This won't work in python3 anymore, so just use sorted() when needed.
In one case, we could remove the sort() completely as were were sanity checking
one line above, that we only having one UID as response which makes sorting
unneeded.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
'set' is builtin since python2.6, so remove the imports. Also 'ssl' exists
since 2.6 and has everything we need, so no need for conditional import
tests here anymore.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
To have the code work in python3, we need to convert all occurences of
raise Exception, "text" to be proper functions. This style also adheres to PEP8.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
It can lead to potential dataloss (see recent commit log where I added a
scary warning about it to offlineimap.conf).
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Most servers support the UIDPLUS extension, and we don't have to search
headers after each uploaded message. There is no need to CHECK the imap
server after each message when there is no need to search headers.
I have not measured the performance impact on real world servers, but
this lets us do less unneeded work in the common case.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
We were not cleaning out possibly existing APPENDUID messages before
APPENDing a new message. In case an old message were still hanging
around, this could *possibly* lead to retrieving and old UID. Things
should have been fine, but we do want to play safe here.
Also, make use of the "official" imaplib2 .response() command rather
than the internal _get_untagged_response() function.
Remove the hack that we would be looking for APPENDUID responses even if
the server claimed not to support the UIDPLUS ext. We now poll server
CAPABILITIES after login, and Gmail does provide us with the UIDPLUS
capability after login.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Rename getuidvalidity -> get_uidvalidity and cache the IMAP result.
1) Start modernizing our function names using more underscores
2) IMAPs implementation of get_uidvalidity was removing the UIDVALIDITY result
from the imaplib2 result stack, so subsequent calls would return "None".
As various functions can invoke this, this led to some errors that we
avoid by caching the current UIDVALIDITY value in the Folder instance.
There are more simplifications and improvements to be made.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
When deleting many (eg 2000) mails using the SQLITE backend, this takes
a long time durig which OfflineImap can not be aborted via
CTRL-C. Thinking it had frozen permanently, I killed it hard, leaving a
corrupted db journal (which leads to awkwards complaints by OLI on
subsequent starts!). That shows that delete performance is critical and
needs improvement.
We were iterating through the list of messages to delete and deleted
them one-by-one execute()'ing a new SQL Query for each message. This
patch improves the situation by allowing us to use executemany(), which
is -despite still being one SQL query per message- much faster. This is
because rather than performing a commit() after each mail, we now do
only one commit() after all mails have been deleted.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Recently the internal function use of imaplib2's _get_untagged_response()
was switched to use the public documented .response() function (which
should return the same data). However within a few fays we received reports
that both uses of a) the UIDVALIDITY fetching and b) the APPENDUID fetching
returned [None] as data although the IMAP log definitely shows that data
was returned. Revert to using the undocumented internal imaplib2 function,
that seemed to have worked without problems. This needs to be taken up to
the imaplib2 developer.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
We have a reported case where response('UIDVALIDITY') returned [None]
which results in an ugly non-intuitive crash. Sanity check and report
something nicer.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Pass through the 'force' argument from selectro() to select() so that it
can also enforce a new SELECT even if we already are on that folder.
Also change the default parameter from '0' to 'False' to make clear that
this is a Bool.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Do not read in custom maildir flags, or we would try to sync them over
the wire. The next step will be to merge flag writes with existing
custom flags, so we don't lose information.
The long term goal will be to attempt to sync flags to the other side,
of course.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
We were using the internal imaplib2 _get_untagged_response() functions a
few times. Replace 3 of these calls with 2 calls to the public function
response() rather than fudging with internals that could change anytime.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
These were needed for python <2.6 compatability, but since we depend on
python 2.6 now, these can go.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
This change looks harmless, but it fixes a severe bugfix, potentially
leading to data loss! It fixes the "on n new uploads, it will redownload
n-1, n-2, n-3,... messages during the next syncs" condition, and this is
what happens:
If there are more than one Mails to upload to a server, we do that by
repeatedly invoking folder.IMAP.savemessage(). If the server supports
the UIDPLUS extension we query the resulting UID by doing a:
imapobj._get_untagged_response('APPENDUID', True)
and that is exactly the problem. The "True" part causes the reply to
remain in the "response stack" of the imaplib2 library. When we do
the same call on a subsequent message and the connection is still on the
same folder, we will get the same UID response back (imaplib2 only looks
for the first matching response and returns that). The only time we
clear the response stack, is when the IMAP connection SELECTS a
different folder.
This means that when we upload 10 messages, the IMAP server gives us
always the same UID (that of the first one) back. And trying to write
out 10 different messages with the same UID will confuse OfflineIMAP.
This is the reason why we saw the ongoing UPLOADING/DOWNLOADING behavior
that people reported. And this is the reason why we saw the
inconsistency in the UID mapping in the IMAP<->IMAP case.
I urge everyone to upgrade ASAP. Sorry for that, I don't know why the
problem only became prevalent in the recent few releases as this code
has been there for quite a while.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Rather than always parsing the filename, we only need to do so if the flags
have actually changed, otherwise we can keep the filename.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Previously, assigning a new UID to a mapped IMAP or Maildir repository
was done by loading the "local" item, saving it under a new UID and
deleting the old one. This involved lots of disk activity for nothing
more than an effective file rename in Maildirs, and lots of network
usage in the MappedUID cases.
We do this on every upload from a local to a remote item, so that can
potentially be quite expensive. This patch lets backends that support it
(Maildir, MappedUID) efficiently rename the file rather than having to
read the mail content, write it out as a new file and delete the old
file. This speeds up uploads from Maildir and the MappedUID server.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Various functions (such as change_message_uid) will want to construct
maildir filenames, so factor out the code into a helper.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Create a helper function that retrieves the UID, folder MD5, and Flags from
a message filename.
We need these items when we simply want to rename (=new UID) a Maildir
message file later. The new function can give us these components.
Rework, so we cache the calculation of the folder's md5 value once, it
never changes and we call it a lot.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
If someone had a custom :2,a flag, adding a new flag would lead to the
invalid maildir filename ...a:2,... due to regex deficiencies not coping
with this. Fix this so we alway produce valid maildir names.
Note that custom flags are still problematic: as the syncing to the
remote IMAP server will fail, the next sync will assume that they have
been removed from the remote IMAP side and they will be removed from the
local Maildir then. We will need to think about how to handle this. At
least, with this patch we won't lose standard flags and won't produce
invalid maildir names.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
The regex for catching Maildir message flags was
self.infosep + '.*2,([A-Z]+)' (infosep being ':').
