This is useful for tags like "deleted" and "spam" that people
generally want to exclude from query results. These exclusions will
be overridden if a tag is explicitly mentioned in a query.
lib/messages.c: In function ‘notmuch_messages_move_to_next’:
lib/messages.c:131:2: warning: ISO C forbids ‘return’ with expression, in function returning void [-pedantic]
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
As reported in
id:"CAEbOPGyuHnz4BPtDutnTPUHcP3eYcRCRkXhYoJR43RUMw671+g@mail.gmail.com"
sometimes gmime tries to access a NULL pointer, e.g. g_mime_iconv_open()
tries to access iconv_cache that is NULL if g_mime_init() is not called.
This causes notmuch to segfault when calling gmime functions.
Calling g_mime_init() initializes iconv_cache and others variables needed
by gmime, making sure they are initialized when notmuch calls gmime
functions.
Test marked fix by db.
It appears to be an oversight that encrypted parts were indexed
previously. The terms generated from encrypted parts are meaningless
and do nothing but add bloat to the database. It is not worth
indexing the encrypted content, just as it's not worth indexing the
signatures in signed parts.
Commit 567bcbc2 introduced two new values for each message (content of the
"From" and "Subject" headers), but the comments about the database schema had
not been updated accordingly.
For some reason, on my machine, the link is picking up
/usr/lib/libutil.so instead of util/libutil.a. This causes there to be
undefined symbols in libnotmuch, making it unuseable. This patch causes
the link to fail instead.
Add function notmuch_query_count_threads() to get the number of threads
matching a search. This is done by performing a search and figuring out the
number of unique thread IDs in the matching messages, a significantly
heavier operation than notmuch_query_count_messages().
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
This is a rebase and cleanup of Istvan Marko's patch from
id:m3pqnj2j7a.fsf@zsu.kismala.com
Search retrieves these headers for every message in the search
results. Previously, this required opening and parsing every message
file. Storing them directly in the database significantly reduces IO
and computation, speeding up search by between 50% and 10X.
Taking full advantage of this requires a database rebuild, but it will
fall back to the old behavior for messages that do not have headers
stored in the database.
Apparently the method was renamed in Xapian 1.1.0 but the old method
name will stay around for a while. It seems better to stick with the
old name to make notmuch compile with older versions of Xapian, at
least for now.
We keep the lib/xutil.c version. As a consequence, also factor out
_internal_error and associated macros. It might be overkill to make a
new file error_util.c for this, but _internal_error does not really
belong in database.cc.
Based on discussions with amdragon, tschwinge, and others on IRC, I concluded that
1) symbol versioning was probably overkill for libnotmuch
2) It was also probably GNU ld specific
3) Most importantly, nobody could tell me on short notice how exactly it works.
So since the change to the notmuch_database_find_message breaks the
previous ABI, we need to bump the SONAME.
Previously, the functions notmuch_database_find_message() and
notmuch_database_find_message_by_filename() functions did not properly
report error condition to the library user.
For more information, read the thread on the notmuch mailing list
starting with my mail "id:871uv2unfd.fsf@gmail.com"
Make these functions accept a pointer to 'notmuch_message_t' as argument
and return notmuch_status_t which may be used to check for any error
condition.
restore: Modify for the new notmuch_database_find_message()
new: Modify for the new notmuch_database_find_message_by_filename()
State up front that these functions may add a filename to an existing
message or remove only a filename (and not the message), respectively.
Previously, this key information was buried in return value
documentation or in "notes", which made it seem secondary to these
functions' semantics.
Adding a message may involve changes to multiple database documents,
and thus needs to be done in a transaction. This makes add_message
(and, I think, the whole library) atomicity-safe: library callers only
needs to use atomic sections if they needs atomicity across multiple
library calls.
notmuch_database_find_message_by_filename is mostly stolen from
notmuch_database_remove_message, so this patch also vastly simplfies
the latter using the former.
This API is also useful in its own right and will be used in a later
patch for eager maildir flag synchronization.
Previously, notmuch_database_remove_message would remove the message
file name, sync the change to the message document, re-find the
message document, and then delete it if there were no more file names.
An interruption after sync'ing would result in a file-name-less,
permanently un-removable zombie message that would produce errors and
odd results in searches. We could wrap this in an atomic section, but
it's much simpler to eliminate the round-about approach and just
delete the message document instead of sync'ing it if we removed the
last filename.
notmuch_database_t now keeps a nesting count and we only start a
transaction or commit for the outermost atomic section.
Introduces a new error, NOTMUCH_STATUS_UNBALANCED_ATOMIC.
Previously, this function would synchronize the folder list even if
removing the file name failed. Now it returns immediately if removing
the file name fails.
If the configure script detects missing getline and/or getdelim
symbols, then notmuch will use it's own versions. This patch, based on
id:"87k49v12i5.fsf@pc44es141.cs.uni-magdeburg.de" by Matthias
Guedemann, adds the symbols to notmuch.sym as well so they are
properly exported from the library.
