icalendar-import-buffer can fail by an error signal (which have been
witnessed) but according to its docstring it can also return nil
when failing (it returns t when succeeding).
Now that the error is caught by the caller of notmuch-show-inset-part-*
functions in case icalendar-import-buffer returns nil an explicit
error is signaled and unwind-protect takes care of deleting the
temporary file (just in case, it is usually not written to the fs yet).
notmuch-get-bodypart-content provides raw data to its caller so
that it can be stored verbatim whenever needed. icalendar functions
expect Emacs to do EOL conversion for the data given to these. Therefore
it the CRLF -> LF conversion is now done explicitly.
The calls to private functions icalendar--convert-ical-to-diary and
icalendar--read-element are replaced with call to public function
icalendar-import-buffer.
There are currently 45 TESTS scripts. 36 of those load
test-lib.sh using '. ./test-lib.sh' and 9 '. test-lib.sh'.
In latter case test-lib.sh is first searched from directories
in PATH (posix) and then from current directory (bash feature).
Changed the 9 files to execute '. ./test-lib.sh'. The test-lib.sh
should never be loaded from directory in PATH.
Previously, this would simply indicate that the grep failed without
any indication of the Emacs output it failed on. Now we take
advantage of the test framework's handling of stdout to display the
incorrect Emacs output if the test fails.
The test should be run using the wrapper run-tests.sh. This links
the tests into the normal notmuch TEST_DIRECTORY and runs them from
there. After the test is complete then the links are removed.
It seems we have never tested the case that restore --accumulate
actually adds tags. I noticed this when I started optimizing and no
tests failed.
The bracketing with "restore --input=dump.expected" are to make sure
we start in a known state, and we leave the database in a known state
for the next test.
If the user pressed return on the end result status line it gave a
blank message. Modify the function notmuch-pick-get-message-id to
return nil rather than an empty message-id in this case to fix this.
This also fixes a bug in the (lack of) quoting of the id string.
This is again the work of uncrustify.
I remember there is some controversy about "! foo" versus "!foo", but
in context I think "! foo" looks OK. Also, for functions "! foo
(blah)" seems better than "!foo (blah)".
notmuch show --format json now includes Bcc and Reply-To headers of
the message. Mention that in NEWS.
(Heavily modified version of text originally from Michal Nazarewicz.)
The test designed to exercise Emacs' rendering of HTML emails
containing images inadvertently assumed w3m was available under Emacs
23. The real point of this test was to check that Emacs 24's shr
renderer didn't crash when given img tags, so use shr if it's
available, html2text otherwise (which is built in), and do only a
simple sanity check of the result.
This regexp agrees with Xapian query syntax much more closely, though
we specifically disallow various cases that would be confusing in the
context of an email body (e.g., punctuation at the end of an id: link
is not considered part of the id: link because it's probably part of
the surrounding text).
In particular, this handles id: links that are not surrounded by
quotes much better, which stash is much more likely to generate now
that we don't quote id's that don't need to be quoted. It also
handles quoted id: links better.
We update the buttonization test to reflect the new pattern.
This matches the current behavior of the buttonizer, so it passes, but
many of these cases are not what you'd want (and some of them aren't
even valid Xapian queries). The next patch will fix the handling of
these cases and update the test.
Over time, maintaining this very long regex has become irritating,
especially when resolving conflicts.
This patch replaces the call to sed with multiple extra arguments to
find. Since each test binary is now on it's own line, this should
make resolving conflicts easier.
Previously, the only mention of devel/schemata was a comment at the
top of format_part_json, but the JSON output code is spread across
several functions that are distributed across notmuch-show.c. Add
references from the other three key JSON output functions.
When inserting of email bodypart failes, insert a failure message
to the buffer (and continue) instead of halting the insertion of
the rest of that email thread in question.
Output the Reply-To header field if present in a message.
I want to be able to see what the sender intended in my mail client,
before hitting the reply key. Only json output is changed,
like the recently added Bcc field.