The .* is bogus, as there is nothing between the : and the 2, per
maildir name specification, so remove that unneeded piece.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Previously, we would simply bail out in an ugly way, potentially leaving
temporary files around etc, or while writing status files. Hand SIGINT
and SIGTERM as an event to the Account class, and make that bail out
cleanly at predefined points. Stopping on ctrl-c can take a few seconds
(it will e.g. finish to transfer the ongoing message), but it will shut
down cleanly.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
As reported in https://github.com/spaetz/offlineimap/pull/2, we would
fail when files are empty because file.read() would throw attribute
errors.
Fix this by removing the superfluous read() check and additionally log
some warning message.
Reported-by: Ralf Schmitt
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
All ExitNotifyThreads and InstanceLimitThreads are setDaemon(True) in their
constructor, so there is no need to do that again in the code.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
1) Differentiate error messages between imaplib.abort and imaplib.error
exceptions in the log.
2) Drop connections in the case of imapobj.error, it also might denote a
broken connection.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
The default parameter value was "None", and we were comparing that
directly to the imaplib2 value of is_readonly which is False or True, so
the comparison always returned "False".
Fix this by setting the default parameter to "False" and not
"None". Also convert all users of that function to use False/True.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Only import the lock, that we actually need. Also import the with statement
for use with python 2.5. We'll need it for sure in this file.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
A repositories 'reference value is always prefixed to the full folder
path, so we should do so when creating a new one. The code had existed
but was commented out since 2003, I guess the "reference" option is not
too often used.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Output (2 of 500) when logging message copying. This required moving of
self.ui.copyingmessage into a different function where we actually have
the information about the progress handy.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
When checking for the IMAP4.abort() exception, we need of course to
perform:
except imapobj.abort:
and not
except imapobj.abort():
Thanks to Johannes Stezenbach <js@sig21.net> for pointing to the glitch.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Dave identified a case where our new dropped connection handling did
not work out correctly: we use the retry_left variable to signify
success (0=success if no exception occured).
However, we were decrementing the variable AFTER all the exception
checks, so if there was one due to a dropped connection, it
could well be that we 1) did not raise an exception (because we want to
retry), and 2) then DECREMENTED retry_left, which indicated "all is
well, no need to retry".
The code then continued to check() the append, which failed with the
above message (because we obtained a new connection which had not even
selected the current folder and we were still in mode AUTH). The fix is
of course, to fix our logic: Decrement retry_left first, THEN decide
whether to raise() (retry_left==0) or retry (retry_left>0) which would
then correctly attempt another loop. I am sorry for this newbie type of
logic error. The retry count loop was too hastily slipped in, it seems.
Reported-by: Dave Abrahams <dave@boostpro.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
If APPEND raises abort(), the (typ, dat) variables will not be set, so
we should not be using it for the OfflineImapError Exception
string. Fixing and prettifying the string formatting a bit at the same
time.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
nametrans rules can lead to different visiblename names for the
top-level directory, specifically both '.' and '' (the latter was
recently introduced). However, we need to be able to compare folder
names to see if we need to create a new directory or whether a directory
already exists, so we need to be able to compare a repositories
visiblename (=transposed via nametrans rule) with another folder.
To make the top-level directory comparison happen, we enforce a
top-level name of '', so that comparisons work.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
getvisiblename() was only defined on IMAP(derived) foldertypes, but we
want it on eg. Maildirs too, so we define it centrally in Folder.Base.py
rather than only in folder.IMAP.py.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
This variable shows if this folder should be synced or is disabled due to
a folderfilter statement. This lets us distinguish between a non-existent
folder and one that has been filtered out. Previously any filtered folder
would simply appear to be non-existing.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
The Message UID is already the key to self.messagelist, so we have that
information. It is redundant to save the UID again as
self.messagelist[uid]{'uid': uid} and we never made use of the
information anyway.
The same thing should be done with the other 2 backends.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
A more pythonic and less verbose way to do the same. Add a comment what the
variable is all about.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
open() and os.open() lead to different file permissions by default, and
while we have not changed the os.open that had been used, some code
changes led to these permissions slipping through. Fix this by setting
the permissions explicitly to 0666 (minus the users umask).
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
IMAPFolder has the repository and foldername values so it can get the
transposed (aka visiblename) of a folder itself just fine. There is no
need to pass it in as an separate parameter.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
They have the Repository() which contains the root, so no need to pass
it in as an extra parameter. Rename repository.LocalStatus()'s
self.directory to self.root for consistency with other backends.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
It is possible to get the config parameter from the Repository() which is
set in BaseFolder, so we set self.config there and remove the various
methods and 'config' parameters that are superfluous.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We passed in the accountname to all derivatives of BaseFolder, such as
IMAPFolder(...,repository,...,accountname), although it is perfectly
possible to get the accountname from the Repository(). So remove this
unneeded parameter. Each backend had to define getaccountname() (although
the function is hardly used and most accessed .accountname directly).
On the other hand BaseFolder was using getaccountname but it never defined
the function. So make the sane thing, remove all definitions from backends
and define accountname() once in Basefolder. It was made a property and not
just a (public) attribute, so it will show up in our developer
documentation as public API.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
As all Folders share these parameters, we can safely handle them in
BaseFolder. This makes sense, as BaseFolder has a getname() function
that returns self.name but nothing actually set self.name.
It also saves a few lines of code.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
In getmessage() we were releaseing a connection when we detected a
dropped connection, but it turns out that this was not enough, we need
to explicitely discard it when we detect a dropped one. So add the
drop_conn=True parameter that was recently introduced to force the
discarding of the dead conection.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
The quickchanged() function was not handling dropped connections yet. If
IMAP4.select() throws a FOLDER_RETRY error, we will now discard the
connection, reconnect and retry.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We rely on the number of mails being returned by the imapobj.select()
call, however that only happens if we "force" a real select() to occur.
Pass in the force parameter that I dropped earlier (we did not make use
of the return value when I dropped it, that is how it slipped through).
