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>
init.c:214:5: warning: ‘rb_cData’ is deprecated: by: rb_cObject. Will be removed in 3.1. [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
This is the last bit of "python" left in the notmuch codebase.
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0394/#recommendation encourages
"third-party distributors" to use more-specific shebang lines. I'm
not certain that the notmuch project itself is a "third-party
contributor" but I think this is a safe way to encourage people to use
python3 when they're developing notmuch.
We already have python3 explicitly elsewhere in the codebase for
developers (in nmbug).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
This will allow client code to provide more meaningful diagnostics. In
particular it will enable "notmuch new" to continue suggsting the user
run "notmuch setup" to create a config after "notmuch new" is
transitioned to the new configuration framework.
A typo in Database._create_query lost the exclude_tag names during the
string to utf-8 conversion.
Amended by DB: fixed patch format and updated commit message.
Building Notmuch on macOS is known to cause problems because the Notmuch
distribution archive contains two files named "version". These names
clash with the <version> header as defined in C++20. Therefore, the
existing naming will likely become a problem on other platforms as well,
once compilers adopt the new standard.
Signed-off-by: Ralph Seichter <github@seichter.de>
Amended-by: db s/keyword/header/ in commit message.
Use `makefile-gmake-mode' instead of `makefile-mode' because the
former also highlights ifdef et al. while the latter does not.
"./Makefile.global" and one "Makefile.local" failed to specify any
major mode at all but doing so is necessary because Emacs does not
automatically figure out that these are Makefiles (of any flavor).
Since it is possible to use an atomic context to abort a number of
changes support this usage. Because the only way to actually abort
the transaction is to close the database this must also do so.
Amended by db: Note the limitation requiring close is a limitation of
the underlying notmuch API, which should be fixed in a future notmuch
release.
This reverses the logic of StandaloneMessage to instead create a
OwnedMessage. Only the Thread class allows retrieving messages more
then once so it can explicitly create such messages.
The added test fails with SIGABRT without the fix for the message
re-use in threads being present.
Any messages retrieved from a query - either directly via
search_messages() or indirectly via thread objects - are owned by that
query. Retrieving the same message (i.e. corresponding to the same
message ID / database object) several times will always yield the same
C object.
The caller is allowed to destroy message objects owned by a query before
the query itself - which can save memory for long-lived queries.
However, that message must then never be retrieved again from that
query.
The python-notmuch2 bindings will currently destroy every message object
in Message._destroy(), which will lead to an invalid free if the same
message is then retrieved again. E.g. the following python program leads
to libtalloc abort()ing:
import notmuch2
db = notmuch2.Database(mode = notmuch2.Database.MODE.READ_ONLY)
t = next(db.threads('*'))
msgs = list(zip(t.toplevel(), t.toplevel()))
msgs = list(zip(t.toplevel(), t.toplevel()))
Fix this issue by creating a subclass of Message, which is used for
"standalone" message which have to be freed by the caller. Message class
is then used only for messages descended from a query, which do not need
to be freed by the caller.
Even though we use collections.abc.Set which implements all these
methods under their operator names, the actual named variations of
these methods are shockingly missing. So let's add them manually.
crypto.gpg_path was only used when we built against gmime versions
before 3.0. Since we now depend on gmime 3.0.3 or later, it is
meaningless.
The removal of the field from the _notmuch_config struct would be an
ABI change if that struct were externally exposed, but it is not, so
it's safe to unilaterally remove it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Another fix to the docstrings, this time for the English part of the
docstrings, not the Python class name. No functional changes here.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
I was supposed to amend the original patch that added this function,
but somehow I botched that. The original version runs, so make an
extra commit for the tidying.
This moves away from the deprecated notmuch_database_add_message API
and instead uses the notmuch_database_index_file API. This means
instroducing a class to manage the index options and bumping the
library version requirement to 5.1.
This add the notmuch version and absolute path of the binary used
in the pytest header. This is nice when running the tests
interactively as you get confirmation you're testing the version you
thought you were testing.
This introduces CFFI-based Python3-only bindings.
The bindings aim at:
- Better performance on pypy
- Easier to use Python-C interface
- More "pythonic"
- The API should not allow invalid operations
- Use native object protocol where possible
- Memory safety; whatever you do from python, it should not coredump.
From notmuch 0.28, notmuch support relative database path in
notmuch-config(1), but python binding haven't taught this yet.
afew denied to work with a perfectly fine notmuch-config due to this.
In Python bindings, Message.get_property fails with an AttributeError when trying to fetch a property that doesn't exist.
From d712832ba982085975c27b23bb502af82e638b39 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: hydrargyrum <dev@indigo.re>
Date: Sun, 6 Jan 2019 16:08:55 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] python: fix get_property error when property doesn't exist
Indent the directive properly to attach it to Threads autoclass
documentation.
Fixes:
WARNING: don't know which module to import for autodocumenting
'__str__' (try placing a "module" or "currentmodule" directive in the
document, or giving an explicit module name)
The simplistic mocking in conf.py falls short on python 3.7. Just use
unittest.mock instead.
Fixes:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/sphinx/config.py", line 368, in eval_config_file
execfile_(filename, namespace)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/sphinx/util/pycompat.py", line 150, in execfile_
exec_(code, _globals)
File "/path/to/notmuch/bindings/python/docs/source/conf.py", line 39, in <module>
from notmuch import __VERSION__,__AUTHOR__
File "/path/to/notmuch/bindings/python/notmuch/__init__.py", line 54, in <module>
from .database import Database
File "/path/to/notmuch/bindings/python/notmuch/database.py", line 25, in <module>
from .globals import (
File "/path/to/notmuch/bindings/python/notmuch/globals.py", line 48, in <module>
class NotmuchDatabaseS(Structure):
TypeError: __mro_entries__ must return a tuple
This way, one can build for a different Ruby than $PATH/ruby
(e. g. different versions, or Ruby in other paths).
Signed-off-by: Thomas Schneider <qsx@chaotikum.eu>
Correct URLs that have crept into the notmuch codebase with http://
when https:// is possible.
As part of this conversion, this changeset also indicates the current
preferred upstream URLs for both gmime and sup. the new URLs are
https-enabled, the old ones are not.
This also fixes T310-emacs.sh, thanks to Bremner for catching it.
It is unlikely this still works since it has not been updated since
2010. The python packages for debian are now built by the top level
debian/ packaging.
We adopt a pythonic idiom here with an optional argument, rather than
exposing the user to the C indexopts object directly.
This now includes a simple test to ensure that the decrypt_policy
argument works as expected.
The old name has a bit of a feeling of hungarian notation. Also many
generators in the core are named with the suffix "s" to indicate
iterables: dict.items, dict.keys for example.
It makes the function a little more intuitive to use and does not
diverge much from the original function signature.
Also an example is added to the docstring.