both serve the same purpose: As callback for Packets. There is no need
to have both, so remace PacketInterceptor and let PacketListener take
its place. Some classes like ChatStateManager can now use
MessageListener as interceptor callback, which is more convenient.
instead of using a PacketListener, which means that the user has to
downcast the Packet to Message, we now use a Listener which callback
parameter is already Message/Presence.
It is necessary to introduce MessageListener and PresenceListener, which
are interfaces that have a callback for Message/Presence instead of
Packet. The 'old' MessageListener is renamed to ChatMessageListener.
Use Generics in ConnectionDetachedPacketCollector.
this is the first stop towards fixing "SMACK-65: parsing should look for
depth", by providing the initial parsing depth to the provider. Some
methods (.e.g parseMessage) now use the depth as abort condition,
instead of a unclean String equals check.
parseIQ() and parseExtension() where both renamed to parse.
This also restricts the Exceptions thrown by the parse method, to just
XmlPullParserException, IOException and SmackException (not really a big
victory, but nevertheless a slight improvement).
StreamFeatureProvider is now gone, we simply use PacketExtensionProvider
for stream features.
Adopt to common design patterns in Smack:
- getFrom(Packet) in Packetextensions
- INSTANCES.put() in getInstanceFor()
- ELEMENT instead of ELEMENT_NAME
- Use XmlStringBuilder
instead of using the old baseName=smack appendix=project.name approach,
we are now going convention over configuration and renaming the
subprojects directories to the proper name.
Having a prefix is actually very helpful, because the resulting
libraries will be named like the subproject. And a core-4.0.0-rc1.jar is
not as explicit about what it actually *is* as a
smack-core-4.0.0-rc1.jar.
SMACK-265