Commit graph

170 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Bremner
bbf6069252 lib: optionally support single argument date: queries
This relies on the FieldProcessor API, which is only present in xapian
>= 1.3.
2016-05-08 08:17:07 -03:00
Jani Nikula
54aeab1962 lib: clean up _notmuch_database_split_path
Make the logic it a bit easier to read. No functional changes.
2016-04-12 20:46:42 -03:00
Jani Nikula
a352d9ceaa lib: fix handling of one character long directory names at top level
The code to skip multiple slashes in _notmuch_database_split_path()
skips back one character too much. This is compensated by a +1 in the
length parameter to the strndup() call. Mostly this works fine, but if
the path is to a file under a top level directory with one character
long name, the directory part is mistaken to be part of the file name
(slash == path in code). The returned directory name will be the empty
string and the basename will be the full path, breaking the indexing
logic in notmuch new.

Fix the multiple slash skipping to keep the slash variable pointing at
the last slash, and adjust strndup() accordingly.

The bug was introduced in

commit e890b0cf40
Author: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Date:   Sat Dec 19 13:20:26 2009 -0800

    database: Store the parent ID for each directory document.

just a little over two months after the initial commit in the Notmuch
code history, making this the longest living bug in Notmuch to date.
2016-04-12 20:40:19 -03:00
Steven Allen
c946356cdc forbid atomic transactions on writable, upgradable databases
We can't (but currently do) allow upgrades within transactions because
upgrades need their own transactions. We don't want to re-use the
current transaction because bailing out of an upgrade would mean loosing
all previous changes (because our "atomic" transactions don't commit
before hand). This gives us two options:

1. Fail at the beginning of upgrade (tell the user to end the
   transaction, upgrade, and start over).
2. Don't allow the user to start the transaction.

I went with the latter because:

1. There is no reason to call `begin_atomic` unless you intend to to
   write to the database and anyone intending to write to the database
   should upgrade it first.
2. This means that nothing inside an atomic transaction can ever fail
   with NOTMUCH_STATUS_UPGRADE_REQUIRED.
2015-11-23 08:15:37 -04:00
David Bremner
2501c2565c lib: migrate notmuch_database_upgrade to new query_search API
Here we depend on the error path cleaning up query
2015-10-05 19:53:11 -03:00
David Bremner
87ee9a53e3 lib: add versions of n_q_count_{message,threads} with status return
Although I think it's a pretty bad idea to continue using the old API,
this allows both a more gentle transition for clients of the library,
and allows us to break one monolithic change into a series
2015-10-05 19:44:07 -03:00
David Bremner
65a6b86873 lib: move query variable to function scope
This is a prelude to deallocating it (if necessary) on the error path.
2015-10-05 19:39:11 -03:00
David Bremner
bd5504ec10 lib: constify argument to notmuch_database_status_string
We don't modify the database struct, so no harm in committing to that.
2015-09-04 08:24:38 -03:00
David Bremner
110694b00b lib: note remaining uses of deprecated message search API
The two remaining cases in the lib seem to require more than a simple
replacement of the old call, with the new call plus a check of the
return value.
2015-09-04 08:08:18 -03:00
Austin Clements
cb08a2ee01 lib: Add "lastmod:" queries for filtering by last modification
The implementation is essentially the same as the date range search
prior to Jani's fancy date parser.
2015-08-14 18:23:49 +02:00
Austin Clements
98ee460eaa lib: API to retrieve database revision and UUID
This exposes the committed database revision to library users along
with a UUID that can be used to detect when revision numbers are no
longer comparable (e.g., because the database has been replaced).
2015-08-13 23:52:51 +02:00
Austin Clements
7f57b747b9 lib: Add per-message last modification tracking
This adds a new document value that stores the revision of the last
modification to message metadata, where the revision number increases
monotonically with each database commit.

An alternative would be to store the wall-clock time of the last
modification of each message.  In principle this is simpler and has
the advantage that any process can determine the current timestamp
without support from libnotmuch.  However, even assuming a computer's
clock never goes backward and ignoring clock skew in networked
environments, this has a fatal flaw.  Xapian uses (optimistic)
snapshot isolation, which means reads can be concurrent with writes.
Given this, consider the following time line with a write and two read
transactions:

   write  |-X-A--------------|
   read 1       |---B---|
   read 2                      |---|

The write transaction modifies message X and records the wall-clock
time of the modification at A.  The writer hangs around for a while
and later commits its change.  Read 1 is concurrent with the write, so
it doesn't see the change to X.  It does some query and records the
wall-clock time of its results at B.  Transaction read 2 later starts
after the write commits and queries for changes since wall-clock time
B (say the reads are performing an incremental backup).  Even though
read 1 could not see the change to X, read 2 is told (correctly) that
X has not changed since B, the time of the last read.  In fact, X
changed before wall-clock time A, but the change was not visible until
*after* wall-clock time B, so read 2 misses the change to X.

