Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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have quit.
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This WILL make the Python interpreter produce exceptions on shutdown.
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Fixes issue #159
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It had not been updated to use the new condition instead of the old
threading event.
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Clearing the session_started_event before sending </stream> will
pause the send loop so that we don't continue sending data after
the </stream>.
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- Add option for disconnecting without sending </stream>:
self.disconnect(send_close=False)
- Optionally distinguish between session_end and disconnected based
on if </stream> was sent.
self.end_session_on_disconnect = False
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The set of bool_interfaces provides default behaviour for
checking/setting the presence of empty subelements.
The prime example of this would be:
bool_interfaces = set(['required'])
This would mean that ``stanza['required']`` would return ``True`` for:
<stanza>
<required />
</stanza>
and ``False`` for:
<stanza />
Likewise, assigning ``stanza['required'] = True`` would add an empty
``<required />`` element, and setting it to ``False`` would remove
such an element if it exists.
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Now that we have the send lock, we can use now=True.
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See issue #152
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Added option to XMLStream.send() to skip applying filters.
Filters in the out_sync group are synced with placing stanza content
either on the wire directly or into the send queue. Because of this,
out_sync filters should not block.
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Setting self.reconnect_max_attempts to a non-None value will limit
the number of times a connection attempt will be made before quiting
and raising a 'connection_failed' event.
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This should eliminate most debug statements about not being
able to acquire a lock during disconnect.
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cElementTree
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Fixes issue #146
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Fixes issue #146
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The ``shutdown = True`` line was preventing the stream from reconnecting
after handling the error.
Fixes issues #101, #145
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Tested using servers provided by Florian Jensen (flosoft.biz)
during the 2012 FOSDEM XMPP Summit.
Fixes issue #94.
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The payload is a dictionary of parsed cert data, as provided by
Python's getpeercert() socket method. It unfortunately does not
provide much detail beyond basic info.
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Socket errors that occur before stream processing begins could not be
handled as the event loop would not be running yet.
Resolves issue #142
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This reverts commit 4274f49ada77d709b931f65e34d3a64e75b81638.
The SASL mech was choking on this, so let's send it back for some
more refining.
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This makes JID objects equivalent to strings in dictionaries, etc.
>>> j = JID('foo@example.com')
>>> s = 'foo@example.com'
>>> d = {j: 'yay'}
>>> d[j]
'yay'
>>> d[s]
'yay'
>>> d[s] = 'yay!!'
>>> d[j]
'yay!!'
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The parsing and namespace cleaning isn't terribly expensive, but it does
add up. It was adding an extra 5sec when processing 100,000 basic
message stanzas.
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Based on profiling, using around 35 stream handlers quarters the number
of basic message stanzas that can be processed in a second, in
comparison to only using the bare minimum of four handlers.
To help, we can drop handlers for stream features once the session
has started. So that we can re-enable these handlers when a stream
must restart, the 'stream_start' event has been added which fires
whenever a stream header is received.
The 'stream_start' event is a more generic replacement for the
existing start_stream_handler() method.
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This should resolve issue #102
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This allows applications to filter out sensitive information, such
as passwords, so that it won't appear in the logs.
It does mean that the debug logs will not show the actual received
data, and there will be no indication of tampering, unless the
filter author explicitly logs and notes that a change was made.
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A filter accepts and returns a stanza, but potentially modified.
To prevent sending/receiving a stanza, a filter may return None.
Incoming:
self.add_filter('in', in_filter)
Outgoing:
self.add_filter('out', out_filter)
Filters are applied in the order thay are added. However, you may
add an order parameter, which is the place in the list to insert the
filter:
self.add_filter('in', in_filter, order=0)
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