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We were retrying indefinitely on imapobj.abort() (as that is what
imaplib2 suggests), but if the failure occurs repeatedly, we'll never
quit this loop. So implement a counter that errs out after unsuccessful
retries.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
If maxage is set too large, we would even SEARCH for negative
years. With devastating results. So implement some sanity check and err
out in case the year does not make sense.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We can use Imaplib's monthnames and shorten the construction of the date
by using them rather than hardcoding them again.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Results are delivered in a 1-element list, and somehow I managed to drop
a [0] in the previous patches. We need to look at the element of course,
or our string splitting will fail horribly. Sorry this somehow slipped
through.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
If a folder is empty, most servers will return EXISTS 0 and imaplib2
passes back ['0'] as return value to a select(). It returns [None] if
no EXISTS response was given by the server at all.
Attempting to fetch the UIDs of 0 emails which leads to
various error messages (One server responds with "NO No matching
messages", Gmail seems to say "BAD Bad message sequence 1:*" for some
(although it is working fine for me with Gmail, so it might behave
different for different people).
In case we get an None or 0 back, we simply stop caching messages as the
folder is empty. This should fix the various error reports that have
popped up.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Make sure that when a connection is dropped during append, we really
discard the broken connection and get a new one, retrying. We retry
indefinitely on the specific abort() Exception, as this is what imaplib2
suggests us to do.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This function was badly named and completely undocumented. Rework it to
avoid copying the full UID list using an iterator. Make it possible to
hand it a list of UIDs as strings rather than implicitely relying on the
fact that they are numeric already. Document the code.
The behavior off the function itself remained otherwise unchanged.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
SEARCH and FETCH were never checking that the IMAP server actually
returned OK. Throw OfflineImapErrors at severity FOLDER in case one of
them fails.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Some code cleanup. If we want to examine all messages of a folder, don't
try to find out how many there are and request a long list of all of them,
but simply request 1:*. This obliviates us from the need to force a select
even if we already had the folder selected and it requires us to send a
few less bytes over the wire.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Do away with the wrapping of this code in a try...except KeyError, as
this code cannot conceivably throw a KeyError. Even if it could, it
should be documented why we should simply return() in this case.
Shorten some of the variable names and minor code cleanup while taking
the git blame anyway.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Rather than passing in huge lists of continuous numbers which eventually
overflow the maximum command line length, we coalesce number ranges
before passing the UID sequence to SEARCH. This should do away with the
error that has been reported with busy mailing lists and 'maxage'.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
It is not needed. list(ALIST) will create a new copy of the list just
fine.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Make sure that when a connection is dropped during append, we really
discard the broken connection and get a new one, retrying. We retry
indefinitely on the specific abort() Exception, as this is what imaplib2
suggests us to do.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
When invoked with FETCH 1:* (UID), imaplib returns [None] for empty
folders. We need to protect against this case and simply 'continue' here.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
If a connection is dropped for some reason while fetching a message, the
imapobj.uid command throws an imapbj.abort() Exception which means we are
supposed to retry. Implement a fail loop that drops the connection, gets a
new one and attempts the command another time.
Remove obsolete comment that we need to catch nonexisting messages. We do
now.
GMail seems to drop connections left and right. This patch is a response to
the reported mail "4E5F8D8C.1020005@gmail.com" by zeek
<ezekiel.das@gmail.com>.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We were using self.getfolderbasename(self.name) but the API is simply
getfolderbasename(). Fix this glitch.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
as that method doesn't exist on sets. Rather call the inbuilt
sorted(flags). This fixes Exceptions being thrown when using the sqlite
backend.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We were omitting an '%' where we needed it. Also include the traceback
information where it belongs in the new ui.error infrastructure.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Commit e023f190b0 changed the storing of
file paths in the messagelist variable to be relative paths, but we were
using the full absolute path anyway as we missed one spot.
Adapt this and construct the full file path in the one place where we
need it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This function was badly named and completely undocumented. Rework it to
avoid copying the full UID list using an iterator. Make it possible to
hand it a list of UIDs as strings rather than implicitely relying on the
fact that they are numeric already. Document the code.
The behavior off the function itself remained otherwise unchanged.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
As this is essentially what it is, a set of values. This allows as
to do set arithmetics to see, e.g. the intersection of 2 flag sets
rather than clunkily having to do:
for flag in newflags:
if flag not in oldflags:
oldflags.append(flag)
Also some more code documenting.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Empty foldernames (as they could be created through nametrans) were
failing as the uidvalidity and status files names as determined by
folder/Base.py:getfolderbasename() lead to invalid file names ''.
Fix this by handling empty file names and translating them to '.' which
leads to the special file name 'dot'. (this special value existed before
and was not invented by this patch)
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
It works by fetching all headers of new messages from IMAP server and
searching for our X-OfflineIMAP marker by using regular expression.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Marek <vlmarek@volny.cz>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We only copy to a single folder anyway, so clean up the code to only
pass in a single folder.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We were not including the full server reply into our error message. Fix
that so we get better error logs.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This is a bug fix on several levels. 1) We were lacking the import of
OfflineImapError. 2) OfflineImap.ERROR.MESSAGE was misspelled as ERROR.Message.
3) COntinuing with the next message only worked in single-thread mode
(using debug) and not in multi-thread mode. The reason is that we were
invoking a new thread and catching Exceptions in the main thread. But
python immediately aborts if an Exception bubbles up to a thread start.
This was fixed by catching exceptions directly in copymessageto() which
is the new thread, rather than catching them in the main thread.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
append() raises an Exception, in case the IMAP server replies with 'BAD'
(but not when it responds with 'NO') but we were not catching that. Do
catch the situation and also raise an OfflineImapError at MESSAGE
severity, so that we can continue with the next message.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This function was overridden as the IMAP version apparently had been
using imapobj.myrights() at some point in time, which was not
implemented in the Gmail version. However, IMAP is not using myrights()
anymore, and as that is an extension that needs to be advertised in
CAPABILITIES we should not unconditionally use it anyway.
So remove the function that is identical to it's ancestor's
function.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We simply assert()ed that APPENDing a message returned OK, but in some
cases (e.g. Google chat messages) APPEND might return BAD or NO too. We
should be throwing an OfflineImapError here at MESSAGE level, so that we
can continue to sync all other messages, and still give the user some
details on what went wrong at the end of the sync run.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Rather than using ui.warn, use ui.error() which outputs Exceptions to
the error log, saving them to a stack, so we get notified again at the
end of the sync run.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Message was stored to dstfolder, but we can't find it's UID. This means we can't
link current message to the one created in IMAP. So we just delete local message
and on next run we'll sync it back. Also fixed imap.savemessage description.
