409 lines
16 KiB
Rust
409 lines
16 KiB
Rust
/*
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* meli - jmap module.
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*
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* Copyright 2019 Manos Pitsidianakis
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*
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* This file is part of meli.
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*
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* meli is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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* the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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* (at your option) any later version.
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*
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* meli is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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* GNU General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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* along with meli. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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*/
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use core::marker::PhantomData;
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use serde::{de::DeserializeOwned, Serialize};
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mod filters;
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pub use filters::*;
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mod comparator;
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pub use comparator::*;
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use super::protocol::Method;
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pub trait Object {}
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// 5.1. /get
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//
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// Objects of type Foo are fetched via a call to "Foo/get".
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//
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// It takes the following arguments:
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//
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// o accountId: "Id"
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//
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// The id of the account to use.
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//
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// o ids: "Id[]|null"
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//
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// The ids of the Foo objects to return. If null, then *all* records
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// of the data type are returned, if this is supported for that data
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// type and the number of records does not exceed the
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// "maxObjectsInGet" limit.
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//
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// o properties: "String[]|null"
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//
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// If supplied, only the properties listed in the array are returned
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// for each Foo object. If null, all properties of the object are
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// returned. The id property of the object is *always* returned,
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// even if not explicitly requested. If an invalid property is
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// requested, the call MUST be rejected with an "invalidArguments"
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// error.
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#[derive(Deserialize, Serialize, Debug)]
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#[serde(rename_all = "camelCase")]
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pub struct GetCall<OBJ: Object, CALL: Method<OBJ>>
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where
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OBJ: std::fmt::Debug + Serialize,
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{
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#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "String::is_empty")]
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account_id: String,
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#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "Option::is_none")]
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ids: Option<Vec<String>>,
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#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "Option::is_none")]
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properties: Option<Vec<String>>,
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_ph: PhantomData<*const CALL>,
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__ph: PhantomData<*const OBJ>,
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}
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// The response has the following arguments:
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//
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// o accountId: "Id"
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//
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// The id of the account used for the call.
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//
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// o state: "String"
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//
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// A (preferably short) string representing the state on the server
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// for *all* the data of this type in the account (not just the
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// objects returned in this call). If the data changes, this string
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// MUST change. If the Foo data is unchanged, servers SHOULD return
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// the same state string on subsequent requests for this data type.
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// When a client receives a response with a different state string to
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// a previous call, it MUST either throw away all currently cached
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// objects for the type or call "Foo/changes" to get the exact
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// changes.
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//
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// o list: "Foo[]"
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//
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// An array of the Foo objects requested. This is the *empty array*
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// if no objects were found or if the "ids" argument passed in was
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// also an empty array. The results MAY be in a different order to
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// the "ids" in the request arguments. If an identical id is
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// included more than once in the request, the server MUST only
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// include it once in either the "list" or the "notFound" argument of
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// the response.
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//
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// o notFound: "Id[]"
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//
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// This array contains the ids passed to the method for records that
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// do not exist. The array is empty if all requested ids were found
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// or if the "ids" argument passed in was either null or an empty
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// array.
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//
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// The following additional error may be returned instead of the "Foo/
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// get" response:
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//
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// "requestTooLarge": The number of ids requested by the client exceeds
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// the maximum number the server is willing to process in a single
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// method call.
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#[derive(Serialize, Debug)]
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#[serde(rename_all = "camelCase")]
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pub struct GetResponse<T> {
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#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "String::is_empty")]
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account_id: String,
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state: String,
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list: Vec<T>,
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not_found: Vec<String>,
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}
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#[derive(Deserialize, Debug)]
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#[serde(rename_all = "camelCase")]
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enum JmapError {
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RequestTooLarge,
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InvalidArguments,
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}
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// 5.5. /query
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//
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// For data sets where the total amount of data is expected to be very
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// small, clients can just fetch the complete set of data and then do
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// any sorting/filtering locally. However, for large data sets (e.g.,
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// multi-gigabyte mailboxes), the client needs to be able to
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// search/sort/window the data type on the server.
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//
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// A query on the set of Foos in an account is made by calling "Foo/
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// query". This takes a number of arguments to determine which records
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// to include, how they should be sorted, and which part of the result
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// should be returned (the full list may be *very* long). The result is
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// returned as a list of Foo ids.
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//
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// A call to "Foo/query" takes the following arguments:
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//
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// o accountId: "Id"
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//
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// The id of the account to use.
