Before we had the problem that when iterating over _a lot_ (like 5k)
entries and also fetching them, at some point the OS would return with
"Too many files open".
That is because the store internally caches a lot.
With this change, the Store gets an API to query how big the cache is,
how much the cache can currently hold and (and that's the main thing in
this patch) to flush the cache to disk.
A function to simply ask the store whether its cache should be flushed
(which would us require to ask the OS how many files we can open...
which would be possible with `libc::getrlimit`) does not yet exist,
though, but could be added easily if desired.
We have to move the `Email` type at the bottom of the DeserVcard type
because it contains a table and we must emit tables as last values when
de/serializing.
Maybe this will shoot us in the foot later, but only with TOML I guess.
We'll see. For now, this is good.
For that we need to update a dependency: vobject -> 0.5
This patch rewrites the whole libimagcategory and brings it to a nice
standard (the code before was rather messy).
Now, categories are represented by an entry in the store and all entries
which have this category are linked to that entry.
The rust compiler does some fancy things for us: It automatically finds
the right fields if the name of the variable and the file is the same.
Lets use that to reduce boilerplate with this patch.
In the previous versions, the sink (where the entries should be written
to) was not passed.
This did conflict with the libimagrt holding the stdout/stderr handles,
because it automatically writes to stdout (which we don't want to do in
some cases).
Passing the sink is way nicer. This patch changes libimagentryview so
that the sink is passed to the viewer.
We need to reverse the iterator for getting the _youngest_ entry here.
Also seems to fix the issue that imag-diary edit -d <date> did not work
properly.
This reverts commit ce0bd9298a.
Pipe magic is removed with this patch.
We remove pipe magic because its implementation in libimagstore is too
complicated and the benefits are too small.
Having this functionality would be really nice, but the cost-benefit
ratio would still be too high.
The implementation in the store would require a rewrite of the internal
caching functionality in the store, plus some functionality to serialize
and deserialize the cache. This is theoretically possible, but as the
store only knows about "StoreEntry" objects, and only the backend knows
of "Entry" (which would be simply de/serializeable), the complexity
increases a _lot_.
Hence, we drop this feature-idea here.
Maybe, at some later point, this functionality will be in imag. The
history of development of this feature is in the history, we just don't
have it merged.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
This fixes the following problem:
If the editor setting was "vim " instead of "vim", the editor was called
with `"vim" " "`, which resulted in unexpected behaviour.
The patch fixes this.
This fixes the issue that spawning the editor trashes the terminal.
The signature of the Runtime::editor() function changed, which has to be
fixed in using code.
do inherit stdin and stderr from parent process, to not break terminal
editors when editing stuff.
vim printed "Input not from terminal" warning messages. This was fixed
by this commit.
When we merged the changes in libimagrt so that it automatically detects
whether stdin/stdout is a TTY and provides the user with stderr in case
stdout is not a TTY, we forgot that things like
imag foo | grep bar
becomes impossible with that, because imag detects that stdout is not a
tty and automatically uses stderr for output.
But in this case, we don't want that. The output has to be stdout in
this case.
With this change, we have a flag in the runtime ("--pipe-magic" or "-P",
globally available) which turns on "pipe magic".
The expected behaviour is the following, if "-P" is passed:
* If stdout is a TTY, we print to stdout
* If stdout is not a TTY, we print to stderr
* If stdin is not a TTY, we do not provide it
If "-P" is not passed, we allow the user of libimagrt to use stdin for
interactive stuff (the interactive stuff is not yet implemented).
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
Unfortunately, our latest fix to file parsing did not solve all issues.
So we have to fix it _again_.
The problem was the `std::str::Lines` iterator, which apparently fails
this:
assert_eq!(1, "".lines().count());
as an empty line seems not to be a line.
Because of that, when reading a file with an empty line at its bottom
got stripped off that line.
This patch removes the use of the `lines()` iterator and uses
`split("\n")` instead. This only works on Unix operating systems, but as
we only target unix operating systems with imag, this is not considered
an issue right now.
This patch also adds extensive tests on multiple levels in the
`libimagstore` implementation:
* On the parsing level, for the function which implements the parsing
* On the filesystem abstraction levels
* On the `Store` levels
to make sure that everything is parsed correctly.
This is another approach for providing access to stdin/out/err via
libimagrt::runtime::Runtime.
The Runtime object does configure which output gets returned (stdout if
stdout is a tty, else stderr).
With this we can change libimagrt to read/write the store from/to
stdin/stdout without the user noticing that she does not write to stdout
but stderr.
Reading from stdin is not possible then, though.