Groups are saved as separate vCards. We removed support for groups to
speed up development and deferred adding them back until there was
demand.
There is demand now, and also, not having this support resulted in the
sync not working, not just groups not supported.
Many thanks to "359" (this user's preferred alias) for investigating and
reporting this issue.
Due to a logical issue in the code, new journal entries were added to the
local cache after they've been created locally, and not after they've
been added to the server. Under normal circumstances this doesn't pose a
problem, however when pushing to the server fails, the local cache
would have the new entries as if they were saved on the server, causing
the app to think there has been a corruption on the server (as entries
should never be removed from the server) and halt the sync.
This change makes it so the entries are saved to the local cache only
after they've been saved on the server.
Note: this was not spotted until now because it relies on an unfortunate
specific sequence of events. It only happens when creating journal
entries, and when trying to sync them successfully connecting to the
server to fetch the journal list and the content of the journal itself,
and only failing when coming to push the journals.
Many thanks to "359" (this user's preferred alias) for reporting the
issue that resulted in this fix.
I assumed the lifecycle of the fragment and the task were tied because they
are tied to the instance, but it looks like I was wrong. We need to
explicitly cancel tasks.
This patch changes the fetching so if the last fetch returned less entries
than the limit, we don't try and fetch again because we already know there
are no others left.
Before this commit we used to fetch the whole journal entry list in one
go, which caused issues in two cases:
1. On slow internet connections the download may fail.
2. With big journals: Android interrupts sync managers if they don't
perform any significant network traffic for over a minute[1],
and because we would first download and only then process, we would
sometimes hit this threshold.
Current chunk size is set to 50.
1: https://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/AbstractThreadedSyncAdapter.html
I set it to 2048 following the NIST recommendations[1] which said it was
OK, but actually, as pointed out by Dominik Schürmann, it's probably a
better idea to set to 3072.
Users who already have a 2048 key pair won't be affected, while users
who don't will have a 3072 key created for them. Users with different
key lengths can interact with each other without any issues.
1: https://www.keylength.com/en/4/
This change makes clicking on journal items in the list to show in a
separate activity. At the moment it just makes for a slightly nicer
presentation. In the future we would change it to show the data in a
nice formatted way instead of a raw dump of the vObject.
There was an issue that for the first load it would only check the url
after a redirect (if there is one), which meant that for example,
the dashboard, would open in app because you'd be redirected to the
login page.
Account migration works in most cases, though while testing I managed to
get it to fail in some rare occasions. This commit adds a check to
verify the number of contacts we thought we migrated is equal to the
number of contacts we have after migration.
If the check fails, it presents the user with a notification that opens
the relevant FAQ entry on the EteSync website.
This doesn't work well, but I'm keeping it since it's still better than
what was there before.
We have a problem that on initial sync with long enough logs, Android
kills the sync manager before completion. The reason for that is that
due to the fact that EteSync first downloads the whole journal and only then
processes it, the sync manager spends a minute without making any
network traffic, which in turn makes Android kill the sync[1].
This should probably be fixed by paginating the initial download, that
is, downloading and processing the journal in chunks, which is possibly
a good idea regardless.
1: https://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/AbstractThreadedSyncAdapter.html
Android allows only having one address book per account, so until now
users of EteSync were only able to have one address book. This was
always an annoying limitation, but even more so now that journal sharing
is implemented.
Luckily, DAVdroid recently implemented multiple account support by
creating sub-accounts for address books.
This merge is based on the changes done in DAVdroid but was heavily
adjusted for EteSync.