Follow-up to https://github.com/chatmail/core/pull/7125: We now have a
mix of non-async (parking_lot) and async (tokio) Mutexes used for the
connectivity. We can just use non-async Mutexes, because we don't
attempt to hold them over an await point. I also tested that we get a
compiler error if we do try to hold one over an await point (rather than
just deadlocking/blocking the executor on runtime).
Not 100% sure about using the parking_lot rather than std Mutex, because
since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93740, parking_lot
doesn't have a lot of advantages anymore. But as long as iroh depends on
it, we might as well use it ourselves.
instead of showing addresses in info message, provide an API to get the
contact-id.
UI can then make the info message tappable and open the contact profile
in scope
the corresponding iOS PR - incl. **screencast** - is at
https://github.com/deltachat/deltachat-ios/pull/2652 ; jsonrpc can come
in a subsequent PR when things are settled on android/ios
the number of parameters in `add_info_msg_with_cmd` gets bigger and
bigger, however, i did not want to refactor this in this PR. it is also
not really adding complexity
closes#6702
---------
Co-authored-by: link2xt <link2xt@testrun.org>
Co-authored-by: Hocuri <hocuri@gmx.de>
SQL statements fail if the number of variables
exceeds `SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER`.
Remaining repeat_vars() calls are difficult to replace
and use arrays passed from the UI,
e.g. forwarded message IDs or marked as seen IDs.
If the number of retries for message is exceeded,
do not fail when marking it as failed if the message does not exist.
Otherwise we may never delete the message from SMTP queue
because corresponding msg_id is not valid anymore.
Right now, when there is an SMTP connection error, the connectivity view
will always show "Error: SMTP connection failure: SMTP failed to
connect".
Instead, I just used the same method that is used in imap connect()
already.
The greeting is now always read manually,
even for STARTTLS connections,
so the errors returned on failure to read form the stream
are the same regardless of the connection type.
Why:
- With IMAP APPEND we can upload messages directly to the DeltaChat folder (for non-chatmail
accounts).
- We can set the `\Seen` flag immediately so that if the user has other MUA, it doesn't alert about
a new message if it's just a sync message (there were several such reports on the support
forum). Though this also isn't useful for chatmail.
- We don't need SMTP envelope and overall remove some overhead on processing sync messages.
This change introduces new config options
`proxy_enabled` and `proxy_url`
that replace `socks5_*`.
Tested with deltachat-repl
by starting it with
`cargo run --locked -p deltachat-repl -- deltachat-db` and running
```
> set proxy_enabled 1
> set proxy_url ss://...
> setqr dcaccount:https://chatmail.example.org/new
> configure
```
- To avoid receiving undecryptable MDNs by bots and replying to them if the bot's key changes.
- MDNs from bots don't look useful in general, usually the user expects some reply from the bot, not
just that the message is read.
Single function smtp::connect::connect_stream
returns a stream of a single `dyn` type
that can be a TLS, STARTTLS or plaintext
connection established over SOCKS5 or directly.
Previously Delta Chat tried all DNS resolution results
in sequence until TCP connection is established successfully,
then tried to establish TLS on top of the TCP connection.
If establishing TLS fails, the whole
connection establishment procedure failed
without trying next DNS resolution results.
In particular, in a scenario
where DNS returns incorrect result
pointing e.g. to a server
that listens on the TCP port
but does not have correpsponding TLS certificate,
Delta Chat now will fall back to the cached result
and connect successfully.
Even though SMTP ALPN is not officially registered (unlike IMAP),
it is an obvious choice that will allow
to multiplex SMTP and other protocols on the same TLS port.
Since commit c0a17df344
(PR https://github.com/deltachat/deltachat-core-rust/pull/3402)
`send_smtp_messages` returns an error
as soon as it encounters the first message it failed to send.
Since this worked like this for about 2 years
without any problems, there is no need to revert the change,
but outdated comment should be removed.
If a time value doesn't need to be sent to another host, saved to the db or otherwise used across
program restarts, a monotonically nondecreasing clock (`Instant`) should be used. But as `Instant`
may use `libc::clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC)`, e.g. on Android, and does not advance while being in
deep sleep mode, get rid of `Instant` in favor of using `SystemTime`, but add `tools::Time` as an
alias for it with the appropriate comment so that it's clear why `Instant` isn't used in those
places and to protect from unwanted usages of `Instant` in the future. Also this can help to switch
to another clock impl if we find any.
a27e84ad89 "fix: Delete received outgoing messages from SMTP queue"
can break sending messages sent as several SMTP messages because they have a lot of recipients:
`pub(crate) const DEFAULT_MAX_SMTP_RCPT_TO: usize = 50;`
We should not cancel sending if it is such a message and we received BCC-self because it does not
mean the other part was sent successfully. For this, split such messages into separate jobs in the
`smtp` table so that only a job containing BCC-self is canceled from `receive_imf_inner()`. Although
this doesn't solve the initial problem with timed-out SMTP requests for such messages completely,
this enables fine-grained SMTP retries so we don't need to resend all SMTP messages if only some of
them failed to be sent.
If there's a temporary SMTP error, pretend there are no more MDNs to send in send_mdn(). It's
unlikely that other MDNs could be sent successfully in case of connectivity problems. This approach
is simpler and perhaps even better than adding a progressive backoff between MDN sending retries --
MDNs just will be resent after a reconnection, which makes some sense.
I.e. from delete_msgs(). Otherwise messages must not be deleted from there, e.g. if a message is
ephemeral, but a network outage lasts longer than the ephemeral message timer, the message still
must be sent upon a successful reconnection.
I.e. from delete_msgs(). Otherwise messages must not be deleted from there, e.g. if a message is
ephemeral, but a network outage lasts longer than the ephemeral message timer, the message still
must be sent upon a successful reconnection.