Messages are sent and encrypted only to the new member. This way we at least postpone spreading the
information that the new member joined: even if the server operator is a broadcast member, they
can't know that immediately.
And enable it by default as the standard Header Protection is backward-compatible.
Also this tests extra IMF header removal when a message has standard Header Protection since now we
can send such messages.
If we use modules (which are actually namespaces), we can use shorter names. Another approach is to
only use modules for internal code incapsulation and use full names like deltachat-ffi does.
Create unprotected group in test_create_protected_grp_multidev
The test is renamed accordingly.
SystemMessage::ChatE2ee is added in encrypted groups
regardless of whether they are protected or not.
Previously new encrypted unprotected groups
had no message saying that messages are end-to-end encrypted
at all.
Sort recipients by `add_timestamp DESC` so that if the group is large and there are multiple SMTP
messages, a newly added member receives the member addition message earlier and has gossiped keys of
other members (otherwise the new member may receive messages from other members earlier and fail to
verify them).
This change introduces a new type of contacts
identified by their public key fingerprint
rather than an e-mail address.
Encrypted chats now stay encrypted
and unencrypted chats stay unencrypted.
For example, 1:1 chats with key-contacts
are encrypted and 1:1 chats with address-contacts
are unencrypted.
Groups that have a group ID are encrypted
and can only contain key-contacts
while groups that don't have a group ID ("adhoc groups")
are unencrypted and can only contain address-contacts.
JSON-RPC API `reset_contact_encryption` is removed.
Python API `Contact.reset_encryption` is removed.
"Group tracking plugin" in legacy Python API was removed because it
relied on parsing email addresses from system messages with regexps.
Co-authored-by: Hocuri <hocuri@gmx.de>
Co-authored-by: iequidoo <dgreshilov@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: B. Petersen <r10s@b44t.com>
Set `rfc724_mid` in `Message::new()`, `Message::new_text()`, and
`Message::default()` instead of when sending the message. This way the
rfc724 mid can be read in the draft stage which makes it more consistent
for bots. Tests had to be adjusted to create multiple messages to get
unique mid, otherwise core would not send the messages out.
In the `test` cfg, introduce `MimeMessage::headers_removed` hash set and `header_exists()` function
returning whether the header exists in any part of the parsed message. `get_header()` shouldn't be
used in tests for checking absense of headers because it returns `None` for removed ("ignored")
headers.