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.
This further reduces the cognitive overload of having many ways to do
something. The same is very easily done using composition. Followup
from 82ace72527.
To handle backups the UIs have to make sure they do stop the IO
scheduler and also don't accidentally restart it while working on it.
Since they have to call start_io from a bunch of locations this can be
a bit difficult to manage.
This introduces a mechanism for the core to pause IO for some time,
which is used by the imex function. It interacts well with other
calls to dc_start_io() and dc_stop_io() making sure that when resumed
the scheduler will be running or not as the latest calls to them.
This was a little more invasive then hoped due to the scheduler. The
additional abstraction of the scheduler on the context seems a nice
improvement though.
With existing approach of constructing
the SQL query dynamically I get errors like this:
ephemeral.rs:575: update failed: too many SQL variables: Error code 1: SQL error or missing database
In my case it is trying to delete 143658 messages.
This is the result of importing a Desktop backup
and enabling device auto-deletion on the phone.
Current SQLite limit is 32766 variables
as stated in <https://www.sqlite.org/limits.html>.
Gmail archives messages marked as `\Deleted` by default if those messages aren't in the Trash. But
if move them to the Trash instead, they will be auto-deleted in 30 days.
get_chat_msgs() function is split into new get_chat_msgs() without flags
and get_chat_msgs_ex() which accepts booleans instead of bitflags.
FFI call dc_get_chat_msgs() is still using bitflags for compatibility.
JSON-RPC calls get_message_ids() and get_message_list_items()
accept booleans instead of bitflags now.
Instead of emitting single MsgsChanged event
with zero chat and msg IDs, emit one event per message.
Also emit WebxdcInstanceDeleted event if expired message
contains a webxdc.
"IMAP folder and UID information" is no longer stored
in the `msgs` table since creation of the `imap` table.
As a result `msgs` table entries do not contain UID information in the
first place.
This commit updates documentation to reflect this change and also
points to `prune_tombstones()` procedure which actually deletes `msgs`
rows.
* Do ephemeral deletion in background loop
1. in start_io start ephemeral async task, in stop_io cancel ephemeral async task
2. start ephemeral async task which loops like this:
- wait until next time a message deletion is needed or an interrupt occurs (see 3.)
- perform delete_expired_messages including sending MSGS_CHANGED events
3. on new messages (incoming or outgoing) with ephemeral timer:
- interrupt ephemeral async task
* Changelog
* Fix and improve test
* no return value needed
* address @link2xt review comments
* slight normalization: have only one place where we wait for interrupt_receiver
* simplify sql statement -- and don't exit the ephemeral_task if there is an sql problem but rather wait
* Remove now-unused `ephemeral_task` JoinHandle
The JoinHandle is now inside the Scheduler.
* fix clippy
* Revert accidental move of the line
* Add log
Co-authored-by: holger krekel <holger@merlinux.eu>
Co-authored-by: link2xt <link2xt@testrun.org>
This makes the contact ID its own newtype instead of being a plain
u32. The change purposefully does not yet try and reap any benefits
from this yet, instead aiming for a boring change that's easy to
review. Only exception is the ToSql/FromSql as not doing that yet
would also have created churn in the database code and it is easier to
go straight for the right solution here.
`imap` table maps Message-IDs to UIDs on the server. `dc_receive_imf`
no longer gets the UID of the message as an argument and does not
insert the folder and UID of the message into the `msgs`
table. `server_folder` and `server_uid` columns in `msgs` table are
deprecated.
MoveMsg and DeleteMsgOnImap jobs are removed. Now messages are moved
and deleted only in the `fetch_move_delete` procedure that consults
the `target` column of the `imap` table to determine where the message
should go.
Where the message should go is determined after prefetching by the
`imap::target_folder()` procedure. Messages are only downloaded once
they reach their target folder to avoid race conditions in multidevice
setting, such as:
1. One device trying to FETCH the message while the other tries to
MOVE it.
2. One device marking the message as \Seen in the Inbox while the
other has already copied unseen message to the Movebox and is going to
delete the \Seen message in the Inbox.
3. Device downloads the message from the Inbox while there are newer
messages in the Movebox placed there by the other device, thus
processing the messages out of order.
* draft a download-api
* basic implementation
* allow partial downloads for protected chats
* use a separate column for download_state
* force a minimal timeout for delete_server_after in combination with partial messages
* add a warning if a possible download may expire by delete_server_after
* test load_imap_deletion_msgid()
* add a test for a partial download
* improve documentation and visibility
* let get_download_limit() return Result<Option>
* rusty getters
* apply MIN_DELETE_SERVER_AFTER to shown availability time
* move stub-creation to download.rs, use stock-strings, nicer logging
* make clippy happy (cargo clippy --tests)
* refine tests and comments
* fix typo
* remove superfluous closure in ffi
* respect partial_download for immediately scheduled DeleteMsgOnImap jobs
Integer overflows crash the application by default.
On a first sight this is only a potential crash that can't be
triggered, because timestamps are stored as i64 and ephemeral timer
duration is u32.
This moves the module-level lookup and creation functions to the
types, which make the naming more consistent. Now the lookup_* get_*
and create_* functions all behave similarly.
Peraps even more important the API of the lookup now allows
distinguishing failure from not found. This in turn is important to
be able to remove reliance on a ChatId with a 0 or "unset" value. The
locations where this ChatId(0) is still used is in database queries
which should be solved in an independed commit.
* Remove sql::error submodule
Use anyhow errors instead.
* Remove explicit checks for open SQL connection
An error will be thrown anyway during attempt to execute query.
* Don't use `with_conn()` and remove it
* Remove unused `with_conn_async`
* Resultify markseen_msgs
* Fix#2335 (delete job flooding)
The problem was:
- You are offline, and an ephemeral message is due to delete.
- load_imap_deletion_job() is called and returns a deletion job for it.
- The job fails because, well, we are offline.
- The job is saved into the database.
- load_imap_deletion_job() is called again, and so on.
* Add test