| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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It's useful enough even when you're not intending to encrypt
something.
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Other highlights:
* be show --no-comments
* Improved *.sync_with_disk.
* Improved be-mbox-to-xml.
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A previous "len(ret) >= 0" had been stripping the alt-id and
in-reply-to from _all_ parts of multipart comments. Now it only
strips them from parts after the first. The following parts do not
specify and alt-id, and they all are in-reply-to the first part.
I also added the KNOWN_IDS list for selecting amongst an array of
possible in-reply-to or references ids. This works well enough for
now, but would be more robust if we could import a list of previously
known ids from BE...
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Split arguments following POSIX rather than at all whitespace.
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Also some minor textual cleanups.
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Many psuedo-headers had been ignored. Now they are all implemented.
Getting this working exposed a few bugs in error message generation
for Commands with IDs in their argument list. These bugs should now
be fixed.
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The README should give enough info to install and use the interface.
While I was writing it, I thought that be-handle-mail could use the
--be-dir, --tag-base, and --test options. generate_global_tags()
helps implement the --tag-base option.
I set up a unittest framework since checking is currently a
pipe-in-emails-by-hand sort of arrangement, which can be slow ;).
Currently only generate_global_tags() is tested.
I also restored "show" to ALLOWED_COMMANDS, since it seems to have
wandered off ;).
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I've added the test-case that show it.
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For example, it's helpful to actually run the autocommit command ;).
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Now the final commit will run whether or not the preceding commands
raise any exceptions.
Note that since we've added the "--allow-empty" to "be commit", we
don't need to worry about empty commits after read-only actions.
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I hadn't attached the mutipart body to the .response_header, which
meant that the reply lacked target email addresses, etc.
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Also restored repsonse-message logging to help track down bugs.
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Caveats:
It will produce blank commits after emails that make no changes.
Todo: --fail-on-null option to "be commit"
It will not commit changes due to emails that are partly successful.
Todo: add "be revert"
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The new pseudo-headers are currently ignored.
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Up to now, my email interface never committed automatically, in order
to avoid locking in inappropriate changes. However, with the ability
to modify bug status, etc., it could be hard to determine the correct
status with a single email's effects removed. In order to make that
easier, I'm switching over to a "auto-commit after every user action"
model, and I've looked up the incantations for commit deletion for bzr
and git (the VCSs I use). These incantations are recorded in
interfaces/README.
Next up: add auto-commit functionality.
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Changed all the example emails over to the new format.
Now it's time to try them all out and fix all the bugs ;).
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This is part of a process to make the email interface more like the
Debian Bug Tracker's.
http://www.debian.org/Bugs/Reporting
_procmailrc had been out of date anyway, [be-mail] should have been
[be-bug].
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Waiting for a response so you can get the bug ID for your initial
comment is silly. Now you don't have to :)
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Added Command and Message classes, and use new flexibility in
send_pgp_mime.py.
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Now send_pgp_mime.py passes it's unittests again, and it should be
easier to use from be-handle-mail :).
Renamed Mail -> EncryptedMessageFactory, since its role is to generate
message bodies of various types (plain, signed, encrypted, ...)
Separated the header processing from Mail, now you need to
header_from_text()
your header text to create an email.Message which you can use in
EncrypedMessageFactory.sign(), .encrypt(), ... Once you've created
the body message you want, you can attach it to the header with
attach_root(header, root_part)
where both header and root_part are email.Message instances.
Made EncryptedMessageFactory doctests more robust, through the use of
# doctest: +ELLIPSIS, +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
which removed the need for the .strip*() methods.
Also added the configurable from_addr and to_addr, which allows you
to run the doctests with successful gpg calls. Just set them to
some address from your private keyring, and pass the passphrase for
that key in to your test via a file (or gpg-agent...)
python send_pgp_mime.py -tP path/to/pasphrase/file
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The goal being to make handling commands differently easier, rather
than just passing off the whole interface to becommands.
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Also removed "commit after every message" from be-handle-mail,
because
a) not implemented yet
b) don't want to commit spam, since we'd have to find a way to
remove it later.
Suggested future workflow:
* "bzr diff" to poll for activity, blank output = no activity.
* on activity:
1) look at changes
2) remove whatever
3) commit email-interface repo.
