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
"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
In test-lib-emacs.sh line 20:
test_require_external_prereq ${TEST_EMACS} || ret=1
^-----------^ SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Did you mean:
test_require_external_prereq "${TEST_EMACS}" || ret=1
In test-lib-emacs.sh line 21:
test_require_external_prereq ${TEST_EMACSCLIENT} || ret=1
^-----------------^ SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Did you mean:
test_require_external_prereq "${TEST_EMACSCLIENT}" || ret=1
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Commit d59d9c81 (test: Make the emacsclient binary user-configurable,
2012-11-27) modified the prereq check for the configured emacsclient,
but we probably want to do the same for emacs itself.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
The struct used to store the types (rb_data_type_t) contains a "data"
field where we can store whatever we want. I use that field to store a
pointer to the corresponding destroy function. For example
notmuch_rb_database_type contains a pointer to notmuch_database_destroy.
I cast that pointer as a notmuch_status_t (func*)(void *) and call
that function passing the internal object (e.g. notmuch_database_t).
Using the rb_data_type_t data we can call the correct notmuch destroy
function.
Therefore this:
ret = ((notmuch_status_t (*)(void *)) type->data) (nm_object);
Is effectively the same as this:
ret = notmuch_database_destroy (database);
The advantage of doing it this way is that much less code is necesary
since each rb_data_type_t has the corresponding destroy function stored
in it.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Virtually the whole ruby core moved from RData to RTypeData, let's do so
ourselves too.
Basically the information typically passed through Data_Wrap_Struct is
now stored in a struct rb_data_type_t (mark and free functions). This
has the advantage that more information can be easily added, like the
name of the type, a custom data ponter, and more.
Data_Wrap_Struct is replaced with TypedData_Wrap_Struct, and the
information is stored in a struct rb_data_type_t, rather than passed
as arguments.
Check_Type is replaced with Check_TypedStruct, which is a wrapper for
rb_check_typeddata (with casts).
#define Check_TypedStruct(v, t) \
rb_check_typeddata(RBIMPL_CAST((VALUE)(v)), (t))
We can use rb_check_typeddata directly, just like we use rb_data_object_get
directly.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
This makes the code more maintainable and will help in further patches.
No functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
There is not much point in complicating the code for error messages that
can be easily constructed.
Before:
database closed (RuntimeError)
After:
Notmuch::Database object destroyed (RuntimeError)
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Data_Get_Struct is nothing but a macro that calls
rb_data_object_get with a cast (unnecessary in C).
#define Data_Get_Struct(obj, type, sval) \
((sval) = RBIMPL_CAST((type*)rb_data_object_get(obj)))
We can use rb_data_object_get directly, and this way we don't need to
pass the type, which is unnecessary information.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
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.
Initially make sure gmime_filter_reply initialization is
thread-safe (assuming notmuch_client_init is only called once).
For tidyness, also put talloc initialization in the new function.
In principle this could be done without depending on C++11 features,
but these features should be available since gcc 4.8.1, and this
localized usage is easy to replace if it turns out to be problematic
for portability.
There's no need to do Check_Type, Data_Get_Struct calls
rb_data_object_get(), which already does that.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Apparently commit 5c9e3855 (ruby: Don't barf if an object is destroyed
more than once, 2010-05-26) missed these two.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
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.