Improved the namespacing by dropping the app prefix on types, e.g.
chat-hook-action -> action. Compensated for shadowing by importing the
/sur files behind a face. End result is that a chat-hook-action becomes
an action:hook. Splits chat-json into lib/chat-{hook,store,view}. Uses
^? on changes files in /lib and /sur to discourage deeply nested
importing.
Previously, when the refresh-rate timer activated, and the thread from
the previous activation was still running, we would kill it and start
a new one. For low refresh rates, on slower machines, nodes, or network
connections, this could cause the update to never conclude.
Here we add a timeout-time to eth-watcher's config. If the refresh-rate
timer activates, and a thread exists, but hasn't been running for at
least the specified timeout-time yet, we simply take no action, and wait
for the next refresh timer.
Note that we opted for "at least timeout-time", instead of killing &
restarting directly after the specified timeout-time has passed, to
avoid having to handle an extra timer flow.
In the +on-load logic, we configure the timeout-time for existing
watchdogs as six times the refresh-rate. We want to set
azimuth-tracker's timeout-time to ~m30, and don't care much about other,
less-likely-to-be-active use cases of eth-watcher.
Instead of going purely off metadata, we now track the collections we're
listening to, and allow the user to remove collections from that list.
This allows us to remove/ignore collections, without mutilating group
assocations locally.
chat: ota attempt
chat: ota triggers chat-store to tell chat-hook to send cards to update chat-store's state
contact-view: commented out avatars and base64
chat: cleaned up commits
- finds resources & displays details using metadata-store
- supports creating new collections for groups
- supports creating new collections with new unmanaged group
- supports receiving invites for new (unmanaged) collections