All three of C-c C-c, <menu-bar> <Message> <Send Message>,
and <tool-bar> <Send Message> are bound to message-send-and-exit by
message.el, but notmuch-mua.el only had an explicit override for the
keyboard binding. This mostly manifests as confusing Fcc behaviour for
GUI users.
Patching the bindings for specific keys is rather brittle, since it has
to be aware of every relevant binding. This change switches to instead
using a remap binding, which turns any binding for message-send or
message-send-and-exit into a binding for the corresponding notmuch-mua
command.
This change addresses two known issues with large sets of changes to
the database. The first is that as reported by Steven Allen [1],
notmuch commits are not "flushed" when they complete, which means that
if there is an open transaction when the database closes (or e.g. the
program crashes) then all changes since the last commit will be
discarded (nothing is irrecoverably lost for "notmuch new", as the
indexing process just restarts next time it is run). This does not
really "fix" the issue reported in [1]; that seems rather difficult
given how transactions work in Xapian. On the other hand, with the
default settings, this should mean one only loses less than a minutes
worth of work. The second issue is the occasionally reported "storm"
of disk writes when notmuch finishes. I don't yet have a test for
this, but I think committing as we go should reduce the amount of work
when finalizing the database.
[1]: id:20151025210215.GA3754@stebalien.com
Unfortunately, it doesn't make a difference if we call
cancel_transaction or not, all uncommited changes are discarded if
there is an open (unflushed) transaction.
The minibuffer-prompt face that was used before made it impossible to
differentiate between two distinct UI elements: (i) the prompt's text
which itself cannot be acted upon, (ii) the actionable keys used to
jump to searches/tags.
The use of a named face, notmuch-jump-key, makes it possible for users
or theme developers to apply properties that are specific to each of
those two cases.
In the interest of backward compatibility, the new face inherits from
minibuffer-prompt.
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.
(cherry picked from commit 3f4de98e7c)
Most concrete verification steps are likely only taken on the e-mail
address in the first place, and e-mail addresses render more
intelligibly than arbitrary User IDs in the first place.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Amended-by: db, apply dme restructuring suggestions.
When the certificate that signs a message is known to be valid, GMime
is capable of reporting on the e-mail address embedded in the
certificate.
We pass this information along to the caller of "notmuch show", as
often only the e-mail address of the certificate has actually been
checked/verified.
Furthermore, signature verification should probably at some point
compare the e-mail address of the caller against the sender address of
the message itself. Having to parse what gmime thinks is a "userid"
to extract an e-mail address seems clunky and unnecessary if gmime
already thinks it knows what the e-mail address is.
See id:878s41ax6t.fsf@fifthhorseman.net for more motivation and discussion.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Since most memory allocation is (ultimately) in the talloc context
defined by a notmuch_database_t pointer, this gives a more complete
view of memory still allocated at program shutdown.
We also change the talloc report in notmuch.c to mode "a" to avoid
clobbering the newly reported log.
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
notmuch-test will now call aggregate-results.sh with file list
that it compiles based on the test ran, and aggregate-results
will report failure is any of the test files are missing.
With this notmuch-test no longer has to exit in non-parallel
run if some test fail to write its report file -- so it works
as parallel tests in this sense.
Changed test_done() in test-lib.sh write report file in one write(2),
so there is (even) less chance it being partially written. Also,
now it writes 'total' last and aggregate-results.sh expects this
line to exist in all report files for reporting to be successful.
Added 'set -eu' to notmuch-test and modified code to work with
these settings. That makes it harder to get mistakes slipped
into committed code.
Gmane web interface is long gone, remove it. Make MARC the new
default. Update LKML to Lore, where it already redirects anyway. Also
add Notmuch web archive.
- declare-function notmuch-unthreaded lacked file name
- declare-function notmuch-search had differently named last arg
- note: check-declare-directory did not complain about that
- declare-function notmuch-search-show-thread without nil
- some functions declared to be in different file than those
existed ("notmuch" -> "notmuch-lib")
- some related function/declare lines were (/are now) wider than
80-columns; added line breaks (and proper indentation) there
After some discussion [1], I decided it is better to make notmuch users
who rely on this behaviour customize mail-user-agent. This is
consistent with the behaviour of other emacs mail packages.
[1]: id:87k0nuhfrk.fsf@toryanderson.com
Sourcing test-lib.sh will cd to TMP_DIRECTORY, so
relative path in $0 will not work in previous version
. $(dirname "$0")/test-lib-emacs.sh
Now individual test scripts -- e.g. ./test/T310-emacs.sh
will work.
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/)
Prior to 9ad19e4454 there was an unhandled Xapian exception when
reindexing after a large number of deletes. This test was used for
bisection, and will subsequently serve as a regression test.
At this point it is a bit tricky to measure the performance increase
from the new message deletion code, since the same commit (9ad19e4)
that improved the performance also seems to have fixed a bug with an
uncaught Xapian exception triggered by this test.
say_color() used to call (builtin) printf (and tput(1) to stdout)
several times, which caused attempts to write messages with color
to have partial content (e.g. escape sequences) often intermixed
with other tests when parallel tests were run.
Now, with all output collected, then written out using one
printf, all strings with color print out correctly
((at least short) write(2)'s appear to write out "atomically").
While at it, used only one tput(1) execution to determine whether
color output works, and made bold/colors/sgr0 to tput(1) their
values once per test.
Example reference to a command-line option using the option role
reference. This creates a hyperlink in html, and the usual boldface
style in man page. This could be used throughout the man pages.
Use the program and option directives to document the subcommand
options. This unifies a lot of option documentation throughout.
This also makes it possible to reference options with :option:`--foo`
(within .. program::) or :option:`subcommand --foo` (globally). This
is left for later work.
See https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/domains.html#directive-program
Note: There is a lot of indentation change, but intentionally there is
no reflow. Using 'git diff -w' or 'git show -w' to ignore white space
changes makes this a very easy change to review.