view src/protocols/oscar/snac.c @ 12645:fc28451f5d96

[gaim-migrate @ 14983] SF Patch #1314512 from Sadrul (who has a patch for everything) "This patch introduces a flag for protocol plugins that support offline messages (like Y!M and ICQ). This was encouraged by the following conversation: <sadrul> should offline buddies be listed/enabled in the send-to menu? <rekkanoryo> i would think only for protocols that support offline messaging, if it's indicated that the buddy is offline -- <snip> -- <Bleeter> sadrul: personally, I'd like to see a 'supports offline' flag of some description <Bleeter> one could then redirect (via plugins) through email or alternative methods <Bleeter> just a thought <Paco-Paco> yeah, that sounds like a reasonble thing to have This patch uses this flag to disable the buddies in the send-to menu who are offline and the protocol doesn't support offline messages." I made this make the label insensitive instead of the whole menuitem. This should address SimGuy's concerns about inconsistency (i.e. you could create a conversation with someone via the buddy list that you couldn't create via the Send To menu). I also hacked up some voodoo to show the label as sensitive when moused-over, as that looks better (given the label-insensitive thing is itself a hack). I think this works quite well. BUG NOTE: This makes more obvious an existing bug. The Send To menu isn't updated when buddies sign on or off or change status (at least under some circumstances). We need to fix that anyway, so I'm not going to let it hold up this commit. Switching tabs will clear it up. I'm thinking we just might want to build the contents of that menu when it is selected. That would save us a mess of inefficient signal callbacks that update the Send To menus in open windows all the time. AIM NOTE: This assumes that AIM can't offline message. That's not strictly true. You can message invisible users on AIM. However, by design, we can't tell when a user is invisible without resorting to dirty hackery. In practice, this isn't a problem, as you can still select the AIM user from the menu. And really, how often will you be choosing the Invisible contact, rather than the user going Invisible in the middle of a conversation or IMing you while they're Invisible? JABBER NOTE: This assumes that Jabber can always offline message. This isn't strictly true. Sadrul said: I have updated Jabber according to this link which seems to talk about how to determine the existence offline-message support in a server: http://www.jabber.org/jeps/jep-0013.html#discover However, jabber.org doesn't seem to send the required info. So I am not sure about it. He later said: I talked to Nathan and he said offline message support is mostly assumed for most jabber servers. GTalk doesn't yet support it, but they are working on it. So I have made jabber to always return TRUE. If there is truly no way to detect offline messaging capability, then this is an acceptable solution. We could special case Google Talk because of its popularity, and remove that later. It's probably not worth it though. MSN NOTE: This assumes that MSN can never offline message. That's effectively true, but to be technically correct, MSN can offline message if there's already a switchboard conversation open with a user. We could write an offline_message function in the MSN prpl to detect that, but it'd be of limited usefulness, especially given that under most circumstances (where this might matter), the switchboard connection will be closed almost immediately. CVS NOTE: I'm writing to share a tragic little story. I have a PC that I use for Gaim development. One day, I was writing a commit message on it, when all of a suddent it went berserk. The screen started flashing, and the whole commit message just disappeared. All of it. And it was a good commit message! I had to cram and rewrite it really quickly. Needless to say, my rushed commit message wasn't nearly as good, and I blame the PC for that. Seriously, though, what kind of version control system loses your commit message on a broken connection to the server? Stupid! committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author Richard Laager <rlaager@wiktel.com>
date Fri, 23 Dec 2005 19:26:04 +0000
parents 17142948653e
children f2431a7e33aa
line wrap: on
line source

/*
 *
 * Various SNAC-related dodads...
 *
 * outstanding_snacs is a list of aim_snac_t structs.  A SNAC should be added
 * whenever a new SNAC is sent and it should remain in the list until the
 * response for it has been received.
 *
 * cleansnacs() should be called periodically by the client in order
 * to facilitate the aging out of unreplied-to SNACs. This can and does
 * happen, so it should be handled.
 *
 */

#define FAIM_INTERNAL
#include <aim.h>

/*
 * Called from aim_session_init() to initialize the hash.
 */
faim_internal void aim_initsnachash(aim_session_t *sess)
{
	int i;

	for (i = 0; i < FAIM_SNAC_HASH_SIZE; i++)
		sess->snac_hash[i] = NULL;

	return;
}

faim_internal aim_snacid_t aim_cachesnac(aim_session_t *sess, const fu16_t family, const fu16_t type, const fu16_t flags, const void *data, const int datalen)
{
	aim_snac_t snac;

	snac.id = sess->snacid_next++;
	snac.family = family;
	snac.type = type;
	snac.flags = flags;

	if (datalen) {
		if (!(snac.data = malloc(datalen)))
			return 0; /* er... */
		memcpy(snac.data, data, datalen);
	} else
		snac.data = NULL;

	return aim_newsnac(sess, &snac);
}

/*
 * Clones the passed snac structure and caches it in the
 * list/hash.
 */
faim_internal aim_snacid_t aim_newsnac(aim_session_t *sess, aim_snac_t *newsnac)
{
	aim_snac_t *snac;
	int index;

	if (!newsnac)
		return 0;

	if (!(snac = malloc(sizeof(aim_snac_t))))
		return 0;
	memcpy(snac, newsnac, sizeof(aim_snac_t));
	snac->issuetime = time(NULL);

	index = snac->id % FAIM_SNAC_HASH_SIZE;

	snac->next = (aim_snac_t *)sess->snac_hash[index];
	sess->snac_hash[index] = (void *)snac;

	return snac->id;
}

/*
 * Finds a snac structure with the passed SNAC ID, 
 * removes it from the list/hash, and returns a pointer to it.
 *
 * The returned structure must be freed by the caller.
 *
 */
faim_internal aim_snac_t *aim_remsnac(aim_session_t *sess, aim_snacid_t id) 
{
	aim_snac_t *cur, **prev;
	int index;

	index = id % FAIM_SNAC_HASH_SIZE;

	for (prev = (aim_snac_t **)&sess->snac_hash[index]; (cur = *prev); ) {
		if (cur->id == id) {
			*prev = cur->next;
			if (cur->flags & AIM_SNACFLAGS_DESTRUCTOR) {
				free(cur->data);
				cur->data = NULL;
			}
			return cur;
		} else
			prev = &cur->next;
	}

	return cur;
}

/*
 * This is for cleaning up old SNACs that either don't get replies or
 * a reply was never received for.  Garbage collection. Plain and simple.
 *
 * maxage is the _minimum_ age in seconds to keep SNACs.
 *
 */
faim_export void aim_cleansnacs(aim_session_t *sess, int maxage)
{
	int i;

	for (i = 0; i < FAIM_SNAC_HASH_SIZE; i++) {
		aim_snac_t *cur, **prev;
		time_t curtime;

		if (!sess->snac_hash[i])
			continue;

		curtime = time(NULL); /* done here in case we waited for the lock */

		for (prev = (aim_snac_t **)&sess->snac_hash[i]; (cur = *prev); ) {
			if ((curtime - cur->issuetime) > maxage) {

				*prev = cur->next;

				free(cur->data);
				free(cur);
			} else
				prev = &cur->next;
		}
	}

	return;
}

faim_internal int aim_putsnac(aim_bstream_t *bs, fu16_t family, fu16_t subtype, fu16_t flags, aim_snacid_t snacid)
{

	aimbs_put16(bs, family);
	aimbs_put16(bs, subtype);
	aimbs_put16(bs, flags);
	aimbs_put32(bs, snacid);

	return 10;
}