4) merge changes into your private repo
* on private repo changes:
* if activity in email-interface repo:
1) deal with email activity as above
* push your private repo onto the email-interface repo
(and update the email repos' working tree, if required)
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This required replacing both the codec-wrapped sys.stdin _and_ the raw
sys.__stdin__ with StringIO(stdin). becommands/comment will use only
one or the other depending on the comment's content type.
Caveat: Get_body_type only grabs the body and type of the first
non-mulitpart section, which may not be what the user expects.
Todo: Add multiple comments for each part of a multipart message, like
we do in interfaces/xml/be-mbox-to-xml.
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This fixes problems with StringIO(None).
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Fixes incorrect implementation of _comment_ bodies via stdin in my
wking@drexel.edu-20090718143517-mkd6toxmcoij3qwk
commit.
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This avoids decode-recode issues inside libbe.cmdutil.execute(), as
well as problems due to large comment bodies.
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Also restored Makefile target to home (from local), which I'd
accidentally committed two commits ago...
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The previous procmail encoding fix failed, because the becommand
execution checks libbe.encoding.get_encoding() on it's own, and got
the procmail encoding. This one works.
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When run by procmail, the encoding returned by
libbe.encoding.get_encoding is ANSI_X3.4-1968, which chokes on unicode
output. I can't think of a more elegant solution than hardcoding in
the default encoding.
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be-handle-mail wants unicode output, since all it's internal
processing is done with unicode. However, the flatten calls in
send_pgp_mime work with the encoded binary string output, and
execute(sendmail, stdin=flatten(msg, to_unicode=True)) fails
with
Exception: u
while executing /usr/sbin/sendmail -t
sendmail: fatal: wking(1001): No recipient addresses found in message header
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This keeps the transfer-encoding out of base64 if possible.
Also added a "help" example to interafaces/email/interactive/examples.
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Now be-handle-mail handles examples/unicode without crashing
cat examples/unicode | ./be-handle-mail -o -l -
But the output email is encoded in base64:
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
From: BE Bugs <wking@thor.physics.drexel.edu>
To: John Doe <jdoe@example.com>
Date: Sat, 18 Jul 2009 12:22:05 +0000
Subject: [be-bug] Re: show
In-reply-to: <abcd@example.com>
UmVzdWx0cyBvZiBydW5uaW5nOiAoZXhpdCBjb2RlIDApCiAgc2hvdyAKCnN0ZG91dDoKCjw/eG1s
IHZlcnNpb249IjEuMCIgZW5jb2Rpbmc9IlVURi04IiA/Pgo8YnVnPgogIDx1dWlkPmY3Y2NkOTE2
LWI1YzctNDg5MC1hMmUzLThjOGFjZTE3YWUzYTwvdXVpZD4KICA8c2hvcnQtbmFtZT5mN2M8L3No
b3J0LW5hbWU+CiAgPHNldmVyaXR5Pm1pbm9yPC9zZXZlcml0eT4KICA8c3RhdHVzPmZpeGVkPC9z
...
This is perhaps the best we can get out of python < 3.1/2.7, see
http://bugs.python.org/issue1368247
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be-handle-mail now gets a bit further on
cat examples/unicode | ./be-handle-mail -o -l - 2>&1 1>/dev/null
It successfully reads in unicode output from the command execution and
successfully prints that output to the log ("-l - 2>&1 1>/dev/null" sets
up the log to be printed to the terminal's stdout). However, it chokes
later on with
responding to John Doe <jdoe@example.com>: show
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "./be-handle-mail", line 274, in <module>
main()
File "./be-handle-mail", line 266, in main
response_email = compose_response(ret, out_text, err_text, info).plain()
File "./be-handle-mail", line 210, in compose_response
LOGFILE.write("\n%s\n\n" % send_pgp_mime.flatten(response_email.plain()))
File "/home/wking/src/fun/be/be.email/interfaces/email/interactive/send_pgp_mime.py", line 165, in flatten
g.flatten(msg)
File "/usr/lib/python2.5/email/generator.py" ...
...
UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character u'\ufffd' in position 2581: ordinal not in
range(128)
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Indeed, be-handle-mail chokes... :(
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The previous setup had been pretty wimpy; now there's a degree of
flexibility.
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With this set-up, be-handle-mail run from its own directory will load
your working-state BE setup, not your system-wide BE installation.
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At least, it points to the directory where be-handle-mail lives. If
you haven't moved it, that will be somewhere inside the BE repository.
This removes my hardcoded BE_DIR.
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