Previously, when all tests were skipped on a test file, there were
no indication of this in the final results aggregate-results.sh
printed.
Now count of the files where all tests were skipped is printed.
This is the result of running:
$ uncrustify --replace --config devel/uncrustify.cfg *.c *.h
In the top level source directory. I was using uncrustify
0.68.1+dfsg1-2.
I do not know why these changes were not caught in
33382c2b5b
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
This is the result of running:
$ uncrustify --replace --config ../devel/uncrustify.cfg *.cc *.c *.h
in the test directory.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
This removes the dependency of this test script on gdb, and
considerably speeds up the running of the tests.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
These can be used e.g. to override return values for functions, in
place of the existing scripting of gdb.
This prepends to LD_PRELOAD rather than clobbering it, thanks to a
suggestion from Tomi Ollila.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Debian's lintian has an informational alert
desktop-entry-lacks-keywords-entry, which recommends including
Keywords= in a .desktop file.
I dug around a bit in /usr/share/applications/*.desktop to make sure
that we covered the range of keywords other e-mail applications are
using. If anyone has other suggestions for keywords, they can add
them to this list.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
The extra flexibility of having both HAVE_EMACS (for yes, there is an
emacs we can use) and WITH_EMACS (the user wants emacs support) lead
to confusion and bugs. We now just force WITH_EMACS to 0 if no
suitable emacs is detected.
This way if variables defined using unused() macro are actually
used then code will not compile...
- removed unused usage around one argc and one argv since those
were used
- changed one unused (char *argv[]) to unused (char **argv) to
work with modified unused() macro definition
Without this change, dh_gencontrol emits:
dpkg-gencontrol: warning: package python-notmuch: substitution variable ${python:Provides} unused, but is defined
dpkg-gencontrol: warning: package python-notmuch: substitution variable ${python:Versions} unused, but is defined
dpkg-gencontrol: warning: package notmuch-mutt: substitution variable ${perl:Depends} unused, but is defined
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
/usr/share/doc/debian-policy/upgrading-checklist.txt.gz suggests that
notmuch is already compliant with debian-policy 4.3.0.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthorseman.net>
Debian's build hardening toolchain options produce binary artifacts
that are more resistant to compromise. The most visible change for
notmuch today is likely to be the addition of the "bindnow" linker
flag, which contributes to making the "Global Offset Table" fully
read-only.
See https://wiki.debian.org/Hardening for more details.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
- all variables in $((...)) without leading $
- all comparisons use -gt, -eq or -ne
- no -a nor -o inside [ ... ] expressions
- all indentation levels using one tab
Dropped unnecessary empty string check when reading results files.
Replaced pluralize() which was executed in subshell with
pluralize_s(). pluralize_s sets $s to 's' or '' based on value of
$1. Calls to pluralize_s are done in context of current shell, so
no forks to subshells executed.
In 40b025 we stopped building the notmuch-emacs documentation if
HAVE_EMACS=0 (i.e. no emacs was detected by configure). Unfortunately
we continued to try to install the (non-existent) documentation, which
causes build/install failures.
As a bonus, we also avoid installing the documentation if the user
configures --without-emacs.
Thanks to Ralph Seichter for reporting the problem, and testing
previous versions of this fix.
Since the docstrings are not built in the case of --without-emacs,
even if emacs is detected, don't let sphinx build the emacs docs. This
avoids a large number of error messages due to missing includes. It's
actually a bit surprising sphinx doesn't generate an error for the
missing include files.
When the user knows the signer's key, we want "notmuch show" to be
able to verify the signature of an encrypted and signed message
regardless of whether we are using a stashed session key or not.
I wrote this test because I was surprised to see signature
verification failing when viewing some encrypted messages after
upgrading to GPGME 1.13.0-1 in debian experimental.
The added tests here all pass with GPGME 1.12.0, but the final test
fails with 1.13.0, due to some buggy updates to GPGME upstream: see
https://dev.gnupg.org/T3464 for more details.
While the bug needs to be fixed in GPGME, notmuch's test suite needs
to make sure that GMime is doing what we expect it to do; i was a bit
surprised that it hadn't caught the problem, hence this patch.
I've fixed this bug in debian experimental with gpgme 1.13.0-2, so the
tests should pass on any debian system. I've also fixed it in the
gpgme packages (1.13.0-2~ppa1) in the ubuntu xenial PPA
(ppa:notmuch/notmuch) that notmuch uses for Travis CI.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
I couldn't run the performance tests on my machines due to a hardcoded
bash path. Use env for finding bash in weird systems like NixOS.
Signed-off-by: William Casarin <jb55@jb55.com>
Previous version expected full upstream install to be run, and also
caused lintian whine about the the desktop file being in a different
package than the script. I'm not sure they shouldn't both be in
elpa-notmuch, but I can see how they should be together.
It seems our previous attempt with order-only targets was not
sufficient to avoid problems with sphinx-builds doctree cache [0].
Looking around at other people's approaches [1], using separate
doctrees was suggested. I guess there might be a slight loss of
efficiency, but it seems more robust.
[0]: build failures were first noticed in Debian experimental, but I was able to duplicate it in
my usual build environment about 1 in 8 builds.
[1]: in particular
9e3fc1657d
Part 0 of a multipart/encrypted object is
GMIME_MULTIPART_ENCRYPTED_VERSION; part 1 is
GMIME_MULTIPART_ENCRYPTED_CONTENT. Using the name for what we want
describes our intent more clearly than using a magic number in the
code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>