`notmuch search` behaves differently depending on the output option: It
either outputs information pertaining to all threads with matching
messages (summary, threads) or to all matching messages (messages,
files, tags). The man page refres solely to the former in the main
description.
Help the user by clearly marking `summary` as the default output option.
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@grubix.eu>
notmuch search does not output header values. However, when browsing
through a large email corpus, it can be time saving to be able to
paginate without running notmuch show for each message/thread.
Add --offset and --limit options to notmuch show. This is inspired from
commit 796b629c3b ("cli: add options --offset and --limit to notmuch
search").
Update man page, shell completion and add a test case to ensure it works
as expected.
Cc: Tim Culverhouse <tim@timculverhouse.com>
Cc: Tomi Ollila <tomi.ollila@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
When adding the description of the propagation of NOTMUCH_CONFIG, I
missed that there was already a section on external commands, with a
different title.
We want the reply used to match that shown e.g. in the emacs
interface. As a first step provide that functionality on the command
line.
Schema does not need updating as the duplicate key was already
present (with a constant value of 1).
Add command line argument --duplicate, analogous with that already
supported for notmuch-search.
Use of a seperate function for _get_filename is mainly a form of
documentation at this point.
md5sum is of course a weak hash, but it is good enough for
this (non-adversarial) test suite use.
The original nmbug format (now called version 0) creates 1
subdirectory of 'tags/' per message. This causes problems for more
than (roughly) 100k messages.
Version 1 introduces 2 layers of hashed directories. This scheme was
chose to balance the number of subdirectories with the number of extra
directories (and git objects) created via hashing.
This should be upward compatible in the sense that old repositories
will continue to work with the updated notmuch-git.
Commits or checkouts that modify a large fraction of the messages in
the database should be relatively rare (and in some automated process,
probably non-existent). For initial setup, where such operations are
expected, the user can pass --force.
This is probably more convenient than always passing a command line
argument.
Use notmuch-config for consistency with other notmuch CLI tools.
Now that there is something relevant in the config files, test the
--config option.
The previous defaults were not suitable for personal (i.e. not
bugtracking for notmuch development) use.
Provide two ways for the user to select nmbug compatible defaults;
command line argument and checking the name of the script.
This is partially redudant given some existing cross references, but
it is useful to have all of the config keys listed in one place, to
help keep track of them if nothing else.
Originally (I think) these were in the order generated by notmuch
setup. As the number of options grows, and several are not in the
initial setup generated file, the original order becomes less useful
for users. This commit alphabetizes the keys to help users
search. There is only one content change, an added cross-reference
from user.other_email to user.primary_email.
The mail store directory is given by database.mail_root,
which can be different from database.path.
However, notmuch-insert documentation was still referencing the latter
as the provider of the maildir directory instead of the former.
Since release 0.32, libnotmuch provides searching for database and
configuration paths. This commit changes the python module notmuch2 to
use those facilities.
This fixes the bug reported in [1], along with a couple of the
deprecation warnings in the python bindings.
Database.default_path is deprecated, since it no longer faithfully
reflects what libnotmuch is doing, and it is also no longer used in
the bindings themselves.
This commit choose the default of config=CONFIG.EMPTY (equivalent to
passing "" to notmuch_database_open_with_config). This makes the
change upward compatible API-wise (at least as far as the test suite
verifies), but changing the default to CONFIG.SEARCH would probably be
more convenient for bindings users.
[1]: id:87h7d4wp6b.fsf@tethera.net
Sphinx-doc already formats the terms appropriately for a given
backend (bold in html and man). `makeinfo` complains noisily about
formatting inside a @item if we add our own explicit formatting.
This change may change the formatting in the info output. On the other
hand, the existing use of quotes for bold is not that great anyway.
In some places blank lines were removed to preserve the logical
structure of a definition list.
This commit does not enable using saved s-expression queries, only
saving and retrieving them from the config file or the database. Use
in queries will be enabled in a following commit.
New --sort CLI option documented in notmuch-show's man page, and
notmuch-search-toggle-order mentioned in doc/notmuch-emacs.rst and
devel/emacs-keybindings.org (in the latter, there's also some
whitespace changes in a table introduced by org-mode).
