We now depend on libsodium unconditionally. Future work will require
functions from libsodium, and nobody we're aware of uses the nacl build
for anything other than making sure it still works on CI.
Add a protocol and the APIs to straightforwardly support user avatars
in client applications. The protocol is designed to transfer avatars
in background, between friends only, and minimize network load by
providing a lightweight avatar notification for local cache validation.
Strict safeguards are imposed to avoid damage from non-cooperative or
malicious users and to limit network usage.
The complete documentation is available in docs/Avatars.md and sample
code is available in testing/test_avatars.c.
Code and documentation are released under the GNU GPLv3 or later, as
described in the file COPYING.
tox_shell is a basic secure shell that can be used to control a
computer from any Tox client.
Just run tox_shell and make it add your Tox id.
It's very basic but it works.
Added request_id.
request_id must be obtained with tox_generate_dns3_string, stored,
then passed to tox_decrypt_dns3_TXT when we want to decrypt the
received response.
From what I see there is a difference between *BSD and Linux when
linking vs. toxcore which has been bulit vs. the NaCl library:
on Linux it only links if NaCl's object files (i.e. randombytes.o) is
present in the linker options, however on *BSD systems this will cause a
linking error, see:
https://github.com/Tox/toxic/issues/31#issuecomment-38224441
This commit makes sure that we do not add the NaCl object files to our
pkg-config settings on *BSD, but do add them on Linux.
Tox sync is a proof of concept bittorrent sync inspired application that
uses tox to sync the contents of two folders.
Currently only works on POSIX compilant operating systems.
By default libsodium is used. Only if --enable-nacl is specified, then
nacl will be used instead of libsodium.
Pass locations of nacl headers and libraries by using the following
options:
--with-nacl-headers=/home/me/somewhere/nacl-20110221/build/469/include/amd64/
--with-nacl-libs=/home/me/somewhere/nacl-20110221/build/469/lib/amd64/
This update makes sure that the build still works with automake prior to
1.12 and at the same time does not give any warnings or errors with
automake 1.14
supported options:
--with-dependency-search=DIR will tell configure to look for various
dependencies in DIR/include and DIR/lib
Alternatively you can also specify libsodium header and libs location
with --with-libsodium-headers and --with-libsodium-libs if it is
installed elsewhere.
Ncurses and libconfig are handled via the default pkg-config way, see
./configure --help=short for detailed information.
The tox library is compiled as libtoxcore in shared and static variants,
public headers are installed to ${prefix}/include/tox
A pkg-config libtoxcore.pc configuration file is provided.
Use ./configure --help for a full list of configure options or
./configure --help=short for the options that I added.
To generate the configure script after pulling from git use:
autoreconf -i
To generate a release tarball use:
make dist
Unit tests are handled by the libcheck library integration that is provided
by autotools, use:
make check
to compile and run the tests.
Unit tests are currently optional, i.e. - if the check library is not
found on the system, then tests will be disabled. Same goes for nTox and
DHT bootstrap daemon - they will be enabled or disabled depending on the
availability of ncurses (for nTox) or libconfig (for DHT bootstrap
daemon).
The above can be also tuned by:
--enable-tests / --disable-tests
--enable-ntox / --disable-ntox
--enable-dht-bootstrap-daemon / --disable-dht-bootstrap-daemon