Don't require the caller of _notmuch_doc_id_set_init to pass in a
correct bound; instead compute it from the array. This simplifies the
caller and makes this interface easier to use correctly.
Remove the repeated "sizeof (doc_ids->bitmap[0])" that bothered cworth
by instead defining macros to compute the word and bit offset of a
given bit in the doc ID set bitmap.
The call-process to notmuch in notmuch-query.el was previously sending
stderr into the output buffer. This means that if there is any stderr
the JSON parsing breaks. Unfortunately call-process does not support
sending stderr to a separate buffer or to the minibuffer [0], but it
does support sending it to /dev/null. So we do that here instead.
[0] a bug was filed against emacs (#7842)
Without this patch, it might happen that the remaining time or processing
rate were calculated just after start where nothing was processed yet.
This resulted into division by a very small number (or zero) and the
printed information was of little value.
Instead of printing nonsenses we print only that the operation is in
progress. The estimates will be printed later, after there is enough data.
This was originally intended to help support filenames with spaces in
them, but this actually breaks things when someone sets a command with
a space in it, (such as CC="ccache cc").
Instead, we now only set a custom IFS when acting on the
newline-separated list of files from /sbin/ldconfig.
Previously, the user didn't know whether the pipe command succeeded or
not. It was only possible to find it out by manually inspecting
the work done (or not done) by the command or by manually switching to
*notmuch-pipe* buffer and determine it from command output. For this
the user had to first find the text corresponding to the last run of
pipe command as the buffer accumulated the output from all pipe commands.
This patch changes the following. The *notmuch-pipe* buffer is erased
before every pipe command so it contains only the output from the last
command. Additionally, when the command failed, the *notmuch-pipe* buffer
is shown and an error message is displayed.
with the output of pipe command.
Currently, there are two places in the test framework that contain very
long list on a single line. Whenever a test is added (or changed) in
several branches and these branches are merged, it results in conflict
which is hard to resolve because one has to go through the whole long
line to find where the conflict is.
This patch splits these long lists to several lines so that the
conflicts are easier to resolve.
add --bashcompletiondir and --zshcompletiondir (like --emacslispdir) to choose
installation dir for bash/zsh completion files
Make some features optional:
--without-emacs / --with-emacs=no do not install lisp file
--without-bash-completion / --with-bash-completion=no do not install bash
files
--without-zsh-completion / --with-zsh-completion=no do not install zsh files
By default, everything is enabled. You can reenable something with
--with-feature=yes
notmuch new reports progress only during the "first" phase when the
files on disk are traversed and indexed. After this phase, other
operations like rename detection and maildir flags synchronization are
performed, but the user is not informed about them. Since these
operations can take significant time, we want to inform the user about
them.
This patch enhances the progress reporting facility that was already
present. The timer that triggers reporting is not stopped after the
first phase but continues to run until all operations are finished. The
rename detection and maildir flag synchronization are enhanced to report
their progress.
If there are several tags applied to the new messages, it is beneficial
to store them to the database at one, because it saves some time,
especially when the notmuch new is run for the first time.
This patch decreased the time for initial import from 1h 35m to 1h 14m.
This is a simplified version of a patch originally by Michal Sojka
<sojkam1@fel.cvut.cz> which is designed to have the same performance
benefits. Michal said the following:
When notmuch new is run for the first time, it is not necessary to
defer maildir flags synchronization to later because we already know
that no files will be removed.
Performing the maildinr flag synchronization immediately after the
message is added to the database has the advantage that the message
is likely hot in the disk cache so the synchronization is faster.
Additionally, we also save one database query for each message,
which must be performed when the operation is deferred.
Without this patch, the first notmuch new of 200k messages (3 GB)
took 1h and 46m out of which 20m was maildir flags
synchronization. With this patch, the whole operation took only 1h
and 36m.
Unlike Michal's patch, this version does the deferral for any new
message, rather than doing it only on the first run of "notmuch new".
Here's a bitty patch to the vim plugin; it now calculates the primary email
of the user based on a call to notmuch config. There's still a lot of work
that needs to get done on notmuch.vim, e.g., the ability to have multiple
emails/accounts.
