* Move installations to status-go
This commit moves installations management/storage to status-go.
We remove the native binding and provide RPC endpoints to set the
metadata and return a list of our own installations.
* Cache keys
Generating a symkey can take up to a second on slow devices, this commit
makes so that keys are saved once generated and stored in the database.
This commit add topic negotiation to the protocol.
On receiving a message from a client with version >= 1, we will generate
a shared key using Diffie-Hellman. We will record also which
installationID has sent us a message.
This key will be passed back to the above layer, which will then use to
start listening to a whisper topic (the `chat` namespace has no
knowledge of whisper).
When sending a message to a set of InstallationIDs, we check whether we
have agreed on a topic with all of them, and if so, we will send on this
separate topic, otherwise we fallback on discovery.
This change is backward compatible, as long as there is no downgrade of
the app on the other side.
A few changes:
* Factored out the DB in a separate namespace as now it is
being used by multiple services (TopicService and EncryptionService).
* Factored out multidevice management in a separate namespace
* Moved all the test to test the whole protoocl rather than just the encryption service
* Moved all the filter management in status-go
In RequestMessagesSync subscriber is listening to a feed where all whisper
events are posted. After we received event with a request hash - subscriber will
stop actively consuming messages from a feed, as a subscription channel will
get overflow and whole feed will get blocked.
Some events are posted to a feed before request is sent, so blocked feed results
in blocked sending.
Now we will unsubscribe after relevant event was received, and terminate subscriber
explicitly by timeout.
This commits adds support for postgres database.
Currently two fields are stored: the bloom filter and the topic.
Only the bloom filter is actually used to query, but potentially we will
use also the topic in the future, so easier to separate it now in order
to avoid a migration.
As part of a performance profiling of mailserver we noticed that most of
the resources on a query are spend decoding the whisper envelope.
This PR changes the way we store envelopes encoding the Topic into the
database key, so we can check that and we are able to publish the
envelope rawValue if it matches.
The change is backward compatible as only newly added envelopes will
have the new key, while old ones will have to be unmarshaled.
* Replace request ID when same request is restarted
* Remove unnecessary changes
* Execute all writes atomically only if request was processed succesfully
* Fix linter
* Fix shadowed errors
* Fix spelling
* Do not append same reference to a byte slice
* Notify users that envelope was discarded and retry sending it
* Update Gopkg files with released whisper version
* Forgot to remove signal after refactoring
* Split shhext.tracker into envelopes and mail monitors
* Send envelopes on every new attempt to deliver a message
* Re-send user payloads if previous envelopes weren't acknowledged
* Remove debug api across the codebase
Currently we only decrypt messages if received on the current bundle.
This changes the behavior so that messages can be decrypted if sent to
previous bundles as well, as otherwise is a bit restrictive
Currently PFS messages are decrypted and therefore modified before being
passed to the client. This make IDs computation difficult, as we pass
the whole object to the client and expect the object be passed back once
confirmed.
This changes the behavior allowing confirmation by ID, which is passed
to the client instead of the raw object.
This is a breaking change, but status-react is already forward
compatible.
This PR does a few things:
1) Add a call GetContactCode to check whether we have a bundle for a
given user.
2) Add a DH flag to the API (non-breaking change), for those messages
that we want to target all devices (contact-requests for example).
3) Fixes a few small issues with installations, namely if for example a
messages is sent without a bundle (currently not done by any client),
we still infer installation info, so that we can communicate securely
and making it truly optional.
We change the protocol to accomodate publishing multiple bundles, in
order to propagate bundles for group chats and have a way to extend it
further.
This commit re-introduces backward compatibility for direct messages,
to be removed once that is not an issue anymore.
* select account decrypting wallet and chat keys
* adapt account tests to use chat and wallet account/keys
* fix tests using chat address
* changes after review
* fix status service e2e tests
* add account.Info struct returned when creating and recovering an account
* use s.EqualValues to compare recovered accounts
* return Info instead of *Info
* add both address and walletAddress to responses
* Update lib/types.go
Co-Authored-By: gravityblast <andrea@gravityblast.com>
* Update lib/types.go
Co-Authored-By: gravityblast <andrea@gravityblast.com>
* update comment to fix lint
`kdf_iter` parameter is reduced to 3200. This change is done because of
performance reasons, currently key derivation is too slow on some mobile
devices. The number of iterations before this commit is 64000, default
value in `sqlcipher` from version `3.0.0`.
fda4c68bb4/CHANGELOG.md (300---2013-11-05)
Implementation:
`sqlcipher_export` is used for migration, check out the link below
for details
https://www.zetetic.net/sqlcipher/sqlcipher-api/#sqlcipher_export
Change to support sending multiple bundles, as needed for group chats,
limit number of devices to 3 as already done in the UI and refresh
bundle daily.
This change allows to connect to the mail server that we were using before the app was restarted. Separate loop is listening for whisper events, and when we receive event that request was completed we will update time on a peer record.
Records are stored in leveldb. Body of the record is marshaled using json. At this point the only field is a timestamp when record was used.
This loop doesn't control connections, it only tracks what mail server we ended up using. It works asynchronously to connection management loop. Which tracks events that are related to connection state and expiry of the requests.
When app starts we look into the database and select the most recently used record. This record is added to connection management loop first. So if this server is available we will stick to using it. If we weren't able to connect to the same server in configured timeout (5s) we will try to connect to any other server from list of active servers.
closes: #1285