Commit graph

18 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Carl Worth
eb7b8cf31a Add -Wwrite-strings and fix warnings.
Need to be const-clean when handling string literals.
2009-10-25 15:55:23 -07:00
Carl Worth
884ac59256 Re-enable the warning for unused parameters.
It's easy enough to squelch the warning with an __attribute__ ((unused))
and it might just catch something for us in the future.
2009-10-25 15:53:27 -07:00
Carl Worth
cc48812cb5 Add -Wextra and fix warnings.
When adding -Wextra we also add -Wno-ununsed-parameters since that
function means well enough, but is really annoying in practice.

So the warnings we fix here are basically all comparsions between
signed and unsigned values.
2009-10-25 15:52:14 -07:00
Carl Worth
067c547b23 Rework Makefile just a bit to enable adding flags for more compiler warnings
We have to carefully separate the C and C++ flags here since a
bunch of the warnings options for gcc are valid for compiling C,
but not for C++.
2009-10-25 15:19:36 -07:00
Carl Worth
526b7144f7 Add debugging code for examining query strings.
It's nice that Xapian provides a little function to print a textual
representation of the entire query tree. So now, if you compile
like so:

	make CFLAGS=-DDEBUG_QUERY

then you get a nice output of the query string received by the query
module, and the final query actually being sent to Xapian.
2009-10-24 22:18:20 -07:00
Carl Worth
6a4992bc61 Generate message ID (using SHA1) when a mail message contains none.
This is important as we're using the message ID as the unique key
in our database. So previously, all messages with no message ID
would be treated as the same message---not good at all.
2009-10-22 15:31:56 -07:00
Carl Worth
466a7bbf62 Implement 'notmuch dump'.
This is a fairly big milestone for notmuch. It's our first command
to do anything besides building the index, so it proves we can
actually read valid results out from the index.

It also puts in place almost all of the API and infrastructure we
will need to allow searching of the database.

Finally, with this change we are now using talloc inside of notmuch
which is truly a delight to use. And now that I figured out how
to use C++ objects with talloc allocation, (it requires grotty
parts of C++ such as "placement new" and "explicit destructors"),
we are valgrind-clean for "notmuch dump", (as in "no leaks are
possible").
2009-10-20 21:21:39 -07:00
Carl Worth
cd4a8734d3 Rename private notmuch_message_t to notmuch_message_file_t
This is in preparation for a new, public notmuch_message_t.

Eventually, the public notmuch_message_t is going to grow enough
features to need to be file-backed and will likely need everything
that's now in message-file.c. So we may fold these back into one
object/implementation in the future.
2009-10-20 15:09:51 -07:00
Carl Worth
00af443b8e Makefile: Add automatic dependency tracking to the Makefile.
With this, I really don't miss anything from automake.
2009-10-20 15:09:18 -07:00
Carl Worth
fedef062ce Remove test programs, xapian-dump and notmuch-index-message
These were just little tests while getting comfortable with
GMime and xapian. I'll likely use pieces of these as notmuch
continues, but for now let's not distract anyone looking
at notmuch with these.

And the code will live on in the history if I need to look
at it.
2009-10-19 22:24:28 -07:00
Carl Worth
fa562fa22b Hook up our fancy new notmuch_parse_date function.
With all the de-glib-ification out of the way, we can now use it
to allow for date-based sorting of Xapian search results.
2009-10-19 13:35:29 -07:00
Carl Worth
0e777a8f80 notmuch: Switch from gmime to custom, ad-hoc parsing of headers.
Since we're currently just trying to stitch together In-Reply-To
and References headers we don't need that much sophistication.
It's when we later add full-text searching that GMime will be
useful.

So for now, even though my own code here is surely very buggy
compared to GMime it's also a lot faster. And speed is what
we're after for the initial index creation.
2009-10-19 13:00:43 -07:00
Carl Worth
10c176ba0e notmuch: Start actually adding messages to the index.
This is the beginning of the notmuch library as well, with its
interface in notmuch.h. So far we've got create, open, close, and
add_message (all with a notmuch_database prefix).

The current add_message function has already been whittled down from
what we have in notmuch-index-message to add only references,
message-id, and thread-id to the index, (that is---just enough to do
thread-linkage but nothing for full-text searching).

The concept here is to do something quickly so that the user can get
some data into notmuch and start using it. (The most interesting stuff
is then thread-linkage and labels like inbox and unread.)  We can
defer the full-text indexing of the body of the messages for later,
(such as in the background while the user is reading mail).

The initial thread-stitching step is still slower than I would like.
We may have to stop using libgmime for this step as its overhead is
not worth it for the simple case of just parsing the message-id,
references, and in-reply-to headers.
2009-10-18 20:56:30 -07:00
Carl Worth
36640b303e Start a new top-level executable: notmuch.
Of course, there's not much that this program does yet. It's got
some structure for some sub-commands that don't do anything. And
it has a main command that prints some explanatory text and then
counts all the regular files in your mail archive.
2009-10-17 08:26:58 -07:00
Keith Packard
a2c467242a Protect against missing message id while indexing files 2009-10-14 21:46:54 -07:00
Carl Worth
c55c34f4a0 Rename g_mime_test to notmuch-index-message
In preparation for actually creating a Xapian index from the
message, (not that we're doing that quite yet).
2009-10-13 13:31:17 -07:00
Carl Worth
11f99eb8ea Add the beginnings of a xapian-dump program.
This will (when it is finished) make a much more reliable way to
ensure that notmuch's sync program behaves identically to sup-sync.
It doesn't actually do anything yet.
2009-10-13 08:53:14 -07:00
Carl Worth
7d0886352c Initial commit of a test program to form the basis of notmuch.
Basically just playing with some simple code using libgmime to parse
an email message.
2009-10-13 08:52:02 -07:00