When creating a folder in one command on Gmail you end up with
one tag such as 'x/y/z' instead of three nested tags such as 'z'
inside of 'y' inside of 'x'. Creating each layer individually
results in the desired nested label structure.
This was tested in a personal transfer of email from a remote
IMAP server to Gmail.
OfflineIMAP/offlineimap#335OfflineIMAP/offlineimap#598
Signed-off-by: Kyle Altendorf <sda@fstab.net>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
If utf8foldernames is enabled on account level all folder names read
from the IMAP server will immediately be reencoded to UTF-8. Names
will be treated as UTF-8 as long as the IMAP server isn't contacted again,
for which they are reencoded to IMAP4-UTF-7.
This means that any further processing such as nametrans, folderfilter
etc. will act upon the UTF-8 names, which will have to be documented
carefully.
NOTE 1:
GMail repositories and folders inherit from the IMAP... classes, so I don't
know yet if these changes have ugly side-effects. But web research suggests
that GMail IMAP folders are equally encoded in UTF-7 so that should work
identically here and incorporate the same improvements.
NOTE 2:
I could not test the behaviour with idlefolders as I didn't get this option
to work at all, not even with the latest stable version.
NOTE 3:
I *did* test to sync an IMAP repository against another IMAP repository.
Signed-off-by: Urs Liska <git@ursliska.de>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
According to documentation and the code, the following behavior is expected:
ipv6 = no
AF_INET is used
ipv6 = yes
AF_INET6 is used
ipv6 undefined
AF_UNDEF is used
Unfortunately the code parsing the "ipv6" configuration option was
returning "False" rather than "None" when failing to locate the option,
making it impossible to detect whether "ipv6" isn't set or if it was set
to "false" and leading offlineimap to use AF_INET for the connection.
This fixes the use of offlineimap on hosts that occasionaly are
connected to IPv6-only networks.
Signed-off-by: Stéphane Graber <stgraber@ubuntu.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Don't pass the account name to the function returned by eval. This allows the
user to define his own arguments.
This fix the code according to the documentation provided in offlineimap.conf.
Github-fix: https://github.com/OfflineIMAP/offlineimap/issues/372
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
They introduce a regression not allowing to discard the XOAUTH2 method when
expected.
The default lambda did not take the "account_name" argument.
Github-fix: https://github.com/OfflineIMAP/offlineimap/issues/362
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
- Learn to support UTF-8 characters where it was not supported for usernames and
passwords (but for netrc).
- Fix the types in the code for both py2 and py3: we now expect unicode for
usernames and passwords.
Unicode (UTF-8) is required only for variables with non-ASCII characters.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
There is no other way to make Python2 and Python3 happy, because syntax
raise E, V, T is incompatible with the latter.
Signed-off-by: Łukasz Żarnowiecki <dolohow@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Some environments that return AAAA records for their IMAP servers can pose
problems for clients that do not have end-to-end IPv6 connectivity for a number
of reasons (e.g. policy, lack of full routing, security, etc..)
Even with a fallback mechanism in place, you can still arrive at IMAP
implementations that could prevent authentication from unknown IPv6 space. This
in itself is not enough to fallback to IPv4 since there is an actual connection
on that socket.
This change is for introducing a user-defined value:
[Repository imap-remote]
ipv6 = no
to create a preference per repository on which AF to connect to the remote
server on
ipv6 = yes (AF_INET6)
ipv6 = no (AF_INET)
unspecified = default
Signed-off-by: Ebben Aries <e@dscp.org>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Allow the user to block usage of known-bad versions of SSL and TLS.
Signed-off-by: Ben Boeckel <mathstuf@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
When new mail arrives, this hook is triggered, allowing the user to
play a sound, or launch a popup.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Krafczyk <krafczyk.matthew@gmail.com>
This simplifies logics for the user, especially if he uses both
fingerprint and certificate validation: it is hard to maintain
the compatibility with the prior behaviour and to avoid getting
default CA bundle to be disabled when fingerprint verification
is requested.
See
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.mail.imap.offlineimap.general/6695
for discussion about this change.
Default CA bundle is requested via 'sslcertfile = OS-DEFAULT'.
I had also enforced all cases where explicitely-requested CA bundles
are non-existent to be hard errors: when users asks us to use CA
bundle (and, thus, certificate validation), but we can't find one,
we must error out rather than happily continue and downgrade to
no validation.
Reported-By: Edd Barrett <edd@theunixzoo.co.uk>
Reviewed-By: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
Signed-off-by: Eygene Ryabinkin <rea@codelabs.ru>