There are at least two user reports that fetching existing messages
sometimes results in infinite loop of retrying it. Account is working
if set up from the backup, but never starts working if set up
from scratch.
This change improves error reporting, but also sets FetchedExistingMsgs
before actually trying to do it. This way if the operation fails,
connection is reestablished, but fetching existing messages is not
retried again over and over.
async-imap does not do its own buffering, but calls flush() after
sending each command. Using BufWriter reduces the number of write()
system calls used to send a single command.
Note that BufWriter is set up on top of TLS streams, because
we can't guarantee that TLS libraries flush the stream before
waiting for response.
This makes it possible to fuzz test the functions
without exposing the module interface in the deltachat core
interface.
Also ensure that format_flowed will not grow a dependency
on deltachat core types.
If we move the detached signatures validation code out of try_decrypt(), we don't need to convert an
already parsed signed message part to Vec and then parse it back. Also this simplifies the
try_decrypt() semantics and return type. It can't make a good coffee anyway.
Services like Lacre [1] on Disroot and Inbound Encryption on Posteo [2]
offer to encrypt all incoming messages with the provided OpenPGP
public key. Resulting messages are encrypted, but not end-to-end encrypted
and not signed by the sender, therefore should not have a padlock displayed.
However, such encrypted and unsigned message is also not an indication
of an error on ongoing attack, so we shoud not report this as a problem
to the user.
[1] https://lacre.io/
[2] https://posteo.de/en/help/how-do-i-activate-inbound-encryption-with-my-public-pgp-key
This way we don't need a separate code path for signatures validation for unencrypted
messages. Also, now we degrade encryption only if there are no valid signatures, so the code for
upgrading encryption back isn't needed.
Note that if the message is encrypted, we don't check whether it's signed with an attached key
currently, otherwise a massive refactoring of the code is needed because for encrypted messages a
signature is checked and discarded first now.
* do not `SELECT *` on old tables to fill new ones
the old table may contain deprecrated columns for whatever reason;
as a result the query fails as the statement tries to insert eg.
16 columns into 12 colums
(concrete error for acpeerstate that have several deprecated columns)
* update CHANGELOG
IMAP capabilities and selected folder are IMAP session,
not IMAP client property.
Moving most operations into IMAP session structure
removes the need to constantly check whether IMAP session exists
and reduces number of invalid states, e.g. when a folder is selected but
there is no connection.
Capabilities are determined immediately after logging in,
so there is no need for `capabilities_determined` flag anymore.
Capabilities of the server are always known if there is a session.
`should_reconnect` flag and `disconnect()` function are removed: we
drop the session on error. Even though RFC 3501 says that a client
SHOULD NOT close the connection without a LOGOUT, it is more reliable
to always just drop the connection, especially after an error.
* Because both only make problems with mailing lists, it's easiest to just disable them. If we want, we can make them work properly with mailing lists one day and re-enable them, but this needs some further thoughts.
Part of #3701
* Use load_from_db() in more tests
* clippy
* Changelog
* Downgrade warning to info, improve message
* Use lifetimes instead of cloning
When a batch of messages is moved from Inbox to DeltaChat folder with a single MOVE command, their
UIDs may be reordered (e.g. Gmail is known for that) which leads to that messages are processed by
receive_imf in the wrong order. But the INTERNALDATE attribute is preserved during a MOVE according
to RFC3501. So, use it for sorting fetched messages.
This esp. speeds up receive_imf a bit when we recreate the member list (recreate_member_list == true).
It's a preparation for https://github.com/deltachat/deltachat-core-rust/issues/3768, which will be a one-line-fix, but recreate the member list more often, so that we want to optimize this case a bit.
It also adds a benchmark for this case. It's not that easy to make the benchmark non-flaky, but by closing all other programs and locking the CPU to 1.5GHz it worked. It is consistently a few percent faster than ./without-optim:
```
Receive messages/Receive 100 Chat-Group-Member-{Added|Removed} messages
time: [52.257 ms 52.569 ms 52.941 ms]
change: [-3.5301% -2.6181% -1.6697%] (p = 0.00 < 0.05)
Performance has improved.
Found 7 outliers among 100 measurements (7.00%)
4 (4.00%) high mild
3 (3.00%) high severe
```
It's a w/a for "Space added before long group names after MIME serialization/deserialization"
issue. DC itself never creates group names with leading/trailing whitespace, so it can be safely
removed. On the sender side there's no trim() because group names anyway go through
improve_single_line_input(). And I believe we should send the exact name we have in our db. Also
there's no check for leading/trailing whitespace because there may be existing user databases with
group names having such whitespaces.