Which specifies that if a user is not a community member & a
chat member, he can't post, react or pin messages in that chat.
Notes:
- also fix&cleanup associated failing tests.
- refactor Community.CanPost() to reflect the new requirement.
- grant code is not fully implemented and is to be removed later.
Fixes https://github.com/status-im/status-desktop/issues/11915
With the recent introduction of pending states, the community requests
logic became more complex. This commit simplifies the flow and
appropriately delegates logic to its corresponding abstraction levels:
messenger, manager and community. Additionally, it eliminates
redundancies in notifications and request-saving mechanism.
- use protected topics for communities
- associate chats to pubsub topics and populate these depending if the chat belongs to a community or not
- mailserver functions should be aware of pubsub topics
- generate private key for pubsub topic protection when creating a community
- add shard cluster and index to communities
- setup shards for existing communities
- distribute pubsubtopic password
- fix: do not send the requests to join and cancel in the protected topic
- fix: undefined shard values for backward compatibility
- refactor: use shard message in protobuffers
* feat: introduce KickedPending state for community members
* feat: tests for ban/unban pending states
* fix: remove pending And banned members from public serialization
* feat: add check for banning and kicking privileged users
* fix: process only first event when obtaining PendingAndBannedMembers
* fix: review fixes
* fix: proper conditions for kicking and banning checks
* Fix: fix tests after rebase
- share requests to join with new privileged roles during reevaluating member role
- share requests to join with new members, joined the community as TOKEN_MASTER, ADMIN
- share requests to join revealed addresses to ADMINS and TOKEN_MASTERS
- refactor common test functionality to make them more predictable
- removed unused CommunityToken protobuf
refactor: associate chats to pubsub topics and populate these depending if the chat belongs to a community or not
refactor: add pubsub topic to mailserver batches
chore: ensure default relay messages continue working as they should
refactor: mailserver functions should be aware of pubsub topics
fix: use []byte for communityIDs
This is a bigger change in how community membership requests are handled
among admins, token masters, owners, and control nodes.
Prior to this commit, all privileged users, also known as
`EventSenders`, were able to accept and reject community membership
requests and those changes would be applied by all users.
This commit changes this behaviour such that:
1. EventSenders can make a decision (accept, reject), but merely forward
their decision to the control node, which ultimately has to confirm
it
2. EventSenders are no longer removing or adding members to and from
communities
3. When an eventsender signaled a decision, the membership request will
enter a pending state (acceptedPending or rejectedPending)
4. Once a decision was made by one eventsender, no other eventsender can
override that decision
This implementation is covered with a bunch of tests:
- Ensure that decision made by event sender is shared with other event
senders
- `testAcceptMemberRequestToJoinResponseSharedWithOtherEventSenders()`
- `testRejectMemberRequestToJoinResponseSharedWithOtherEventSenders()`
- Ensure memebrship request stays pending, until control node has
confirmed decision by event senders
- `testAcceptMemberRequestToJoinNotConfirmedByControlNode()`
- `testRejectMemberRequestToJoinNotConfirmedByControlNode()`
- Ensure that decision made by event sender cannot be overriden by other
event senders
- `testEventSenderCannotOverrideRequestToJoinState()`
These test cases live in three test suites for different event sender
types respectively
- `OwnerWithoutCommunityKeyCommunityEventsSuite`
- `TokenMasterCommunityEventsSuite`
- `AdminCommunityEventsSuite`
In addition to the changes mentioned above, there's also a smaller
changes that ensures membership requests to *not* attached revealed wallet
addresses when the requests are sent to event senders (in addition to
control nodes).
Requests send to a control node will still include revealed addresses as
the control node needs them to verify token permissions.
This commit does not yet handle the case of event senders attempting to
kick and ban members.
Similar to accepting and rejecting membership requests, kicking and
banning need a new pending state. However, we don't track such state in
local databases yet so those two cases will be handled in future commit
to not have this commit grow larger.
- distribute ratchet keys at both community and channel levels
- use explicit `HashRatchetGroupID` in ecryption layer, instead of
inheriting `groupID` from `CommunityID`
- populate `HashRatchetGroupID` with `CommunityID+ChannelID` for
channels, and `CommunityID` for whole community
- hydrate channels with members; channel members are now subset of
community members
- include channel permissions in periodic permissions check
closes: status-im/status-desktop#10998
This component decouples key distribution from the Messenger, enhancing
code maintainability, extensibility and testability.