Currently, whenever we call index_terms multiple times for a single
field, the term generator is being reset to position 0 each time. This
means that with text such as:
To: a@b.c, x@y.z
one can get a bogus match by searching for:
To: a@y.c
Thanks to Mark Anderson for reporting the bug, (and providing a nice,
minimal test case that inspired what is used here).
With talloc, we were already freeing all memory by the time we exited
the loop, but that didn't help with excess use of memory inside the
loop, (which was mostly from tallocing some objects with the incorrect
parent).
Thanks to Andrew Tridgell for sitting next to me and teaching me to
use talloc_report_full to find these leaks.
A new "folder:" prefix in the query string can now be used to match
the directories in which mail files are stored.
The addition of this feature causes the recently added
search-by-folder tests to now pass.
This is a new feature which is not implemente yet, so these tests mostly
fail currently. A subsequent commit will add the feature and cause these
tests to start passing.
These tests verify that we can search for containing folders of mail files
by word or by phrase and that the search terms are updated correctly when
directories are renamed.
Using the local talloc context ensures that the memory we are using
here will be freed shortly, (rather than hanging on for a long time
with the notmuch database object).
Convert the meta information to point to the notmuchmail.org repository, rather
than the old cnotmuch location. I will delete the "cnotmuch" package
from http://pypi.python.org/pypi/cnotmuch and create a new "notmuch"
package there that contains the current versions.
Also bump the version number to 0.4. I will need to upgrade the API
first before I can release the 0.5 of the bindings, there are still some
methods missing.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
This reduces thread search's 1+2t Xapian queries (where t is the
number of matched threads) to 1+t queries and constructs exactly one
notmuch_message_t for each message instead of 2 to 3.
notmuch_query_search_threads eagerly fetches the docids of all
messages matching the user query instead of lazily constructing
message objects and fetching thread ID's from term lists.
_notmuch_thread_create takes a seed docid and the set of all matched
docids and uses a single Xapian query to expand this docid to its
containing thread, using the matched docid set to determine which
messages in the thread match the user query instead of using a second
Xapian query.
This reduces the amount of time required to load my inbox from 4.523
seconds to 3.025 seconds (1.5X faster).
We really want to change the thread subject at the same time we set
the date, (if the sort order indicates this is necessary). The
previous code for setting the thread subject was sensitive on the
query sort when adding matching messages. An independent bug fix is
about to change that query sort order, so we remove the dependency on
it here.
This reverts commit f22a7ec1e2.
Interrupting the test suite due to an actual bug in a test script
would be just fine, but interrupting the run of the entire test suite
at the first test failure is unacceptable.
Previously, this directory was only preserved for failing tests. But
it's important to be able to easily debug known-broken tests, so
preserve the actual vs. expected output for those as well.
Use varying dates in the test messages to test the order authors are
listed in. Add tests with repeated author names and unusual date
ordering. Most of these are broken at the moment, but will be fixed
shortly.
Edited-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>: Also update the expected
results for existing emacs tests that currently codify the incorrect
author ordering, (and similarly note them as broken in the current
test suite).
The removed expressions, which were used to ensure that citations were
both preceded and followed by a blank line, were poorly implemented
and caused a regexp stack overflow on messages more than a few
thousand lines long.
Incremental search does not match strings that span a
visible/invisible boundary. This results in failure to correctly
isearch for authors in `notmuch-search' mode if the name of the author
is split between the visible and invisible components of the authors
string. To avoid this, attempt to truncate the visible component of
the authors string on a boundary between authors, such that the
entirety of an author's name is either visible or invisible.
Appease the test suite by using the true name for the Fcc directory
path, otherwise a value for `notmuch-database-path' which includes
symbolic links causes test suite failures.
When a test fails, a tmp.<testname> file is left behind. These files
are useful for the person debugging the test failure, but are never
anything we want to commit.
Edited-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>: Changed from tmp.emacs to
tmp.* and added explanation in the commit message.
Previously, we would only scan a directory if the filesystem
modification time was strictly newer than the database modification
time for the directory. This would cause a problem for systems with an
unstable clock, (if a new mail was added to the filesystem, then the
system clock rolled backward, "notmuch new" would not find the message
until the clock caught up and the directory was modified again).
Now, we always scan the directory if the modification time of the
directory is not exactly the same between the filesystem and the
database. This avoids the problem described above even with an
unstable system clock.