... by making a lot of objects unsigned, and some signed.
casts which lose precision and change the sign in one go (ssize_t and
time_t to uint on LP64) are made explicit as well.
this does specifically *not* cover about a bazillion warnings about
size_t being shrunk to uint - these make no sense given the expected
data set size.
mostly ATTR_PRINTFLIKE(*, 0) for functions with a va_list argument.
also, one ATTR_NORETURN and one ATTR_UNUSED, both on functions.
also, an explicit suppression for a format string stored in a variable.
this is semantically cleaner, and fixes storing the flags in the rare
case that flags are not being synced and the target is not being
expunged, as in this case flags are queried only during the actual
propagation.
maildir supports a 'P' flag which denotes the fact that a message has
been 'passed' on (forwarded, bounced). notmuch syncs this to the
'passed' tag.
Per https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5788, IMAP has a user-defined flag
(keyword) '$Forwarded' that is supported by many servers and clients
these days. (Technically, one should check for '$Forwarded' in the
server response.)
Restructure mbsync's flag parser to accept keywords (flags starting with
'$') but still bail out on unknown system flags (flags starting with '\').
Support '$Forwarded' as a first keyword since it maps to maildir's 'P'
and needs to be sorted in between the system flags.
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <github@grubix.eu>
Mailbox driver flags are defined in several places. It is essential that
they are kept in sync, so mark them with the same string for easy
grepping with an alerting boiler plate.
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <github@grubix.eu>
empty strings were previously meaningless, and starting with 72c2d695a,
failure to handle them lead to bogus results when the IMAP hierarchy
separator is legitimately empty (when the server genuinely supports none
and none is manually configured). non-null can be asserted more cleanly
than null-or-non-empty, so change the api like that.
incidentally, this also removes the need to work around gcc's bogus
warning in -Os mode.
problem found by "Casper Ti. Vector" <caspervector@gmail.com>
the only legitimate "deviant" UID is zero, meaning "no message". this
can be futher qualified by additional flags in the sync record, rather
than using magic values for the UID. in fact, the zero UID (so far
meaning only "expunged") was already optionally qualifed with "expired".
as a side effect, driver->store_msg() now returns 0 instead of -2 for
unknown UIDs. this was a hack to avoid translating the value later
on, but it made the api horrible, and now it's superflous in the first
place.
do that by wrapping the actual stores into proxies.
the proxy driver's code is auto-generated from function templates, some
parameters, and the declarations of the driver functions themselves.
attempts to do it with CPP macros turned out to be a nightmare.
we need a separate log entry type which does proper mmaxxuid tracking.
while moving code around, this also removes a redundant debug statement.
amends b1842617.
newmaxuid represents the highest UID for which a sync entry was created,
while maxuid represents the end of the range which is guaranteed to have
been propagated. that means that the former needs to be instantly
incremented (and logged), while the latter must not be touched until the
entire new message sync completes. this matters particularly in the case
of resuming an interrupted run, where sync entry creation must resume
exactly where it left off, while loading the box must use the old limit
to ensure that all messages are available for actual propagation.
we've been using indices to separate master/slave state for a long time,
so there is no point in using pairs of matching brackets to signify the
side in the journal. instead, use somewhat descriptive letters (S[een],
F[ind], T[rashed]) and the index itself.
they are derived from srec->status, which is unsigned. for not
understood reasons, the compiler complains only after extending status
to a full unsigned int.
on the way, localize the declarations.
when syncing flags but not re-newing non-fetched messages, there is no
need to query the message size for all messages, as the old ones are
queried only for their flags.