This was broken by e20d8b9679.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Marek <vlmarek@volny.cz>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
It's not enough to place header after first newline, since this might break
multiline rfc0822 folded long header lines. Those are difined as CRLF followed
by white space. Instead we'll search for two successive CRLF sequences which
mark end of mail headers and place our header just before that.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Marek <vlmarek@volny.cz>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
That makes OfflineIMAP to use exclamation mark (!) instead of colon for storing
messages. Such files can be written to windows partitions. But you will probably
loose compatibility with other programs trying to read the same Maildir.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Marek <vladimir.marek@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Previously, we instanciated an MappedImapFolder, and would cleverly (too
cleverly?) invoke methods on it casting it to an IMAPFolder by calling
methods such as: self._mb.cachemessages(self) where self._MB is the class
IMAPFolder and self and instance of MappedImapFolder. If
e.g. cachemessages() invokes a method uidexists() which exists for
MappedImapFolder, but not directly in IMAPFolder, I am not sure if
Python would at some point attempt to use the method of the wrong class.
Also, this leads to some twisted thinking as our class would in same
cases act as an IMAPFolder and in some cases as an MappedImapFOlder and
it is not always clear if we mean REMOTE UID or LOCAL UID.
This commit simplifies the class, by a)doing away with the complex Mixin
construct and directly inheriting from IMAPFOlder (so we get all the
IMAPFOlder methods that we can inherit). We instantiate self._mb as a
new instance of IMAPFolder which represents the local IMAP using local
UIDs, separating the MappedIMAPFolder construct logically from the
IMAPFolder somewhat.
In the long run, I would like to remove self._mb completely and simply
override any method that needs overriding, but let us take small and
understandable baby steps here.
Reported-and-tested-by: Vincent Beffara <vbeffara@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Folder.savemessage() is supposed to return the new UID that a backend
assigned, and it BaseFolder.copymessageto() fails if we don't return a
non-negative number in the savemessage() there.
For some reason, the UIDMappedFolder was not returning anything in
savemessage, despite clearly stating in the code docs that it is
supposed to return a UID. Not sure how long this has already been the
case. This patch fixes the UIDMappedFolder to behave as it should.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
During a sync run, someone might remove or move IMAP messages. As we
only cache the list of UIDs in the beginning, we might be requesting
UIDs that don't exist anymore. Protect folder.IMAP.getmessage() against
the response that we get when we ask for unknown UIDs.
Also, if the server responds with anything else than "OK", (eg. Gmail
seems to be saying frequently ['NO', 'Dave I can't let you do that now']
:-) so we should also be throwing OfflineImapErrors here rather than
AssertionErrors.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Previously we were attempting to save out mails according to
http://www.qmail.org/man/man5/maildir.html in 4 steps:
1 Create a unique filename
2 Do stat(tmp/<filename>). If it found a file, wait 2 sec and go back to 1.
3 Create and write the message to the tmp/<filename>.
4 Link from tmp/* to new/*
(we did step 2 up to 15 times) But as stated by
http://wiki1.dovecot.org/MailboxFormat/Maildir (see section 'Issues with
the specification'), this is a pointless approach, e.g. there are race
issues between stating that the filename does not exist and the actual
moving (when it might exist).
So, we can simplify the steps as suggested in the dovecot wiki and
tighten up our safety at the same time.
One improvement that we do is to open the file, guaranteeing that it did
not exist before in an atomic manner, thus our simplified approach is
really more secure than what we had before.
Also, we throw an OfflineImapError at MESSAGE level when the supposedly
unique filename already exists, so that we can skip this message and
still continue with other messages.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
MaildirFolder.messagelist[*]['filename'] was storing the absolute file
paths for all stored emails. While this is convenient, it wastes much
space, as the folder prefix is always the same and it is known to the
MaildirFolder. Just 40 chars in a folder with 100k mails waste >4MB of
space. Adapt the few locations where we need the full path to construct
it dynamically.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We use getfullname() very often (thousands to millions), yet we
dynamically calculate the very same value over and over. Optimize this
by caching the value once and be done with it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
we do:
for msgid in imapdata:
maxmsgid = max(long(msgid), maxmsgid)
and then basically immediately:
maxmsgid = long(imapdata[0])
throwing away the first assignment although the first method of
assigning is the correct one. The second had been forgotten to be
removed when we introduced the above iteration. This bug would fix a
regression with those broken ZIMBRA servers that send multiple EXISTS
replies.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
All months names are 3-letter abbreviated, but accidentally June and
July slipped through. Thanks to the heads up by
Philipp Kern <pkern@debian.org>.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
The semaphorewait()/waitforthread() logic is usefull for IMAP starting
connections. We actually use it in imapserver only.
This patch removes the over-engineered factorized methods. It tend to simplify
the code by cleaning out a chain of two direct calls with no other processes.
Reviewed-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We were outputting full message bodies to the debug log (often stderr),
and then again (as they go over the imaplib2 wire, imaplib logs
everything too). Not only is quite a privacy issue when sending in debug
logs but it can also freeze a console for quite some time. Plus it
bloats debug logs A LOT.
Only output the first and last 100 bytes of each message body to the
debug log (we still get the full body from imaplib2 logging). This
limits privacy issues when handing the log to someone else, but usually
still contains all the interesting bits that we want to see in a log.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
The syntax was not right, and deleting messages from the LocalStatus
failed. (We passed in the full list of uids and we need to pass in one
uid at a time (as a tuple). Deleting messages works now.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Throw an OfflineImapError when SELECTing a folder is unsuccessful and
bail out with a FOLDER serverity. In accounts.py catch all
OfflineImapErrors and either just log the error and skip the folder or
bubble it up if it's severe.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Make the folder classes use uidexists() more. Add some code
documentation while going through.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Test if sqlite is multithreading-safe and bail out if not. sqlite
versions since at least 2008 are.
But, as it still causes errors when 2
threads try to write to the same connection simultanously (We get a
"cannot start transaction within a transaction" error), we protect
writes with a per class, ie per-connection lock. Factor out the retrying
to write when the database is locked.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
doautosave was a useless variable before (it was *always* 1). So we
remove the self.dofsync variable and store in doautosave whether we
should fsync as often as possible (which really hurts performance).
