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.
MX record lookup was only used to detect Google Workspace domains.
They can still be configured manually.
We anyway do not want to encourage creating new profiles
with Google Workspace as we don't have Gmail OAUTH2 token anymore
and new users can more easily onboard with a chatmail relay.
Before, the color was computed from the address, but as we've switched to fingerprint-based contact
colors, this logic became stale. Now `deltachat::contact::get_color()` is used. A test would be nice
to have, but as now all the logic is in Core, this isn't critical as there are Core tests at least.
In-Reply-To may refer to non-call message
as we do not control the sender.
It may also happen that call message
was received by older version and processed
as text, in which case correct In-Reply-To
appears to be referring to the text message.
Regarding the `@deprecated` addition:
it's not clear to me why the `listAccounts` function exists,
why `getAllAccounts` gets special treatment.
It has been there ever since the introduction of JSON-RPC.
Maybe it's because of the existence of `getContextEvents`,
which has to do with accounts.
But hopefully the new doc on `getContextEvents`
compensates for this.
Some Delta Chat clients (Desktop, for example)
do `leave_webxdc_realtime`
regardless of whether we've ever joined a realtime channel
in the first place. Such as when closing a WebXDC window.
This might result in unexpected and suspicious firewall warnings.
Co-authored-by: iequidoo <dgreshilov@gmail.com>
Quoting @adbenitez:
> I have been using the SecurejoinInviterProgress event to show a
welcome message when user scan the QR/link of the bot (== starts a chat
with the bot)
> but this have a big problem: in that event all you know is that a
contact completed the secure-join process, you don't know if it was via
certain 1:1 invite link or a group invitation, then a group-invite bot
would send you a help message in 1:1 every time you join a group with it
Since it's easy enough to add this information to the
SecurejoinInviterProgress event, I wrote a PR to do so.
- sync declined calls from callee to caller, as usual in all larger
messengers
- introduce the call states "Missed call", "Declined call" and
"Cancelled all" ("Ended call" is gone)
- allow calling end_call()/accept_call() for already ended/accepted
calls, in practise, handling all cornercases is tricky in UI - and the
state needs anyways to be tracked.
- track and show the call duration
the duration calculation depends on local time, but it is displayed only
coarse and is not needed for any state. this can be improved as needed,
timestamps of the corresponding messages are probably better at some
point. or ending device sends its view of the time around. but for the
first throw, it seems good enough
if we finally want that set of states, it can be exposed to a json-info
in a subsequent call, so that the UI can render it more nicely. fallback
strings as follows will stay for now to make adaption in other UI easy,
and for debugging:
<img width="320" alt="IMG_0154"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/09a89bfb-66f4-4184-b05c-e8040b96cf44"
/>
successor of https://github.com/chatmail/core/pull/6650
a dedicated viewtype allows the UI to show a more advanced UI, but even
when using the defaults,
it has the advantage that incoming/outgoing and the date are directly
visible.
successor of https://github.com/chatmail/core/pull/6650
UIs now display green checkmark in a profile
if the contact is verified.
Chats with key-contacts cannot become unprotected,
so there is no need to check 1:1 chat.
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.