gmime 3.0 no longer offers a means to set the path for gpg.
Users can set $PATH anyway if they want to pick a
differently-installed gpg (e.g. /usr/local/bin/gpg), so this isn't
much of a reduction in functionality.
The one main difference is for people who have tried to use "gpg2" to
make use of gpg 2.1, but that isn't usefully co-installable anyway.
The reply-to munging code might behave differently whether there's an
exact match on the strings or not, or whether the string is a raw
addr-spec instead of an name-addr. These tests cover those variations
(i also had to tweak json output further below when this new test was
added).
The "key_id" field seems to used for userid in gmime-3.0, while the
keyid is dropped in the fingerprint field if the full fingerprint is
not available.
We need to rewrite the loop for gmime-3.0; move the loop body to its
own function to avoid code duplication. Keep the common exit via
"goto DONE" to make this pure code movement. It's important to note
that the existing exit path only deallocates the iterator.
There are two keyword options here that impliment boolean options. It
is simpler to use the built-in boolean argument handling, and also
more robust against divergence in parsing boolean and keyword arguments.
Since the error field is unused by the emacs front end, no changes are
needed other than bumping the format version number.
As it is, this is a bit overengineered, but it will reduce duplication
when we support gmime 3.0
Replace numeric errors with human readable flags. Not all sig_error
keys will necessarily be generated with a given version of gmime.
Drop status "none" as it's currrently unused and I don't know what
it's for.
We want to reuse the scanner definition with a different table. This
is mainly code movement, and making the state table part of the filter
struct/class.
As the Linux man page states: "Each invocation of va_start() must be
matched by a corresponding invocation of va_end() in the same
function." Detected by cppcheck.
Emacs' major modes can facilitate navigation in their buffers by
supporting Imenu. In such major modes, launching Imenu (M-x imenu)
makes Emacs display a list of items (e.g., function definitions in a
code buffer). Selecting an item from this list moves point to this
item.
This patch adds Imenu support to both notmuch-show and notmuch-search
buffers:
* in notmuch-show, Imenu will present a list of all messages in the
currently visible thread;
* in notmuch-search, Imenu will present a list of all messages in the
search buffer.