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//
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// o filter: "FilterOperator|FilterCondition|null"
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//
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// Determines the set of Foos returned in the results. If null, all
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// objects in the account of this type are included in the results.
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// A *FilterOperator* object has the following properties:
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//
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// * operator: "String"
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//
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// This MUST be one of the following strings:
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//
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// + "AND": All of the conditions must match for the filter to
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// match.
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//
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// + "OR": At least one of the conditions must match for the
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// filter to match.
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//
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// + "NOT": None of the conditions must match for the filter to
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// match.
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//
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// * conditions: "(FilterOperator|FilterCondition)[]"
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//
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// The conditions to evaluate against each record.
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//
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// A *FilterCondition* is an "object" whose allowed properties and
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// semantics depend on the data type and is defined in the /query
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// method specification for that type. It MUST NOT have an
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// "operator" property.
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//
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// o sort: "Comparator[]|null"
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//
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// Lists the names of properties to compare between two Foo records,
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// and how to compare them, to determine which comes first in the
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// sort. If two Foo records have an identical value for the first
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// comparator, the next comparator will be considered, and so on. If
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// all comparators are the same (this includes the case where an
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// empty array or null is given as the "sort" argument), the sort
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// order is server dependent, but it MUST be stable between calls to
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// "Foo/query". A *Comparator* has the following properties:
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//
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// * property: "String"
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//
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// The name of the property on the Foo objects to compare.
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//
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// * isAscending: "Boolean" (optional; default: true)
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//
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// If true, sort in ascending order. If false, reverse the
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// comparator's results to sort in descending order.
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//
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// * collation: "String" (optional; default is server-dependent)
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//
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// The identifier, as registered in the collation registry defined
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// in [RFC4790], for the algorithm to use when comparing the order
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// of strings. The algorithms the server supports are advertised
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// in the capabilities object returned with the Session object
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// (see Section 2).
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//
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// If omitted, the default algorithm is server dependent, but:
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//
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// 1. It MUST be unicode-aware.
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//
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// 2. It MAY be selected based on an Accept-Language header in
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// the request (as defined in [RFC7231], Section 5.3.5) or
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// out-of-band information about the user's language/locale.
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//
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// 3. It SHOULD be case insensitive where such a concept makes
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// sense for a language/locale. Where the user's language is
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// unknown, it is RECOMMENDED to follow the advice in
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// Section 5.2.3 of [RFC8264].
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//
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// The "i;unicode-casemap" collation [RFC5051] and the Unicode
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// Collation Algorithm (<http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr10/>)
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// are two examples that fulfil these criterion and provide
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// reasonable behaviour for a large number of languages.
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//
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// When the property being compared is not a string, the
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// "collation" property is ignored, and the following comparison
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// rules apply based on the type. In ascending order:
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//
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// + "Boolean": false comes before true.
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//
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// + "Number": A lower number comes before a higher number.
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//
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// + "Date"/"UTCDate": The earlier date comes first.
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//
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// The Comparator object may also have additional properties as
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// required for specific sort operations defined in a type's /query
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// method.
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//
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// o position: "Int" (default: 0)
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//
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// The zero-based index of the first id in the full list of results
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// to return.
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//
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// If a negative value is given, it is an offset from the end of the
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// list. Specifically, the negative value MUST be added to the total
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// number of results given the filter, and if still negative, it's
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// clamped to "0". This is now the zero-based index of the first id
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// to return.
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//
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// If the index is greater than or equal to the total number of
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// objects in the results list, then the "ids" array in the response
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// will be empty, but this is not an error.
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//
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// o anchor: "Id|null"
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//
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// A Foo id. If supplied, the "position" argument is ignored. The
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// index of this id in the results will be used in combination with
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// the "anchorOffset" argument to determine the index of the first
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// result to return (see below for more details).
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//
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// o anchorOffset: "Int" (default: 0)
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//
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// The index of the first result to return relative to the index of
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// the anchor, if an anchor is given. This MAY be negative. For
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// example, "-1" means the Foo immediately preceding the anchor is
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// the first result in the list returned (see below for more
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// details).
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//
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// o limit: "UnsignedInt|null"
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//
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// The maximum number of results to return. If null, no limit
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// presumed. The server MAY choose to enforce a maximum "limit"
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// argument. In this case, if a greater value is given (or if it is
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// null), the limit is clamped to the maximum; the new limit is
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// returned with the response so the client is aware. If a negative
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// value is given, the call MUST be rejected with an
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// "invalidArguments" error.
