| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Lines |
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As mentioned in the previous commit, this change makes it possible to
select the first or last N matches in conjunction with the -l flag.
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This is useful if the user already expects a lot of matches but is only
interested in a limited number of them. An upcoming commit will
introduce the option to have quarg list matches in ascending or
descending order (currently we do not pick a default - effectively
listing matches in ascending timestamp order), making it possible to
select the first or last N matches.
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Quassel uses UTC message timestamps in its database, but does not save
any timezone information along with them. Up until now, we were reading
those timestamps from the database naively - resulting in datetime
objects that could not be identified as UTC.
The same happened with timestamps we got from dateutil.isoparse. If the
user did not specify an offset explicitly, the timestamp would be parsed
and passed to the program "as is", effectively being interpreted as UTC
because they were compared to database timestamps.
This commit will ensure that the correct timezone is saved for every
datetime object we encounter. Timestamps from the database are marked as
UTC. If the user does not explicitly specify an offset, the timestamp is
assumed to be in local time.
Furthermore, when printing out message timestamps, make sure to convert
them to the user's local timezone first.
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This will save the user a look at the program's manual and makes using
the program more convenient.
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Up until now it was only possible to give --around a range specified in
hours. Since most discussions on IRC tend not to last for multiple
hours, and one may only be interested in a few minutes of logs, this
commit adds the ability to specify a unit suffix that takes either 'm'
for minutes or 'h' for hours. If it is missing, 'h' is assumed.
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Previously quarg would simply echo the error message without any
context, making it harder to find exactly which option caused it.
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Previously this case was handled by the int() cast in the try/except
block but resulted in a confusing error message. Make clear to the user
what exactly went wrong.
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Group message matching into two main parts (context and timestamps) and
simplify the help text for each option. Rename 'query' to 'keyword' to
avoid confusion with SQL queries and IRC queries.
Additionally, change some option flags to better communicate the type of
option (upper-case ones are used less frequently) or to make sure no
future option clashes with a less-frequently used one.
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Whilst still not perfect, 'umode' signals more closely what this option
does. We do not plan to add matching on channel modes, so -m should be
fine here.
The original name for this option came from the column in the backlog
table, 'senderprefixes'.
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As this program interacts with quassel's database only, it does not have
access to any state the UI carries. Some types (such as DAYCHANGE,
IGNORED, BACKLOG, GROUP) seem to not be represented in the database at
all, most likely only set on data structures in memory by the
quasselclient application.
Some others make no real sense to include in an application like this,
which is more focused on human-readable messages and circumstances. For
example, INVALID, REDIRECTED, SERVERMSG, etc are all of less concern to
the average user than, say, matching on nicknames or buffers.
Therefore, ignore all of these until we find a good use for them.
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Using / here should be fine.
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These make more sense and are clearer if they're named after the command
line arguments that trigger them.
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Using --around does not make much sense if there is also a match on
--after or --before, since the range in --around would most certainly
take precedence. Disallow this behaviour.
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Sadly we can not yet rely on BooleanOptionalAction, since that was only
added in Python 3.9. Also remove the FIXME note, it seems that boolean
options like this trigger a standard default setting with argparse.
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We're going to need this for an upcoming commit that moves all
argparse.Action classes to its own file.
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Instead of adding another indentation level, exit early if a value or a
key can be ignored.
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The list of users that have quit or joined after a netsplit can become
quite large. Quassel itself cuts reporting off after printing 15 users,
so let's follow that. Note that this will not affect queries - the
search is performed against the whole netsplit message.
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Instead of defining a function for every message format that trivially
returns an f-string, have a generic partially-applied helper function
that applies the Message object as a dictionary to the format()
function. That way, we can inline the formatter definitions directly in
the FORMATTERS dictionary.
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