The user-visible change here is that it allows the FFI API to save
keys in the database for a context. This is primarily intended for
testing purposes as it allows you to get a key without having to
generate it.
Internally the most important change is to start using the
SignedPublicKey and SignedPrivateKey types from rpgp instead of
wrapping them into a single Key object. This allows APIs to be
specific about which they want instead of having to do runtime checks
like .is_public() or so. This means some of the functionality of the
Key impl now needs to be a trait.
A thid API change is to introduce the KeyPair struct, which binds
together the email address, public and private key for a keypair.
All these changes result in a bunch of cleanups, though more more
should be done to completely replace the Key type with the
SignedPublicKye/SignedPrivateKey + traits. But this change is large
enough already.
Testing-wise this adds two new keys which can be loaded from disk and
and avoids a few more key-generating tests. The encrypt/decrypt tests
are moved from the stress tests into the pgp tests and split up.
Since stock string callback has been deprecated, all event callbacks
return 0.
For compatibility, C declarations are not changed and FFI users are
expected to return 0 from their callbacks.
For consistency with other tests that use example public and private
keys, replace use of `concat!` macro with `include_str!`. This way, key
data embedded into source with single line of code.
A new context is now created by calling Context::new and therefore you
always have a valid context. This is much more in Rust style and will
allow a lot of furture simplifications on the context itself.
The FFI layer has not yet been adjusted in this commit and thus will
fail.
This marks the function safe and returns Result, it also now returns
the ConfiguredAddr since it has to look this up anyway and it makes
testing more easy. Turns out it reduces some duplicate SQL query in
some callers too.
More test code has been moved from dc_imex to test_utils as it's
more genrally applicable.