Date | Commit message (Collapse) |
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Unfortunately, long inbox names and URLs don't really display well
with my gigantic fonts...
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Extracted from import_slrnspool, since some spools get converted
to mbox or what not.
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This allows archivists to publish incomplete archives with newer
mail while allowing "0.git" (or "1.git" and so on) epochs to be
added-after-the-fact (without affecting "git clone" followers).
A reindex will be necessary for Xapian and SQLite to catch up
once the old epochs are added; but the reindexing code is also
capable of tolerating missing epochs.
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This can be useful for configuring archives of lists which are
no longer active.
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When a client starts pipelining requests to us which trigger
long responses, we need to keep socket readiness checks disabled
and only enable them when our socket rbuf is drained.
Failure to do this caused aborted clients with
"BUG: nested long response" when Danga::Socket calls event_read
for read-readiness after our "next_tick" sub fires in the
same event loop iteration.
Reported-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
cf. https://public-inbox.org/meta/20181013124658.23b9f9d2@lwn.net/
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Putting the Xref field into xover lines allows newsreaders to mark
cross-posted messages read when catching up a group. That, in turn,
massively improves the life of crazy people who try to follow dozens of
kernel lists, where emails are often heavily cross-posted.
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RFC 5536 sec 3.2.14 says that the server-name in an Xref line is "which
news server generated the header field"; indeed, that is necessary for
newsreaders like gnus to handle references properly. So pick up the server
name from the config if available (the first name if there's more than
one), from the host name otherwise, and use it rather than the domain
name of the list server.
Tests have been adjusted to match the new behavior.
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This ensures that the number of added files remains the same and thus
the article numbers derived from a repository will remain the same.
I think this is the last place in public-inbox that has to be tweaked to
guarantee the generated article number will remain the same in an public
inbox archive.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Otherwise, walking backwards through history could mean the root
message in a thread forgets its `tid' and it prevents messages
from being looked up by it.
This bug was hidden by the fact that `sid' matches were often
good enough to link threads together.
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The "loose" (Subject:-based) thread matching yields too many
hits for some common subjects (e.g. "[GIT] Networking" on LKML)
and causes thread skeletons to not show the current messages.
Favor strict matches in the query and only add loose matches
if there's space.
While working on this, I noticed the backwards --reindex walk
breaks `tid' on v1 repositories, at least. That bug was hidden
by the Subject: match logic and not discovered until now. It
will be fixed separately.
Reported-by: Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@linuxfoundation.org>
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Incremental indexing fixes from Eric W. Biederman.
These prevents the highest message number in msgmap from
being reassigned after deletes in rare cases and ensures
messages are deleted from msgmap in v2.
* eb/index-incremental:
V2Writeable.pm: In unindex_oid delete the message from msgmap
V2Writeable.pm: Ensure that a found message number is in the msgmap
SearchIdx,V2Writeable: Update num_highwater on optimized deletes
t/v[12]reindex.t: Verify the num highwater is as expected
t/v[12]reindex.t Verify num_highwater
Msgmap.pm: Track the largest value of num ever assigned
SearchIdx.pm: Always assign numbers backwards during incremental indexing
t/v[12]reindex.t: Test incremental indexing works
t/v[12]reindex.t: Test that the resulting msgmap is as expected
t/v[12]reindex.t: Place expected second in Xapian tests
t/v2reindex.t: Isolate the test cases more
t/v1reindex.t: Isolate the test cases
Import.pm: Don't assume {in} and {out} always exist
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Now that we track the num highwater mark it is safe to remove messages
from msgmap that have been previously allocated. Removing even the
highest numbered article will no longer cause new message numbers to
move backwards.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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The lookup to see if a num has already been assigned to a message
happens in a temporary copy of message map. It is possible that the
number has been removed from the current message map. The
unindex/reindex after a history rewrite triggered by a purge should be
one such case. Therefore add the number to the msgmap in case it is
not currently present.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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When performing an incremental index update with index_sync if a message is seen
to be both added and deleted update the num_highwater mark even though the
message is not otherwise indexed.
