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authorJeff King <peff@peff.net>2023-10-20 06:15:24 -0400
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2023-10-20 14:31:39 -0700
commit3ec6167567d0e1e03a728a64efa9848310d172ab (patch)
tree69776656b2426ae366ba85e7914d41d2620a1f11
parent637e8944a13af5eae2dcaef99d4d84645f2b60ac (diff)
downloadgit-3ec6167567d0e1e03a728a64efa9848310d172ab.tar.gz
send-email: handle to/cc/bcc from --compose message
If the user writes a message via --compose, send-email will pick up various headers like "From", "Subject", etc and use them for other patches as if they were specified on the command-line. But we don't handle "To", "Cc", or "Bcc" this way; we just tell the user "those aren't interpeted yet" and ignore them. But it seems like an obvious thing to want, especially as the same feature exists when the cover letter is generated separately by format-patch. There it is gated behind the --to-cover option, but I don't think we'd need the same control here; since we generate the --compose template ourselves based on the existing input, if the user leaves the lines unchanged then the behavior remains the same. So let's fill in the implementation; like those other headers we already handle, we just need to assign to the initial_* variables. The only difference in this case is that they are arrays, so we'll feed them through parse_address_line() to split them (just like we would when reading a single string via prompting). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-send-email.txt11
-rwxr-xr-xgit-send-email.perl16
-rwxr-xr-xt/t9001-send-email.sh16
3 files changed, 31 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/git-send-email.txt b/Documentation/git-send-email.txt
index 021276329c..f4d7166275 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-send-email.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-send-email.txt
@@ -68,11 +68,12 @@ This option may be specified multiple times.
Invoke a text editor (see GIT_EDITOR in linkgit:git-var[1])
to edit an introductory message for the patch series.
+
-When `--compose` is used, git send-email will use the From, Subject,
-Reply-To, and In-Reply-To headers specified in the message. If the body
-of the message (what you type after the headers and a blank line) only
-contains blank (or Git: prefixed) lines, the summary won't be sent, but
-the headers mentioned above will be used unless they are removed.
+When `--compose` is used, git send-email will use the From, To, Cc, Bcc,
+Subject, Reply-To, and In-Reply-To headers specified in the message. If
+the body of the message (what you type after the headers and a blank
+line) only contains blank (or Git: prefixed) lines, the summary won't be
+sent, but the headers mentioned above will be used unless they are
+removed.
+
Missing From or In-Reply-To headers will be prompted for.
+
diff --git a/git-send-email.perl b/git-send-email.perl
index 2adaa35938..526f2dd712 100755
--- a/git-send-email.perl
+++ b/git-send-email.perl
@@ -861,6 +861,9 @@ if ($compose) {
my $tpl_subject = $initial_subject || '';
my $tpl_in_reply_to = $initial_in_reply_to || '';
my $tpl_reply_to = $reply_to || '';
+ my $tpl_to = join(',', @initial_to);
+ my $tpl_cc = join(',', @initial_cc);
+ my $tpl_bcc = join(', ', @initial_bcc);
print $c <<EOT1, Git::prefix_lines("GIT: ", __(<<EOT2)), <<EOT3;
From $tpl_sender # This line is ignored.
@@ -872,6 +875,9 @@ for the patch you are writing.
Clear the body content if you don't wish to send a summary.
EOT2
From: $tpl_sender
+To: $tpl_to
+Cc: $tpl_cc
+Bcc: $tpl_bcc
Reply-To: $tpl_reply_to
Subject: $tpl_subject
In-Reply-To: $tpl_in_reply_to
@@ -928,8 +934,14 @@ EOT3
} elsif (/^From:\s*(.+)\s*$/i) {
$sender = $1;
next;
- } elsif (/^(?:To|Cc|Bcc):/i) {
- print __("To/Cc/Bcc fields are not interpreted yet, they have been ignored\n");
+ } elsif (/^To:\s*(.+)\s*$/i) {
+ @initial_to = parse_address_line($1);
+ next;
+ } elsif (/^Cc:\s*(.+)\s*$/i) {
+ @initial_cc = parse_address_line($1);
+ next;
+ } elsif (/^Bcc:/i) {
+ @initial_bcc = parse_address_line($1);
next;
}
print $c2 $_;
diff --git a/t/t9001-send-email.sh b/t/t9001-send-email.sh
index c62f032056..4052b28e73 100755
--- a/t/t9001-send-email.sh
+++ b/t/t9001-send-email.sh
@@ -2522,7 +2522,7 @@ test_expect_success $PREREQ '--compose handles lowercase headers' '
test_expect_success $PREREQ '--compose handles to headers' '
write_script fake-editor <<-\EOF &&
- sed "s/^$/To: edited-to@example.com\n/" <"$1" >"$1.tmp" &&
+ sed "s/^To: .*/&, edited-to@example.com/" <"$1" >"$1.tmp" &&
echo this is the body >>"$1.tmp" &&
mv "$1.tmp" "$1"
EOF
@@ -2534,10 +2534,16 @@ test_expect_success $PREREQ '--compose handles to headers' '
--to=nobody@example.com \
--smtp-server="$(pwd)/fake.sendmail" \
HEAD^ &&
- # Ideally the "to" header we specified would be used,
- # but the program explicitly warns that these are
- # ignored. For now, just make sure we did not abort.
- grep "To:" msgtxt1
+ # Check both that the cover letter used our modified "to" line,
+ # but also that it was picked up for the patch.
+ q_to_tab >expect <<-\EOF &&
+ To: nobody@example.com,
+ Qedited-to@example.com
+ EOF
+ grep -A1 "^To:" msgtxt1 >msgtxt1.to &&
+ test_cmp expect msgtxt1.to &&
+ grep -A1 "^To:" msgtxt2 >msgtxt2.to &&
+ test_cmp expect msgtxt2.to
'
test_done