This is tricky to solve in full-blown snapshot isolation, but because
Xapian serializes writes, we can use a simple, monotonically
increasing database revision number.  Furthermore, maintaining this
revision number requires no more IO than a wall-clock time solution
because Xapian already maintains statistics on the upper (and lower)
bound of each value stream.
2015-08-13 23:52:51 +02:00
David Bremner
32fd74b7aa lib: reject relative paths in n_d_{create,open}_verbose
There are many places in the notmuch code where the path is assumed to be absolute. If someone (TM) wants a project, one could remove these assumptions. In the mean time, prevent users from shooting themselves in the foot.

Update test suite mark tests for this error as no longer broken, and
also convert some tests that used relative paths for nonexistent
directories.
2015-06-12 07:34:50 +02:00
David Bremner
b59ad1a9cc lib: add NOTMUCH_STATUS_PATH_ERROR
The difference with FILE_ERROR is that this is for things that are
wrong with the path before looking at the disk.

Add some 3 tests; two broken as a reminder to actually use this new
code.
2015-06-12 07:34:47 +02:00
J. Lewis Muir
d08af93c65 cli: change "setup" to "set up" where used as a verb
The word "setup" is a noun, not a verb.  Change occurrences of "setup"
where used as a verb to "set up".
2015-05-31 19:14:42 +02:00
David Bremner
9d192da683 lib: eliminate fprintf from _notmuch_message_file_open
You may wonder why _notmuch_message_file_open_ctx has two parameters.
This is because we need sometime to use a ctx which is a
notmuch_message_t. While we could get the database from this, there is
no easy way in C to tell type we are getting.
2015-03-29 00:34:15 +01:00
David Bremner
736ac26407 lib: replace almost all fprintfs in library with _n_d_log
This is not supposed to change any functionality from an end user
point of view. Note that it will eliminate some output to stderr. The
query debugging output is left as is; it doesn't really fit with the
current primitive logging model. The remaining "bad" fprintf will need
an internal API change.
2015-03-29 00:34:15 +01:00
David Bremner
b53e1a2da7 lib: add a log function with output to a string in notmuch_database_t
In principle in the future this could do something fancier than
asprintf.
2015-03-29 00:34:15 +01:00
David Bremner
84d3b15d25 lib: add "verbose" versions of notmuch_database_{open,create}
The compatibility wrapper ensures that clients calling
notmuch_database_open will receive consistent output for now.

The changes to notmuch-{new,search} and test/symbol-test are just to
make the test suite pass.

The use of IGNORE_RESULT is justified by two things. 1) I don't know
what else to do.  2) asprintf guarantees the output string is NULL if
an error occurs, so at least we are not passing garbage back.
2015-03-29 00:34:15 +01:00
Todd
b04bc967f9 Add indexing for the mimetype term
This adds the indexing support for the "mimetype:" term and removes
the broken test flag.  The indexing is probablistic in Xapian terms,
which gives a better experience to end users.  Standard content-types
of the form "foo/bar" are automatically interpreted as phrases in
Xapian due to the embedded slash.

Assume, separate messages with application/pdf and application/x-pdf
are indexed, then:

- mimetype:application/x-pdf will find only the application/x-pdf
- mimetype:application/pdf will find only the application/pdf
- mimetype:pdf will find both of the messages
2015-01-24 16:47:59 +01:00
Todd
0de999aab5 Add the NOTMUCH_FEATURE_INDEXED_MIMETYPES database feature
This feature will exist in all newly created databases, but there is
no upgrade provided for it.  If this flag exists, it indicates that
the database was created after the indexed MIME-types feature was
added.
2015-01-24 16:47:47 +01:00
Austin Clements
70f15b37fb lib: Remove unnecessary thread linking steps when using ghost messages
Previously, it was necessary to link new messages to children to work
around some (though not all) problems with the old metadata-based
approach to stored thread IDs.  With ghost messages, this is no longer
necessary, so don't bother with child linking when ghost messages are
in use.
2014-10-25 19:46:19 +02:00
Austin Clements
d1e8c80b72 lib: Implement upgrade to ghost messages feature
Somehow this is the first upgrade pass that actually does *any* error
checking, so this also adds the bit of necessary infrastructure to
handle that.
2014-10-25 19:30:08 +02:00
Austin Clements
58a4277d3b lib: Implement ghost-based thread linking
This updates the thread linking code to use ghost messages instead of
user metadata to link messages into threads.