This ensures index_sync generates the same msgmap no matter which commit
it stops at during incremental syncs.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Today the only thing that prevents public-inbox not reusing the
message numbers of deleted messages is the sqlite autoincrement magic
and that only works part of the time. The new incremental indexing
test has revealed areas where today public-inbox does try to reuse
numbers of deleted messages.
Reusing the message numbers of existing messages is a problem because
if a client ever sees messages that are subsequently deleted the
client will not see the new messages with their old numbers.
In practice this is difficult to trigger because it requires the most
recently added message to be removed and have the removal show up in a
separate pull request. Still it can happen and it should be handled.
Instead of infering the highset number ever used by finding the maximum
number in the message map, track the largest number ever assigned directly.
Update Msgmap to track this value and update the indexers to use this
value.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Not sure what was going through my mind when I made my first
attempt at this, but we really want to make sure we index all
the text we display in the web view (and presumably anything a
reasonable mail client can display).
Followup-to: 0cf6196025d4e4880cd1ed859257ce21dd3cdcf6
("search: match the behavior of WWW for indexing text")
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When walking messages newest to oldest, assigning the larger numbers
before smaller numbers ensures older messages get smaller numbers.
This leads to the possibility of a msgmap that can be regenerated when
needed.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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While working on one of the tests I did:
my $im = PublicInbox::V2Writable->new($ibx, 1);
my $im0 = $im->importer();
$im->add($mime);
Which resulted in a warning of the use of an undefined value from
atfork_child, and the test failing nastily. Inspection of the code
reveals this can happen anytime gfi_start has not been called.
So just fix atfork_child to skip closing file descriptors that have
not yet been setup.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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While playing with git fast export I discovered that mixing <> and
read would give inconsistent results. I tracked the issue down to
using sysread in ProcessPipe instead of plain read.
If it is desirable to use readline I can't see how using sysread
can work as readline to be efficient needs to use buffered I/O.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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This reuses some of the configuration from -watch, but remains
independent since some configurations will use -watch for some
inboxes and -mda for others.
The default remains "spamc" for -mda users so nothing changes
without explicit configuration.
Per-inbox configurations may also be supported in the future.
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It's a convenient wrapper nowadays, so get rid of some legacy
code and minimize differences from the -watch code.
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I've hit some case where probabilistic searches don't work when
using dfpre:/dfpost:/dfblob: search prefixes because stemming in
the query parser interferes.
In any case, our indexing code indexes longer/unabbreviated blob
names down to its 7 character abbreviation, so there should be
no need to do wildcard searches on git blob names.
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For v1 repos, we don't need to write any metadata to Xapian
and changing from 'basic' to 'medium' or 'full' will work.
For v2, the metadata for indexing is stored in msgmap (because
the Xapian databases are partitioned for parallelism), so a
reindex is required.
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Use ||= '' to ensure that if the From or Sender header is not present
the code sees an empty string and instead of undefined.
I had some email messages with a From field without an @ (because the
sender was local) and without a Sender which were causing errors when
imported. I think this was bad enough that the email messages were
failing to be imported.
Signed-off-by: Eric Biederamn <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Xapian documents and respect XAPIAN_FLUSH_THRESHOLD to define
the interval in documents to flush, so don't override it with
our own BATCH_BYTES. This is helpful for initial indexing for
those on slower storage but enough RAM.
It is unnecessary for -watch and frequent incremental indexing;
and it increases transaction times if -watch is playing "catch-up"
if it was stopped for a while.
The original BATCH_BYTES was tuned for a machine with little
memory as the default XAPIAN_FLUSH_THRESHOLD of 10000 documents
was causing swap storms. Using document counts also proved an
innaccurate estimator of RAM usage compared to the actual bytes
processed.