OpenBSD nm apparently doesn't support --defined.
The awk condition is based on the assumption that all defined symbols
have some hex number in the first column.
Thanks to Matthias Guedemann reporting the problem, and an earlier
version of this patch.
Unfortunately Robin Green's patch 52e4dedf9a was lost when I created
gen-version-script.sh. This merges his changes manually into that
script. It turns out tabs seem not needed in version script
files, so I simplified a bit and removed the printf.
Thanks to Alexander Botero-Lowry for help and testing.
If the notmuch.sym target does not explicitly depend on $(libnotmuch_modules),
gen-version-script.sh may be run before all the .o files are created, for
example when doing a parallel build on a machine with many cores.
Conflicts:
lib/Makefile.local
The conflicts are from three kinds of commits not merged into release:
- typo fixes
- removal of debug output
- fix for CLEAN rule
That were never merged into the release branch.
The lack of such exporting seems to cause problems catching
exceptions, as suggested by
http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Visibility
This manifested in the symbol-hiding test failing when notmuch was
compile with gcc 4.4.5. On i386, this further manifested as notmuch
new failing to run (crashing with an uncaught exception on first run).
Add removal of all ZXFOLDER terms to removal of all XFOLDER terms for
each message filename removal.
The existing filename-list reindexing will put all the needed terms
back in. Test search-folder-coherence now passes.
Signed-off-by:Mark Anderson <ma.skies@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 8a856e5c38)
Add removal of all ZXFOLDER terms to removal of all XFOLDER terms for
each message filename removal.
The existing filename-list reindexing will put all the needed terms
back in. Test search-folder-coherence now passes.
Signed-off-by:Mark Anderson <ma.skies@gmail.com>
Carl reports "gcc -aux-info notmuch.aux lib/notmuch.h" does not
generate notmuch.aux for him with Debian gcc 4.6.0-8. A small
modification of the original sed regular expression allows us to work
directly from lib/notmuch.h, rather than preprocessing with gcc.
As with most such simple regex based "parsing", this is quite
sensitive to the input format, and needs that each symbol to be
exported from libnotmuch should
- start with "notmuch_"
- be the first non-whitespace token on the line
- be followed by an open parenthesis.
(Cherry-picked from 51b7ab6968, with conflicts resolved by db)
Carl reports "gcc -aux-info notmuch.aux lib/notmuch.h" does not
generate notmuch.aux for him with Debian gcc 4.6.0-8. A small
modification of the original sed regular expression allows us to work
directly from lib/notmuch.h, rather than preprocessing with gcc.
As with most such simple regex based "parsing", this is quite
sensitive to the input format, and needs that each symbol to be
exported from libnotmuch should
- start with "notmuch_"
- be the first non-whitespace token on the line
- be followed by an open parenthesis.
- c0961e6 introduced a missing slash between $(dir)$(LIBNAME) and missing
$(dir) in front of libnotmuch.a
- cdf1c70a created a file $(dir)/notmuch.h.gch and neglected to
add it to CLEAN
Various typo fixes in comments within the source code.
Signed-off-by: Pieter Praet <pieter@praet.org>
Edited-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org> Restricted to just
source-code comments, (and fixed fix of "descriptios" to "descriptors"
rather than "descriptions").
Various typo fixes in comments within the Makefile and other build scripts.
Signed-off-by: Pieter Praet <pieter@praet.org>
Edited-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org> Restricted to just build files.
This is closely tied to gcc and particularly gnu ld, but I guess the
shared library linking code would need to be adjusted to work on a
non-gnu linker anyay.
I had to make a few not-obviously related changes to the
lib/Makefile.local to make this work: libnotmuch_modules is defined
with := and used in place of $^
(cherry picked from commit 014bf85b1c06ff49be2bde5a26433d2cf376cf70)
We're not properly concatenating the Received headers if we parse them
while requesting a header that isn't Received.
this fixes notmuch-reply address detection in a bunch of situations.
This patch adds the tag "signed" to messages with any multipart/signed
parts, and the tag "encrypted" to messages with any
multipart/encrypted parts. This only occurs when messages are indexed
during notmuch new, so a database rebuild is required to have old
messages tagged.
As of gcc 4.6, there are new warnings from -Wattributes along the lines of:
warning: ‘_notmuch_messages’ declared with greater visibility
than the type of its field ‘_notmuch_messages::iterator’
[-Wattributes]
To squelch these, we decorate all such containing structs with
__attribute__((visibility("default"))). We take care to let only the
C++ compiler see this, (since the C compiler would otherwise warn
about ignored visibility attributes on types).
gcc (at least as of version 4.6.0) is kind enough to point these out to us,
(when given -Wunused-but-set-variable explicitly or implicitly via -Wunused
or -Wall).
One of these cases was a legitimately unused variable. Two were simply
variables (named ignored) we were assigning only to squelch a warning about
unused function return values. I don't seem to be getting those warnings
even without setting the ignored variable. And the gcc docs. say that the
correct way to squelch that warning is with a cast to (void) anyway.