As part of adding this feature:
- fixed bug in update_caps() not assigning verstrings
- fixed xep_0004 typo
- can now use None as a roster key which will map to boundjid.bare
- fixed using JID objects in disco node handlers
- fixed failing test related to get_roster
Several of these bugs I've fixed before, so I either didn't push them
earlier, or I clobbered something when merging. *shrug*
New plugin configuration options:
use_cache - Enable caching disco info results. Defaults to True
wrap_results - Always return disco results in an Iq stanza. Defaults
to False
Node handler changes:
Handlers now take four arguments: jid, node, ifrom, data
Most older style handlers will still work, depending on if they
raise a TypeError for incorrect number of arguments. Handlers that
used *args may not work.
New get_info options:
cached - Passing cached=True to get_info() will attempt to load
results from the cache. If nothing is found, a query
will be sent as normal. If set to False, the cache
will be skipped, even if it contains results.
New method:
supports() - Given a JID/node pair and a feature, return True
if the feature is supported, False if not, and
None if there was a timeout. By default, the search
will use the cache.
Updated the XML-RPC value conversion to correctly apply namespaces, and
fixed an error uncovered by the tests in the XML -> Python conversion of
dateTime values.
Only allowing handlers to return a DiscoInfo/DiscoItem stanza works
for the majority of cases, but does not allow for the addition of
an RSM stanza, or other extensions.
An Iq stanza returned by a handler must already be configured as
a reply.
The form plugin was being registered on first use for providers,
but not for clients receiving the form.
NOTE: Use of non-form payloads will have this issue - adhoc command
clients will need to have an expectation beforehand of what
the command payload will be to properly load stanza plugins.
Note that using % in a string will _always_ perform the sting substitutions, because the strings are constructed before the function is called. So log.debug('%s' % expensiveoperation()) will take about the same CPU time whether or not the logging level is DEBUG or INFO. if you use , no substitutions are performed unless the string is actually logged