FINGERPRINT is already exported by add_gnupg_home, so this is
unnecessary. This change also happens to get rid of the superfluous
check-trustdb spew from the test suite that looked like this:
gpg: checking the trustdb
gpg: marginals needed: 3 completes needed: 1 trust model: pgp
gpg: depth: 0 valid: 1 signed: 0 trust: 0-, 0q, 0n, 0m, 0f, 1u
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
We did not have a test showing what message decryption looks like
within notmuch-emacs. This change gives us a baseline for future work
on the notmuch-emacs interface.
This differs from previous revisions of this patch in that it should
be insensitive to the order in which the local filesystem readdir()s
the underlying maildir.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
If either the moreutils or GNU parallel utility are available, run all
tests in parallel. On my eight core machine this makes for a ~x7
speed-up in the full test suite (1m24s -> 12s).
The design of the test suite makes this parallelization trivial.
The add_email_corpus test utility includes logic that tries to re-use
an index of the corpus if available. This was seemingly done as an
optimization, so that every test that uses the corpus didn't have to
create it's own index of the corpus. However, this has the perverse
side effect of entangling tests together, and breaks parallelization.
Forcing each test to do it's own index does increase the overall time
of the test slightly (~6%), but this will be more than made up for in
the next patch that introduces paraellization.
The typical use case for gpg is that if you control a secret key, you
mark it with "ultimate" ownertrust.
The opaque --import-ownertrust mechanism is GnuPG's standard mechanism
to set up ultimate ownertrust (the ":6:" means "ultimate", for
whatever reason).
We adjust the test suite to match this change, inverting the sense of
one test: since the default is now that the user ID of the suite's own
key is valid, we change the test to make sure that the user ID is not
emitted when it is *not* valid.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
The user ID on the self-test is a little bit clunky-looking. It also
may end up showing up elsewhere in the test suite. Centralizing the
user ID in one place should make it easier to handle if it ever
changes, and should make tests easier to read.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
This is a subtle difference, but the output of notmuch shouldn't ever
change based on ownertrust itself -- notmuch is intended to show valid
User IDs, and to avoid showing invalid User IDs.
It so happens that setting ownertrust of a key to ultimate sets all
associated user IDs to "full" validity, so the test is correct, but
just misnamed.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
The comment line here lingers from when we were using some fancy
version checking about session keys. Correct it to match the current
state.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Apparently, message-default-charset is deprecated, which causes the
following warning messages during the build:
In notmuch-maildir-setup-message-for-saving:
emacs/notmuch-maildir-fcc.el:172:31:Warning: ‘message-default-charset’ is an
obsolete variable (as of 26.1); The default charset comes from the
language environment
In discussion with emacs upstream over on
https://debbugs.gnu.org/35370, it appears that we can just drop this
entirely and things should still work with emacs 25.
https://launchpad.net/~notmuch/+archive/ubuntu/notmuch/+packages
contains backports of gmime and gpgme and related cryptographic tools
to ubuntu xenial.
I tried to do a simple backport of gmime alone, and it failed due to
the older gpgme in xenial, so this setup resolves those problems.
This should allow us to continue to use the Travis continuous
integration build.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Previously if the input was exactly a multiple of the internal buffer
size, notmuch would attempt to fwrite nothing to stdout, but still
expected fwrite to return 1, causing a failure that looked like this:
$ notmuch show --format=raw id:87o96f1cya.fsf@codeaurora.org
...entire message shown as expected..
Error: Write failed
$ echo $?
1
To fix the problem don't call fwrite at all when there's nothing to
write.
Amended by db: add some tests of message sizes likely to cause this
problem.
This drops "file" from mime_node_context and just uses a local
variable. It also uses the new gzip aware utility routines recently
added to util/gmime-extra.c. The use of gzopen / gzfile in addition is
a bit icky, but the choice is between that, and providing yet another
readline implimentation that understands GMime streams.
Rather than storing the lower level stdio FILE object, we store a
GMime stream. This allows both transparent decompression, and passing
the stream into GMime for parsing. As a side effect, we can let GMime
close the underlying OS stream (indeed, that stream isn't visible here
anymore).
This change is enough to get notmuch-{new,search} working, but there is still
some work required for notmuch-show, to be done in a following commit.
This is a functional change, not a straight translation, because we
are no longer directly invoking g_mime_parser_options_get_default(),
but the GMime source has indicated that the options parameter for
g_mime_parser_construct_message() is "nullable" since upstream commit
d0ebdd2ea3e6fa635a2a551c846e9bc8b6040353 (which itself precedes GMime
3.0).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Several GMime 2.6 functions sprouted a change in the argument order in
GMime 3.0. We had a compatibility layer here to be able to handle
compiling against both GMime 2.6 and 3.0. Now that we're using 3.0
only, rip out the compatibility layer for those functions with changed
argument lists, and explicitly use the 3.0 argument lists.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Several of these #defines were not actually used in the notmuch
codebase any longer. And as of GMime 3.0, g_mime_init takes no
arguments, so we can also drop the bogus RFC2047 argument that we were
passing and then #defining away.
signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
This means dropping GMimeCryptoContext and notmuch_config arguments.
All the argument changes are to internal functions, so this is not an
API or ABI break.
We also get to drop the #define for g_mime_3_unused.
signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
note that "notmuch-show for message with invalid From" is still broken
in T310-emacs.sh. It would be good to debug what's going on there and
try to get it fixed!
signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Note that we do keep ignoring the gpg_path configuration option,
though, to avoid breakage of existing installations. It is ignored
like any other unknown configuration option, but we at least document
that it is ignored so that people who find it in their legacy configs
can know that it's safe to drop.
signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
In _index_mime_part, we don't need to extract the content-type from
the part until just before we use it, so we also defer it lazily.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
GMime 3.0 is over 2 years old now, and 2.6 has been deprecated in
notmuch for about 1.5 years.
Comments and documentation no longer need to refer to GMime 2.6, so
clean them all up.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Since only the first line of the documentation is shown by the
help command, it is confusing when "x" and "a" seem to have the same
binding in show-mode. This commit makes the two function documentations
first lines different and (hopefully) clearer.
Unsigned encrypted mail shows up with a weird empty signature list.
If we successfully decrypted and there was no signature in it, we
should just not show a sigstatus at all.
The documentation for g_mime_decrypt_result_get_signatures says:
a GMimeSignatureList or NULL if the stream was not signed.
If a test has added a GnuPG homedir, it may well want to know the
fingerprint. This saves us from having to redefine this magic string
in multiple places when more tests eventually use the GnuPG homedir.
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.
Since message is owned by messages, it was held for the entire run of
the program. This in turn means that the Xapian::Document objects are
not freed, and thus one ends up with (effectively) a copy of one's
entire mailstore in memory when running
notmuch reindex '*'
Thanks to Olly Betts for the patient help debugging, and the
suggestion of a fix.