Example reference to a command-line option using the option role
reference. This creates a hyperlink in html, and the usual boldface
style in man page. This could be used throughout the man pages.
Use the program and option directives to document the subcommand
options. This unifies a lot of option documentation throughout.
This also makes it possible to reference options with :option:`--foo`
(within .. program::) or :option:`subcommand --foo` (globally). This
is left for later work.
See https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/domains.html#directive-program
Note: There is a lot of indentation change, but intentionally there is
no reflow. Using 'git diff -w' or 'git show -w' to ignore white space
changes makes this a very easy change to review.
Make man1/notmuch.rst the single point of truth for describing notmuch
environment variables. Use the envvar directive for that, and
reference them with the envvar role.
Drive-by cleanup configuration file and hook directory search order
documentation.
Add internal hyperlink targets for man pages and cross-reference them
using the any role reference. There are a number of alternatives to
accomplish this, but this seems like the combination that retains the
man page section number and the same boldface style in the man pages.
As a bonus, we get sanity checking on the links; for example
notmuch-search-terms.rst had a reference to notmuch-properties(1)
i.e. the wrong section.
The obvious semantic follow-up change would be to only have meaningful
"see also" references instead of having them all everywhere.
Using manpage role references generates helpful links in html
documentation, while retaining the same boldface style in the man
pages.
The external man page site is configurable. The Debian manpage site
seems like a good fit for Notmuch.
Previously the fact that some configuration options were only stored
in the database (and thus editing the config file had no effect) was a
source of user confusion. This was fixed with the series ending at
d9af0af164.
On the other hand, the underlying partition of config options into
those stored by default in the database and those stored in the config
file remained. This is also confusing, since now some invocations of
"notmuch config set" modify the config file, and others silently
modify the database instead.
With this commit, it is up to the user to decide which configuration
to modify. A new "--database" option is provided for notmuch config to
enable modifying the configuration information in the database;
otherwise the default is to update an external config file.
Introduce a new configuration value for the mail root, and use it to
locate mail messages in preference to the database.path (which
previously implied the mail messages were also in this location.
Initially only a subset of the CLI is tested in a split
configuration. Further changes will be needed for the remainder of the
CLI to work in split configurations.
Remove STORED IN DATABASE discussion, describe search rules.
Currently profiles seem a bit pointless. They will make more sense
when they apply to databases as well.
The features that require field processor support, are now just
documented w/o mentioning **Xapian Field Processors**' is needed
for those.
Replaced "compact" and "field_processor" with "retry_lock" in
build_with config option, as it is currently the only one that
is optionally excluded. The former 2 are now documented as
features always included.
Dropped one 'we' "passive" in notmuch-search-terms.rst. It was the
only one, and inconsistent with rest of the documentation in that
file.
Dropped message about conditional open-ended ranges support, as
those are now always supported.
id:CA+Tk8fzRiqxWpd=r8=DRvEewNZXUZgD7MKyRLB1A=R-LxxGEZw@mail.gmail.com
started a thread of discussion that showed that the cli's current
idiosyncrasies around dealing with boolean options were not
understandable.
This attempts to improve the documentation at least (actual changes to
the API might be better, but have not reached consensus).
Note that no one in the discussion thread identified any other
(non-boolean) command-line options that cannot use space as a
separator. If such an option is identified (or introduced in the
future), it should be added explicitly to this part of the manual.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
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>
The escaping in the description of the output of "notmuch-config list"
appears to have been inherited from some previous attempts at
documentation. It leaked out in the actual generated manpage
documentation, where it looks like this:
list Every configuration item is printed to stdout, each on a
separate line of the form:
*section*.\ *item*\ =\ *value*
This simplification cleans up the overescaping.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Many of the manpages didn't treat literal text as literal text. I've
tried to normalize some of the restructured text to make it a bit more
regular.
several of the synopsis lines are still untouched by this cleanup, but
i'm not sure what the right way to represent those is in .rst,
actually.
In particular find that if i rebuild the manpages, sometimes i end up
with some of the synopsis lines showing – (U+2013 EN DASH) where they
should have -- (2 × U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS) in the generated nroff
output, though i have not tracked down the source of this error yet.