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This adds a new inbox configuration option 'indexlevel' that can take
the values 'full', 'medium', and 'basic'.
When set to 'full' everything is indexed including the positions
of all terms.
When set to 'medium' everything except the positions of terms is
indexed.
When set to 'basic' terms and positions are not indexed. Just the
Overview database for NNTP is created. Which is still quite good and
allows searching for messages by Message-ID. But there are no indexes to support
searching inside the email messages themselves.
Update the reindex tests to exercise the full medium and basic code paths
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Create a new method add_xapian that holds all of the code to create
Xapian indexes. The creation of this method simpliy involved
idenitifying the relevant code and moving it from add_message.
A call is added to add_xapian from add_message to keep everything
working as it currently does. The new call is made conditional upon
index levels of 'full' and 'medium'. The index levels that index
positions and terms the two things public-inbox uses Xapian to index.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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About half the size of the Xapian search index turns out to be search
positions. The search positions are only used in a very narrow set of
queries. Make the search positions optional so people don't need to
pay the cost of queries they will never make.
This also makes public-inbox more approachable for light hacking as
generating all of the indexes is time consuming.
The way this is done is to add a method to SearchIdx called index_text
that wraps the call of the term generator method index_text. The new
index_text method takes care of calling both index_text and
increase_termpos (the two functions that are responsible for position
data).
Then index_users, index_diff_inc, index_old_diff_fn, index_diff,
index_body are made proper methods that calls the new index_text.
Callers of the new index_text are slightly simplified as they don't
need to call increase_termpos as well.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Decrement regen_down when visiting messages that appear in %D that we
know will later be deleted. This ensures consistent message numbers are
generated no matter which commit number is on top. Allowing deletes to
propagage separately from the messages they delete without causing
problems.
The v2 trees already do this and when the indexes are deleted and
rebuilt they maintain they commit numbers.
Add a v1 version of the v2reindex test to verify that reindexing is
working properly on v1 as well as v2.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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The normal behavior is to prevent the deleted messages from
being indexed in the first place. However, when fetching
incrementally via git; public-inbox-index needs to account for
deleted files which were created outside of the most recent
fetch/reindexing window.
Reported-by: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Recently I ran git --git-dir=lkml/git/1.git fsck
and it reported:
> warning in commit 299dbd50b6995c6debe2275f0df984ce697fb4cc: nulInCommit: NULL byte inthe commit object body
Which I found quite scary. Nulls in the wrong place have a bad tendency
to make programs misbehave.
It turns out someone had placed "=?iso-8859-1?q?=00?=" at the end of
their subject line. Which is the mime encoding for NULL. Email::Mime
had correctly decoded the header, and then public-inbox had simply
copied the contents of the header into the subject line of the git
commit.
To prevent that from causing problems replace nulls in such subject
lines with spaces.
Signed-off-by: Eric Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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Recently I had trouble cloning lkml/git/0.git because
git fsck on receive was failing. The output of git fsck was:
> Checking object directories: 100% (256/256), done.
> warning in commit 59173dc1fe67b113ace4ce83e7f522414b3e0404: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit ff22aaff22eb4479e49e93f697e385f76db51c55: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 609b744909693f5f00aff5ed9928beeeee9ded2e: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 084572141db8e0d879428afb278bd338f2dbb053: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 789d204de27cd12c6da693d903390a241a1a4bca: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 0d9a65948b0c957007ca387cd56b690f9bab9c08: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit f7468c42b4196ee6323afb373ab9323971c38d69: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 85e0cd6dd527cd55ad0440f14384529b83818228: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit f31e19a2e772c9ed00728ef142af9c550ea5de6a: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 56eb7384443ef84e17e29504a304a071b189ae67: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit e4470030471e6810414b9de5e3b52e16f2245d12: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit f913b48caa097c3b2cb3f491707944f88d52d89f: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 4390f26923d572c6dab6cce8282c7cad5520d785: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 0f66db71a06bd7d651a0cd80877d8043b70fda20: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit d71472c40b36dcdf0396afc9778f6137eea45887: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit e8d3b19a91a2d86b6a91bd19dc811e851398b519: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit afd9fc0cc87e56ed7736d633e17d0ef77817b3cc: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 811b3217708358cf1b75fba4602a64a426fce0f5: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit e7a751a597c6f5e4770c61bdee6220d55a37cba9: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 3e32ad6192fe093e03e6b9346c3a90b16d9905c0: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit 5e66b47528e79d3bbb769e137f036a1fa99cccf9: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> warning in commit d90d67d94ca47142670dff13fcb81ab7afab07bb: badTimezone: invalid author/committer line - bad time zone
> Checking objects: 100% (1711464/1711464), done.
