This lessens the warning for unstable-but-not-official versions while still communicating that the version is unstable. In the future, we may want to make this state dismissable.
I further tweaked the wording from Tom's in the bug report to
put passphrases first since they are supposed to be the norm
(and the correct term is "recovery passphrase").
Fixes https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/8214
Fixes https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/6435
This is done through an on-the-fly inverter for the settings. All the settings changed are boolean values, so this should be more than safe to just let happen throughout the SettingsStore. Typically a change like this would be done in the individual handlers (similar to how setting names are remapped to different properties or even different storage locations on the fly), however doing that for this many settings would be a huge nightmare and involve changing *all* the layers. By putting a global "invert this" flag on the setting, we can get away with doing the inversion as the last possible step during a read (or write).
To speed up calculations of the default values, we cache all the inverted values into a lookup table similar to how we represent the defaults already. Without this, the DefaultHandler would need to iterate the setting list and invert the values, slowing things down over time. We invert the value up front so we can keep the generic inversion logic without checking the level ahead of time. It is fully intended that a default value represents the new setting name, not the legacy name.
This commit also includes a debugger for settings because it was hard to visualize what the SettingsStore was doing during development. Some added information is included as it may be helpful for when someone has a problem with their settings and we need to debug it. Typically the debugger would be run in conjunction with `mxSendRageshake`: `mxSettingsStore.debugSetting('showJoinLeaves') && mxSendRageshake('Debugging showJoinLeaves setting')`.
This updates the custom status context menu to match the latest comps. A single
button is used for setting / clearing, depending on what is appropriate.
The state logic is also changed to depend on events and storage from js-sdk for
the committed status message. This makes it easy to distinguish the value being
edited from what's currently committed.
Split the 'new recovery method' into two cases: one where the new
recovery method isn't trusted and you need to verify the device, and
another where it is and the client is using it (where it's more of
an FYI).
https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/8069
Fixes https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/7997
This isn't super elegant, but it also provides some amount of utility for people. As users might leave the old room, it might be useful to see when exactly a room was upgraded. We should fix the underlying cause for infinite back pagination though.
The "New Recovery Method" dialog would show if either the recovery method had
been changed or removed, but the dialog text didn't make much sense for the
removed case.
This adds a separate dialog customized for the removed case.
Fixes https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/8046.
Since the initial key backup can take several minutes for some users, this moves
the upload step to the background. The create key backup flow now only marks
all sessions for backup synchronously, with the actual backup happening later.
The key backup panel in Settings gains a new row to show a summary of upload
status. Users are directed there if they wish to know if the backup is done.
The text in various related dialogs has also been tweaked to fit the new flow.
The download / copy actions to store the new recovery key now send you forward
(the most likely case) with a Back button in case you wanted to also do the
other storing type.
If the current device hasn't verified the device that created the account's
current key backup version, then the current device is won't use the key backup.
This change adjusts an existing in-room reminder to do the right thing for this
case by allowing the user to verify the device that created the key backup.
Fixesvector-im/riot-web#7902.
It's possible to get errors when fetching commits (for example, if the rate
limit is exceeded), so this will handle the error case and display it instead of
an infinite spinner.
Signed-off-by: J. Ryan Stinnett <jryans@gmail.com>
Adds a New Recovery Method dialog which is shown when key backup fails because
of a version mismatch / version not found error.
The set up button in the dialog currently only marks a device as verified (via a
verification prompt) instead of the eventual restore and cross-sign flow, since
those pieces don't exist yet.
Signed-off-by: J. Ryan Stinnett <jryans@gmail.com>
Adds UI control for 3 hidden notification rules:
* Messages containing @room
* Encrypted one-to-one messages
* Encrypted group messages
This should help to clarify some mysterious notification behavior, as it wasn't
obvious that these rules existed.
Fixesvector-im/riot-web#7833.
Signed-off-by: J. Ryan Stinnett <jryans@gmail.com>
They are now independent of each other. If both are specified in the config, the user will see an error and be prevented from logging in. The expected behaviour is that when a default server name is given, we do a .well-known lookup to find the default homeserver (and block the UI while we do this to prevent it from using matrix.org while we go out and find more information). If the config specifies just a default homeserver URL however, we don't do anything special.
This adds an in-room reminder above the message timeline to set up Secure
Message Recovery so that your keys will be backed up. If you try to ignore it,
an additional dialog is shown to confirm.
Fixesvector-im/riot-web#7783.
Signed-off-by: J. Ryan Stinnett <jryans@gmail.com>
Fixes https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/7724
The `default_server_name` from the config gets displayed in the "Login with my [server] matrix ID" dropdown when the default server is being used. At this point, we also discourage the use of the `default_hs_url` and `default_is_url` options because we do an implicit .well-known lookup to configure the client based on the `default_server_name`. If the URLs are still present in the config, we'll honour them and won't do a .well-known lookup when the URLs are mixed with the new server_name option. Users will be warned if the `default_server_name` does not match the `default_hs_url` if both are supplied. Users are additionally prevented from logging in, registering, and resetting their password if the implicit .well-known check fails - this is to prevent people from doing actions against the wrong homeserver.
This relies on https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-js-sdk/pull/799 as we now do auto discovery in two places. Instead of bringing the .well-known out to its own utility class in the react-sdk, we might as well drag it out to the js-sdk.
Hopefully makes the syntax a bit nicer. Also uses ES6 async import
rather than require.ensure which is now deprecated. Also also
displays an error if the component fails to load rather than falling
over in a heap, which is nice.