win_println_incoming_muc_msg() always used the current time. Now let's
use whatever is sent int he message struct (from the delay stanza or
the current time that we set now once the message is received).
No playing with the time upon display anymore.
If we are connected with another client and send a message, then correct
it. We now display it correctly in Profanity.
Id wasn't saved for carbon copied messages too so far.
So far the correction is sent. But the UI in Profanity itself is not
updated.
Also autocompletion for `/correct` with the last sent message is
missing.
So far we saved the timestamp which also had the `from`.
But we need this only to find out whether it's MUC history.
For displaying we should use the oldest delay timestamp.
Also in
61f66966dd (diff-4926fd4577a336bd3eb240f8104a5c5bL837)
a error was introduced.
Before we saved the timestamp in all cases. And only if timestamp AND
from was given we went into MUC history case.
Normal timestamp saving was not done anymore only if it also had a from
attribute.
Regards https://github.com/profanity-im/profanity/issues/1254
So far we got the first delay with a from that comes from the server.
This way we know it's MUC history.
Now we take the first time stamp we actually find. Which is likely the
one being added first. And should contain the correct time to display.
It would be nicer to actually compare the dates though.
Regards https://github.com/profanity-im/profanity/issues/1254
https://github.com/profanity-im/profanity/issues/1190 had another issue:
Sometimes servers send multiple </delay> and we just checked the first
one we got and only used it if the 'from' attribute was fitting.
However it could be that we actually wanted the second </delay> element
and there the 'from' would have been right.
So we need to loop through them until we get the one with the fitting
'from'.
Fix https://github.com/profanity-im/profanity/issues/1190
The problem is that in _handle_groupchat() we look for
STANZA_NS_STABLE_ID which will result in origin-id or stanza-id.
It seems like prosody servers send origin-id first, so this worked in
all my tests. But actually we cannot be sure of the order.
So far we stopped after the first element was found.
I only found xmpp_stanza_get_child_by_ns() and
xmpp_stanza_get_child_by_name() in libstrophe. But we need a combination
of both.
So I created stanza_get_child_by_name_and_ns() for Profanity. I need to
remember to upstream this to libstrophe later (if they really don't have
such a function).
Fix https://github.com/profanity-im/profanity/issues/1223
Profanity sends the same value for both. Other clients might not.
Safe both since we could need them later.
Once we implement Last Message Correction we will need the regular id.
If we override it with origin-id and another client chooses to not use
the same value for id and origin-id then we can't interpret the id sent
with the LMC request correctly.
Also we initialize mucuser properly.
Now in case of a carbon of a MUC PM we sv_ev_incoming_carbon() which
calls _sv_ev_incoming_plain() and then we log it via chat_log_msg_in()
in there.
But we also get the sv_ev_incoming_private_message() and call
chat_log_msg_in() in there too. So the incoming message get's logged
twice.
If we get a private message from a user in a MUC profanity shows this
like:
`profanity@roomsASDF.dismail.de/Martin: Hi`
This was so far logged at:
`~/.local/share/profanity/chatlogs/my-account-at-server/profanity_at_rooms.dismail.de/2019_09_04.log` as:
```
10:48:13 - profanity@rooms.dismail.de: Hi
```
So the nickname was not saved anywhere. This is due to us not knowing
whether we got a regular message from user@server.org/resource or a MUC
PM from room@server.org/user.
We now check for `<x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc#user' />` and
add the resourcepart to the logging if we get it.
The file will be created at
`~/.local/share/profanity/chatlogs/my-account-at-server/profanity_at_rooms.dismail.de_nick` and look like:
```
23:59:43 - nick: Hi
```
Fix https://github.com/profanity-im/profanity/issues/1184
Double-check that a <delay/> tag on a groupchat message was actually
added by the MUC service (rather than the sending client) before
assuming it was received from the MUC history.
Fixes#1173.
Probably missing copy of body to plain in carbon and privmessage.
Only covers the incoming message path because goal is OMEMO decryption
of untrusted message.
Cover some of the log functions but not all.
Reflected messages can't be filtered by nick only otherwise you might
ignore messages comming from you on another devices.
Consequently we maintain a list of sent messages id in mucwin.
To be sure the id will be correctly reflected we use the origin-id
stanza.
Store hints are required has some server might discard messages without
body. Here we ensure OMEMO messages are stored on server and delivered
to client when they connect back.
It's really important since it avoid libsignal to desynchronize
counters.
We try to decrypt all messages, if it's successful we use
sv_ev_incoming_message even for OMEMO messages. We pass an OMEMO
boolean to let UI be aware that message were encrypted.
With all the different kinds of encryption (OMEMO, OTR3 OTR4, PGP in XEP-0027 and XEP-0373) it might be helpful to know which kind of encryption is used.
create_unique_id() was changed to use UUIDs instead of a counter in the
last commit. Since now it depends on connection_create_uuid() which is
in the xmpp subfolder the function should also be moved there.
Renamed it to connection_create_stanza_id() and moved it to
src/xmpp/connection.c.
Discussion happened in https://github.com/boothj5/profanity/pull/1010
In most get-like funcitons libstrophe returns pointer to a string
that resides in an internal structure (e.g. xmpp_stanza_t). Hence,
Profanity must not change such strings. Define respective variables
as 'const char*' to reduce a chance of error and conform future
libstrophe's interface.
This patch mostly replaces 'char *' with 'const char*', but also
fixes two memory leaks after stanza_get_reason(). Add comment within
stanza_get_reason() to fix conflict with different allocator types.