Also, include the sent-date in the header when using
the "prefix" quote style. "Be like mutt" (and gmail,
and thunderbird)
Also, the quoteOriginalHtmlMessage method was using the mSourceMessage
field in various places when it should be using its originalMessage
parameter.
Related issues: 2249, 3456
This string resource is used in two places -- both with and without the
linefeed at the end. Instead of having a linefeed in the string and
having the code remove it if not needed, the linefeed is now omitted from
the string and the code adds it if needed.
Also, the line ending is changed from \n to \r\n.
Also, the string in the DE and FR locales had linefeeds at the start that
were removed so they match all the other locales.
(The string in the zh-rTW locale was left alone, since it had no
linefeeds. It looks like that file has numerous instances where \n was
replaced with actual newlines, which is probably not correct.)
This builds upon the efforts started 2 commits back where \r\n is used for
all message text and \n is only used when the text is inside an
EolConvertingEditText widget.
Even with the fix in the parent commit, the X-K9mail-Identity header can
become invalid if, for example, a user creates a draft in K-9 Mail, then
edits the draft outside of K-9 Mail, then opens the draft again in K-9
Mail.
This commit assures that an invalid X-K9mail-Identity header will not
result in an IndexOutOfBoundsException.
The problem:
Configure the account (just an example -- problems can occur in other
configurations as well):
Message Format: HTML
Reply quoting style: Prefix
Quote message when replying: yes
Reply after quoted text: yes
Reply to a message that has a large quantity (20+) of \r\n scattered in
the body of its HTML version (not an unusual scenario).
Add a reply. Save the message as a draft. Go back & open the draft
again. A fatal IndexOutOfBoundsException occurs.
The cause:
When the draft was saved, the X-K9mail-Identity header was computed and
added to the message, then the text of the message was processed with
MimeUtility.fixDraftTextBody, replacing all occurrences of \r\n with \n in
the quoted message before being saved in LocalStore, thus invalidating the
X-K9mail-Identity header.
The fix:
Remove MimeUtility.fixDraftTextBody and implement
MessageCompose$EolConvertingEditText instead. Any message text placed in
an EolConvertingEditText widget is assured to have \n line endings. Any
message text extracted from an EolConvertingEditText widget is assured to
have \r\n line endings. The X-K9mail-Identity header will always be
computed correctly.
Issues thought to be related: 4782, 5010, 5634, 5725
As noted in some of the referenced issues, errors didn't always result in
a fatal exception, but instead with mixed up text.
Ref: commit f9a35aeaee
Update LocalStore code to handle the newly introduced temporary files
for attachments
Conflicts:
res/values/strings.xml
src/com/fsck/k9/activity/MessageCompose.java
Android allows other apps to access protected content of an app without requesting the
necessary permission when the app returns an Intent with FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION.
This regularly happens as a result of ACTION_GET_CONTENT, i.e. what we use to pick content
to be attached to a message. Accessing that content only works while the receiving activity
is running. Afterwards accessing the content throws a SecurityException because of the
missing permission.
This commit changes K-9 Mail's behavior to copy the content to a temporary file in K-9's
cache directory while the activity is still running.
Fixes issue 4847, 5821
This also fixes bugs related to the fact that K-9 Mail didn't save a copy of attached content
in the message database.
Fixes issue 1187, 3330, 4930
The preceding commit resulted in attachments of type message/rfc822 being
sent with 8bit encoding even when the SMTP server did not support
8BITMIME. This commit assures that messages will be converted to 7bit
when necessary.
A new interface CompositeBody was created that extends Body, and classes
Message and Multipart were changed from implementing Body to
CompositeBody. Additional classes BinaryTempFileMessageBody and
LocalAttachmentMessageBody were created (by extending BinaryTempFileBody
and LocalAttachmentBody, respectively), and they too implement
CompositeBody.
A CompositeBody is a Body containing a composite-type that can contain
subparts that may require recursive processing when converting from 8bit
to 7bit. The Part to which a CompositeBody belongs is only permitted to
use 8bit or 7bit encoding for the CompositeBody.
