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.
latest since 77acc268, the code prior to these statements ensures that
the full length is available, so just use memcpy(). the code for
comparing TUIDs uses memcmp() anyway.
introduce recognition of $USE_VALGRIND to run all mbsync invocations
through valgrind.
this also removes the seemingly purposeless --log-fd=3 indirection.
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.
instead of a single hard-coded branch, use a generic method to split
ranges as needed.
this is of course entirely over-engineered as of now, but subsequent
commits will make good use of it.
turns out the comment advising against it was bogus - unlike for
memcmp(), the standard does indeed prescribe that the memchr()
implementation may not read past the first occurrence of the searched
char.
that's what the sources already assumed anyway. size_t is total
overkill, as No Email Ever (TM) will exceed 2GiB.
this also fixes a harmless format string warning in 32 bit builds.
if AuthMechs includes more than just LOGIN and the server announces any
AUTH= mechanism, we try SASL. but that can still fail to find any
suitable authentication mechanism, and we must not error out in that
case if we are supposed to fall back to LOGIN.
specifically, if AuthMechs included more than just LOGIN (which would be
the case for '*') and the server announced any AUTH= mechanism, we'd
immediately error out upon seeing it, thus failing to actually try
LOGIN.
the number was chosen to make queries more comprehensible when the
server sends no UIDNEXT, but it appears that such insanely large UIDs
actually show up in the wild. so send 32-bit INT_MAX instead.
note that this is again making an assumption: that no server uses
unsigned ints for UIDs. but we can't sent UINT_MAX, as that would break
with servers which use signed ints. also, *we* use signed ints (which is
actually a clear violation of the spec).
it would be possible to special-case the range [1,inf] to 1:*, thus
entirely removing arbitrary limits. however, when the range doesn't
start at 1, we may actually get a single message instead of none due to
the imap uid range limits being unordered. this gets really nasty when
we need to issue multiple queries, as we may list the same message
twice.
a reliable way around this would be issuing a separate query to find the
actual value of UID '*', to make up for the server not sending UIDNEXT
in the first place. this would obviously imply an additional round-trip
per mailbox ...
trashing many messages at once inevitably overtaxes m$ exchange, and the
connection breaks. without any progress tracking, it would restart from
scratch each time, which would lead to a) it never finishing and b) many
copies of the messages in the trash.
full transactions as we do for "proper" syncing would be over the top,
as it's not *that* bad if some messages get duplicated in the trash. so
we record only the messages for which trashing completed, thus allowing
some overlap between the attempts.