On queue overflow, terminate the c2s session instead of just dropping
items from the queue. This makes sure all stanzas are either delivered
or bounced.
When the FSM goes into the 'wait_for_resume' state, let fsm_next_state/2
take care of updating #state.mgmt_state and of writing the log line.
This doesn't change the behavior, but simplifies the code.
The 'previd' value provided by the client during a session resume
request includes the client's JID and ejabberd's session ID. If there
is a session for the requested JID but with a different session ID,
resumption should fail, but that session shouldn't be closed. This
commit makes sure the latter won't happen.
In practice, this will only make a difference in odd corner cases.
If stream management is enabled, don't exit the c2s process when
ejabberd_socket:send/2 fails, but close the socket instead. This gives
the client a chance to resume the session.
Thanks go to Matthias Rieber for reporting the issue, providing detailed
logs, and testing the fix.
Only the child elements of <iq/> stanzas are qualified by the namespaces
in question, not the <iq/> stanzas themselves.
This change just clarifies the code. It doesn't alter the behaviour, as
those <iq/> stanzas are handed over to jlib:iq_to_xml/1, and that
function ignores the 'xmlns' attribute anyway.
Regarding "extauth_cache", the guide says: "The integer 0 (zero) enables
caching for statistics, but doesn't use that cached information to
authenticate users." Make sure the cached password isn't used even if
the user is currently logged in with another resource.
Only stanzas are subject to stream management, so when XEP-0198 support
is enabled, we must distinguish them from non-stanza elements. This
commit adds a send_packet/2 function that can be used in place of
send_stanza/2 or send_element/2 whenever a packet is delivered that
might or might not be a stanza.
If the client says that it handled more stanzas than we sent (due to a
bug in the client's or in our code), increase our outgoing stanza count
accordingly. There's no point in sticking to the old value even if it
was correct, as the client surely won't fix its count during the current
session.
Do not log a warning (but only a debug message) if the client sends an
invalid </a> packet. Some clients do that occasionally, and there's
nothing server admininistrators could do about that.