libchat/docs/adr/0001-client-event-system.md
osmaczko addcde03eb feat: introduce client event system
- Core returns `InboundResult` — a typed struct with an optional
  `NewConversation` and a `FrameOutcome` of decrypted messages.
- Client surfaces app-facing events via `Vec<Event>`, translated from
  `InboundResult` at the boundary.
- MLS group welcomes now produce a `ConversationStarted` event with no
  initial content, fixing the silent-group-join case where the inbox
  layer dropped the observation.
- C FFI exposes an `EventList` opaque type with indexed accessors and
  an `Invalid` sentinel for OOB / non-applicable reads.
- Symmetric `Inbox` / `InboxV2` handlers: both return
  `Result<InboundResult, _>` and own the persistence + ephemeral-key
  cleanup for the conversations they create.
- Updated and simplified `docs/adr/0001-client-event-system.md`.
2026-05-26 12:05:44 +02:00

5.7 KiB

Client Event System

Field Value
Status Accepted
Issue https://github.com/logos-messaging/libchat/issues/97
Date 2026-05-19
Last revised 2026-05-25

Context and Problem

Applications must observe several kinds of things produced by the chat library: new conversations appearing from peer-initiated handshakes, decrypted messages on existing conversations, and further protocol observations (group membership changes, reliability signals). These observations are not coupled — an MLS group welcome creates a new conversation with no initial content; a single inbound payload can yield multiple observations; some observations (delivery timeouts from background retry work) have no synchronous trigger at all and must reach the application after the call that might have caused them has long since returned.

Issue #97 captures the requirement for an observation surface that does not piggy-back on content, accommodates both sync-triggered and background-triggered observations uniformly, and crosses the FFI boundary cleanly.

Decision Drivers

  • Simplicity of the core. Fully synchronous and caller-driven: no background work, no callbacks out. External effects flow through services injected as method parameters.
  • Asynchronous delivery at the client. Applications consume events on their own schedule. Observations from sync-triggered processing and observations from background work share a single delivery surface, so the application sees one notification stream and does not care which path produced any given event.
  • FFI compatibility. Payloads crossing the safer-ffi boundary in crates/client-ffi are limited to owned, concrete data — no closures, generics, or non-'static references — so any delivery mechanism must degrade to a sync drain on that side.

Architecture

Three layers. Calls flow downward. Sync results return through method returns; events reach the application asynchronously through a channel.

flowchart TB
    A["<b>app</b><br/>drains Receiver&lt;Event&gt;"]
    B["<b>client</b><br/>owns transport poller + services<br/>translates InboundResult → Event values<br/>pushes onto channel"]
    C["<b>core</b><br/>strict sync, caller-driven<br/>returns InboundResult"]

    A -- "method calls" --> B
    B -- "method calls" --> C
    C -.->|"InboundResult<br/>(sync method return)"| B
    B == "Event (async channel)" ==> A

Crates: appbin/chat-cli, future logos-chat-module; clientcrates/client, crates/client-ffi; corecore/conversations and friends in libchat.

Decisions

  1. Core returns InboundResult, a structural result type. One field per kind of observation a payload can produce: an optional new conversation, plus a FrameOutcome carrying everything a per-conversation frame processor yields. The structural shape encodes causality (a new conversation is logically prior to anything that happens inside it), so a wrong ordering of observations cannot be represented in the type. FrameOutcome exists as a separate type because Convo::handle_frame cannot create a conversation; embedding it inside InboundResult keeps each return type producing only what its source can populate.

  2. Event is an asynchronous notification. The client's constructor returns a Receiver<Event> alongside the client handle. A background poller drives the transport, calls into the core for each inbound payload, translates the resulting InboundResult into one event per observation, and pushes them onto the channel. Background work that has no synchronous trigger at all (delivery retry timeouts, future protocol timers) pushes onto the same channel.

  3. Two enums, mapping at the client boundary. InboundResult is the structural sum of observations from one payload; Event is a discrete app-facing notification. The two enums are allowed to diverge: a protocol-internal observation the app does not need lives only on FrameOutcome; a client-only event like DeliveryFailed { Timeout } lives only on Event. Translation is an explicit per-variant match inside the client — not a blanket From impl — to preserve that divergence as both sides grow.

Events vs errors

Events are asynchronous notifications: things the application learns after the call that might have triggered them has returned. They cross thread boundaries through the channel.

Synchronous failures — publish, parse, store, MLS — stay on Result<_, ChatError> on the call that triggered them. They are never events. DeliveryFailed { reason } is therefore an event by construction: only background work can raise it, after the original send already returned Ok.

Sequence

Two flows cover everything the application observes: a synchronous send initiated by the app, and inbound bytes carried by the client's transport poller.

sequenceDiagram
    participant App
    participant Client
    participant Poller as Client poller (background)
    participant Core
    participant Delivery as DeliveryService

    Note over App,Delivery: Outbound — synchronous send
    App->>Client: send_message(convo, content)
    Client->>Core: send_content(...)
    Core->>Delivery: publish(envelope)
    Delivery-->>Core: Ok / Err
    Core-->>Client: Ok(()) / Err
    Client-->>App: Ok(()) / Err

    Note over Poller,Delivery: Inbound — background poller pushes events
    Poller->>Delivery: poll
    Delivery-->>Poller: payload bytes
    Poller->>Core: handle_payload(payload)
    Core-->>Poller: Ok(InboundResult)
    Poller->>Poller: translate fields → Event values
    Poller-)App: events via Receiver<Event>

    Note over App: App drains on its own schedule
    App->>App: for event in receiver.try_iter() { handle(event) }