Since this change the client is responsible to provide credentials
to use to authenticate backends (through ESource-s, to be more precise),
unless the credentials are already saved.
A simple Evolution run and move between all views means creation of
more than 100 GSettings objects, with only a bit more than 10 schemas.
Reusing the objects should have a positive impact on a performance too.
There are currently only three values: Keep in Outbox, Send immediately
and Send after 5 minutes. It is partly related with the "flush-outbox"
option, but as that is used for filtering, I rather kept it untouched.
This makes evolution depend on theme-defined named colors, namely:
theme_bg_color
theme_base_color
theme_fg_color
theme_text_color
theme_selected_bg_color
theme_selected_fg_color
theme_unfocused_selected_bg_color
theme_unfocused_selected_fg_color
If it's not defined, then a fallback color is used, in the worse case
one of the fallbacks defined in evolution itself.
This is related to bug 698275, which did not cover all cases.
The problem here is that the dconf can in certain situation claim
that everything changed (path "/" changed), which GSettingsBinding
propagates to a GObject property unconditionally and GObject's
property setter (g_object_set_property()) also notifies about
the property change unconditionally, despite the real descendant
property setter properly checks for the value change. After all
these false notifications a callback on "notify" signal is called
and possibly an expensive operation is run.
Checking whether the value really changed helps in performance, for
which were added new e-util functions:
e_signal_connect_notify()
e_signal_connect_notify_after()
e_signal_connect_notify_swapped()
e_signal_connect_notify_object()
which have the same prototype as their GLib counterparts, but they allow
only "notify::..." signals and they test whether the value really changed
before they call the registered callback.
Users ask from time to time for the old behaviour when the messages
used to be saved through Outbox, rather than the composer being opened
all the time the message is sending. The change is pretty simple,
thus why not to add it.
Note the Outbox is not flushed after sending, the users is responsible
to invoke the Outbox flush on his/her own. This also allows a user
to postpone the message send for later.
Replaces the 'oklabel' argument when creating a new dialog, and can be
changed after the dialog is created.
This makes EMFolderSelector a little more "subclassable".
Replaces the 'text' argument when creating a new dialog, and can be
changed after the dialog is created.
This makes EMFolderSelector a little more "subclassable".
Replaces the EM_FOLDER_SELECTOR_CAN_CREATE flag, and can also be set
after the selector dialog is instantiated.
This makes EMFolderSelector a little more "subclassable".
Win32 headers have a #define for 'interface', which breaks the build
when this word is used in the code, thus replace it to 'iface',
the same way as GLib or GTK+ code use to have it. (See bug #722068.)
While looking at bug #721286, I found out that mail_shell_view_prepare_for_quit_cb
calls a sync of the folder changes to the server, but mail_backend_prepare_for_quit_cb
does the same thing (or even more, because it calls to synchronize changes in all folders),
thus the former is redundant and can be dropped.
Turns out this function was a no-op, because nothing registered itself
to be cancelled this way. This was part of the legacy async framework,
which we've mostly moved away from now.
Replaces em_folder_tree_model_lookup_uri() and to some extent
em_folder_tree_model_lookup_store_info().
Working toward making the EMFolderTreeModelStoreInfo struct private to
EMFolderTreeModel, so it can then be made thread-safe.
This makes the code free of Coverity scan issues.
It is sometimes quite pedantic and expects/suggests some
coding habits, thus certain changes may look weird, but for a good
thing, I hope. The code is also tagged with Coverity scan
suppressions, to keep the code as is and hide the warning too.
Also note that Coverity treats g_return_if_fail(), g_assert() and
similar macros as unreliable, and it's true these can be disabled
during the compile time, thus it brings in other set of 'weird'
changes.