This property is useful for clients to know when a channel or chat
was joined so they can use that to calculate the order of channels
and chats shown in applications.
Changes include a new joined property on the Chat struct,
as well as adjustments in the persistence layer to retreive and
update chat data in the database.
In addition there's a migration script that alters the existing
chat table to introduce a new column for the joined field.
It also updates all existing rows in the database to set `joined`
to `0`.
* Added anon metrics send opt in setting
* resolved rebase conflict, renamed migration to use unixtimestamp
Theres always conflicts with migrations using sequential numbers, less so with unix timestamp
* Add extra event to capture other type of navigations, allow empty screen name, rename cofx to get rid of clj ns, update tests
* Some view ids are greater than 16 characters. Made it 32 to be safe.
* Tab navigation events occur outside nav, add a new validator for them
* Remove navigate to cofx event, capture screens on will focus, get rid of enum and make valid screens a string less than 32 characters
* Run make generate
* Fix test
* Bump version to 0.75.1
* Migrations in place, how to run them?
* Remove down migrations and touch database.go
* Database and Database Test package in place, added functions to get and store app metrics
* make generate output
* Minor bug fix on app metrics insert and select
* Add a validation layer to restrict what can be saved in the database
* Make validation more terse, throw error if schema doesn't exist, expose appmetrics service
* service updates
* Compute all errors before sending them out
* Trying to bring a closjure to appmetrics go
* Expose appmetrics via an api, skip fancy
* Address value as Jason Dawt Rawmasage to ease parsing
* Introduce a buffered chan with magic cap of 8 to minimize writes to DB. Tests for service and API. Also expose GetAppMetrics function.
* Lint issues
* Remove autoincrement, undo waku.json changes, fix error being shadowed, return nil where nil ought to be returned, get rid of buffered channel
* Bump migration number
* Fix API factory usage
* Add comment re:json.RawMessage instead of strings
* Get rid of test vars, throw save error inside the loop
* Update version
Co-authored-by: Samuel Hawksby-Robinson <samuel@samyoul.com>
This commit expands the confirmation mechanism to allow private group
chat messages to be confirmed:
Changes:
- Added a separate table for message confirmations as group chat
messages have same messageID but multiple datasyncID
- Removed DataSyncID from raw message (I haven't removed the column name
as it can't be done in sqlite without copying over the table)
There was a bug on status-react where it would save filters that were
not listened to.
This commit adds a task to clean up those filters as they might result
in long syncing times.
This commit also returns topics/ranges/mailserves from messenger in
order to make the initialization of the app simpler and start moving
logic to status-go.
It also removes whisper from vendor.
One of the issues we noticed is that the partitioned topic
in push notification is heavy in traffic, as any user using a particular
mailserver will use that partitioned topic to register for PNs.
This commit moves from the partitioned topic to the personal topic of
the PN server, so it does not clash with other users that might happen
to have the same partitioned topic as the mailserver, resulting in long
sync times.
Another issue that will need to be addressed separately is that once you
send a message to a topic, because of the way how waku/whisper works,
you will have to register to that topic, meaning that you will receive
that data. Currently waku does not support unsubscribing from a topic
without logging in and out, so that needs also to be addressed.
This commit fixes a couple of issues:
1) Emojis were sent to any member of the group chat, regardless of
whether they joined
2) We don't want to wrap emojis, as there's no need to do so, only
messages are to be wrapped
This commit re-introduces a feature that we lost during the migration to
status-go.
Messages are cached for a couple of days if processed correctly by
status-go, to avoid performance issues.
In some instances the communities migration would be skipped but not
marked as `dirty`.
This commit addresses the issue by:
- Making sure that if dirty is set the migration is not skipped but
replayed
- If the version is on the communities migration and dirty is false, we
check for the presence of the communities table. If not present we
replay the communities migration.
- Make community_id field in user_messages nullable
It also removes all the `down` migration, as we can't use them
effectively, as explained in the README.md added.
Currently replies to messages are handled in status-react.
This causes some issues with the fact that sometimes replies might come
out of order, they might be offloaded to the database etc.
This commit changes the behavior so that status-go always returns the
replies, and in case a reply comes out of order (first the reply, later
the message being replied to), it will include in the messages the
updated message.
It also adds some fields (RTL,Replace,LineCount) to the database which
were not previously saved, resulting in some potential bugs.
