Closes https://github.com/chatmail/core/issues/7980.
Unpublished transports are not advertised to contacts, and self-sent messages are not sent there, so that we don't cause extra messages to the corresponding inbox, but can still receive messages from contacts who don't know the new relay addresses yet.
- This adds `list_transports_ex()` and `set_transport_unpublished()` JsonRPC functions
- By default, transports are published, but when updating, all existing transports except for the primary one become unpublished in order not to break existing users that followed https://delta.chat/legacy-move
- It is not possible to unpublish the primary transport, and setting a transport as primary automatically sets it to published
An alternative would be to change the existing list_transports API rather than adding a new one list_transports_ex. But to be honest, I don't mind the _ex prefix that much, and I am wary about compatibility issues. But maybe it would be fine; see b08ba4bb8 for how this would look.
There is no need to store copy of public key
next to the secret key because public key is a subset of the secret key
and can be obtained by using SignedSecretKey.public_key()
or SignedSecretKey.to_public_key().
We use query_and_then() instead of query_map() function now.
The difference is that row processing function
returns anyhow::Result, so simple fallible processing
like JSON parsing can be done inside of it
when calling query_map_vec() and query_map_collect()
without having to resort to query_map()
and iterating over all rows again afterwards.
We already have both rand 0.8 and rand 0.9
in our dependency tree.
We still need rand 0.8 because
public APIs of rPGP 0.17.0 and Iroh 0.35.0
use rand 0.8 types in public APIs,
so it is imported as rand_old.
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.
Emitting an `AccountsItemChanged` event is needed for UIs to know when `Contact::get_color()` starts
returning the true color for `SELF`. Before, an address-based color was returned for a new account
which was changing to a fingerprint-based color e.g. on app restart. Now the self-color is our
favorite gray until own keypair is generated or imported e.g. via ASM.
The setting is already removed from the UIs,
but users who had it disabled previously have
no way to enable it. After this change
encryption is effectively always preferred.
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>
The test works most of the time, but essentially tests that splitting
the public key from a private key
generates the same result.
However, it fails if two signatures are generated
at different seconds.
Closes#6762
Replacing default key
when a profile is already part of
verified groups results in
`[The message was sent with non-verified encryption. See 'Info' for more details]`
messages for other users.
It is still possible
to import the default key before
Delta Chat generates the key.
PR #5099 removed some columns in the database that were actually in use.
usually, to not worsen UX unnecessarily
(releases take time - in between, "Add Second Device", "Backup" etc.
would fail), we try to avoid such schema changes (checking for
db-version would avoid import etc. but would still worse UX),
see discussion at #2294.
these are the errors, the user will be confronted with otherwise:
<img width=400
src=https://github.com/deltachat/deltachat-core-rust/assets/9800740/e3f0fd6e-a7a9-43f6-9023-0ae003985425>
it is not great to maintain the old columns, but well :)
as no official releases with newer cores are rolled out yet, i think, it
is fine to change the "107" migration
and not copy things a second time in a newer migration.
(this issue happens to me during testing, and is probably also the issue
reported by @lk108 for ubuntu-touch)
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.
Moved custom ToSql trait including Send + Sync from lib.rs to sql.rs.
Replaced most params! and paramsv! macro usage with tuples.
Replaced paramsv! and params_iterv! with params_slice!,
because there is no need to construct a vector.
.call() interface is safer because it ensures
that blocking operations on SQL connection
are called within tokio::task::block_in_place().
Previously some code called blocking operations
in async context, e.g. add_parts() in receive_imf module.
The underlying implementation of .call()
can later be replaced with an implementation
that does not require block_in_place(),
e.g. a worker pool,
without changing the code using the .call() interface.