Use the mail subject line for creating a descriptive filename for the wash
generated inline patch fake parts. The names are similar to the ones
created by 'git format-patch'.
If the user has notmuch-wash-convert-inline-patch-to-part hook enabled in
notmuch-show-insert-text/plain-hook, this will change the old default
filename of "inline patch" in fake parts:
[ inline patch: inline patch (as text/x-diff) ]
into, for example:
[ 0002-emacs-create-patch-filename-from-subject-for-inline.patch: inline patch (as text/x-diff) ]
which is typically the same filename the sender had if he was using 'git
format-patch' and 'git send-email'.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
Add wash generated inline patch fake parts through a special
"inline-patch-fake-part" handler to distinguish them from real MIME
parts. The fake parts are described as "inline patch (as text/x-diff)".
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
This removes all of the MIME traversal logic from show_message_body
and leaves only its interaction with the format callbacks.
Besides isolating concerns, since traversal happens behind a trivial
interface, there is now much less code duplication in
show_message_part. Also, this uses mime_node_seek_dfs to start at the
requested part, eliminating all of the logic about parts being
selected or being in_zone (and reducing the "show state" to only a
part counter). notmuch_show_params_t no longer needs to be passed
through the recursion because the only two fields that mattered
(related to crypto) are now handled by the MIME tree.
The few remaining complexities in show_message_part highlight
irregularities in the format callbacks with respect to top-level
messages and embedded message parts.
Since this is a rewrite, the diff is not very enlightening. It's
easier to look at the old code and the new code side-by-side.
This function matches how we number parts for the --part argument to
show. It will allow us to jump directly to the desired part, rather
than traversing the entire tree and carefully tracking whether or not
we're "in the zone".
This wraps all of the complex MIME part handling in a single, simple
function that gets part N from *any* MIME object, so traversing a MIME
part tree becomes a two-line for loop. Furthermore, the MIME node
structure provides easy access to envelopes for message parts as well
as cryptographic information.
This code is directly derived from the current show_message_body code
(much of it is identical), but the control relation is inverted:
instead of show_message_body controlling the traversal of the MIME
structure and invoking callbacks, the caller controls the traversal of
the MIME structure.
Examples in documentation for `notmuch-search-line-faces' had an extra
quote, e.g.:
'(\"unread\" . '(:foreground \"green\"))
Which resulted in values like:
(\"unread\" quote (:foreground \"green\"))
And tons of "Invalid face reference: quote" errors in the messages
buffer.
Since message-ids necessarily match just a single message, there's no
reason to do a search for the id before viewing the actual message;
the search just becomes an extra screen to click through. Clicking on
an id: links now just jumps straight to the message itself.
Commit 567bcbc2 introduced two new values for each message (content of the
"From" and "Subject" headers), but the comments about the database schema had
not been updated accordingly.
Text properties change between characters; prev-s-c-property-change
returns the position after the change. Thus, it is still inside the
invisible region.
Notmuch-hello stores a list of recent searches. Before the change, if
a search from this list is repeated, the recent search list is not
changed. The patch makes repeated recent searches move to the head of
the list. I.e. the last search is always on top of the recent search
list, which is what one would expect from a history list.
Test that `notmuch-hello-refresh-hook' is called once when
`notmuch-hello' is called and twice when calling
`notmuch-hello-update' after that.
The tests are very similar to tests for `notmuch-hello-mode-hook'.
This had been discussed and decided on IRC.
Rationale:
Therefore the space is recommended in the SI/ISO 31-0 standard, and the
International Bureau of Weights and Measures states that "for numbers with
many digits the digits may be divided into groups of three by a thin space, in
order to facilitate reading. Neither dots nor commas are inserted in the
spaces between groups of three".
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_separator#Digit_grouping)
If the address matching function generates no matches, don't prompt
the user to choose between them (!). Instead, generate a message to
report that there were no matches.
The :options keyword is not meaningful for function type. Also, it was not
possible to enter nil value, contrary to the notmuch-mua-user-agent
defcustom documentation. Specify the alternatives using choice type, taking
nil into account.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
It was not possible to define custom filters or filter functions because
the types were const. Remove const to allow editing.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
From a Carl Worth idea: add a function which will select the most
recently used notmuch buffer (search, show or hello). If no recent
buffer is found, run `notmuch'.
It is expected that the user will global bind this command to a key
sequence.
`notmuch-hello' should call `notmuch-hello-mode' function only when
run for the first time. But before the change, `notmuch-hello' used
`kill-all-local-variables' to remove editable widgets fields. This
caused the major mode to be reset, and `notmuch-hello-mode' to be
called every time.
