Keeping the message files around, and the message details in the database, is
useful for IMAP sessions that haven't seen/processed the removal of a message
yet and try to fetch it. Before, we would return errors. Similarly, a session
that has a mailbox selected that is removed can (at least in theory) still read
messages.
The mechanics to do this need keeping removed mailboxes around too. JMAP needs
that anyway, so we now keep modseq/createseq/expunged history for mailboxes
too. And while we're at it, for annotations as well.
For future JMAP support, we now also keep the mailbox parent id around for a
mailbox, with an upgrade step to set the field for existing mailboxes and
fixing up potential missing parents (which could possibly have happened in an
obscure corner case that I doubt anyone ran into).
only with "return" including "metadata". so clients can quickly get certain
metadata (eg for display, such as a color) for mailboxes.
this also adds a protocol token type "mailboxt" that properly encodes to utf7
if required.
not just /private. /shared/ is the more commonly implemented namespace, because
it is easier te implement: you don't need per-user/account storage of metadata.
i initially approached it from the other direction: we don't have a mechanism
to share metadata with other accounts, so everything is private, and i assumed
that would be what a user would prefer. but email clients make the decisions,
and they'll likely try the /shared/ namespace.
i added the metadata extension to the imapserver recently. then i wondered how
a client would efficiently find changed metadata. turns out the qresync rfc
mentions that metadata changes should set a new modseq on the mailbox.
shouldn't be hard, except that we were not explicitly keeping track of modseqs
per mailbox. we only kept them for messages, and we were just looking up the
latest message modseq when we needed the modseq (we keep db entries for
expunged messages, so this worked out fine). that approach isn't enough
anymore. so know we keep track of modseq & createseq for mailboxes, just as for
messages. and we also track modseq/createseq for annotations. there's a good
chance jmap is going to need it.
this also adds consistency checks for modseq/createseq on mailboxes and
annotations to the account storage. it helped spot cases i missed where the
values need to be updated.
this allows setting per-mailbox and per-server annotations (metadata). we have
a fixed maximum for total number of annotations (1000) and their total size
(1000000 bytes). this size isn't held against the regular quota for simplicity.
we send unsolicited metadata responses when a connection is in the idle
command and a change to a metadata item is made.
we currently only implement the /private/ namespace. we should implement the
/shared/ namespace, for mox-global metadata annotations. only the admin should
be able to configure those, probably through the config file, cli, or admin web
interface.
for issue #290