When sending messages in quick succession, it might be that multiple
messages are batched together in datasync, resulting in a single large
payload.
This commit changes the behavior so that we can pass a max-message-size
and we split the message in batches before sending.
A more elegant way would be to split at the transport layer (i.e
waku/whisper), but that would be incompatible with older client.
We can still do that eventually to support larger messages.
Marketing was relying on mailserver entries for checking the time a
give peer spent on the app.
This was not accurate as the assumption was that a peer would "ping" a
mailserver every 15s, which is not the case, it only hit the mailserver
as it comes from an "offline" state.
This commit changes the log level of two entries so that we have
connect/disconnect time for a given peer, which should be enough to
calculate roughly the time a peer has been online if connected to our
fleet.
On logout happens sometimes that `PeersCount` is called when the server
has been removed.
This commit adds a guard to make sure that the server is not nil when
calling `PeersCount`.
If one request failed, the whole batch would fail.
This caused issue as one of the contract is constantly returning an
error now, and essentially there was not way to fetch balance.
Also extend the timeout to 20s as we throw 165 request to Infura in one
go and it takes its time to reply to those, although it seems like we
should batch them on our side instead of sending them all cuncurrently.
This commit does two things:
1) Add an index on seen & update only the not-seen messages in the query
2) Hide long messages in the database, as that's likely spam
For some reason when calling saveChat from desktop with `lastMessage`
set to null, a sigsev is received.
The issue seems to be in logFormat
05280a7ae3/log/format.go (L356)
which for some reason blows up if passed a nil pointer (`lastMessage`).
Can't replicate on any other platform or running it locally, but hey,
this fixes the issue.
previously FullNode would only result in setting a bloom filter to full.
This behavior caused issues as you effectively cannot install a filter
on a FullNode, as it would advertise the new topic/bloom filter and stop
receiving all the messages.
This caused an issue when running push notifications servers together
with mailservers, also the behavior is a bit counter-intuitive as I
would expect the FullNode config to be honored no matter of what filters
are installed.
StartWallet was called before service initialization.
After the recent changes this call was moved after initialization, but
the geth system automatically start services.
This meant that `IsStarted()` returned true, although the reactor was
not started, and only after calling `StopWallet()` and `StartWallet()`
again the system would reach the right state.
This commit changes the behavior so that we only check whether the
reactor has been started when calling `IsStarted()` and we allow
multiple calls to `Start()` on the signal service, which won't return an
error (it's a noop if callled multiple times).
LastMessage in chat was encoded in bytes so that we don't have to
encoded/decode everytime we save to db or pass the client.
An issue with emoji surfaced a problem with this approach.
Chat.LastClockValue represent the last clock value of any type of
message exchanged in a chat (emoji,group membership updates, contact
updates).
So when receving a new message, we should update LastMessage if the
clock of the LastMessage is lower than the received message, and we
should not only check LastClockValue, otherwise the message might be
discarded although it is the most recent.
This commit fixes the issue by keeping LastMessage as an object and
comparing LastMessage.Clock instead of LastClockValue
If a message was inserted before the migration the field
audio_duration_ms would be set to NULL, and would not be serialized into
go correctly, as uint is non-nullable.
this commit fixes the issue by calling COALESCE on the value.