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//
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// o calculateTotal: "Boolean" (default: false)
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//
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// Does the client wish to know the total number of results in the
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// query? This may be slow and expensive for servers to calculate,
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// particularly with complex filters, so clients should take care to
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// only request the total when needed.
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//
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// If an "anchor" argument is given, the anchor is looked for in the
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// results after filtering and sorting. If found, the "anchorOffset" is
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// then added to its index. If the resulting index is now negative, it
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// is clamped to 0. This index is now used exactly as though it were
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// supplied as the "position" argument. If the anchor is not found, the
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// call is rejected with an "anchorNotFound" error.
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//
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// If an "anchor" is specified, any position argument supplied by the
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// client MUST be ignored. If no "anchor" is supplied, any
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// "anchorOffset" argument MUST be ignored.
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//
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// A client can use "anchor" instead of "position" to find the index of
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// an id within a large set of results.
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#[derive(Serialize, Debug)]
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#[serde(rename_all = "camelCase")]
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pub struct QueryCall<F: FilterTrait<OBJ>, OBJ: Object>
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where
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OBJ: std::fmt::Debug + Serialize,
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{
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account_id: String,
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filter: Option<Filter<F, OBJ>>,
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sort: Option<Comparator<OBJ>>,
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#[serde(default)]
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position: u64,
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#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "Option::is_none")]
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anchor: Option<String>,
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#[serde(default)]
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anchor_offset: u64,
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#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "Option::is_none")]
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limit: Option<u64>,
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#[serde(default = "bool_false")]
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calculate_total: bool,
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_ph: PhantomData<*const OBJ>,
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}
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fn bool_false() -> bool {
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false
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}
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fn bool_true() -> bool {
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true
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}
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// The response has the following arguments:
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//
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// o accountId: "Id"
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//
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// The id of the account used for the call.
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//
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// o queryState: "String"
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//
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// A string encoding the current state of the query on the server.
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// This string MUST change if the results of the query (i.e., the
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// matching ids and their sort order) have changed. The queryState
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// string MAY change if something has changed on the server, which
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// means the results may have changed but the server doesn't know for
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// sure.
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//
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// The queryState string only represents the ordered list of ids that
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// match the particular query (including its sort/filter). There is
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// no requirement for it to change if a property on an object
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// matching the query changes but the query results are unaffected
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// (indeed, it is more efficient if the queryState string does not
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// change in this case). The queryState string only has meaning when
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// compared to future responses to a query with the same type/sort/
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// filter or when used with /queryChanges to fetch changes.
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//
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// Should a client receive back a response with a different
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// queryState string to a previous call, it MUST either throw away
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// the currently cached query and fetch it again (note, this does not
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// require fetching the records again, just the list of ids) or call
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// "Foo/queryChanges" to get the difference.
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//
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// o canCalculateChanges: "Boolean"
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//
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// This is true if the server supports calling "Foo/queryChanges"
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// with these "filter"/"sort" parameters. Note, this does not
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// guarantee that the "Foo/queryChanges" call will succeed, as it may
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// only be possible for a limited time afterwards due to server
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// internal implementation details.
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//
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// o position: "UnsignedInt"
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//
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// The zero-based index of the first result in the "ids" array within
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// the complete list of query results.
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//
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// o ids: "Id[]"
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//
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// The list of ids for each Foo in the query results, starting at the
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// index given by the "position" argument of this response and
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// continuing until it hits the end of the results or reaches the
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// "limit" number of ids. If "position" is >= "total", this MUST be
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// the empty list.
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//
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// o total: "UnsignedInt" (only if requested)
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//
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// The total number of Foos in the results (given the "filter").
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// This argument MUST be omitted if the "calculateTotal" request
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// argument is not true.
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//
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// o limit: "UnsignedInt" (if set by the server)
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//
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// The limit enforced by the server on the maximum number of results
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// to return. This is only returned if the server set a limit or
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// used a different limit than that given in the request.
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//
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// The following additional errors may be returned instead of the "Foo/
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// query" response:
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//
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// "anchorNotFound": An anchor argument was supplied, but it cannot be
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// found in the results of the query.
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//
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// "unsupportedSort": The "sort" is syntactically valid, but it includes
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// a property the server does not support sorting on or a collation
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// method it does not recognise.
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//
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// "unsupportedFilter": The "filter" is syntactically valid, but the
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// server cannot process it. If the filter was the result of a user's
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// search input, the client SHOULD suggest that the user simplify their
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// search.
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