The sqlite backend could (at one point) use the doautosave variable to
determine if it should autocommit after each modification.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Based on patches by Stewart Smith, updated by Rob Browning.
plus:
- Inherit LocalStatusSQLFolder from LocalStatusFolder
This lets us remove all functions that are available via our ancestors
classes and are not needed.
- Don't fail if pysql import fails. Fail rather at runtime when needed.
- When creating the db file, create a metadata table which contains the
format version info, so we can upgrade nicely to other formats.
- Create an upgrade_db() function which allows us to upgrade from any
previous file format to the current one (including plain text)
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
When our LocalStatus cache is corrupt, ie e.g. it contains lines not in
the form number:number, we would previously just raise a ValueError
stating things like "too many values". In case we encounter clearly
corrupt LocalStatus cache entries, clearly raise an exception stating
the filename and the line, so that people can attempt to repair it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This function will need much more "robustifying", but the very least we
can do is to print the file name and line that are giving trouble.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Add some comments how the data structures actually look like.
Describe the function properly, and make sure we only hold on to the
data connection as quickly as possible.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This was in the code for a very long time, it seems.
Remove one instance, no functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Just clean up lines which end in whitespaces.
Also adapt the copyright to the current year while touching the file.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
In order to optimize performance, we fold the 1st and 2nd pass of our
sync strategy into one. They were essentially doing the same thing:
uploading a message to the other side. The only difference was that in
one case we have a negative UID locally, and in the other case, we have
a positive one already.
This saves some time, as we don't have to run through that function on
IMAP servers anyway (they always have positive UIDs), and 2nd were we
stalling further copying until phase 1 was finished. So uploading a
single new message would prevent us from starting to copy existing
regular messages.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
For each folder we were making a second IMAP request asking for the
latest UID and compared that with the highest UID in our
statusfolder. This catched the case that 1 mail has been deleted by
someone else and another one has arrived since we checked, so that the
total number of mails appears to not have changed.
We don't capture anymore this case in the quickchanged() case.
It improves my performance from 8 to about 7.5 seconds per check (with lots of
variation) and we would benefit even more in the IMAP<->IMAP case as we do one
additional IMAP lookup per folder on each side then.
Do cleanups on whitespaces while in this file.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
quickchanged() was iterating a lot, make use of some of the helper
functions that had been introduced recently and document the function a
bit better. No functional change.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
getmessagelist() is slow for the mapped UID case, so replace some of its
occurences with calls that are optimized for this case, ie
getmessagecount() and uidexists().
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Vincent Beffara <vbeffara@ens-lyon.fr>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We are calling getmessagelist() internally a lot, e.g. just to check if
a UID exists (from uidexist()). This is a very expensive operation in
the UIDMapped case, as we reconstruct the whole messagelist dict every
single time, involving lots of copying etc.
So we provide more efficient implementations for the uidexists()
getmessageuidlist() and getmessagecount() functions that are fast in the
UIDMapped case. This should solve the performance regression that was
recently observed in the Mapped UID case.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Vincent Beffara <vbeffara@ens-lyon.fr>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Signed-off-by: David Favro <offlineimap@meta-dynamic.com>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
When uploading a new message to Gmail we need to find out the UID it
assigned it, but Gmail does not advertize the UIDPLUS extension (in all
cases) and it fails to find the email that we just uploaded when
searching for it. This prevented us effectively from uploading to
gmail.
See analysis in
http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/offlineimap-project/2011-March/001449.html
for details on what is going wrong.
This patch increases compatability with Gmail by checking for APPENDUID
responses to an APPEND action even if the server did not claim to
support it. This restores the capability to upload messages to the
*broken* Gmail IMAP implementation.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
As the LocalStatus and UIDMap backend already did: If the uid already
exists for savemessage(), only modify the flags and don't append a new
message.
We don't invoke savemessage() on messages that already exist in our sync
logic, so this has no change on our current behavior. But it makes
backends befave more consistent with each other.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
- Some documentation improvements, this is a severely underdocumented
class. This still needs some further improvements though.
- Don't use apply(Baseclass) (which is going away in Python 3), use
IMAPFolder.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs).
- Don't call ValueError, string. It is ValueError(string)
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
The biggest change here is that imapobj.untagged_responses is no
longer a dictionary, but a list. To access it, I use the semi-private
_get_untagged_response method.
* offlineimap/folder/IMAP.py (IMAPFolder.quickchanged,
IMAPFolder.cachemessagelist): imaplib2 now explicitly removes its
EXISTS response on select(), so instead we use the return values from
select() to get the number of messages.
* offlineimap/imapserver.py (UsefulIMAPMixIn.select): imaplib2 now
stores untagged_responses for different mailboxes, which confuses us
because it seems like our mailboxes are "still" in read-only mode when
we just re-opened them. Additionally, we have to return the value
from imaplib2's select() so that the above thing works.
* offlineimap/imapserver.py (UsefulIMAPMixIn._mesg): imaplib2 now
calls _mesg with the name of a thread, so we display this
information in debug output. This requires a corresponding change to
imaplibutil.new_mesg.
* offlineimap/imaplibutil.py: We override IMAP4_SSL.open, whose
default arguments have changed, so update the default arguments. We
also subclass imaplib.IMAP4 in a few different places, which now
relies on having a read_fd file descriptor to poll on.
Signed-off-by: Ethan Glasser-Camp <ethan@betacantrips.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
imaplib2 has slightly different semantics than standard imaplib, so
this patch will break the build, but I thought it was helpful to have it as
a separate commit.
Signed-off-by: Ethan Glasser-Camp <ethan@betacantrips.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
The rfc822 module has been deprecated since python 2.3, and conversion to
the email module is straightforward, so let us do that. rfc822 is
completely gone in python3.
This also fixes a bug that led to offlineimap abortion (but that code path
is apparently usually not exercised so I did not notice:
rfc822|email.utils.parsedate return a tuple which has no named attributes,
but we were using them later in that function. So pass the tuple into a
struct_time() to get named attributes.
