I got bitten when creating a new variant leaving the permission out of
the manifest but using a config flag to claim it was there. Better to
have just one place to configure that. So check for presence in the
manifest and, for now, assert that that matches the isBanned flag. Soon
the isBanned flag can be removed.
Some people will decide to leave SMS comms in while I look for an
alternative. Maybe. Don't show them the same alert every time they open
the game. In the process removed what seemed to be a duplicate ivar.
There's no one way to launch an SMS app with a ready-to-send
invitation. So try the two that work on our two phone/app combinations,
iterating until startActivity() succeeds. The code's set up to have new
recipes added easily.
Lots of work dealing with banned permissions (SEND_SMS and
RECEIVE_SMS). First, if they're banned and NBSProxy is installed, just
use it as if the permissions had been granted. When it's not there,
explain at various points where users will otherwise be confused: when
they try to invite using data sms, or when they open a game that already
uses it.)
It's an error to use an env with the wrong thread, but it IS possible
for more than one thread to be associated with the same env. So don't
assert to the contrary.
Seeing the occasional crash and trying to plug leaks that might be
contributing. I think I fixed the Gameptr.finalize() assertions I've
been seeing forever but the thread match assertion remains. Logs will
help catch that.
Didn't think it was required, but once the app started getting messages
in the background it stoped working or crashed. Changes are minimal
because this service isn't responsible for receiving messages: it
doesn't have the long-lived threads of the BT and Relay services.
What I've been calling SMS is now "data sms" (or "nbs", in
code). There's a new way of inviting, called "User Sms" or somesuch,
that launches the user's SMS app with a URL and phone number, much like
email (save that no addressing is required by the inviter.) This new way
won't be involved in the ban on SMS permissions. (But play by NBS is
still awesome and will stay where it can.)
Get rid of the single sender thread and the complexity of querying
individual queues for their state (and the slowdown that happened when
successful writes had to wait for those to devices that weren't
responding). Instead each PacketAccumulator does its own waiting with
timeouts and backoffs, wakes itself when appropriate, and periodically
sends if it can make a connection. Now when there are a bunch of
messages ready they'll get sent pretty quickly once connections to the
remote device start to be successful.
A device where the OS isn't servicing enqueueWork() requests won't write
back to sockets it accept()s, causing the sender's writer to block
forever. So give it 30 seconds then kill the socket.
Add support for the old protocol, and define to use it. After the next
release has been adopted and everybody can read the new protocol another
release will turn it on.
Fix race condition that would have cleared all messages including those
added after a send began. In the process, move to storing outbound
messages individually rather than concatenated in their stream format.
Set a boolean every time app's upgraded, and clear it on first launch of
MainActivity. In between, if we try to launch the BTService but the OS
doesn't schedule it, post a notification asking user to launch the app.
Lots of changes. Old BT proto is no longer compatible. New one
batches messages per device and sends all on a single connection.
The queue (now a single buffer) is now a static global and the thread
that services it doesn't die (but gloms onto whatever Service instance
is most recent.) Code to pack and unpack the protocol can probably be
reused for wifi-direct or any other pass-through transport.
I'm seeing an assertion failure in cleanup that could be explained by
the cleanup happening when initGame() has been called but no subsequent
jni method that would have added the env to the map. So let's add it
immediately so that can't happen.
JNIThread is somehow sticking around sometimes and holding the lock for
a game so that that game can never be opened again. On the theory that
there's some place retain() was called but not release(), use the thing
in try-with-resources wherever possible. Which is pretty much
everywhere.
Also added age to the lock-holder report being uploaded.
I'm seeing something permanently lock a game so it can't be opened. So
add code to report the stack of the owner to Crashlytics when opening
fails 3 times in a row. It's stubbed out for non-debug builds.
I didn't like having to re-open a game to archive it after
rematching, so now there's a checkbox that lets you archive it after
either rematching OR just using OK to dismiss the alert. Also fixed
rematch of a solo game causing new game to be created in Archive
group if that's where the source game was.
squash me