Added FILE, notmuch_show_params_t and sprinter_t to be
types when uncrustifying sources. This affect spacing
when uncrustify is deciding for type declaration instead
of binary multiplication operation.
Add a custom value range processor to enable date and time searches of
the form date:since..until, where "since" and "until" are expressions
understood by the previously added date/time parser, to restrict the
results to messages within a particular time range (based on the Date:
header).
If "since" or "until" describes date/time at an accuracy of days or
less, the values are rounded according to the accuracy, towards past
for "since" and towards future for "until". For example,
date:november..yesterday would match from the beginning of November
until the end of yesterday. Expressions such as date:today..today
means since the beginning of today until the end of today.
Open-ended ranges are supported (since Xapian 1.2.1), i.e. you can
specify date:..until or date:since.. to not limit the start or end
date, respectively.
CAVEATS:
Xapian does not support spaces in range expressions. You can replace
the spaces with '_', or (in most cases) '-', or (in some cases) leave
the spaces out altogether.
Entering date:expr without ".." (for example date:yesterday) will not
work as you might expect. You can achieve the expected result by
duplicating the expr both sides of ".." (for example
date:yesterday..yesterday).
Open-ended ranges won't work with pre-1.2.1 Xapian, but they don't
produce an error either.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
Test the date/time parser module directly, independent of notmuch,
using the parse-time test tool.
Credits to Michal Sojka <sojkam1@fel.cvut.cz> for writing most of the
tests.
Add a smoke testing tool to support testing the date/time parser
module directly and independent of the rest of notmuch.
Credits to Michal Sojka <sojkam1@fel.cvut.cz> for the stdin parsing
idea and consequent massive improvement in testability.
Add a date/time parser to notmuch, to be used for adding date range
query support for notmuch lib later on. Add the parser to a directory
of its own to make it independent of the rest of the notmuch code
base.
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani@nikula.org>
-Wswitch-enum is a bit awkward if a switch statement is intended to
handle just some of the named codes of an enumeration especially, and
leave the rest to the default label.
We already have -Wall, which enables -Wswitch by default, and per GCC
documentation, "The only difference between -Wswitch and this option
[-Wswitch-enum] is that this option gives a warning about an omitted
enumeration code even if there is a default label."
Drop -Wswitch-enum to not force listing all named codes of
enumerations in switch statements that have a default label.
This patch just renames the internal variables for the JSON parser now
it is no longer specific to search mode. It also fixes up the white
space after the previous patch. There should be no functional changes.
This patch splits out the incremental json parser into its own
function.
It moves the main logic of the parser to happen inside the parse
buffer rather than inside the results buffer, but makes sure all
results and all errors are displayed in the results buffer.
It also changes the local parser variables from being buffer
local to the results buffer to being buffer local to the parse buffer,
and sets them up automatically so the caller does not need to.
Finally to keep the diff small this patch does not fix the whitespace,
nor complete the code movement (these are done in subsequent patches)
but it should contain all the functional changes.
OpenBSD's build flags are identical to FreeBSD, except that libraries
need to be explicitly linked against libc. No code changes are
necessary.
From: Cody Cutler <ccutler@csail.mit.edu>
Currently, we only properly escape stashed id queries, but there are
other places where the Emacs UI constructs queries for boolean terms.
Since this escaping function is meant to be used in other places, it
avoids escaping strings that don't need escaping.
This disallows adding empty tags, since nothing but confusion follows
in their wake, and disallows adding tags that begin with "-" because
they are also confusing, the tag "-" is impossible to remove using the
CLI, and because the syntax for removing such tags conflicts with long
argument syntax.
This does not place any restrictions on what tags can be removed, as
that would make it difficult for people who have the misfortune of
already having malformed tags to remove these tags.
Newer patch email containing In-Reply-To: to an email sent some time ago
(i.e. to a "thread") was not visible in that "thread" in patch view when
another patch "thread" was submitted in between. This change collects
all messages in every (notmuch-created) thread together before printing
all these threads out in a patch view.
Thanks to Ethan Glasser-Camp for initial review and suggestions with
code examples.