If a leaf part's body content is omitted, return the encoded length and
transfer encoding in --format=json output. This information may be used
by the consumer, e.g. to decide whether to download a large attachment
over a slow link.
Returning the _encoded_ content length is more efficient than returning
the _decoded_ content length. Returning the transfer encoding allows
the consumer to estimate the decoded content length.
Write a "charset" field for all omitted parts for which it is applicable,
not only text/html parts. Factor out the code to a separate function.
It will be extended with more fields next.
notmuch_json_show_sanitize replaced "filename" field values even in part
structures, where the value is predictable. Make it only normalize the
filename value if it is an absolute path (begins with slash), which is
true of the Maildir filenames that were intended to be normalized away.
Currently there is a period of pain whenever we make
backward-incompatible changes to the structured output format, which
discourages not only backward-incompatible improvements to the format,
but also backwards-compatible additions that may not be "perfect". In
the end, these problems limit experimentation and innovation.
This series of patches introduces a way for CLI callers to request a
specific format version on the command line and to determine if the
CLI does not supported the requested version (and perhaps present a
useful diagnostic to the user). Since the caller requests a format
version, it's also possible for the CLI to support multiple
incompatible versions simultaneously, unlike the alternate approach of
including version information in the output.
This patch lays the groundwork by introducing a versioning convention,
standard exit codes, and a utility function to check the requested
version and produce standardized diagnostic messages and exit
statuses.
This slightly changes the output of an existing test since we now
report non-zero exits with a pop-up buffer instead of at the end of
the search results.
This checks for non-zero exit status from JSON CLI calls and pops up
an error buffer with stderr and stdout. A consequence of this is that
show and reply now handle errors, rather than ignoring them.
This provides library functions for unified handling of errors from
the notmuch CLI. Follow-up patches will convert some scattered error
handling to use this and add error handling where we currently ignore
errors.
Update pick's archive message to respect notmuch-archive-tags. Also
split archive message into an archiving part and a separate
"then-next" part, to move more inline with show. Update the keybinding
so default behaviour is unchanged.
Previously, if the input stream consisted only of an error message,
notmuch-json-begin-compound would signal a (wrong-type-argument
number-or-marker-p nil) error when reaching the end of the error
message. This happened because notmuch-json-scan-to-value would think
that it reached a value and put the parser into the 'value state.
Even after notmuch-json-begin-compound signaled the syntax error, the
parser would remain in this state and when the resynchronization logic
reached the end of the buffer, the parser would fail because the
'value state indicates that characters are available.
This fixes this problem by restoring the parser's previous state if it
encounters a syntax error.
This makes the tag set a bit less trivial.
Note that if you use the small corpus, this is not so interesting (and
is also a bit noisy) since the messages will not be found. In the
future this could be checked for.
Conflicts:
performance-test/01-dump-restore
Austin suggested a while ago that the corpus size be printed in the
header. In the end it seems the corpus will be fixed per test script,
so this suggestion indeed makes sense.
The tabbing was wrapping on my usual 80 column terminal, so I joined
the input and output columns together.
Unlike in the correctness tests, the most common cause of non-zero
return seems to be the user interrupting, so killing the run seems
like the friendly thing to do.
* test/emacs:
- Rename subtests "{Add,Remove} tag from notmuch-show view" to
"notmuch-show: {add,remove} single tag {to,from} single message"
to be consistent with the following tests.
- New subtest "notmuch-show: add multiple tags to single message":
`notmuch-show-add-tag' ("+") can add multiple tags to a message.
- New subtest "notmuch-show: remove multiple tags from single message":
`notmuch-show-remove-tag' ("-") can remove multiple tags from a message.
Previously if you carried on past the last message in a pick view pick
would get confused and `forget' about the split pane and would try and
re-split when moving up again. This was due to faulty logic in
notmuch-pick-show-message: something that should have been in the (when message)
clause was not.
Thanks to jrollins for the bug report.
Added the following Emacs Interface NEWS entries:
Catch errors bodypart insertions may throw,
Improved text/calendar content handling and
Disabled coding conversions when reading in
`with-current-notmuch-show-message`.
Thanks to Austin and David for content improvements.
The idea is not to bother with restore operations if they don't change
the set of tags. This is actually a relatively common case.
In order to avoid fancy datastructures, this method is quadratic in
the number of tags; at least on my mail database this doesn't seem to
be a big problem.
We want to test both that error/warning messages are generated when
they should be, and not generated when they should not be. This varies
between restore and batch tagging.
These one need the completed functionality in notmuch-restore. Fairly
exotic tags are tested, but no weird message id's.
We test each possible input to autodetection, both explicit (with
--format=auto) and implicit (without --format).
This can be enabled with the new --format=batch-tag command line
option to "notmuch restore". The input must consist of lines of the
format:
+<tag>|-<tag> [...] [--] id:<msg-id>
Each line is interpreted similarly to "notmuch tag" command line
arguments. The delimiter is one or more spaces ' '. Any characters in
<tag> and <search-terms> MAY be hex encoded with %NN where NN is the
hexadecimal value of the character. Any ' ' and '%' characters in
<tag> and <msg-id> MUST be hex encoded (using %20 and %25,
respectively). Any characters that are not part of <tag> or
<search-terms> MUST NOT be hex encoded.
Leading and trailing space ' ' is ignored. Empty lines and lines
beginning with '#' are ignored.
Commit message mainly stolen from Jani's batch tagging commit, to
follow.
These are meant to be shared between notmuch-tag and notmuch-restore.
The bulk of the routines implement a "tag operation list" abstract
data type act as a structured representation of a set of tag
operations (typically coming from a single tag command or line of
input).
This is to give a home to strtok_len. It's a bit silly to add a header
for one routine, but it needs to be shared between several compilation
units (or at least that's the most natural design).
sup is the old format, and remains the default, at least until
restore is converted to parse this format.
Each line of the batch-tag format is modelled on the syntax of notmuch tag:
- "notmuch tag" is omitted from the front of the line
- The dump format only uses query strings of a single message-id.
- Each space seperated tag/message-id is 'hex-encoded' to remove
trouble-making characters.
- It is permitted (and will be useful) for there to be no tags before
the query.
In particular this format won't have the same problem with e.g. spaces
in message-ids or tags; they will be round-trip-able.
All the structured output functions in notmuch-reply and notmuch-show
are renamed to a generic name (as they do not contain any json-specific
code anyway). This patch is a preparation to actually using the new
S-Expression sprinter in notmuch-reply and notmuch-show.