "notmuch search"
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Then executes "notmuch show" on a thread
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While user is reading, new mail is added to database for the thread
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Client asks for the thread to be archived.
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The bug here is that email that was never read will be
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2009-10-27 18:19:46 +01:00
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archived. That's bad. The fix for the above is for the client to
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archive the individual messages already retrieved and shown, not
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the thread. (And in fact, we don't even have functions for removing
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tags on threads.)
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But this one is harder to fix:
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A client executes "notmuch search"
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While user is reading, new mail is added to database for the thread
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Client asks for a thread to be archived.
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To support this operation, (archiving a thread without even seeing
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the individual messages), we might need to provide a command to
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archive a thread as a whole. The problem is actually easy to fix
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for a persistent client. It can onto the originally retrieved
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thread objects which can hold onto the originally retrieved
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messages. So archiving those thread objects, (and not newly created
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thread objects), will be safe.
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It's harder to fix the non-persistent "notmuch" client. One
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approach is to simply tell the user to not run "notmuch new"
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between reading the results of "notmuch search" and executing
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"notmuch archive-thread" (or whatever we name it).
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