While reading the docs, I noticed that email.parsedate returns invalid
daylight savings information (is_dst attribute), and we are using it
anyway. Oh well, the imap server might think the mails are off by an hour
at worst.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
More convenient way to test if a certain uid exists and getting a list
of all uids. Also, the SQL backend will have efficient overrides for
these methods.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Rather than always having to call len(getmessagelist.keys()) as was done
before. No functional change, just nicer looking code. Also the SQLite
backend or other backends could implement more efficient implementations.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We only have one "dstfolder" at a time when deleting/adding flags, so no
need to pass in a list of those to the ui functions that output the log
info.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This enables us to just use the folder instance in the ui output and get
a name rather than having to call getname() all the time.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
The previous syncing strategy was doing more than we needed to and was a
bit underdocumented. This is an attempt to clean it up.
1) Do away with the previous different code paths depending on
whether there is a LocalStatus file or not (the isnewfolder() test). We
always use the same strategy now, which makes the strategy easier to
understand. This strategy is simply:
a) Sync remote to local folder first
b) Sync local to remote
Where each sync implies a 4 pass strategy which does basically the same
as before (explained below).
2) Don't delete messages on LOCAL which don't exist on REMOTE right at
the beginning anymore. This prevented us e.g. from keeping local
messages rather than redownloading everything once LocalStatus got
corrupted or deleted. This surprised many who put in an existing local
maildir and expected it to be synced to the remote place. Instead, the
local maildir was deleted. This is a data loss that actually occured to
people!
3) No need to separately sync the statusfolder, we update that one
simultanously with the destfolders...
3) Simplified the sync function API by only taking one destdir rather
than a list of destdirs, we never used more anyway. This makes the code
easier to read.
4) Added plenty of code comments while I was going through to make sure
the strategy is easy to understand.
-----------------------------------------
Pass1: Transfer new local messages
Upload msg with negative/no UIDs to dstfolder. dstfolder should
assign that message a new UID. Update statusfolder.
Pass2: Copy existing messages
Copy messages in self, but not statusfolder to dstfolder if not
already in dstfolder. Update statusfolder.
Pass3: Remove deleted messages
Get all UIDS in statusfolder but not self. These are messages
that we have locally deleted. Delete those from dstfolder and
statusfolder.
Pass4: Synchronize flag changes
Compare flags in self with those in statusfolder. If msg has a
valid UID and exists on dstfolder (has not e.g. been deleted
there), sync the flag change to dstfolder and statusfolder.
The user visible implications of this change should be unnoticable
except in one situation:
Blowing away LocalStatus will not require you to redownload ALL of
your mails if you still have the local Maildir. It will simply recreate
LocalStatus.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Removing this lock makes the function not threadsafe, but then it is
only ever called from one thread, the main account syncer. Also, it
doesn't make it worse than most of the other functions in that class
which are also not threadsafe.
Removing this makes the code simpler, and removes the need to import the
threading module.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Rather than inserting our own home-grown header, everytime we save a
message to an IMAP server, we check if we suport the UIDPLUS extension
which provides us with an APPENDUID reply. Use that to find the new UID
if possible, but keep the old way if we don't have that extension.
If a folder is read-only, return the uid that we have passed in per API
description in folder.Base.py
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
The working horse of the savemessage() function, imaplib.append() was
hidden away in an assert statement. Pull the real functions out of the
asserts and simply assert on the return values. This looks less
convoluted and makes this easier to understand in my opinion.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
savemessage was too long and complex. Factor out the date guessing part
of the function and put it into a function of its own. The logic of the
date guessing is the same, however, we do not use the
imaplib.Time2InternalDate() function as it is buggy
(http://bugs.python.org/issue11024) and returns localized patches. So we
create INTERNALDATE ourselves and pass it to append() as a string.
This commit fixes a bug that international users used to pass an invalid
date to the IMAP server, which the server will either ignore or complain
about.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
savemessage_getnewheader was an undocmented, cryptic and overengineered
function. It generates a new unique value that can be used as a mail
header to be inserted. For this it used LOTS of randomness sources: hash
of the mail content, hash of the folder name, hash of the repository
name, the current time, a random() value, and the offlineimap version string.
All we need is something random. So reduce this to hash of content
appended by a random integer. Sufficient and somewhat faster to calculate.
Rename the function to actually describe accurately what it does or
would you have guessed that savemessage_getnewheader() did nothing more
than returning ('X-OfflineIMAP', <randomstring> )? Rename to
generate_randomheader() to make it clearer what this is all about.
Also document the function, describing what it does, and what it returns.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
There is no need for using the string module if all we want is to split
a string at the white space. All pythons since at least 2.4 can do that.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We have vonverted all places in folder/* to have self.ui available,
rather than having to use UIBase.getglobalui() all the
time. Unfortunately, we did not convert the users in folder/Base.py.
This patch does it belatedly. This fixes
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=613483
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth1 <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Code was broken, as these backends import UIBase (which had been moved).
However, they don't use it, so we can just delete the import.
Sorry, I failed to find those earlier somehow.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Signed-off-by: Edward Z. Yang <ezyang@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
This branch is currently broken, as we were using getglobalui() but it
was not imported. This fixes the missing import and makes offlineimap
run successfully.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Earlier we would ignore *ALL* Exceptions that could occur during the
fsyncing of our LocalStatus database. Ignoring all Exceptions is not the
right thing here though. A recent commit improved the situation by
raising at least KeyboardInterrupt Exceptions, but that is still not
optimal.
os.fsync() is available on Unix, and Windows starting in python
2.2.3. so it should always work. If it doesn't, something is wrong.
It has been suggested to only catch EnvironmentError (ie SystemError and
OSError) here, but even those should be thrown. Something *is* wrong if
this fails and we should not ignore it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Previously we did not catch KeyboardInterrupts explicitly as all of the
code was executed in forked child threads which would never receive
Ctrl-c exceptions. With the upcoming single threaded modus, this code
can be run in the main thread however, so we need to take care of
KeyboardInterrupts explicitly.
This was done wherever we would catch *ALL* exceptions universally and
print out an error message.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
We already import threadutil, so no need to also import
threadutil.InstanceLimitedThread separately.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Rather than regetting the ui with UIBase.getglobalui() all the time, we get it once in the base class and let all derivative classes just make use of self.ui rather than refetching the ui all the time, this makes for a bit less code and shorter lines.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Move central constant definitions into __init__.py. This does away
with version.py which contained nothing else and __init__.py is where
things like __VERSION__ are usually defined.
This commit also changes code to use offlineimap.__version__ rather
than offlineimap.version.__version__ as was before. Cleaned up some
duplicate or unneeded imports while touching those, formatting import
statements per PEP8 (one import per row).