It also alleviates the need to impact all methods potentially affecting
encryption keys.
Moreover, it allows key distribution inspection for integration tests.
part of: status-im/status-desktop#10998
* chore: make the owner without the community private key behave like an admin
* Add test for the owner without community key
* chore: refactor Community fn names related to the roles
* feat: add api to remove private key and separete owner from private key ownership
For https://github.com/status-im/status-desktop/issues/11475
* feat: introduce IsControlNode for Community
* feat: remove community private key from syncing
* feat: add IsControlNode flag to Community json serialisation
* Update protocol/protobuf/pairing.proto
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Rainville <rainville.jonathan@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Rainville <rainville.jonathan@gmail.com>
chore:
- add CommunityEventsMessage
- refactor community_admin_event to accept a list of events and patch a CommunityDescription
- save/read community events into/from database
- publish and handle community events message
- fixed admin category tests
- rename AdminEvent to Events or CommunityEvents
I have encountered a crash in the app after syncing, looks like a
community has been created without a Config.
This crashes the app after the user logs in.
This commit prevents the app from crashing, but does not fix the
underlaying issue (that's something I will have to investigate).
Added tests to validate the behavior.
Check community exists
Modify API to handle also ERC20 tokens.
Modify community_tokens table - keep supply as string since string is easly convertible to bigint.BigInt.
Use bigint.BigInt for supply functions and fields.
Issue #11129
* feat(share-links): Add protobuf and encode/decode url data methods
* feat(new-links-format): Adds generators for new links format
* feat: add parsing for new links format
* feat: add messenger-level pubkey serialization and tests
* feat: fix and test CreateCommunityURLWithChatKey
* feat: impl and test parseCommunityURLWithChatKey
* feat: fix and test CreateCommunityURLWithData
* feat: impl and test parseCommunityURLWithData (not working)
* feat: UrlDataResponse as response share urls api
* feat: impl& tested ShareCommunityChannelURLWithChatKey
* feat: impl & tested ParseCommunityChannelURLWithChatKey
* fix: bring urls to new format
* feat: add regexp for community channel urls
* feat: impl & test contact urls with chatKey, Ens and data
* fix: encodeDataURL/encodeDataURL patch from Samyoul
* fix: fix unmarshalling protobufs
* fix: fix minor issues, temporary comment TestParseUserURLWithENS
* fix: allow url to contain extra `#` in the signature
* fix: check signatures with SigToPub
* chore: lint fixes
* fix: encode the signature
* feat: Check provided channelID is Uuid
* fix(share-community-url): Remove if community encrypted scope
* fix: review fixes
* fix: use proto.Unmarshal instead of json.Marshal
* feat(share-urls): Adds TagsIndices to community data
* feat: support tag indices to community url data
---------
Co-authored-by: Boris Melnik <borismelnik@status.im>
- Add ERC20 contract
- Add decimals field to community_tokens db table
- Adjusting API to handle assets deployment
- Add decimals field to CommunityTokenMetadata
Issue #10987
Similar to `CheckPermissionToJoin()` we now get
a `CheckChannelPermissions()` API.
It will rely on the same `PermissionResponse` types, but gives
information about both `ViewOnlyPermissions` and
`ViewAndPostPermissions`.
This commit does a few things:
- Adds a migration that adds chainids to communities_request_to_join_revealed_addresses
- Removes RevealedAddress in favor of RevealedAccount which is now a struct that contains the revealed address, as well as the signature and a list of chain IDs on which to check for user funds
- Changes the logic of sending requests to join a community, such that after creating address signatures, the user node will also check which of the addresses has funds on which networks for the community's token permissions, and add the chainds to the RevealedAccount
- Updates checkPermissionToJoin() such that only relevant chainids are used when checking user's funds. Chain IDs are retrieved from RevealedAccounts and matched against token permission criteria chain IDs
When a community permission is edited, we need to revalidate
the token criteria with the existing member list, as members might
no longer fulfill the requirements.
This commit runs the checks in a go routine after the permission has
been updated.
This adds checks to `HandleCommunityRequestToJoin` and
`AcceptRequestToJoinCommunity` that ensure a given user's revealed
wallet addresses own the token funds required by a community.
When community has token permissions of type `BECOME_MEMBER`, the
following happens when the owner receives a request:
1. Upon verifying provided wallet addresses by the requester, the owner
node accumulates all token funds related to the given wallets that
match the token criteria in the configured permissions
2. If the requester does not meet the necessary requirements, the
request to join will be declined. If the requester does have the
funds, he'll either be automatically accepted to the community, or
enters the next stage where an owner needs to manually accept the
request.