Previously, a Message was created so that it was 7bit clean by default
(even though that meant base64 encoding all attachments, including
messages). Then, if the SMTP server supported 8BITMIME,
Message.setEncoding("8bit") was called so that bodies of type TextBody
would been transmitted using 8bit encoding rather than quoted-printable.
Now, messages are created with 8bit encoding by default. Then, if the
SMTP server does not support 8BITMIME, Message.setUsing7bitTransport is
called to recursively convert the message and its subparts to 7bit. The
method setUsing7bitTransport was added to the interfaces Part and
CompositeBody.
setEncoding no longer iterates over parts in Multipart. That task belongs
to setUsing7bitTransport, which may in turn call setEncoding on the parts.
MimeUtility.getEncodingforType was created as a helper function for
choosing a default encoding that should be used for a given MIME type when
an attachment is added to a message (either while composing or when
retrieving from LocalStore).
setEncoding was implemented in MimeBodyPart to assure that the encoding
set in the Part's headers was the same as set for the Part's Body. (The
method already existed in MimeMessage, which has similarities with
MimeBodyPart.)
MimeMessage.parse(InputStream in, boolean recurse) was implemented so that
the parser could be told to recursively process nested messages read from
the InputStream, thus giving access to all subparts at any level that may
need to be converted from 8bit to 7bit.
The problem: Receive a message with an attachment of type message/rfc822
and forward it. When the message is sent, K-9 Mail uses base64 encoding
for the attachment. (Alternatively, you could compose a new message and
add such an attachment from a file using a filing-picking app, but that is
not 100% effective because the app may not choose the correct
message/rfc822 MIME type for the attachment.)
Such encoding is prohibited per RFC 2046 (5.2.1) and RFC 2045 (6.4). Only
8bit or 7bit encoding is permitted for attachments of type message/rfc822.
Thunderbird refuses to decode such attachments. All that is shown is the
base64 encoded body.
This commit implements LocalAttachmentBody.setEncoding. If an attachment
to a newly composed message is itself a message, then setEncoding("8bit")
is called, otherwise setEncoding("base64") is called for the attachment.
Similar behavior occurs when an attachment is retrieved from LocalStore.
The setEncoding method was added to the Body interface, since all
implementations of Body now declare the method.
The problem here differs from that in the preceding commit: Here, the
encoding problem occurs on sending, not on receipt. Here, the entire
message (headers and body) is base64 encoded, not just the body. Here,
the headers correctly identify the encoding used; it's just that the RFC
does not permit such encoding of attached messages. The problem here
could in fact occur in combination with the preceding problem.
Previously the activity theme was used to display the auto-complete
suggestions. This lead to unreadable text when the activity theme was
different from the "composer theme".
The MIME type for the supplied text was always text/html,
so there is no need to pass that as a parameter.
Furthermore, we are relying on it being text/html because
we are wrapping it with HTML code.
Likewise, change/simplify/rename AccessibleWebView.loadDataWithBaseURL().
Previously, <html>, <head>, & <body> tags were
attached to messages before they were stored locally.
But now that the <head> element also needs to include
a <meta> element (for proper MessageWebView display),
it seems unecesary to store all these tags with each
message.
Now the tags are no longer stored with the messages. Instead,
MessageWebView applies the tags before displaying the message.
This also eliminates the need to upgrade an older
message database where all the old messages would have
otherwise needed to be wrapped with the new tags.
This way also the From: selection, To:, Cc, and Bcc: are themed correctly.
It looks more homogeneous and is consistent with the looks of the MessageView.
Through shortcuts, widgets, etc. users can start the app using another
activity than Accounts. We still want to display the database upgrade
screen in such cases.
- If there's only a single message in the notification, add 'Reply' and
'Read' (marks as read) buttons.
- If there's more than one message pending, add only 'Read'.
RFC 6068 defines these parameters case-insensitive, yet we only
supported lower-case values because the method Uri.getQueryParameters()
treats parameter names case-sensitive.
This patch introduces a wrapper class that implements case-insensitive
parameter name matching.
Note: commit message edited by cketti