Existing users of the legacy python bindings use
message.get_flags(Message.FLAG.MATCH) to determine which messages in a
thread matched. Since the bindings don't provide get_flags anymore,
they should provide a property analogous to the existing "excluded"
property.
Since it is possible to use an atomic context to abort a number of
changes support this usage. Because the only way to actually abort
the transaction is to close the database this must also do so.
Amended by db: Note the limitation requiring close is a limitation of
the underlying notmuch API, which should be fixed in a future notmuch
release.
This reverses the logic of StandaloneMessage to instead create a
OwnedMessage. Only the Thread class allows retrieving messages more
then once so it can explicitly create such messages.
The added test fails with SIGABRT without the fix for the message
re-use in threads being present.
Even though we use collections.abc.Set which implements all these
methods under their operator names, the actual named variations of
these methods are shockingly missing. So let's add them manually.
crypto.gpg_path was only used when we built against gmime versions
before 3.0. Since we now depend on gmime 3.0.3 or later, it is
meaningless.
The removal of the field from the _notmuch_config struct would be an
ABI change if that struct were externally exposed, but it is not, so
it's safe to unilaterally remove it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
I was supposed to amend the original patch that added this function,
but somehow I botched that. The original version runs, so make an
extra commit for the tidying.
This add the notmuch version and absolute path of the binary used
in the pytest header. This is nice when running the tests
interactively as you get confirmation you're testing the version you
thought you were testing.
This introduces CFFI-based Python3-only bindings.
The bindings aim at:
- Better performance on pypy
- Easier to use Python-C interface
- More "pythonic"
- The API should not allow invalid operations
- Use native object protocol where possible
- Memory safety; whatever you do from python, it should not coredump.