The general problem of indexing attachments requires some help to turn
things into text, but (most?) text/* should be doable internally,
possibly with optimizations as for the text/html case.
The corpus is not really suitable for general indexing test since the
sole message is ignored (and will most likely continue to be ignored)
by notmuch-new.
By sharing the existing logic used by the sexp query parser, this
allows negative lastmod revisions to be interpreted as relative to the
most recent revision.
There is some duplication of code here, but not all of the locations
valid to find a database make sense to create. Furthermore we nead two
passes, so the control flow in _choose_database_path would get a bit
convoluted.
The failing "create database" test replicates a bug reported by Sean
Whitton [1]. The other two failures also look related to the database
being (re)created in the wrong place.
[1]: id:87y1wqkw13.fsf@athena.silentflame.com.
The existing database creation (via add_email_corpus) was always done
in the traditional configuration. The use of xapian-metadata is just
to portably ensure that there is a database created where we expect
there to be.
Essentially we just need to arrange to pass the right --duplicate
argument to notmuch reply.
As a side-effect, correct the previously unused value of EXPECTED in
T453-emacs-reply.sh.
We want the reply used to match that shown e.g. in the emacs
interface. As a first step provide that functionality on the command
line.
Schema does not need updating as the duplicate key was already
present (with a constant value of 1).
This new command allows the user to interactively choose a different
duplicate (file) to display for a given message in
notmuch-show-mode. Since both tree and unthreaded view use
notmuch-show-mode, this provides the same facility there.
This introduces a new mandatory key for message structures, namely
"duplicate". Per convention in devel/schemata this does _not_ increase
the format version. This means that clients are responsible for
checking that it exists, and not crashing if it does not.
The main functional change is teaching mime_node_open to understand a
'duplicate' argument.
Support for --duplicate in notmuch-reply would make sense, but we
defer it to a later commit.
Add command line argument --duplicate, analogous with that already
supported for notmuch-search.
Use of a seperate function for _get_filename is mainly a form of
documentation at this point.
md5sum is of course a weak hash, but it is good enough for
this (non-adversarial) test suite use.
This parameter was originally introduced to hide large attachements
that happened to be text/plain. From a performance point of view,
there is no reason not to also hide large message bodies.
This leverages the machinery already there to insert buttons for
attachments.
A potential use-case is browsing the top layers of the tree to decide
which of the lower subtrees to read.
The original nmbug format (now called version 0) creates 1
subdirectory of 'tags/' per message. This causes problems for more
than (roughly) 100k messages.
Version 1 introduces 2 layers of hashed directories. This scheme was
chose to balance the number of subdirectories with the number of extra
directories (and git objects) created via hashing.
This should be upward compatible in the sense that old repositories
will continue to work with the updated notmuch-git.
In split configurations there is no special significance to a top
level directory called .notmuch in the mail root. Users should
therefore be able to have mail stored underneath it.
This makes the tests more robust against changing output formats, by
allowing us to centralize fixes in the sanitization function. It is
not appropriate for all cases, in particular it is unneeded when using
test_json_nodes, and unhelpful when testing filenames.
Fix the bug reported at [1].
The parameter expansion for regex and wildcard modifiers has to be
done a bit differently, because their arguments are not s-expressions
defining complete Xapian queries.
[1]: id:87o7yxqxy6.fsf@code.pm
The date range parsing machinery already knows how to do something
appropriate with an empty string, but the lastmod parsing blindly
tries to parse each atom as a number.
In order for a database to actually be writeable, it must be the case that it
is open, not just the correct type of Xapian object. By explicitely
checking, we are able to provide better error reporting, in particular
for the previously broken test in T566-lib-message.
Make the behaviour when passed NULL consistent with
notmuch_filenames_valid. The library already passes the result of
notmuch_message_get_tags without checking for NULL, so it should be
handled.
This should return false, but currently segfaults.
Start a new file for tags library API related tests. This is maybe
overkill, but new C boilerplate which doesn't corrupt the database is
needed anyway.
When testing error handling, it is sometimes difficult to cover a
particular error path deterministically. Introduce a test function to
allow calling lower level functions directly.
This addresses a bug report / feature request of Uwe Kleine-König. The
assumption is that we always load a config file in the CLI (i.e. we
never pass "" as the config file argument to
notmuch_database_open_with_config).
[1]: id:8baa58c3-7ab9-ec03-1bbd-28aa5be838f2@kleine-koenig.org
Setting this according to --config was requested by Uwe
Kleine-König. There are some other ways that the configuration file
might be found in current notmuch, so check those as well.
As a bonus, fix a bug in the hook tests that left NOTMUCH_CONFIG set
even though a config file was provided via NOTMUCH_PROFILE.
[1]: id:8baa58c3-7ab9-ec03-1bbd-28aa5be838f2@kleine-koenig.org
Commits or checkouts that modify a large fraction of the messages in
the database should be relatively rare (and in some automated process,
probably non-existent). For initial setup, where such operations are
expected, the user can pass --force.
This is probably more convenient than always passing a command line
argument.
Use notmuch-config for consistency with other notmuch CLI tools.
Now that there is something relevant in the config files, test the
--config option.
The previous defaults were not suitable for personal (i.e. not
bugtracking for notmuch development) use.
Provide two ways for the user to select nmbug compatible defaults;
command line argument and checking the name of the script.