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Change the X-OfflineIMAP header to work around possible Exchange MAPI
table overflow problem described in
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.mail.imap.offlineimap.general/1699
(It is unknown whether this problem still exits in current
Exchange versions, but let's assume the worst.)
The X-OfflineIMAP header is neccessary with some IMAP servers to
reliably determine the UID of a new messages uploaded to the server
by using the "UID SEARCH HEADER name string" command. Since this
command compares header name and value it is sufficient to have
a unique header value and a non-unique header name.
Note that a message can have more than one X-OfflineIMAP header if
the message was copied between IMAP folders multiple times.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
After tens of thousands of messages on the IMAP server were deleted it
takes offlineimap extremely long time (several hours of high CPU usage)
to delete them locally. It spends almost all the time modifying
LocalStatus. It processes the messages one by one, rewriting the
folder's status file in LocalStatus after each message.
It is much more efficient to save the status file only once, after
removing all the messages from the messagelist.
Deleting lots of messages now takes seconds instead of hours.
This should solve Debian bug #518093:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=518093
Signed-off-by: Michal Schmidt <mschmidt@redhat.com>
Dear All,
I have made the attached patch to try and make offlineimap a bit more
stable in challenging situations. It's extremely useful in slow
connection environments - but sometimes if one account had the wrong
password or the connection went down then unfortunately the whole
program would crash.
I have tested this on our connection and tried throwing at it just about
every situation - connection, up down, up, down again, change password,
error whilst copying one message, etc. I have been running this patch
for the last 5 days or so syncing 6 accounts at the moment... It seems
to work and stay alive nicely (even if your connection does not)...
Hope that this can go in for the next release... Please let me know if
anyone notices any problems with this...
Regards,
-Mike
-- Attached file included as plaintext by Ecartis --
-- File: submit
From 1d6777cab23637eb830031c7cab0ae9b8589afd6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: mike <mike@mikelaptop.(none)>
Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2009 19:37:59 +0430
Subject: [PATCH] This patch attempts to introduce a little more error handling - e.g.
if one account has an error because of a changed password or something
that should not affect the other accounts.
Specifically:
If one sync run has an issue this is in a try-except clause - if it
has an auto refresh period the thread will sleep and try again - this
could be quite useful in the event of the connection going down for a
little while, changed password etc.
If one folder cannot be created an error message will be displayed through
the UI and the program will continue (e.g. permission denied to create a folder)
If one message does not want to copy for whatever resaon an error message
will be displayed through the UI and at least the other messages will
be copied
If one folder run has an exception then the others will still run
Dear All,
Attached is the patch that I have developed to provide maxage and
maxsize options. You can thus sync only the last x days of messages and
exclude large messages. All details in the attached git file.
Regards,
-Mike
-- Attached file included as plaintext by Ecartis --
-- File: submit
From 04fead2b46a79675a5b29de6f2b4088b9c9448e5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: mike <mike@mikelaptop.(none)>
Date: Sun, 16 Aug 2009 17:00:49 +0430
Subject: [PATCH] Patch to provide maxage and maxsize account options to exclude old/large messages
This is designed to make offlineimap even better for low bandwidth connections.
maxage allows you to specify a number of days and only messages within
that range will be considered by offlineimap for the sync. This can be
useful if you would like to start using offlineimap with a large
existing account and do not want to import large archives of mail.
maxsize allows you to specify the maximum size of a message to consider so
that you can exclude messages with large attachments etc.
In both cases the cachemessagelist function of the folder was modified to ignore
messages that do not meet the criteria. If the criteria are not specified
then the existing code will be executed the same as before. If a message
does not meet the criteria it will be as though this message does not exist
- offlineimap will completely ignore it. It will not have flags updated,
it will not be deleted, it will not be considered at all.
When operating against an IMAP repository a server side search function
is used. This of course requires support for server side search.
I have tested this with either option, no options etc. against IMAP, Maildir
and Gmail. I have run variations of this patch here for the last 3 weeks or
so syncing about 4 accounts normally.
Closes: #535160
Bug#535160: offlineimap fails on encfs (FUSE) due to hard linking
Package: offlineimap
Version: 6.0.3
Severity: normal
Tags: patch
Hi,
if the localrepository is stored on an encfs, offlineimap fails as follows:
OfflineIMAP 6.0.3
Copyright (C) 2002 - 2008 John Goerzen <jgoerzen@complete.org>
This software comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; see the file
COPYING for details. This is free software, and you are welcome
to distribute it under the conditions laid out in COPYING.
***** Processing account pleione
Copying folder structure from IMAP to Maildir
Establishing connection to tunnel:eval `keychain --quiet --eval` && ssh -q mymailhost /usr/sbin/dovecot --exec-mail imap.
Syncing Drafts: IMAP -> Maildir
Syncing INBOX: IMAP -> Maildir
----------8<----------
Syncing net: IMAP -> Maildir
Copy message 360 IMAP[net] -> Maildir[net], LocalStatus[net]
Syncing personal: IMAP -> Maildir
Thread 'Copy message 360 from net' terminated with exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/var/lib/python-support/python2.4/offlineimap/threadutil.py", line 149, in run
Thread.run(self)
File "threading.py", line 422, in run
self.__target(*self.__args, **self.__kwargs)
File "/var/lib/python-support/python2.4/offlineimap/folder/Base.py", line 282, in copymessageto
newuid = object.savemessage(uid, message, flags, rtime)
File "/var/lib/python-support/python2.4/offlineimap/folder/Maildir.py", line 198, in savemessage
os.path.join(tmpdir, messagename))
OSError: [Errno 1] Operation not permitted
Last 4 debug messages logged for Copy message 360 from net prior to exception:
----------8<----------
As encfs does not support hard linking, the rename of the temporary
message file fails.
This is the only occurrence of hard linking in offlineimap and can be
fixed by using an atomic `os.rename` instead of `os.link`+`os.unlink`.
I have been using the attached patch for more than 1.5 years and have
never again had any problems with offlineimap on encfs.
Regards,
Peter
Paul Hinze <paul.t.hinze@gmail.com> on 2008-12-22 at 19:16:
> I did a bit of debugging and asking around in #python and it turns out
> that because Maildir.py uses a conditional import of md5 from either
> hashlib or the md5 module, the md5.new() call is not always correct.
> The attached patch should fix this problem.
