| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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There was an off-by-one in the modulo calculation. Switching to a plain
old array-table makes the apparent size of the queue wrong, but since
some of the queue may not be available this is likely for the best.
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This brings back the queue size limit that was once added, then removed
because destroying the session when reaching the limit was not great.
Instead, the queue wraps and overwrites the oldest unacked stanza on the
assumption that it will probably be acked anyway and thus does not need
to be delivered. If those discarded stanzas turn out to be needed on
resumption then the resumption fails.
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Meant to be used in mod_smacks for XEP-0198
Meant to have a larger virtual size than actual number of items stored,
on the theory that in most cases, the excess will be acked before needed
for a resumption event.
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Extending the timeout by poking the watchdog, and letting it go on
resumption, should be much better than the previous method.
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All that was a complicated way to limit the number of resumable
sessions. Let's control resource usage some other way. This leaves the
essence of mapping resumption tokens to live sessions.
This keeps resumption state across reloads.
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This allows clients that try to resume a session after a server restart
to at least know which of their pending outgoing stanzas were received
and which need to be re-sent.
This removes the limit on how many of those counters are kept, which
should be fixed eventually.
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Since nothing uses it. Some equivalent functionality may return in the
future.
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I have no idea what is going on in this code, which session is which?
Something has one of the sessions as an upvalue which is where the
filter checks for it.
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Encountered what looks like a bug where after *many* resumptions, part
of the queue was not acked.
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Maybe it works now with the session patching in the previous commit
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The number of places where the session is an upvalue to its own methods
is too high!
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As per a86ae74da96c the 'session' object here is the wrong session, so
the attempt to block stanzas from being added to the queue twice did not
work causing something of a leak.
Instead we have a leak of the previous session.
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The attempted fix completely broke everything after resumption.
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a86ae74da96c caused the stanza queue to double on resumption because
session.send() keeps a reference to the session which is what gets
passed to filters, so the added flag was not seen in the filter.
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A search for log formats in use points to %s being the most common,
followed by %d, so worth having a fast path for that. %g works well with
most numbers and is what Lua 5.1 and 5.2 used
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To aid in debugging
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Amazing how string.format behaves differently under each Lua version
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The more tests I made, the more Lua 5.1 quirks I discovered.
Tests generated using a tool plus some touch-up.
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Ie. log("debug", "%d", "\1\2\3") should not result in garbage.
Also optimizing for the common case of ASCII string passed to %s and
early returns everywhere.
Returning nil from a gsub callback keeps the original substring.
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Should prevent invalid UTF-8 from making it into the logs, which can
cause trouble with terminals or log viewers or other tools, such as when
grep determines that log files are binary.
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This should rule out error replies to PEP notifications, which come from
the account bare JID, and would be reflected back to it if they can't be
delivered for some reason, e.g. s2s problems.
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Including the payload of the stanza that caused the error is optional
and we're generally not doing it anywhere else.
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Mistake introduced in cbe524ed1a6a. Removing because this is a query to
the bare JID where the error origin matches the resulting stanza 'from'.
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The numeric error codes seems to have been removed from the examples in
XEP-0045 version 1.24, and were deprecated even by RFC 3920 in 2004,
only allowed for backwards compatibility.
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I spend several minutes confused over where the bug was until I
remembered I had set myself as visitor in the previous debug session.
This would have helped.
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Not a particularly user-friendly error message, but better than "unable
to resolve service" and having no clue where it came from.
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This should allow modules to override the username in a profile handler by
assigning to self.username.
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Allows inferring whether Direct TLS was used, or perhaps which SRV
record was chosen. Not shown by default.
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It was previously set to the hostname, not the users bare JID which
would be correct.
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This allows overriding it in cases where it is not equal to module.host,
like say, in mod_pep
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So that the methods are there and don't cause an error.
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Is it not odd that um.set_roles() takes `nil` to mean global?
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If you already know the account, from say the server contact info, then
this confirms their admin status.
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Can these even be seen?
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Needed to e.g. grant admin rights on a component, or grant non-local
users local privileges.
Leave the same host syntax for convenience, since this might be the
common case.
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This would allow e.g. granting admin status without changing the config
and without a restart.
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With opportunistic writes enabled, writes can return what :onwritable()
returns, thus :onwritable() should return something sensible at each
spot.
Should prevent whatever caused
> Error writing to connection: (nil)
Tho this was probably harmless
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This makes it easier to reschedule or otherwise manipulate the timer
from e.g. the shell, which is handy for debugging.
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