When execution of tests is interrupted by signal coming outside of the
test system itself, output just one line "interrupted by signal <num>"
message to standard output. This distinguishes the case from internal
exit and reduces noise.
Set the variable '$test_subtest_name' in all functions which starts
a new test and use that variable in all functions that output
test results.
Additionally output the latest '$test_subtest_name' in case of
abnormal exit, to avoid confusion.
Emacs has two button type objects: widgets (as used for saved searches
in notmuch-hello) and buttons as used by parts/citations and id links
in notmuch-show. These two behave subtly differently when clicked with
the mouse: widgets select the window clicked before running the
action, buttons do not.
This patch makes all of these behave the same: clicking always selects
the clicked window. It does this by defining a notmuch-button-type
supertype that the other notmuch buttons can inherit from. This
supertype binds the mouse-action to select the window and then
activate the button.
Details:
- $pipe_decode is turned off, to prevent message-id from being
filtered out by "ignore" settings in the muttrc.
- Original values for $pipe_decode and $wait_key are saved and restored.
- The macros, being much longer now, are line wrapped for improved
readability.
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 12:36:58AM +0100, Profpatsch wrote:
> On 13-02-13 02:35pm, Kevin J. McCarthy wrote:
> > A more likely idea is to check whether you have $pipe_decode set.
>
> BRILLIANT!
> So much for copying a basic rc from someone else.
> Of course, that was it and I’m officially an idiot.
Neat, thanks Kevin for debugging the issue down to $pipe_decode (which
I've never used, mutt never stops to amaze me :-)).
> And apparently Mail::Internet errors out if there is no Message-ID.
> (Which mentioned in the docs at CPAN…)
>
> Mystery solved.
Right, but still a more graceful failure model would be nice.
Please find attached a patch that in such cases should 1) give a
supposedly nice error message explaining what's going on and 2) empty
the results dir to avoid showing you unrelated results. It works for me.
But extra checking never hurts, in particular for the tag action, which
I don't personally use.
I guess it would also be nice to actually disable $pipe_decode in the
relevant Mutt macros, but I'm not sure about to do that without
interfering with user desired configuration. Kevin: do you know if there
is a common Mutt trick to store the value of a variable before changing
it, and restoring it a posteriori? More isolation for this kind of
things in Mutt would definitely be welcome...
Cheers.
--
Stefano Zacchiroli . . . . . . . zack@upsilon.cc . . . . o . . . o . o
Maître de conférences . . . . . http://upsilon.cc/zack . . . o . . . o o
Debian Project Leader . . . . . . @zack on identi.ca . . o o o . . . o .
« the first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club »
From b67ab95855ce7d279d8c0b3ddcbc20e679afc70b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Stefano Zacchiroli <zack@upsilon.cc>
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2013 09:31:37 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] notmuch-mutt: more graceful handling of missing Message-Id
errors
in particular:
- the "thread" action would print an error and empty results dir
- the "tag action would print an error
As discussed in id:871udhcmks.fsf@zancas.localnet, notmuch-vim doesn't
really meet the standards of the CLI, emacs interface, or python
bindings in terms of being well maintained.
There seems to be consensus to use presence in contrib as
documentation of limited support by the notmuch developers; in fact
nmbug is pretty integrated into our current development process, so
devel seems more appropriate.
Using char instead of int allows for simpler definitions of the
DOCIDSET macros so the code is easier to understand and consistent with
respect to memory-usage. Estimated reduction of memory-usage for
bitmap about 8 times.
nmbug pull only merges upstream master, but nmbug push tries to push
all local branches. The asymmetry results in conflicts whenever there
have been changes in the config branch in the origin:
$ nmbug push
To nmbug@nmbug.tethera.net:nmbug-tags
! [rejected] config -> config (non-fast-forward)
error: failed to push some refs to 'nmbug@nmbug.tethera.net:nmbug-tags'
hint: Updates were rejected because a pushed branch tip is behind its remote
hint: counterpart. If you did not intend to push that branch, you may want to
hint: specify branches to push or set the 'push.default' configuration
hint: variable to 'current' or 'upstream' to push only the current branch.
'git push origin' exited with nonzero value
To fix this, only push the master branch on nmbug push. Any config
changes need to be done manually via git anyway.
This really should have been there before. I think it's better to do
the actual operation and then possibly fail writing the memory log,
but it would not be too hard to change it to abort earlier.
Instead of checking immediately for the watched process, delay a
minute, or in the case that process-attributes returns nil, for two
minutes. This is intended to cope with the case that
process-attributes is unimplimented, and returns always returns nil.
In this case, the watchdog check is the same as the two minute limit
imposed by timeout.
M-RET notmuch-show-open-or-close-all opens all closed messages.
The archiving change is mentioned twice, remove dupe.
"notmuch search" supports --format=text0 to work with xargs -0
The TERM environment variable is set to 'dumb' when running tests, but
the original value of it is stored for echoing colors and running emacs
(somewhat interactively) in detached session. Emacs requires some
terminal control sequences to be available for interactive operation.
In case original TERM is (also) 'dumb' (or unset/empty) emacs cannot
run interactively. To fix this problem dtach (and emacs as it's child
process) is run with TERM=vt100 in case original TERM was unset, empty
or 'dumb'. This way there is a chance to run emacs tests with different
user terminals and potentially find problems there.
Remove the superfluous mode argument given to notmuch_database_create
fixing the creation of notmuch databases using python code.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <4winter@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
The options --help and --version were not documented before. One
could quibble about how useful that documentation is, but we will soon
add more options.
The commands are long deprecated, so removal is probably overdue. The
real motivation is to simplify argument handling for notmuch so that
we can migrate to the common argument parsing framework.
Version string has strict format requirements in release-check.sh:
only numbers and periods (in sane order) are accepted.
Mismatch there used to halt further execution.
In this case, checking versions like '*~rc1' for (more) problems
was not possible.
This 'fatal error' is now changed buffered error message like in
following tests, and is displayed at the end of execution.
- enable hardening
- fix dh syntax. Now that we have compat level 9, the old, wrong
syntax is no longer accepted.
- update debian/libnotmuch{3,-dev}.install for multiarch.
- update versioned dependency on debhelper.
In case last input for batch tagging was either invalid or skippable
line, notmuch command exited with non-zero value.
After this change if there is at least one invalid line, notmuch
command will exit with non-zero value. Additionally, skipped lines
(last or other) doesn't cause non-zero value to be returned.
There is a bug in the current notmuch code with w3m and invisible
parts. w3m sets a keymap, and if we have a hidden [text/html] point
at the start of the following line still gets this w3m keymap which
causes some strange effects. For example, RET gives an error "No URL
at Point" rather than hiding the message, <down> goes to the next link
rather than just down a line.
These keybinding are also inconvenient when the text/html part is
displayed so we ask w3m not to install a keymap.
This is only likely to be a problem for emacs 23 as shr is preferred
as html renderer on emacs 24 (although the user can set the renderer
to w3m even on emacs 24).
This solution was suggested by Tomi Ollila <tomi.ollila@iki.fi>