The reason for that is that before version 2, all the journals of a
particular user shared the same encryption key, which means, sharing a
journal of version one, would essentially give away the encryption key
of all of its journals, even the private ones.
This is thus blocked for security reasons.
This currently just adds the journal back, but doesn't re-apply the
journal, so the calendar for example would be empty, but the journal
itself would be listed and visible.
At the moment we only support one address book per user, and sharing
address books will interfere with this model. Hopefully, we'll add
multiple address book support in the next release, and then we'll
re-enable this.
We were not detecting the version correctly, but always just assumed
latest version, which is obviously wrong.
In addition, before this commit we used to automatically verify on
fetch, which wasn't flexible enough for some use cases. This fixes that
too.
We need the keypair to access shared journals, so we need to make sure
to fetch it at the moment we create the local account, which is what
this commit does.
This is used to create a keypair and put it on the server if one doesn't
exist, and fetch it and save it locally if one does.
It's currently called from the account activity.
If a journal has a key set to it (usually used for shared journals), use
it instead of the symmetric key. The key of the journal is asymmetrically
encrypted using our keypair.
Requery doesn't automatically update column constraints, and there was
an issue with it applying indexes before adding the new columns which
was also causing troubles. This commit, while ugly, just manually
updates the database using raw SQL to what we expect it to be.
Having it in raw sql was slowing down development, and was error-prone.
It's much cleaner now, easier to handle, and enables us to develop
faster.
In this change I also fixed the fetching of journals to be by service
and id, not just id, because just id is not guaranteed to be unique.
Before this change, uid was unique on its own, this was wrong, because
due to shared journals, we can have the same journal in two accounts,
and we can thus have both journal and entry UIDs more than once.
This fixes the constraint to be unique for journal, uid, and service,
uid combinations.
This is currently disabled for journals because of a bug in requery.
The server was changed so the owner of the journal, and the encrypted
key (if a shared journal) would be exposed. This change fetches it, and
saves it.
Although this release is claimed to fix the afterLoad issue, this is not
the case. We are just updating it so the upgrade path later one would be
easier.
Unfortunately this requery version introduced a regression. When adding
a new account, it takes syncign a few times until it works. It looks
like requery is not loading the recently saved instances.
This reverts commit f0f70ff1c61996d0e45d8f72d24654c739c325f7.
Prior to this version of requery there was an issue that prevented
afterLoad to be called in some cases. This issue forced us to add an
explicit call to afterLoad. It's now fixed, so the workaround is no
longer required.
Reference issue: https://github.com/requery/requery/issues/487
We were storing the ctag separately although the data was already
present in the journal. The last entry's ID is always the CTAG.
This could cause issues if sync is aborted exactly at the right time.
I managed to trigger this issue on rare cases.
It's only used for migrations, and has been considered deprecated for a
while. Mark it as deprecated to make it extra obvious that this should
not be used.