Since the minimum required version of Go has been bumped to 1.16, the
deprecation of io/ioutil can now be acted upon. This Commit removes the
remaining dependencies on ioutil and replaces them with their io or os
counterparts.
Signed-off-by: Moritz Poldrack <git@moritz.sh>
Acked-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
Apply GoDoc comment policy (comments for humans should have a space
after the //; machine-readable comments shouldn't)
Use strings.ReplaceAll instead of strings.Replace when appropriate
Remove if/else chains by replacing them with switches
Use short assignment/increment notation
Replace single case switches with if statements
Combine else and if when appropriate
Signed-off-by: Moritz Poldrack <moritz@poldrack.dev>
Acked-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
Do not pass logger objects around anymore. Shuffle some messages to make
them consistent with the new logging API. Avoid using %v when a more
specific verb exists for the argument types.
The loggers are completely disabled (i.e. Sprintf is not even called)
by default. They are only enabled when redirecting stdout to a file.
Signed-off-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
Acked-by: Moritz Poldrack <moritz@poldrack.dev>
Previously, Message.NewReader returned the wrapped buffered reader
without a reference to the opened file, so the files descriptors
were left unclosed after reading. Now, the file reader is returned
directly and closed on the call site. Buffering is not needed here
because it is an implementation detail of go-message.
Fixes: https://todo.sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc/9
Aerc usually used the path []int{1} if it didn't know what the proper path is.
However this only works for multipart messages and breaks if it isn't one.
This patch removes all the hard coding and extracts the necessary helpers to lib.
Provide search and filter with the option to specify more flag based
conditions.
Use '-x <flag>' to search for messages with a flag (seen, answered,
flagged) and '-X <flag>' to search for messages without a flag.
This changes the search flags for maildir and imap backends.
They now no longer use -t for searching all text. This seems to make
more sense as being the targeted recipient. I have similarly added Cc
for -c. The text search now resides under -a for all text.
Basic searching is supported with the following:
- read messages
- unread messages
- from addresses
- text in body
- text in subject
- text in all
The implementation loops through all messages in the selected directory.
It tries to be smart by detecting which parts of each message the search
query needs to use and only loads these from the filesystem.