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#63311
30.0.50; [PATCH] smtpmail-send-it split
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Message #52 received at 63311 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org> writes:
>> From: Manuel Giraud <manuel <at> ledu-giraud.fr>
>> Cc: 63311 <at> debbugs.gnu.org
>> Date: Wed, 01 Nov 2023 13:35:45 +0100
>>
>> I'm reviving this old bug report because I think I have made some
>> progress. Here is a new patch that tries to send mail asynchronously.
>> This seems to work for me but, of course, it needs testing, testing and
>> even more testing.
>
> Thank you for working on this.
>
> I have several questions about it:
>
> . I'm not sure I understand how will the success/failure of sending
> be communicated back to the callers. Currently, when the sending
> succeeds, there's a message in echo-area, and if the message was a
> reply, then Emacs marks the original message as "have been replied
> to". How will this work with async sending?
The progress and "Sending email done" still shows in echo-area and
*Messages* buffer but asynchronously. As for the "have been replied
too" part, it happens right after 'C-c C-c' so a message that should
error later down the line will be named as "*sent reply...": this is a
problem.
> . What happens if sending fails for some reason? It could be that
> the problem is detected by smtpmail itself, or it could be that
> some low-level code signals an error -- what happens in both
> cases?
Some errors should be handled in 'smtpmail-send-mail' and signal by
calling (error). But other errors won't be. For instance, I tried to
send a mail to a non existent address and I get no error whatsoever: the
buffer is also called "*sent ...*"
> . With which MUA are you testing this?
I'm testing gnus and message-mode.
> . What happens if another message is sent while the previous one is
> still being sent?
That I have tested. It works because the temporary buffer where
everything takes place is generated by 'generate-new-buffer' which
creates a unique name if needed.
> . What did you try to do in Emacs while the message was being sent,
> and did you see any problems with the foreground responsiveness?
I did not do some intensive usage just moving to other buffers. I've
not seen any problem with responsiveness.
> For that matter, how long did it take for the background thread to
> send the message? If that was short enough, like 1 sec or so, I
> suggest to test this with sending a larger message, like a message
> with a large attachment. That's because the most important
> situation where async sending is valuable is when it takes a long
> time to send a message, either because it's a large message or
> because the connection is slow or unreliable.
Yes I have tested with longer to send message otherwise I would not be
able to see the asynchronous process.
--
Manuel Giraud
This bug report was last modified 1 year and 220 days ago.
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