The method that we use to pull replies is currently a bit naive, we just
pull all the message again from the database, but has the advantage of
being simple. It will go through performance testing to make sure
performnace are acceptable, if so I think it's reasonable to avoid some
complexity.
* Add status-option code
This commits changes the behavior of waku introducing a new status-code,
`2`, that replaces the current single options codes.
* linting
*** How it worked before this PR on multiaccount creation:
- On multiacc creation we scanned chain for eth and erc20 transfers. For
each address of a new empty multiaccount this scan required
1. two `eth_getBalance` requests to find out that there is no any
balance change between zero and the last block, for eth transfers
2. and `chain-size/100000` (currently ~100) `eth_getLogs` requests,
for erc20 transfers
- For some reason we scanned an address of the chat account as well, and
also accounts were not deduplicated. So even for an empty multiacc we
scanned chain twice for each chat and main wallet addresses, in result
app had to execute about 400 requests.
- As mentioned above, `eth_getBalance` requests were used to check if
there were any eth transfers, and that caused empty history in case
if user already used all available eth (so that both zero and latest
blocks show 0 eth for an address). There might have been transactions
but we wouldn't fetch/show them.
- There was no upper limit for the number of rpc requests during the
scan, so it could require indefinite number of requests; the scanning
algorithm was written so that we persisted the whole history of
transactions or tried to scan form the beginning again in case of
failure, giving up only after 10 minutes of failures. In result
addresses with sufficient number of transactions would never be fully
scanned and during these 10 minutes app could use gigabytes of
internet data.
- Failures were caused by `eth_getBlockByNumber`/`eth_getBlockByHash`
requests. These requests return significantly bigger responses than
`eth_getBalance`/`eth_transactionsCount` and it is likely that
execution of thousands of them in parallel caused failures for
accounts with hundreds of transactions. Even for an account with 12k
we could successfully determine blocks with transaction in a few
minutes using `eth_getBalance` requests, but `eth_getBlock...`
couldn't be processed for this acc.
- There was no caching for for `eth_getBalance` requests, and this
caused in average 3-4 times more such requests than is needed.
*** How it works now on multiaccount creation:
- On multiacc creation we scan chain for last ~30 eth transactions and
then check erc20 in the range where these eth transactions were found.
For an empty address in multiacc this means:
1. two `eth_getBalance` transactions to determine that there was no
balance change between zero and the last block; two
`eth_transactionsCount` requests to determine there are no outgoing
transactions for this address; total 4 requests for eth transfers
2. 20 `eth_getLogs` for erc20 transfers. This number can be lowered,
but that's not a big deal
- Deduplication of addresses is added and also we don't scan chat
account, so a new multiacc requires ~25 (we also request latest block
number and probably execute a few other calls) request to determine
that multiacc is empty (comparing to ~400 before)
- In case if address contains transactions we:
1. determine the range which contains 20-25 outgoing eth/erc20
transactions. This usually requires up to 10 `eth_transactionCount`
requests
2. then we scan chain for eth transfers using `eth_getBalance` and
`eth_transactionCount` (for double checking zero balances)
3. we make sure that we do not scan db for more than 30 blocks with
transfers. That's important for accounts with mostly incoming
transactions, because the range found on the first step might
contain any number of incoming transfers, but only 20-25 outgoing
transactions
4. when we found ~30 blocks in a given range, we update initial
range `from` block using the oldest found block
5. and now we scan db for erc20transfers using `eth_getLogs`
`oldest-found-eth-block`-`latest-block`, we make not more than 20 calls
6. when all blocks which contain incoming/outgoing transfers for a
given address are found, we save these blocks to db and mark that
transfers from these blocks are still to be fetched
7. Then we select latest ~30 (the number can be adjusted) blocks from
these which were found and fetch transfers, this requires 3-4
requests per transfer.
8. we persist scanned range so that we know were to start next time
9. we dispatch an event which tells client that transactions are found
10. client fetches latest 20 transfers
- when user presses "fetch more" button we check if app's db contains next
20 transfers, if not we scan chain again and return transfers after
small fixes
Move settings table schema from a key-value store to a one row table with many columns.
We now save the first row with initial data in saveAccountAndLogin and follow up saveSetting calls are only saving one setting at a time.
Co-authored-by: Adam Babik <a.babik@designfortress.com>