In contrast with the old approach, this is actually correct.
Previously, thread merging updated only the thread IDs of message
documents, not thread IDs stored in user metadata.  As originally
diagnosed by Mark Walters [1] and as demonstrated by the broken
T260-thread-order test, this can cause notmuch to fail to link
messages even though they're in the same thread.  In principle the old
approach could have been fixed by updating the user metadata thread
IDs as well, but these are not indexed and hence this would have
required a full scan of all stored thread IDs.  Ghost messages solve
this problem naturally by reusing the exact same thread ID and message
ID representation and indexing as regular messages.

Furthermore, thanks to this greater symmetry, ghost messages are also
algorithmically simpler.  We continue to support the old user metadata
format, so this patch can't delete any code, but when we do remove
support for the old format, several functions can simply be deleted.

[1] id:8738h7kv2q.fsf@qmul.ac.uk
2014-10-25 19:27:07 +02:00
Austin Clements
d9f5da00bb lib: Update database schema doc for ghost messages
This describes the structure of ghost mail documents.  Ghost messages
are not yet implemented.
2014-10-25 19:26:03 +02:00
Austin Clements
1cdb96d3c4 lib: Add a ghost messages database feature
This will be implemented over the next several patches.  The feature
is not yet "enabled" (this does not add it to
NOTMUCH_FEATURES_CURRENT).
2014-10-25 19:25:54 +02:00
Austin Clements
46b1b035a5 lib: Refactor _notmuch_database_link_message
This moves the code to retrieve and clear the metadata thread ID out
of _notmuch_database_link_message into its own function.  This will
simplify future changes.
2014-10-11 07:10:02 +02:00
Austin Clements
54ec8a0fd8 lib: Move message ID compression to _notmuch_message_create_for_message_id
Previously, this was performed by notmuch_database_add_message.  This
happens to be the only caller currently (which is why this was safe),
but we're about to introduce more callers, and it makes more sense to
put responsibility for ID compression in the lower-level function
rather than requiring each caller to handle it.
2014-10-11 07:09:54 +02:00
Austin Clements
cec601c4dd lib: Simplify close and codify aborting atomic section
In Xapian, closing a database implicitly aborts any outstanding
transaction and commits changes.  For historical reasons,
notmuch_database_close had grown to almost, but not quite duplicate
this behavior.  Before closing the database, it would explicitly (and
unnecessarily) commit it.  However, if there was an outstanding
transaction (ie atomic section), commit would throw a Xapian
exception, which notmuch_database_close would unnecessarily print to
stderr, even though notmuch_database_close would ultimately abort the
transaction anyway when it called close.

This patch simplifies notmuch_database_close to explicitly abort any
outstanding transaction and then just call Database::close.  This
works for both read-only and read/write databases, takes care of
committing changes, unifies the exception handling path, and codifies
aborting outstanding transactions.  This is currently the only way to
abort an atomic section (and may remain so, since it would be
difficult to roll back things we may have cached from rolled-back
modifications).
2014-10-03 08:58:58 +02:00
Austin Clements
cca05ac10e lib: Fix endless upgrade problem
48db8c8 introduced a disagreement between when
notmuch_database_needs_upgrade returned TRUE and when
notmuch_database_upgrade actually performed an upgrade.  As a result,
if a database had a version less than 3, but no new features were
required, notmuch new would call notmuch_database_upgrade to perform
an upgrade, but notmuch_database_upgrade would return immediately
without updating the database version.  Hence, the next notmuch new
would do the same, and so on.

Fix this by ensuring that the upgrade-required logic is identical
between the two.
2014-09-01 23:06:51 -07:00
Austin Clements
ec573cd54f lib: Return an error from operations that require an upgrade
Previously, there was no protection against a caller invoking an
operation on an old database version that would effectively corrupt
the database by treating it like a newer version.

According to notmuch.h, any caller that opens the database in
read/write mode is supposed to check if the database needs upgrading
and perform an upgrade if it does.  This would protect against this,
but nobody (even the CLI) actually does this.

However, with features, it's easy to protect against incompatible
operations on a fine-grained basis.  This lightweight change allows
callers to safely operate on old database versions, while preventing
specific operations that would corrupt the database with an
informative error message.
2014-08-30 11:39:41 -07:00
Austin Clements
02fec226fc lib: Report progress for combined upgrade operation
Previously, some parts of upgrade didn't report progress and for
others it was possible for the progress meter to restart at 0 part way
through the upgrade because each stage was reported separately.

