Although the function dates from 2015, the autoload is newer. In
particular [1] it is not found in Emacs 25.3.
[1]: id:874ke85tqx.fsf@cgc-instruments.com
This is a fix for the test failures reported by Dan Čermák [1].
It is more robust to check for the prerequisite inside the function
that uses it, rather than in every test file that calls the function.
[1]: id:87k0n4fqgm.fsf@tethera.net
See list discussion in thread starting with
id:87h7ip2baq.fsf@fifthhorseman.net for more details.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Amended-by: David Bremner (s/.emacs/Emacs configuration/)
This prevents the message document getting multiple thread-id terms
when there are multiple files with the same message-id.
This change shifts some thread ids, requiring adjustments to other tests.
According to my bijection, this bug has been present since commit
411675a6ce in 2017. It is not completely clear what harm it causes in
regulary use, but it (at least) makes notmuch crash when compiled with
-DDEBUG_DATABASE_SANITY.
"xargs tar cf backup.tar < $manifest" recreates the tar file with each
"batch" execed by xargs. In general this results in only a fraction of
the desired files being backed up.
Variable 'notmuch-saved-searches-sort-function' does not exist;
'notmuch-saved-search-sort-function' is the correct name.
Signed-off-by: Luis Henriques <henrix@camandro.org>
Sphinx 4.0 changed the default value of man_make_section_directory
from False to True. We create the section directories and move the
files manually, so fix the immediate man build failure by disabling
the feature.
The Sphinx documentation on this [1] is confusing, and has the change
backwards. Git history says the default changed from False to True.
[1] https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/configuration.html#confval-man_make_section_directory
Although this default worked for "notmuch config get", it didn't work
most other places. Restore the previous functionality, with the
wrinkle that XDG locations will shadow $HOME/mail if they exist.
This fixes a bug reported by Jack Kamm in id:87eeefdc8b.fsf@gmail.com
notmuch-before-tag-hook and notmuch-after-tag-hook are supposed to
have access to two dynamic variables, tag-changes and query, but these
were lost with the switch to lexical binding in fc4cda07 (emacs: use
lexical-bindings in all libraries, 2021-01-13).
Add a variant of Emacs's dlet (not available until Emacs 28) and use
it in notmuch-tag to expose tag-changes and query to the hooks.
Due to the change in the config system, notmuch keeps a notmuch database
open when it would not do so before. Consequently, it can miss changes
to the database which are done from a hook (while notmuch holds the
databse in read only mode). When notmuch itself writes to the database
after that it uses wrong assumptions about the last used doc id etc.
Demonstrate this by triggering an assertion. (This new test succeeds
with notmuch 0.31.4.)
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@grubix.eu>
Amended-by: db. Check for both messages
Prior to 0.32, notmuch had the (undocumented) behaviour that it
expanded a relative value of database.path with respect to $HOME. In
0.32 this was special cased for database.path but broken for
database.mail_root, which causes problems for at least notmuch-new
when database.path is set to a relative path.
The change in T030-config.sh reflects a user visible, but hopefully
harmless behaviour change; the expanded form of the paths will now be
printed by notmuch config.
Passing an unparsed header field to Mail::Field.new is deprecated and will be removed in Mail 2.8.0. Use Mail::Field.parse instead.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
The lastest versions of GNU parallel no longer make mention of GNU
within their help output. This causes the test script to mistakenly use
the moreutils parallel execution. In order to fix this, while
maintaining compatibility with previous versions of GNU parallel,
--version should be used.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Backer Dirks <omgitsaheadcrab@gmail.com>
Apparently the -f option to hostname is not portable, and in fact it
does not seem to always behave reasonably in e.g. a chroot.
Python code originally due to Tomi [1], modified by yours truly.
[1]: id:m2lf9fbkug.fsf@guru.guru-group.fi