Thanks to Daniel Rall for pointing out that the attachment got stripped
off my last message. Patch follows.
Paul
----
From e01fdfbf62c61c31b514e826e6cc00fb98d88808 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Paul Hinze <paul.t.hinze@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 18:42:44 -0600
Subject: [PATCH] Fixing md5 import when hashlib is available
Thanks to habnabit and Rhamphoryncus in #python for help debugging
I created new IMAP folders on my server. In some moment I found offlineimap
crashed. The reason were empty LocalStatus files. From looking at the code I
have no explanation how those files came into existence.
refs deb#469598
Bug report received in Debian. User is having occasional trouble with Gmail
driver crashing, indicates problem may have started after switching to Gmail.
Gmail driver merged to tree in 81b86fb74 on 2008-01-03 and recently released
in beta tarballs.
BT shows:
File "/var/lib/python-support/python2.4/offlineimap/folder/Gmail.py", line 102, in processmessagesflags
attributehash = imaputil.flags2hash(imaputil.imapsplit(result)[1])
File "/var/lib/python-support/python2.4/offlineimap/imaputil.py", line 88, in imapsplit
for i in range(len(imapstring)):
TypeError: len() of unsized object
imap debug log shows:
imap: 29:58.16 > BEAL75 UID STORE 4887 +FLAGS (\Deleted)
imap: 29:58.47 < BEAL75 OK Success
imap: 29:58.47 matched r'(?P<tag>BEAL\d+) (?P<type>[A-Z]+) (?P<data>.*)' => ('BEAL75', 'OK', 'Success')
imap: imapsplit() called with input: None
imap: imapsplit() got a non-string input; working around.
looking at code for Gmail.py processmessagesflags, comments from Ricardo
indicate it was copied from the same function in folder/IMAP.py.
However, folder/IMAP.py has checks for this, added 2002-07-12 in
5342dacc & 817a10ce. Suspect that Gmail author believed those checks
superfluous for Gmail.
Copied checks from folder/IMAP.py to folder/Gmail.py.
This reverts commit 71a76d9a61.
Zak Smith reported a problem at:
self.processmessagesflags('+', uidlist, flags)
File "/usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/offlineimap/folder/IMAP.py",
line 372, in processmessagesflags
myrights = imapobj.myrights(self.getfullname())[1][0].split()[1]
IndexError: list index out of range
Conflicts:
offlineimap/folder/IMAP.py
closes#22
from pistore in OfflineIMAP #22:
When an IMAP flag update is performed for multiple messages, some IMAP
servers (e.g. Exchange) return the UID attribute only for some of the
FETCH untagged responses, as shown in the following log:
21:19.04 > DCKF8 UID STORE 66050,50613,52164,40043,40055,25874 +FLAGS
(\Deleted)
21:19.36 < * 35 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted) UID 25874)
21:19.36 < * 321 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted))
21:19.57 < * 322 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted))
21:19.57 < * 560 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted))
21:19.57 < * 581 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted) UID 52164)
21:19.62 < * 1022 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted))
21:19.62 < DCKF8 OK STORE completed.
Function IMAPFolder.processmessagesflags is able to manage the servers
which return the UID and the servers which do not return it, but is
not able to deal with the mixed behavior shown above.
The problem is that the fragment of function
IMAPFolder.processmessagesflags that handles the responses with UID
attribute uses variable flags to store the list of flags of the
message in the IMAP format ("flags = attributehashFLAGS?"), while the
fragment that handles the responses without UID expects variable
"flags" to contain the list of modified flags passed to the function
in Maildir format ("self.messagelist[uid]flags?.append(flag)").
As a consequence, the wrong list of flags is used for the messages
without UID, leading to the addition of "strange" flags to the Maildir
messages:
Syncing messages IMAP[INBOX] -> Maildir[.]
Adding flags to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags e to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags d to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags ) to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags ( to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags l to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags n to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags t to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags \ to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags D to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Deleting flags T to 4 messages on Maildir[.]
Adding flags to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags e to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags d to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags ) to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags ( to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags l to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags n to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags t to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags \ to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Adding flags D to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Deleting flags T to 4 messages on LocalStatus[.]
Fix: use a different variable to store IMAP flags when managing
messages corresponding to responses with UID attribute, e.g.:
*** IMAP.py.orig Wed Aug 22 18:23:17 2007
--- IMAP.py Wed Aug 22 18:22:38 2007
*************** class IMAPFolder(BaseFolder):
*** 340,348 ****
if not ('UID' in attributehash and 'FLAGS' in
attributehash):
# Compensate for servers that don't return a UID
attribute.
continue
! flags = attributehash['FLAGS']
uid = long(attributehash['UID'])
! self.messagelist[uid]['flags'] =
imaputil.flagsimap2maildir(flags)
try:
needupdate.remove(uid)
except ValueError: # Let it slide if it's not
in the list
--- 340,348 ----
if not ('UID' in attributehash and 'FLAGS' in
attributehash):
# Compensate for servers that don't return a UID
attribute.
continue
! lflags = attributehash['FLAGS']
uid = long(attributehash['UID'])
! self.messagelist[uid]['flags'] =
imaputil.flagsimap2maildir(lflags)
try:
needupdate.remove(uid)
except ValueError: # Let it slide if it's not
in the list
02/03/08 14:04:35 changed by js
* attachment flags-fix.patch added.
Delete 02/03/08 14:05:24 changed by js ¶
Unfortunately I have to fetch some of my mail from an Exchange server
(Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 IMAP4rev1 server version 6.5.7638.1)
and I can confirm that the analysis of the problem is correct, and the
patch given here fixes the problem.
Looking at the code of the processmessagesflags() method I think it
generally is a bug that the "flags" parameter is reused as a local
variable, since the final "for uid in needupdate:" loop needs the
original value of "flags". This only worked by accident.
I'm attaching a unidiff version of the patch which applies cleanly
against Debian unstable's offlineimap 5.99.4.
New repository/folder classes to support "real deletion" of messages
thorugh Gmail's IMAP interface: to really delete a message in Gmail,
one has to move it to the Trash folder, rather than EXPUNGE it.
This patch maneuvers around python imaplib's mysterious read-only detection
algorithm and correctly calls the UI's deletetoreadonly(), when trying to
delete/expunge in a mailbox without having the necessary rights.