The original generic handler had an extra '%s' in the format
string. Update tests that failed to catch this because the template to
print status strings checked 'stat', which was not set.
This is actually one of the few potentially useful things you can do
with a message belonging to a closed database, since in principle you
could re-open the database.
It's not very nice to return FALSE for an error, so provide
notmuch_message_get_flag_st as a migration path.
Bump LIBNOTMUCH_MINOR_VERSION because the API is extended.
Instead of printing the same static string for each test, can replace
the assert with something simpler (or at least easier to integrate
into the test suite).
These are less crucial since we stopped generating new database
versions and relied primarily on features. They also rely on a
pre-generated v1 database which happens to be chert format. This
backend is not supported by Xapian 1.5.
Also drop the tool gen-testdb.sh, which is currently broken, due to
changes in the testing infrastructure.
I haven't traced the code path as exhaustively for the SMIME test, but
the expiry date in question is larger then representable in a signed
32 bit integer.
This is a simple hack to enable out-of-tree builds, a concern raised
by Tomi in id:m24kzjib9a.fsf@guru.guru-group.fi
This change at least enables "make check" to complete without error,
but I'm sure it could be improved. I am not expert enough in
setuptools to know how.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Amended by db per id:87d06usa31.fsf@powell.devork.be
json_check_nodes.py exists in source tree, not in out of tree
build tree. Added -B to the execution so source tree is not
"polluted" by a .pyc file when json_check_nodes.py is executed.
When creating run_emacs.sh make it load .elc files from out of
tree build tree, not from source tree if such files existed.
If existed, those may be outdated, or even created by some other
emacs than the one that was used to build .elc files in out of
tree build dir.
This change means we can support "notmuch show --decrypt=true" for
S/MIME encrypted messages, resolving several outstanding broken tests,
including all the remaining S/MIME protected header examples.
We do not yet handle indexing the cleartext of S/MIME encrypted
messages, though.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
When composing a reply, no one wants to see this line in the proposed
message:
Non-text part: application/pkcs7-mime
So we hide it, the same way we hide PGP/MIME cruft.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Until we did PKCS#7 unwrapping, no leaf MIME part could have a child.
Now, we treat the unwrapped MIME part as the child of the PKCS#7
SignedData object. So in that case, we want to show it instead of
deliberately omitting the content.
This fixes the test of the protected subject in
id:smime-onepart-signed@protected-headers.example.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Unwrap a PKCS#7 SignedData part unconditionally when the cli is
traversing the MIME tree, and return it as a "child" of what would
otherwise be a leaf in the tree.
Unfortunately, this also breaks the JSON output. We will fix that
next.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
When we are indexing, we should treat SignedData parts the same way
that we treat a multipart object, indexing the wrapped part as a
distinct MIME object.
Unfortunately, this means doing some sort of cryptographic
verification whose results we throw away, because GMime doesn't offer
us any way to unwrap without doing signature verification.
I've opened https://github.com/jstedfast/gmime/issues/67 to request
the capability from GMime but for now, we'll just accept the
additional performance hit.
As we do this indexing, we also apply the "signed" tag, by analogy
with how we handle multipart/signed messages. These days, that kind
of change should probably be done with a property instead, but that's
a different set of changes. This one is just for consistency.
Note that we are currently *only* handling signedData parts, which are
basically clearsigned messages. PKCS#7 parts can also be
envelopedData and authEnvelopedData (which are effectively encryption
layers), and compressedData (which afaict isn't implemented anywhere,
i've never encountered it). We're laying the groundwork for indexing
these other S/MIME types here, but we're only dealing with signedData
for now.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>