Publishes, retractions, purges, and deletions now raise the events:
- pubsub_publish
- pubsub_retract
- pubsub_purge
- pubsub_delete
In addition, custom events may be raised based on the node that
generated the notification. For example:
xmpp['xep_0060'].map_node_event('http://jabber.org/protocol/tune',
'user_tune')
will allow for using the events:
- user_tune_publish
- user_tune_retract
- user_tune_purge
- user_tune_delete
This was XEP-0237, but is now part of RFC 6121.
Roster backends should now expose two additional methods:
version(jid):
Return the version of the given JID's roster.
set_version(jid, version):
Update the version of the given JID's roster.
A new state field will be passed to the backend if an item
has been marked for removal. This is 'removed' which will
be set to True.
Each state element must have its own stanza class now. A stanza class
with an empty name field causes errors in ElementTree, even though
it works fine with cElementTree.
The payload is a dictionary of parsed cert data, as provided by
Python's getpeercert() socket method. It unfortunately does not
provide much detail beyond basic info.
This is inspired by the version from macdiesel and tomstrummer, but
their version was heavily linked with XEP-0096 and focused solely
on file transfer. This version is a more generic implementation.
Added new example for how to retrieve a Google token, following
the best case, non-browser, workflow. Other thirdparty auth
mechs (Facebook, MSN) follow a similar pattern of using an
access token.
This is mainly just useful for authenticating without using TLS.
If an access token is not provided, an attempt will be made to
retrieve one from Google.
Silently substituting the password field was nice, but for mechs
that can use either the password or an access token, it makes
things very difficult. This really only affects MSN clients since
Facebook clients should already be setting the api key.