The BATCH feature is a form of a server-suggested message processing
delays.
To implement this, we can record all inflight batches, handle start/end
in handle_batch and collect all pending messages in the entrypoint of
the message handler as long as they have a correct batch id.
Signed-off-by: Raito Bezarius <masterancpp@gmail.com>
While this archive is indeed DER-formatted, in contrast to `cert_path`,
a regular DER file created from some certificate/key PEM file won't work:
```
openssl x509 -outform der -in foo.pem -out foo.der
```
This will result in the following OpenSSL error through tls-native error:
```
error:068000A8:asn1 encoding routines:asn1_check_tlen:wrong tag:crypto/asn1/tasn_dec.c:1188:
error:0688010A:asn1 encoding routines:asn1_d2i_ex_primitive:nested asn1
error:crypto/asn1/tasn_dec.c:752:
error:0688010A:asn1 encoding routines:asn1_template_noexp_d2i:nested asn1
error:crypto/asn1/tasn_dec.c:685:Field=version, Type=PKCS12
```
Instead, a PKCS #12 archive must be created like so:
```
openssl pkcs12 -export -out foo.p12 -inkey fookey.pem -in foocert.pem
```
If the PEM file contains both the private key and the certificate,
the same file can be passed to `openssl` twice.
Also compare the documentation for `from_pkcs12` to `from_der` in
native-tls, as used in the `new_secured_transport` function:
https://docs.rs/native-tls/0.2.11/native_tls/struct.Identity.html#method.from_pkcs12
When `.to_string()` is invoked on a the crate-wide Error enum,
the error message using #[error("...")] is displayed.
Some of those wrapped internal enums also contain, possibly more
helpful, error messages. This will include the string gathered by
`.to_string()` from the encapsulated enum in the main error message.
See also
https://github.com/squidowl/halloy/pull/143
irc clients can query the details of some modes (e.g. request list of
banned users) by sending a message with no plus or minus prefix,
e.g. "MODE #chan b"
This patch adds an option to dangerously ignore all ceritificate
verifications. This option must be used with extreme caution and should
only be used as a last resort.
Closes#209, #230
Co-authored-by: Hyeon Kim <simnalamburt@gmail.com>