`outline-minor-mode' treats comments that begin with three or more
semicolons as headings. That makes it very convenient to navigate
code and to show/hide parts of a file.
Elips libraries typically have four top-level sections, e.g.:
;;; notmuch.el --- run notmuch within emacs...
;;; Commentary:...
;;; Code:...
;;; notmuch.el ends here
In this package many libraries lack a "Commentary:" section, which is
not optimal but okay for most libraries, except major entry points.
Depending on how one chooses to look at it, the "... ends here" line
is not really a heading that begins a section, because it should never
have a "section" body (after all it marks eof).
If the file is rather short, then I left "Code:" as the only section
that contains code. Otherwise I split the file into multiple sibling
sections. The "Code:" section continues to contain `require' and
`declare-function' forms and other such "front matter".
If and only if I have split the code into multiple sections anyway,
then I also added an additional section named just "_" before the
`provide' form and shortly before the "...end here" line. This
section could also be called "Back matter", but I feel it would be
distracting to be that explicit about it. (The IMO unnecessary but
unfortunately still obligatory "... ends here" line is already
distracting enough as far as I am concerned.)
Before this commit some libraries already uses section headings, some
of them consistently. When a library already had some headings, then
this commit often sticks to that style, even at the cost inconsistent
styling across all libraries.
A very limited number of variable and function definitions have to be
moved around because they would otherwise end up in sections they do
not belong into.
Sections, including but not limited to their heading, can and should
be further improved in the future.
readelf on (at least) ppc64le sometimes generates some extension to
the Ndx name inside '[]'. Remove this output to allow our simple
column based parsing to work.
It turns out that using nm -P isn't as portable as hoped. In
particular with some ELF ABIs (e.g. ppc64 ELFv1), the desired symbols
end up in the data section instead of text.
The test is currently only functional on ELF based architectures, so I
think it's legit to depend on readelf instead of nm.
The switch to readelf has the advantage that we can explicitely ask
for all of the symbols with global visibility, rather than grepping
for notmuch. That seems a more robust approach since it will catch any
strangely named global symbols.
notmuch insert does not currently support passing a filename for the
input, so all of these tests have an extra error in addition to the
one being tested for.
Currently this does not make a difference because the error being
tested for is caught before the error of an extra command line
argument. In the future it might make a difference, and in any case it
is confusing.
Previously in message-show mode message's first header line (From
header) was always indented, even if user had turned thread
indentation off with "<" (notmuch-show-toggle-thread-indentation)
command.
This change modifies notmuch-show-insert-headerline function so that
it doesn't indent the first header line if notmuch-show-indent-content
variable is nil.
This change also modifies tests so that they expect this new output
format:
test/emacs-show.expected-output/notmuch-show-indent-thread-content-off
Use `makefile-gmake-mode' instead of `makefile-mode' because the
former also highlights ifdef et al. while the latter does not.
"./Makefile.global" and one "Makefile.local" failed to specify any
major mode at all but doing so is necessary because Emacs does not
automatically figure out that these are Makefiles (of any flavor).
On some systems (notably, the one shipped with LibreSSL),
default fingerprint digest algorithm is SHA256.
On other systems, users can change default digest algorithm by changing
default_md in /etc/ssl/default_md.
Let's ask openssl to provide us specific algorithm to make the test
more deterministic.
Signed-off-by: Đoàn Trần Công Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Inspired by the suggestion of
id:20200727154108.16269-3-congdanhqx@gmail.com
to drop the configuration test for the default backend. This version
is hopefully robust against backend changes.
This is similar to the case of toplevel messages. Currently everything
is cached, so no database access is necessary. This might change in
the future, but it should not crash in either case.
The goal of this abstraction was to save space. But that failed as
the result actually was that four trivial lines got replace with 15
fairly complicated lines. The opposite of what it was supposed to
do.
Also it made it harder to come up with the fix in the previous commit;
simply grepping for the relevant symbols did not work because they get
constructed at run-time instead of appearing in the source file.
Starting with Emacs 27 undeclared variables in evaluated interactive
code uses lexical scope. This includes code passed with '--eval' as
we do in the Emacs tests, which also happen to assume dynamic scope.
- This can affect variables defined by libraries that we use. We
let-bind such variables to change the behavior of functions which we
then call with these bindings in effect. If these libraries are not
loaded beforehand, then the bindings are lexical and fail to have
the effect we intended.
At this time only 'smtpmail' has to be loaded explicitly (for the
variables let-bound in emacs_deliver_message and emacs_fcc_message).
'message' doesn't have to be loaded explicitly, because loading
'notmuch' (in 'run_emacs') already takes care of that, indirectly.
- Our own testing-only variables also have to be declared explicitly.
We should have done that anyway, but because of how and where these
variables are used it was very easy to overlook that (i.e. it isn't
something the byte-compiler ever looks at). Not so in Emacs 27
anymore; here this oversight caused four tests to fail.
The numeric values of these variables get incremented by functions
that we add to hooks that are run by many tests, not just the tests
where we actually inspect the value and therefore take care to let-
bind the values to 0 before we begin. The global values therefore
have to be numeric values as well. I have chosen -100 instead of 0
as the default in case someone writes a test that inspects the value
but forgets to let-bind the value. I hope that the unusual negative
value that one is going to see in such a case will help debugging
the issue.
The API docs promise to handle relative filenames, but the code did
not do it.
Also check for files outside the mail root, as implied by the API
description.
This fixes the bug reported at
id:87sgdqo0rz.fsf@tethera.net
Xapian currently succeeds to begin/end a transaction on a closed database,
or at least does not throw an exception. Make the test robust against
this changing.
The original generic handler had an extra '%s' in the format
string. Update tests that failed to catch this because the template to
print status strings checked 'stat', which was not set.
This is actually one of the few potentially useful things you can do
with a message belonging to a closed database, since in principle you
could re-open the database.
It's not very nice to return FALSE for an error, so provide
notmuch_message_get_flag_st as a migration path.
Bump LIBNOTMUCH_MINOR_VERSION because the API is extended.