Bump Gradle from 6.8.3 to 8.10.2 and increase the minimum required
Java version from 8 to 11 (SMACK-953).
The switch from Java 8 to 11 caused some Bytecode portability issues
regarding NIO Buffers. Java changed with version 9 the return type of
some subclasses of Buffer to return the specific Buffer type instead
of the Buffer superclass [JDK-4774077]. For example, ByteBuffer.filp()
previously returned Buffer, while it does return ByteBuffer now.
This sensible change was not reflected by the Android API [1], which
means that AnimalSniffer rightfully started to complain that there is
no method "ByteBuffer ByteBuffer.flip()" in Android, there is only
"Buffer ByteBuffer.flip()", and those are incompatible methods on
Java's Bytecode layer.
As workaround, this changes
return charBuffer.flip().toString();
to
((java.nio.Buffer) charBuffer).flip();
return charBuffer.toString();
to restore the Bytecode portability between Android and Java.
Errorprone also got new checks, of which JavaUtilDate and JdkObsolete
are wroth mentioning.
JavaUtilData basically strongly recommends to use Java's newer time
API over java.util.Date. But since Smack was Java 8 until now,
j.u.Date is widely used.
Similar JdkObsolete mentions obsolete JDK APIs, like data structures
like Vector and Stack. But mostly LinkedList, which should usually be
replaced by ArrayList. And this is what this commit largely does.
JDK-4774077: https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-4774077
1: https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/369219141
This also removes the powermock dependency. Although powermock is a
fine library, it currently prevents dropping Junit4. And since we only
use the Whitebox API of powermock, this simply replaced powermock's
Whitebox with our own.
Those exception are caused by I/O operations in the OmemoStore, which
is now declaring that it throws those (since it is not uncommon for
I/O operations to cause IOExceptions). After all, this is nicely
demonstrated as this change is caused by switching with this commit to
the Android API 19 compatible methods in FileBasedOmemoStore, which
throw.
The library can not decide what to do in case of those exceptions,
hence it is sensible to expose them to the user.
Changes:
Rework integration tests
New structure of base integration test classes
bump dependency on signal-protocol-java from 2.4.0 to 2.6.2
Introduced CachingOmemoStore implementations
Use CachingOmemoStore classes in integration tests
Removed OmemoSession classes (replaced with more logical OmemoRatchet classes)
Consequently also removed load/storeOmemoSession methods from OmemoStore
Removed some clutter from KeyUtil classes
Moved trust decision related code from OmemoStore to TrustCallback
Require authenticated connection for many functions
Add async initialization function in OmemoStore
Refactor omemo test package (/java/org/jivesoftware/smack/omemo -> /java/org/jivesoftware/smackx)
Remove OmemoStore method isFreshInstallation() as well as defaultDeviceId related stuff
FileBasedOmemoStore: Add cleaner methods to store/load base data types (Using tryWithResource, only for future releases, once Android API gets bumped)
Attempt to make OmemoManager thread safe
new logic for getInstanceFor() deviceId determination
OmemoManagers encrypt methods now don't throw exceptions when encryption for some devices fails. Instead message gets encrypted when possible and more information about failures gets returned alongside the message itself
Added OmemoMessage class for that purpose
Reworked entire OmemoService class
Use safer logic for creating trust-ignoring messages (like ratchet-update messages)
Restructure elements/provider in order to prepare for OMEMO namespace bumps
Remove OmemoManager.regenerate() methods in favor of getInstanceFor(connection, randomDeviceId)
Removed some unnecessary configuration options
Prepare for support of more AES message key types
Simplify session creation
Where possible, avoid side effects in methods
Add UntrustedOmemoIdentityException
Add TrustState enum
More improved tests
This commit adds the modules smack-omemo and smack-omemo-signal.
smack-omemo is licensed under the Apache license like the rest of the smack project.
smack-omemo-signal on the other hand is licensed under the GPLv3.
Due to the fact, that smack-omemo is not of much use without smack-omemo-signal,
the OMEMO feature can currently only be used by GPLv3 compatible software.
This may change in the future, when a more permissively licensed module becomes available.
Fixes SMACK-743.