Mailspring/packages/client-sync
Mark Hahnenberg e441632293 [client-sync] Refactor message processing throttling
Summary:
We want to enable code to control whether fetching is throttled or not.
We basically only want to throttle syncing the historical message
archive. New messages, initial inbox sync, and unknown search results
should not be throttled. Also some drive-by code refactoring.

Test Plan: Run locally, verify that things still work

Reviewers: spang, evan, juan

Reviewed By: juan

Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D4126
2017-03-08 14:18:44 -08:00
..
images
spec Revert "Revert "[feat] Add support for send later"" 2017-03-07 17:21:29 -08:00
src [client-sync] Refactor message processing throttling 2017-03-08 14:18:44 -08:00
stylesheets
main.es6
package.json
README.md [*] update and add READMEs to each package 2017-02-17 17:28:09 -08:00

Client Sync

This is the mail sync engine that runs within the Nylas Mail client

It is symlinked in as an internal_package of Nylas Mail via the postinstall script of the root repo.

Important Usage Notes:

Since this is symlinked in as an internal_package of Nylas Mail, there are a handulf of considerations when developing in client-sync. Some common gotchas:

  • You MAY use NylasEnv, NylasExports and other injected libraries in the Nylas Mail client environment.
  • You MAY use any 3rd party library declared in client-app/package.json. Since this gets added as a plugin of the Nylas Mail client, you'll have access to all libraries. This works because the client-app/node_modules was added to the global require paths. That lets us access client-app plugins without being a file directory decendent of client-app (client-sync is now a sibling of client-app)
  • You may NOT add "dependencies" to the client-sync/package.json. If you need a 3rd party library, add it to the main client-app/package.json. All Nylas Mail plugins (those inside of internal_packages), may no longer declare their own dependencies.
  • You should be aggressive at moving generic mail methods to isomorphic-core. We may eventually want to make large chunks of client-sync work in a cloud environment as well.