Fix this by computing the total amount of work that needs to be done
up-front and updating completed work monotonically.
2014-08-30 11:36:08 -07:00
Austin Clements
e0635bd003 lib: Reorganize upgrade around document types
Rather than potentially making multiple passes over the same type of
data in the database, reorganize upgrade around each type of data that
may be upgraded.  This eliminates code duplication, will make
multi-version upgrades faster, and will let us improve progress
reporting.
2014-08-30 11:24:11 -07:00
Austin Clements
48db8c8b60 lib: Use database features to drive upgrade
Previously, we had database version information hard-coded in the
upgrade code.  Slightly re-organize the upgrade process around the set
of new database features to be enabled by the upgrade.
2014-08-30 11:21:48 -07:00
Austin Clements
4a38588488 lib: Simplify upgrade code using a transaction
Previously, the upgrade was organized as two passes -- an upgrade
pass, and a separate cleanup pass -- so the database was always in a
valid state.  This change substantially simplifies this code by
performing the upgrade in a transaction and combining both passes in
to one.  This 1) eliminates a lot of duplicate code between the
passes, 2) speeds up the upgrade process, 3) makes progress reporting
more accurate, 4) eliminates the potential for stale data if the
upgrade is interrupted during the cleanup pass, and 5) makes it easier
to reason about the safety of the upgrade code.
2014-08-30 10:45:36 -07:00
Austin Clements
8363c90531 lib: Database version 3: Introduce fine-grained "features"
Previously, our database schema was versioned by a single number.
Each database schema change had to occur "atomically" in Notmuch's
development history: before some commit, Notmuch used version N, after
that commit, it used version N+1.  Hence, each new schema version
could introduce only one change, the task of developing a schema
change fell on a single person, and it all had to happen and be
perfect in a single commit series.  This made introducing a new schema
version hard.  We've seen only two schema changes in the history of
Notmuch.

This commit introduces database schema version 3; hopefully the last
schema version we'll need for a while.  With this version, we switch
from a single version number to "features": a set of named,
independent aspects of the database schema.

Features should make backwards compatibility easier.  For many things,
it should be easy to support databases both with and without a
feature, which will allow us to make upgrades optional and will enable
"unstable" features that can be developed and tested over time.

Features also make forwards compatibility easier.  The features
recorded in a database include "compatibility flags," which can
indicate to an older version of Notmuch when it must support a given
feature to open the database for read or for write.  This lets us
replace the old vague "I don't recognize this version, so something
might go wrong, but I promise to try my best" warnings upon opening a
database with an unknown version with precise errors.  If a database
is safe to open for read/write despite unknown features, an older
version will know that and issue no message at all.  If the database
is not safe to open for read/write because of unknown features, an
older version will know that, too, and can tell the user exactly which
required features it lacks support for.
2014-08-30 10:42:08 -07:00
Michal Sojka
028c56061e Make parsing of References and In-Reply-To header less error prone
According to RFC2822 References and In-Reply-To headers are supposed
to contain one or more Message-IDs, however older RFC822 allowed
almost any content. When both References and In-Reply-To headers ends
with something else that a Message-ID (see e.g. [1]), the thread
structure presented by notmuch is incorrect. The reason is that
notmuch treats this case as if the email contained no "replyto"
information (see _notmuch_database_link_message_to_parents).

This patch changes the parse_references() function to return the last
valid Message-ID encountered rather than NULL resulting from the last
hunk of text not being the Message-ID.

[1] https://lkml.org/lkml/headers/2014/5/19/864
2014-08-16 17:45:16 -07:00
Austin Clements
1d652c8719 lib: Fix slight misinformation in the database schema doc
The database schema documentation made it sound like each mail
document had exactly one on-disk message file, which hasn't been true
for a long time.
2014-08-04 18:58:11 -03:00
Charles Celerier
df8885f62c lib: Start all function names in notmuch-private.h with
As noted in devel/STYLE, every private library function should start
with _notmuch. This patch corrects function naming that did not adhere
to this style in lib/notmuch-private.h. In particular, the old function
names that now begin with _notmuch are

    notmuch_sha1_of_file
    notmuch_sha1_of_string
    notmuch_message_file_close
    notmuch_message_file_get_header
    notmuch_message_file_open
    notmuch_message_get_author
    notmuch_message_set_author

Signed-off-by: Charles Celerier <cceleri@cs.stanford.edu>
2014-07-13 12:25:29 -03:00
Jani Nikula
ab24e883b0 lib: add return status to database close and destroy
notmuch_database_close may fail in Xapian ->flush() or ->close(), so
report the status. Similarly for notmuch_database_destroy which calls
close.