> Checking connectivity: 1711464, done.
Upon examination with git show --pretty=raw all of the problem commits
had a time zone that was not 4 digits long. This time zone had been
passed straight from the Date line in the email into the author line
of the commit.
Looking into that I discovered that str2time takes into account the
time zone, and was actually able to process these weird time zones.
So get the normalized time zone with strptime and convert it from
seconds from gmt to hours and minutes from gmt.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
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For v2 repositories with multiple epochs, we must not forget
about earlier epochs in clones. Ensure we update the alternates
file with all known epochs up to the current one.
Reported-by: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
https://public-inbox.org/meta/871scj2vzi.fsf@xmission.com/
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In PSGI, PATH_INFO contains URI-decoded paths which cause
problems when Message-IDs contain ambiguous characters for used
for routing. Instead, extract the undecoded path from
REQUEST_URI and use that.
Reported-by: Leah Neukirchen <leah@vuxu.org>
https://public-inbox.org/meta/8736xsb5s5.fsf@vuxu.org/
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The query planner in sqlite3 < 3.8 is not very clever, so when it sees
num mentioned in the query filter, it decides not to use the fast idx_ts
index and goes for the much slower autoindex. CentOS-7 still has
sqlite-3.7, so loading the http landing page of a very large archive
(LKML) was taking over 18 seconds, as oppposed to milliseconds on a
system with sqlite-3.8 and above:
$ time sqlite3 -line over.sqlite3 'SELECT ts,ds,ddd FROM over \
WHERE num > 0 ORDER BY ts DESC LIMIT 1000;' > /dev/null
real 0m19.610s
user 0m17.805s
sys 0m1.805s
$ sqlite3 -line over.sqlite3 'EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN SELECT ts,ds,ddd \
FROM over WHERE num > 0 ORDER BY ts DESC LIMIT 1000;'
selectid = 0
order = 0
from = 0
detail = SEARCH TABLE over USING INDEX sqlite_autoindex_over_1 (num>?) (~250000 rows)
However, if we slightly tweak the query per SQlite recommendations [1]
by adding + to the num filter, we force it to use the correct index
and see much faster performance:
$ time sqlite3 -line over.sqlite3 'SELECT ts,ds,ddd FROM over \
WHERE +num > 0 ORDER BY ts DESC LIMIT 1000;' > /dev/null
real 0m0.007s
user 0m0.005s
sys 0m0.002s
$ sqlite3 -line over.sqlite3 'EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN SELECT ts,ds,ddd \
FROM over WHERE +num > 0 ORDER BY ts DESC LIMIT 1000;'
selectid = 0
order = 0
from = 0
detail = SCAN TABLE over USING INDEX idx_ts (~1464303 rows)
This appears to be the only place where this is needed in order to avoid
running into this issue.
As far as I can tell, this change has no impact on systems running newer
sqlite3 (>= 3.8).
.. [1] https://sqlite.org/optoverview.html#disqualifying_where_clause_terms_using_unary_
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@linuxfoundation.org>
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This is consistent with git itself and the previous behavior
was a result of misunderstanding of how git interprets this.
And adjust tests slightly to match the new behavior.
