| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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The taxonomy is now as follows:
* A _login_ is someone's identity for the purposes of authenticating to the service. Logins are not synchronized, and in fact are not published anywhere in the current API. They have a login ID, a name and a password.
* A _user_ is someone's identity for the purpose of participating in conversations. Users _are_ synchronized, as before. They have a user ID, a name, and a creation instant for the purposes of synchronization.
In practice, a user exists for every login - in fact, users' names are stored in the login table and are joined in, rather than being stored redundantly in the user table. A login ID and its corresponding user ID are always equal, and the user and login ID types support conversion and comparison to facilitate their use in this context.
Tokens are now associated with logins, not users. The currently-acting identity is passed down into app types as a login, not a user, and then resolved to a user where appropriate within the app methods.
As a side effect, the `GET /api/boot` method now returns a `login` key instead of a `user` key. The structure of the nested value is unchanged.
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I've split this from the schema and API changes because, frankly, it's huge. Annoyingly so. There are no semantic changes in this, it's all symbol changes, but there are a _lot_ of them because the term "channel" leaks all over everything in a service whose primary role is managing messages sent to channels (now, conversations).
I found a buggy test while working on this! It's not fixed in this commit, because it felt mean to hide a real change in the middle of this much chaff.
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In a discussion with wlonk, we both agreed that 15 days is _too_ aggressive, but also that it's not quite time to implement configurable expiry.
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The original retention values were loosely based on Slack's retention, for lack of a more specific motivator. Today's election results have changed my views; the service now defaults to retention more in line with the needs of communities for which deep message history may be a risk:
* Unused channels expire after 7 days.
* Used channels expire when their last message expires (as before).
* Deleted channels are purged after 6 hours (which is in line with the purge behaviour of messages).
* Messages expire after 15 days.
* Deleted messages are purged after 6 hours (as before).
No changes have been made to token expiry.
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This is an inconsequential change for actual clients, since "resume from the beginning" was never a preferred mode of operation, and it simplifies some internals. It should also mean we get better query plans where `coalesce(cond, true)` was previously being used.
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This also found a bug! No live event was being emitted during invite accept. The only way to find out about invites was to reconnect.
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* A `cookie::Identity` (`IdentityCookie`) is a specialized CookieJar for working with identities.
* An `Identity` is a token/login pair.
I hope for this to be a bit more legible.
In service of this, `Login` is no longer extractable. You have to get an identity.
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Previously, when a channel (message) was deleted, `hi` would send events to all _connected_ clients to inform them of the deletion, then delete all memory of the channel (message). Any disconnected client, on reconnecting, would not receive the deletion event, and would de-synch with the service. The creation events were also immediately retconned out of the event stream, as well.
With this change, `hi` keeps a record of deleted channels (messages). When replaying events, these records are used to replay the deletion event. After 7 days, the retained data is deleted, both to keep storage under control and to conform to users' expectations that deleted means gone.
To match users' likely intuitions about what deletion does, deleting a channel (message) _does_ immediately delete some of its associated data. Channels' names are blanked, and messages' bodies are also blanked. When the event stream is replayed, the original channel.created (message.sent) event is "tombstoned", with an additional `deleted_at` field to inform clients. The included client does not use this field, at least yet.
The migration is, once again, screamingingly complicated due to sqlite's limited ALTER TABLE … ALTER COLUMN support.
This change also contains capabilities that would allow the API to return 410 Gone for deleted channels or messages, instead of 404. I did experiment with this, but it's tricky to do pervasively, especially since most app-level interfaces return an `Option<Channel>` or `Option<Message>`. Redesigning these to return either `Ok(Channel)` (`Ok(Message)`) or `Err(Error::NotFound)` or `Err(Error::Deleted)` is more work than I wanted to take on for this change, and the utility of 410 Gone responses is not obvious to me. We have other, more pressing API design warts to address.
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This was motivated by Kit and I both independently discovering that sqlite3 will happily partially apply migrations, leaving the DB in a broken state.
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This separates the code that figures out what happened to an entity from the code that represents it to a user, and makes it easier to compute a snapshot at a point in time (for things like bootstrap). It also makes the internal logic a bit easier to follow, since it's easier to tell whether you're working with a point in time or with the whole recorded history.
This hefty.
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This helped me discover an organizational scheme I like more.
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Trying to reliably do expiry mid-request was causing some anomalies:
* Creating a channel with a dup name would fail, then succeed after listing channels.
It was very hard to reason about which operations needed to trigger expiry, to fix this "correctly," so now expiry runs on every request.
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It now includes events for all channels. Clients are responsible for filtering.
The schema for channel events has changed; it now includes a channel name and ID, in the same format as the sender's name and ID. They also now include a `"type"` field, whose only valid value (as of this writing) is `"message"`.
This is groundwork for delivering message deletion (expiry) events to clients, and notifying clients of channel lifecycle events.
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I had no idea `std` included a `matches!` macro, and I feel we're better off using it.
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