3. The the community does not automatically accept users, then the funds
check will happen again, when the owner tries to manually accept the
request. If the necessary funds do not exist at this stage, the
request will be declined
4. Upon accepting, whether automatically or manually, the owner adds the
requester's wallet addresses to the `CommunityDescription`, such that
they can be retrieved later when doing periodic checks or when
permissions have changed.
This commit extends the `CommunityRequestToJoin` with `RevealedAddresses` which represent wallet addresses and signatures provided by the sender, to proof a community owner ownership of those wallet addresses.
**Note: This only works with keystore files maanged by status-go**
At high level, the follwing happens:
1. User instructs Status to send a request to join to a community. By adding a password hash to the instruction, Status will try to unlock the users keystore and verify each wallet account.
2. For every verified wallet account, a signature is created for the following payload, using each wallet's private key
``` keccak256(chatkey + communityID + requestToJoinID) ``` A map of walletAddress->signature is then attached to the community request to join, which will be sent to the community owner
3. The owner node receives the request, and if the community requires users to hold tokens to become a member, it will check and verify whether the given wallet addresses are indeed owned by the sender. If any signature provided by the request cannot be recovered, the request is immediately declined by the owner.
4. The verified addresses are then added to the owner node's database such that, once the request should be accepted, the addresses can be used to check on chain whether they own the necessary funds to fulfill the community's permissions
The checking of required funds is **not** part of this commit. It will be added in a follow-up commit.
The `Edit()` method on `Community` merely updates "primitive" values
that live inside a community description. For any data that is more complex,
we typically have dedicated methods.
Because `Edit()` was expecting `CommunityTokensMetadata`, it would
override it with empty data every time we would edit a community.
This is because we typically don't update that kind of data as part
of `Edit()`.
In addition, `CommunityTokensMetadata` is append-only anyways,
so there wouldn't be any other way to update that field, other than
adding new items to it, which is done in a dedicated method.
Community tokens has some metadata (image, description) which must be kept in waku(CommunityDescription).
Add CommunityTokenMetadata message to communities.proto.
Add []CommunityTokenMetadata to CommunityDescription.
Issue #9545
- added `SpectateCommunity` endpoint, it is supposed to be used in
scenarios where we want to "Go to public Community" and see its
content without joining
- added `spectated` field to `Community`, it means we are observing the
community and its chats but we are not members
Use case:
https://github.com/status-im/status-desktop/issues/7072#issuecomment-1246560885
This might look like a weird requirement at a fist glance.
The reason this is needed, is because some message signals require
admin rights to take effect (e.g. PinMessage).
When messages are imported from third-party services,
translated to status messages, signed by the community, and eventually distributed
via the archive protocol, we need to ensure that messages signed
by the community itself are considered as admin privileges as well,
so they can be correctly replayed into the database.
`FirstMessageTimestamp` enables members of the community to determine if
there are any messages they can fetch on the community channel(chat).
`FirstMessageTimestamp` is advertised by admin for each community chat
through `CommunityDescription`. It assumes admin is online frequently
enough to capture the first channel message.
For existing communities admin determines first message timestamp by
finding oldest chat message in its local database.
task: status-im/status-desktop#6731
This commit introduces a few changes regarding users accessing
communities:
While the APIs still exist, community invites should no longer be
used, instead communities should merely be "shared".
Sharing a community to users allows users to "join" the community,
which in reality makes them request access to that community.
This means, users have to request access to any community, even if
the community has permissions set to NO_MEMBERSHIP
Only difference between ON_REQUEST and NO_MEMBERSHIP is that
ON_REQUEST communities require manual approval of the owner/admin
to access a community. NO_MEMBERSHIP communities accept
automatically (as soon as owner/admin receives the request).
This also implies that users are no longer optimistically added to the
member list of communities, but only after they have been accepted.
This introduces a bit of a message ping-pong for users to know that
someone is now part of a community
This commit introduces a new `clock` field in the
`communities_settings` table so that it can be leveraged for syncing
community settings across devices.
It alsoe exends existing `syncCommunity` APIs to generate
`SyncCommunitySettings` as well, avoiding sending additional sync messages
for community settings.
When editing communities however, we still sync community settings
explicitly are we aren't syncing the community itself in that case.