Reported-by: Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@linuxfoundation.org>
<38873789-ab42-65a1-20c9-12c30b171f4f@linuxfoundation.org>
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Xapian v1.2.21..v1.2.24 (inclusive) use OFD locks but failed to
set the close-on-exec flag on those locks. So we must continue
to work around those old versions by ensuring Xapian file
descriptors aren't held any longer than necessary when in
long-running git processes.
Reported-by: Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@linuxfoundation.org>
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Xapian will replace files upon committing, so non-parallel
V2Writable users need to have umask preserved this way.
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Improve the display by finding any parent when we see out-of-order
References. This prevents us from having two roots in the test
case like Mail::Thread does.
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In retrospect, the loop prevention done by our indexer is not
always sufficient since it can have an improperly sorted
or incomplete References headers.
This bug was triggered multiple bracketed Message-IDs in an
In-Reply-To: header (not References) where the Message-IDs were
in non-chronological order when somebody tried to reply to
different leafs of a thread with a single message.
So we must check for descendents before blindly trying to
use the last one.
Fixes: c6a8fdf71e2c336f ("thread: last Reference always wins")
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All callers in expect to iterate through results. This
was causing unfairness when fetching large ranges via XHDR
as rtin does :<
Fixes: b8c41362f2a5c8fc "nntp: simplify the long_response API"
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Previous search queries already set sort order on the Enquire
object, altering the ordering of results and was causing
messages to be redundantly downloaded via POST /$INBOX/?q=$QUERY&x=m
So stop caching the Search::Xapian::Enquire object since it
wasn't providing any measurable performance improvement.
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It's ugly and all of our other parameters are omitted
when values are not the default.
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We no longer need to parse and dedupe References:
ourselves, PublicInbox::MID::references does it for us.
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It is common to have large amounts of addresses Cc:-ed in large
mailing lists like LKML. Make them more readable by wrapping
after addresses. Unfortunately, line breaks inserted by the
MUA get lost when using the public Email::MIME API.
Subject and body lines remain unwrapped, as it's the author's
fault to have such long lines :P
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The old loop did not help with code clarity with the various
conditional statements. It also hid a bug where we forgot to
(optionally) obfuscate email addresses in Subject: lines if
search was enabled.
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"LIKE" in SQLite (and other SQL implementations I've seen) is
expensive with nearly 3 million messages in the archives.
This caused some partial Message-ID lookups to take over 600ms
on my workstation (~300ms on a faster Xeon). Cut that to below
under 30ms on average on my workstation by relying exclusively
on Xapian for partial Message-ID lookups as we have in the past.
Unlike in the past when we tried using Xapian to match partial
Message-IDs; we now optimize our indexing of Message-IDs to
break apart "words" in Message-IDs for searching, yielding
(hopefully) "good enough" accuracy for folks who get long URLs
broken across lines when copy+pasting.
We'll also drop the (in retrospect) pointless stripping of
"/[tTf]" suffixes for the partial match, since anybody who
hits that codepath would be hitting an invalid message ID.
Finally, limit wildcard expansion to prevent easy DoS vectors
on short terms.
And blame Pine and alpine for generating Message-IDs with
low-entropy prefixes :P
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I was using this to trace the path of brian's message.
Fixes: 017fed7bc4d33ac4
("searchidx: regenerate and avoid article number gaps on full index")
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Relaxing this lock during a v1 --reindex is important to keep
messages showing up in -watch process in a timely manner.
Looks like I deleted an extra line when doing the following
for v2:
s/xdb->commit_transaction/self->commit_txn_lazy/
Fixes: 35ff6bb106909b1c ("replace Xapian skeleton with SQLite overview DB")
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For Subject/To/Cc/From headers, we squeeze them to a space (' ').
For Message-IDs (including References/In-Reply-To), '\t', '\n', '\r'
are deleted since some MUAs might screw them up:
https://public-inbox.org/git/656C30A1EFC89F6B2082D9B6@localhost/raw
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