Adapt to E2EE changes in lib-jitsi-meet. Notably:
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e2ee: introduce per-participant randomly generated keys
This the second stage in our E2EE journey.
Instead of using a single pre-shared passphrase for deriving the key used for
E2EE, we now establish a secure E2EE communication channel amongst peers.
This channel is implemented using libolm, using XMPP groupchat or JVB channels
as the transport.
Once the secure E2EE channel has been established each participant will generate
a random 32 byte key and exchange it over this channel.
Keys are rotated (well, just re-created at the moment) when a participant joins
or leaves.
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- Disables the invite buttons while invites are ongoing
- Adds a keyboard shortcut (Enter) to send out invites
- Closes AddPeopleDialog upon successful invites sent
- Fixes the SecurityDialog closing when trying to set E2EE key via Enter shortcut
- Removes superfluous separator from SecurityDialog
Up until now we relied on implicit loading of middlewares and reducers, through
having imports in each feature's index.js.
This leads to many complex import cycles which result in (sometimes) hard to fix
bugs in addition to (often) breaking mobile because a web-only feature gets
imported on mobile too, thanks to the implicit loading.
This PR changes that to make the process explicit. Both middlewares and reducers
are imported in a single place, the app entrypoint. They have been divided into
3 categories: any, web and native, which represent each of the platforms
respectively.
Ideally no feature should have an index.js exporting actions, action types and
components, but that's a larger ordeal, so this is just the first step in
getting there. In order to both set example and avoid large cycles the app
feature has been refactored to not have an idex.js itself.
* Add dialog to set the E2EE key
* Use the Redux action / middleware to update the key even when set through the
hash parameter
* Cleanup URL after processing the key so it's not recorded in browser history