This is required for notmuch insert to report error status if message
indexing failed.
2014-07-09 20:29:36 -03:00
Jani Nikula
473930bb6f lib: replace the header parser with gmime
The notmuch library includes a full blown message header parser. Yet
the same message headers are parsed by gmime during indexing. Switch
to gmime parsing completely.

These are the main changes:

* Gmime stops header parsing at the first invalid header, and presumes
  the message body starts from there. The current parser is quite
  liberal in accepting broken headers. The change means we will be
  much pickier about accepting invalid messages.

* The current parser converts tabs used in header folding to
  spaces. Gmime preserve the tabs. Due to a broken python library used
  in mailman, there are plenty of mailing lists that produce headers
  with tabs in header folding, and we'll see plenty of tabs. (This
  change has been mitigated in preparatory patches.)

* For pure header parsing, the current parser is likely faster than
  gmime, which parses the whole message rather than just the
  headers. Since we parse the message and its headers using gmime for
  indexing anyway, this avoids and extra header parsing round when
  adding new messages. In case of duplicate messages, we'll end up
  parsing the full message although just headers would be
  sufficient. All in all this should still speed up 'notmuch new'.

* Calls to notmuch_message_get_header() may be slightly slower than
  previously for headers that are not indexed in the database, due to
  parsing of the whole message. Within the notmuch code base, notmuch
  reply is the only such user.
2014-04-05 12:53:04 -03:00
Jani Nikula
1fa8e40561 lib: make folder: prefix literal
In xapian terms, convert folder: prefix from probabilistic to boolean
prefix, matching the paths, relative from the maildir root, of the
message files, ignoring the maildir new and cur leaf directories.

folder:foo matches all message files in foo, foo/new, and foo/cur.

folder:foo/new does *not* match message files in foo/new.

folder:"" matches all message files in the top level maildir and its
new and cur subdirectories.

This change constitutes a database change: bump the database version
and add database upgrade support for folder: terms. The upgrade also
adds path: terms.

Finally, fix the folder search test for literal folder: search, as
some of the folder: matching capabilities are lost in the
probabilistic to boolean prefix change.
2014-03-11 19:51:22 -03:00
Jani Nikula
59823f9642 lib: add support for path: prefix searches
The path: prefix is a literal boolean prefix matching the paths,
relative from the maildir root, of the message files.

path:foo matches all message files in foo (but not in foo/new or
foo/cur).

path:foo/new matches all message files in foo/new.

path:"" matches all message files in the top level maildir.

path:foo/** matches all message files in foo and recursively in all
subdirectories of foo.

path:** matches all message files recursively, i.e. all messages.
2014-03-11 19:51:22 -03:00
Tomi Ollila
2fd7ef64ba compact: improve error messages on failures after compaction
The error messages written during the steps replacing old
database with new now includes relevant paths and strerror.
2013-11-19 20:15:02 -04:00
Tomi Ollila
6452ae0fcb compact: unconditionally remove old wip database compact directory
In case previous notmuch compact has been interrupted there is old
work-in-progress database compact directory partially filled. Remove
it just before starting to fill the directory with new files.
2013-11-19 20:14:28 -04:00
Tomi Ollila
cb6cc296e2 compact: preserve backup database until compacted database is in place
It is less error prone and window of failure opportunity is smaller
if the old (backup) database is always renamed (instead of sometimes
rmtree'd) before new (compacted) database is put into its place.
Finally rmtree() old database in case old database backup is not kept.
2013-11-19 20:13:25 -04:00
Tomi Ollila
19a89753ca compact: catch Xapian::Error consistently
catch Xapian::Error in compact code in lib/database.cc to be consistent
with other code in addition to not making software crash on uncaught
other Xapian error.
2013-11-17 20:25:43 -04:00
Tomi Ollila
4d5986e8ad compact: tidy formatting
Notmuch compact code whitespace changes to match devel/STYLE.
2013-11-17 20:25:25 -04:00
Jani Nikula
00d2ac2b41 lib: use the compaction backup path provided by the caller
The extra path component added by the lib is a magic value that the
caller just has to know. This is demonstrated by the current code,
which indeed has "xapian.old" both sides of the interface. Use the
backup path provided by the lib caller verbatim, without adding
anything to it.
2013-11-07 06:51:16 -04:00
Jani Nikula
180dba66e4 lib: add closure parameter to compact status update callback
This provides much more flexibility for the caller.
2013-11-07 06:46:42 -04:00