This stops the (usually incorrect) sigstatus and encstatus buttons
appearing when replying in emacs, and updates the test suite to match.
Overriding the status button functions is a little unusual but much
less intrusive than passing an argument all the way down the call
chain. It also makes it clear exactly what it does.
We also hide the application/pgp-encrypted part as it can only contain
"Version: 1". We do this in notmuch show, which means it also happens
when replying.
Use gmime message instead of notmuch message in Reply-To: redundancy
detection. This allows us to easily iterate over all recipient email
addresses accurately, instead of just scanning for strings in the
relevant message headers. This improves the accuracy of the detection
in many ways.
This also makes the notmuch message parameter to get_sender()
unused. This will be cleaned up in a follow-up patch to not make too
many changes here at once.
Avoid parsing Reply-To: header into internet address list twice. Move
the parsing outside of reply_to_header_is_redundant(), and pass the
parsed internet address list in as parameter. This also avoids leaking
the memory of one copy of the internet address list.
Pass in GMimeMessage to simplify To/Cc/Bcc headers. We'll eventually
remove the notmuch message passing altogether, but keep both for now
to not make too big changes at once.
Getting the headers from GMimeMessage using GMime functions fixes the
error on duplicate Cc headers reported by Daniel Kahn Gillmor
<dkg@fifthhorseman.net> in id:87d1ngv95p.fsf@alice.fifthhorseman.net.
Get rid of an intermediate function.
The small annoyance is the ownership differences in the address lists.
Now that we've made the various reply formats quite similar to each
other, there's no point in keeping the abstractions. They are now
close enough to be put in one function.
For now, a mime node will be uselessly created for the headers-only
case, but this is insignificant, and may change in the future.
Just use strdup when original references is not available, instead of
trying to cram everything into a monster asprintf. There should be no
functional changes.
Again, in preparation for later unification, reorganize
create_reply_message() to be more similar to the headers-only format
reply code in notmuch_reply_format_headers_only(). Due to "pretty"
header ordering, there should be no change in output. There should be
no functional changes.
Prepare for further future unification by making the code similar. The
only functional change is that errors in mime_node_open() also break
execution in default reply format.
There's quite a bit of duplication, and some consequent deviation,
between the various notmuch reply format code paths. Perform the query
and message iteration in common code, and make the format specific
functions operate on single messages.
There should be no functional changes.
As Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net> reports in
id:87d1ngv95p.fsf@alice.fifthhorseman.net, notmuch show combines
multiple Cc: fields into one, while notmuch reply does not. While such
messages are in violation of RFC 5322, it would be reasonable to
expect notmuch to be consistent. Add a known broken test to document
this expectation.
This also starts a new "broken" corpus for messages which are broken.
Details:
The original message is formatted using the message printing in
notmuch-show.c. For Cc:, it uses g_mime_message_get_recipients(),
which apparently combines all Cc: fields into one internally.
The addresses in the reply headers, OTOH, are based on headers queried
through libnotmuch. It boils down to g_mime_object_get_header() in
lib/message-file.c, which returns only the first occurence of header.
We largely use the corpus under test/corpus for
testing. Unfortunately, many of our tests have grown to depend on
having exactly this set of messages, making it hard to add new message
files for testing specific cases.
We do use a lot of add_message from within the tests, but it's not
possible to use that for adding broken messages, and adding several
messages at once can get unwieldy.
Move the basic corpus under tests/corpora/default, and make it
possible to add new, independent corpora along its side. This means
tons of renames with a few tweaks to add_email_corpus function in
test-lib.sh to let tests specify which corpus to use.
Previously if notmuch-wash-wrap-lines-length was set then all messages
would be wrapped at this value (or window-width if that is
smaller). This was done regardless of the message's depth in a thread --
for example, if the n.w.w.l.l is 80 and the messages depth is 20
(so indented 20 by default) the messages text only got 60 characters
of space.
This commit changes that so a message always gets the full n.w.w.l.l
of width regardless of its indentation (unless that goes over
window-width of course).
