Turns out round trip tests didn't really round trip anything. Broken
by yours truly in 971cdc72cd ("test: make it possible to have
multiple corpora"). Ooops.
Subsequent patches will introduce a convention that properties whose
name starts with "index." will be stripped (and possibly re-added)
during re-indexing. This patch lays the groundwork for doing that.
Commit 0f314c0c99 ("cli: convert notmuch_bool_t to stdbool")
over-eagerly converted EXCLUDE_TRUE and EXCLUDE_FALSE to EXCLUDE_true
and EXCLUDE_false in notmuch-count.c. We could just fix the case back,
but convert the option to an actual boolean argument instead.
We've used a keyword argument rather than a boolean argument for
notmuch count --exclude for five years, since commit 785c1e497f
("cli: move count to the new --exclude=(true|false|flag) naming
scheme."), "to allow future options to be added more easily". I think
we can conclude future options aren't coming any time soon.
In practice, we're going to see this function invoked differently
depending on which gmime we build against. The compatibility layer
forces our code into the lowest-common-denominator -- unable to make
use of new features even when built against a newer version.
Dropping the compatibility layer paves the way for clearer use of
features from GMime 3.0 in future commits.
"typedef GMimeAddressType GMimeRecipientType" is already present
further down in the compatibility wrapper (with other typedefs). We
don't need it twice.
There's no chance that _notmuch_crypto_cleanup() will ever return
anything other than 0, and no one ever checks its return value anyway.
So make it return void instead of int.
notmuch_crypto_context_t was introduced (i think) as some sort of
abstraction layer to make notmuch somewhat independent of GMime. But
it isn't even useful for GMime 3.0 or later -- we can drop the
pretense that it's some sort of abstraction in this case, and just
call it what it is, GMimeCryptoContext, which is useful for building
against older versions of GMime.
This also renames _notmuch_crypto_get_context() to
_notmuch_crypto_get_gmime_context().
The notmuch_crypto_t struct isn't used externally, and we have no
plans to explicitly export it. Prefix its name (and associated
functions) with _ to make that intent clear.
C99 stdbool turned 18 this year. There really is no reason to use our
own, except in the library interface for backward
compatibility. Convert the lib internally to stdbool.
C99 stdbool turned 18 this year. There really is no reason to use our
own, except in the library interface for backward
compatibility. Convert the cli and test binaries to stdbool.
Renamed from out-of-tree-build-check.sh to be consistent with
other files in this directory.
Fixed quoting in "$srcdir" usage for additional robustness, other
quoting changes for consistency.
The --entire-thread default depends on other arguments, so we'll have
to figure out if it was explicitly set by the user or not. The arg
parser .present feature helps us clean up the code here.
Add pointer to boolean .present field to opt desc, which (if non-NULL)
will be set to TRUE if the argument in question is present on the
command line. Unchanged otherwise.
Several changes at once, just to not have to change the same lines
several times over:
- Use designated initializers to initialize opt desc arrays.
- Only initialize the needed fields.
- Remove arg_id (short options) as unused.
- Replace opt_type and output_var with several type safe output
variables, where the output variable being non-NULL determines the
type. Introduce checks to ensure only one is set. The downside is
some waste of const space per argument; this could be saved by
retaining opt_type and using a union, but that's still pretty
verbose.
- Fix some variables due to the type safety. Mostly a good thing, but
leads to some enums being changed to ints. This is pedantically
correct, but somewhat annoying. We could also cast, but that defeats
the purpose a bit.
- Terminate the opt desc arrays using {}.
The output variable type safety and the ability to add new fields for
just some output types or arguments are the big wins. For example, if
we wanted to add a variable to set when the argument is present, we
could do so for just the arguments that need it.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but I think this looks nice when
defining the arguments, and reduces some of the verbosity we have
there.
Several subtle interconnected changes here:
- If the folder name passed as argument is the empty string "" or
slash "/", the final maildir path would end up having "//" in it. We
should strip the final maildir path, not folder.
- The folder variable should really be const char *, another reason
not to modify it.
- The maildir variable is only const to let us point it at db_path
directly.
To be able to strip the maildir variable, always allocate it. Default
folder to the empty string "", and don't treat folder not being
present on the command line as anything special.
As a side effect, we also create the cur/new/tmp in the top level
directory if they're not there and --create-folder is given.
This imports a message with ISO-8859-2 encoded characters, then opens
the database using the python bindings. We peek through all mesage
parts, afterwards print the message id.
Signed-off-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rammhold <andreas@rammhold.de>