Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Carl Worth
9ec68aa9c4 Shuffle the value numbers around in the database.
First, it's nice that for now we don't have any users yet, so we
can make incompatible changes to the database layout like this
without causing trouble. ;-)

There are a few reasons for this change. First, we now use value 0
uniformly as a timestamp for both mail and timestamp documents, (which
lets us cleanup an ugly and fragile bare 0 in the add_value and
get_value calls in the timestamp code).

Second, I want to drop the thread value entirely, so putting it at the
end of the list means we can drop it as compatible change in the
future. (I almost want to drop the message-ID value too, but it's nice
to be able to sort on it to get diff-able output from "notmuch dump".)

But the thread value we never use as a value, (we would never sort on
it, for example). And it's totally redundant with the thread terms we
store already. So expect it to disappear soon.
2009-10-24 23:05:08 -07:00
Carl Worth
17f9c6a0ef Use _find_prefix instead of hard-coded term in notmuch_query_search
I'm planning to change prefix values soon, which would break code
like this. So eliminate the fragility by going through our existing
_find_prefix function.
2009-10-24 22:21:57 -07:00
Carl Worth
15d949b740 Fix bit-twiddling brain damage in notmuch_query_search
Here's the big bug that was preventing any searches from working at
all like desired. I did the work to carefully pick out exactly the
flags that I wanted, and then I threw it away by trying to combine
them with & instead of | (so just passing 0 for flags instead).

Much better now.
2009-10-24 22:20:13 -07:00
Carl Worth
526b7144f7 Add debugging code for examining query strings.
It's nice that Xapian provides a little function to print a textual
representation of the entire query tree. So now, if you compile
like so:

	make CFLAGS=-DDEBUG_QUERY

then you get a nice output of the query string received by the query
module, and the final query actually being sent to Xapian.
2009-10-24 22:18:20 -07:00
Carl Worth
65baa4f4e7 notmuch dump: Fix the sorting of results.
To properly support sorting in notmuch_query we know use an
Enquire object. We also throw in a QueryParser too, so we're
really close to being able to support arbitrary full-text
searches.

I took a look at the supported QueryParser syntax and chose
a set of flags for everything I like, (such as supporting
Boolean operators in either case ("AND" or "and"), supporting
phrase searching, supporting + and - to include/preclude terms,
and supporting a trailing * on any term as a wildcard).
2009-10-21 00:35:56 -07:00
Carl Worth
6519aff957 query: Remove the magic NOTMUCH_QUERY_ALL
Using the address of a static char* was clever, but really
unnecessary. An empty string is much less magic, and even
easier to understand as the way to query everything from
the database.
2009-10-20 22:40:37 -07:00
Carl Worth
4ca1492f1b Add destroy functions for results, message, and tags.
None of these are strictly necessary, (everything was leak-free
without them), but notmuch_message_destroy can actually be useful
for when one query has many message results, but only one is needed
to be live at a time.

The destroy functions for results and tags are fairly gratuitous, as
there's unlikely to be any benefit from calling them. But they're all
easy to add, (all of these functions are just wrappers for talloc_free),
and we do so for consistency and completeness.
2009-10-20 22:24:59 -07:00
Carl Worth
f6c7810945 Rename our talloc destructor functions to _destructor.
I want to reserve the _destroy names for some public functions
I'm about to add.
2009-10-20 22:10:07 -07:00
Carl Worth
466a7bbf62 Implement 'notmuch dump'.
This is a fairly big milestone for notmuch. It's our first command
to do anything besides building the index, so it proves we can
actually read valid results out from the index.

It also puts in place almost all of the API and infrastructure we
will need to allow searching of the database.

Finally, with this change we are now using talloc inside of notmuch
which is truly a delight to use. And now that I figured out how
to use C++ objects with talloc allocation, (it requires grotty
parts of C++ such as "placement new" and "explicit destructors"),
we are valgrind-clean for "notmuch dump", (as in "no leaks are
possible").
2009-10-20 21:21:39 -07:00