The patch manually deletes all editable widget fields and removes
`kill-all-local-variables' call.
Add `notmuch-hello-mode-hook-counter' hook to count how many times
`notmuch-hello-mode-hook' was called. The counter function increments
`notmuch-hello-mode-hook-counter' variable value if it is bount,
otherwise it does nothing.
From the emacs changelog:
** `compose-mail' now accepts an optional 8th arg, RETURN-ACTION, and
passes it to the mail user agent function. This argument specifies an
action for returning to the caller after finishing with the mail.
This is currently used by Rmail to delete a mail window.
Under Emacs 24, notmuch breaks when this argument is passed to it by a
function in another part of Emacs. One example of a functon that does
this is report-emacs-bug -- so notmuch users cannot file emacs bug
reports!
This patch also adds a &rest argument to the arg-list of this function,
to future-proof against such changes. This is adapted from the approach
taken by message-mail, a similar function built into emacs.
This patch was originally submitted by richardmurri@gmail.com on Aug. 1:
id:"877h6x6oor.fsf@veracitynetworks.com"
Aaron Ecay points out in
id:"1324136185-4509-1-git-send-email-aaronecay@gmail.com" that the
mktemp in
debian-snapshot: TMPFILE := $(shell mktemp)
Is being evaluated for every target. As best I can tell, this is
because make is evaluating the right hand side, even though it is not
doing the assignment.
Of course, it isn't quite as nice to edit with the line continuations,
but it is ideomatic make.
The idea is that $test_count could be used in tests to label
intermediate files. The output enabled by this patch (and --debug)
helps figure out which OUTPUT.nn file belongs to which test in case
several subtests write to OUTPUT.$test_count
binutils-2.22 changes the behaviour of ld by defaulting to
--no-copy-dt-needed-entries, which means that required objects/libs are not
"indirectly" linked through intermediate objects/libs anymore. As a consequence,
when using binutils-2.22, building symbol-test fails with the following error:
/usr/bin/ld: test/symbol-test.o: undefined reference to symbol
'std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char>
>::~basic_string()@@GLIBCXX_3.4'
/usr/bin/ld: note: 'std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>,
std::allocator<char> >::~basic_string()@@GLIBCXX_3.4' is defined in DSO
/usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6 so try adding it to the linker command line
/usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6: could not read symbols: Invalid operation
An easy fix is to link using CXX instead of CC.
Commit cb841878 introduced new parts handlers for crypto parts, but also
hardcoded values for their headers face. This replaces these hardcoded values
with a customizable face.
This reverts commit c6a3a768fe.
This test is unreliable, showing BROKEN in some environments and FIXED
in others. The confusion seems to outweigh the benefits, for now.
Conflicts:
test/emacs
In my test case added g_object_unref(charset_filter) reduces memory
consumption over 90% when 'notmuch show --format=text "*"' is
executed (~11000 messages, RES ~330M -> ~25M).
Support nil value for notmuch-poll-script to run "notmuch new" instead of
an external script, and make this the new default. "notmuch new" is run
using the configured notmuch-command.
This allows taking better advantage of the "notmuch new" hooks from emacs
without intermediate scripts.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
Two new internal routines are created _config_get_list and
_config_set_list; the notmuch_config_get_* functions that deal with
lists are simply wrappers for these functions.
Run notmuch new pre and post hooks, named "pre-new" and "post-new", if
present in the notmuch hooks directory. The hooks will be run before and
after incorporating new messages to the database.
Typical use cases for pre-new and post-new hooks are fetching or delivering
new mail to the maildir, and custom tagging of the mail incorporated to the
database.
Also add command line option --no-hooks to notmuch new to bypass the hooks.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
Add mechanism for running user defined hooks. Hooks are executables or
symlinks to executables stored under the new notmuch hooks directory,
<database-path>/.notmuch/hooks.
No hooks are introduced here, but adding support for a hook is now a simple
matter of calling the new notmuch_run_hook() function at an appropriate
location with the hook name.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
Some distros (Arch Linux) ship Python as python2 and Python 3 as python.
Checking for python2 is necessary for the Python tests to work on these
platforms.
The new test_python() function makes writing Python tests a little easier:
- it sets the environment variables as needed
- it redirects stdout to the OUTPUT file (like test_emacs()).
This commit also declares python as an external prereq.
The stdout redirection is required to avoid trouble when running commands like
"python 'script' | sort > OUTPUT": in such a case, any error due to a missing
external prereq would be "swallowed" by sort, resulting to a failed test instead
of a skipped one.