From bae1ce09a37071cdf592048938319c72653e96e0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Carl Worth Date: Wed, 14 Oct 2009 16:49:26 -0700 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] Document the little details separating the sup and notmuch indexes. As can be seen here, there are not a lot of differences. I've verified this by using sup-sync to import a month of mail from the sup mailing list, and comparing the database term-by-term, value-by-value, and data-by-data with that created by notmuch. There are no differences other than those documented here. --- notmuch-index-message.cc | 32 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+) diff --git a/notmuch-index-message.cc b/notmuch-index-message.cc index 79ec81e4..4585a3b9 100644 --- a/notmuch-index-message.cc +++ b/notmuch-index-message.cc @@ -17,6 +17,38 @@ * Author: Carl Worth */ +/* This indexer creates a Xapian mail index that is remarkably similar + * to that created by sup. The big difference, (and the thing that + * will keep a notmuch index from being used by sup directly), is that + * sup expects a serialized ruby data structure in the document's data + * field, but notmuch just puts the mail's filename there (trusting + * that the email client can get the data in needs from the filename). + * + * Note: One bug here is that sup actually merges together fields such + * as To, CC, Bcc etc. when finding multiple emails with the same + * message ID. To support something similar, notmuch should list + * multiple files in the data field. + * + * Other differences between sup and notmuch-index identified so far: + * + * o sup supports encrypted mime parts by prompting for a passphrase + * to decrypt the message. So far, notmuch doesn't support this, + * both because I'm lazy to code it, and I also think doing so + * would present a security leak. + * + * o sup and notmuch have different heuristics for identifying (and + * thus ignoring) signatures. For example, sup considers a line + * consisting of two hypens as a signature separator, while + * notmuch expects those two hyphens to be followed by a space + * character. + * + * o sup as been seen to split some numbers before indexing + * them. For example, the number 1754 in an email message was + * indexed by sup as separate terms 17 and 54. I couldn't find any + * explanation for this behavior and did not try to replicate it + * in notmuch. + */ + #include #include #include -- 2.43.0