This allows the user to override the mime-type of a part in the show
buffer. This takes the simple option of displaying the part with the
specified mime-type in its own buffer (in view mode). This avoids
further complicating the part handling code.
Bound to ". m" (i.e., m in the part map). Then the user can either
enter a mime-type (with completion to all mime types that mailcap (and
thus notmuch) knows about, or press return for the default choice of
text/plain.
Originally the intent was to make the test more robust against changing
test keys. It turns out that (unscientifically) gpg --with-colons output
changes more often than our test key. Rather than making the script more
complex, just hard code the fingerprint.
This fixes Debian bug #847013; I expect similar test failures as other
distros adopt gnupg 2.1.15
With all the preparation it is now simple to add the actual insert
code. Since insert can fail for many reasons we let the user decide
interactively deal with it.
We modify test-lib.el to set file fcc, so that all the old tests and
emacs_fcc_message from test-lib.sh still work
We will need our own local copy of message-do-fcc so this commit just
copies the code straight from message.el so that it is easier to see
our local changes coming in the next commit.
We move some code around in preparation for the use of notmuch
insert. In particular, we move the check for a valid maildir for the
fcc to when the message is sent rather than when the fcc header is
inserted. The main motivation is consistency with the insert version
(coming later) where we cannot check the validity until send.
We allow the user some chance to correct the header; the choice here
is intended to be consistent with the insert version to come.
This function prints diagnostic information in the event of an
error. However, one of the callers has an optional :stdin-string
keyword argument. This causes the error printing routine to error
itself.
Rather than reach notmuch-check-exit-status about the possible keyword
arguments (currently only one but could be more in the future) this
commit just tells notmuch-check-exit-status how to print non-string arguments.
With this GNU Make construct one shell invocation can be skipped
and code looks shorter (narrower). This would now match to .git
being other file type than regular file or directory (or symlink
to those), but that is not a use case anyone should expect users
to do.
This commit makes two changes. The first allows the user to override
an external completion method with the internal notmuch address based
completion for an individual buffer.
Secondly, if the user has company-mode enabled then it sets up company
mode (based on internal completion) but disables the automatic timeout
completion -- the user can still activate it in when desired with
standard company commands such as company-complete.
This commit lets the user customize the address completion. It makes
two changes.
The first change controls whether to build the address completion list
based on messages you have sent or you have received (the latter is
much faster).
The second change add a possible filter query to limit the messages
used -- for example, setting this to date:1y.. would limit the
address completions to addresses used in the last year. This speeds up
the address harvest and may also make the search less cluttered as old
addresses may well no longer be valid.
This signals two things, an intent to be more liberal about accepting
patches, and an intent to stop distributing the bindings if maintenance
doesn't pick up.
I believe the current one is misleading, because in my experiments
Xapian did not add : when prefix and term were both upper case. Indeed,
it's hard to see how it could, because prefixes are added at a layer
above Xapian in our code. See _notmuch_message_add_term for an example.
Also try to explain why this is a good idea. As far as I can ascertain,
this is more of an issue for a system trying to work with an unknown set
of prefixes. Since notmuch has a fixed set of prefixes, and we can
hopefully be trusted not to add XGOLD and XGOLDEN as prefixes, it is
harder for problems to arise.
gdb sometimes writes warnings to stdout, which we don't need/want, and
for some reason --batch-silent isn't enough to hide. So in this commit
we write them to a log file, which is probably better for debugging
anyway. To see an illustrative test failure before this change, run
% make
% touch notmuch-count.c
% cd test && ./T060-count.sh
(cherry picked from commit f45fa5bdd3)
The User-Agent: header can be fun and interesting, but it also leaks
quite a bit of information about the user and their software stack.
This represents a potential security risk (attackers can target the
particular stack) and also an anonymity risk (a user trying to
preserve their anonymity by sending mail from a non-associated account
might reveal quite a lot of information if their choice of mail user
agent is exposed).
This change also avoids hiding the User-Agent header by default, so
that people who decide they want to send it will at least see it (and
can edit it if they want to) before sending.
It makes sense to have safer defaults.