- Getting started guide - from nothing to end-to-end-encrypted chat session in < 5 minutes
- fluid client APIs for sharing data - e.g. share(value).with(atSign/s).as(keyName)
- extend client REPL so that you can call AtClient methods (e.g. the share() above) interactively
- Retry bug fixed in Register CLI
- Config yaml parameters restructured and backwards compatibility provided so as not to break existing usage.
- New parameter added to validateOtp method in RegisterUtil.java. The usage of this parameter is provided in java docs of the respective method.
- A new CLI tool Register has been introduced which can acquire a free atsign and register it to the provided email.
- Register CLI also handles calling the Onboard client with the cram secret which was received during the registration process.
- Better event distribution
- Improved Monitor's event generation
- Added 'userDefined' to the AtEventType enum, to allow the event bus to be used by application code
- Caches shared keys after first retrieval
- AtClientImpl listens for updateNotification events, decrypts the ciphertext on-the-fly, and publishes a decryptedUpdateNotification which is more useful for application code
- Enhanced REPL to optionally listen to only decryptedUpdateNotification; added command-line flag to listen to both
- at_client : Initial implementation of Java client library for the atPlatform. README will come soon
but here's a very brief summary which will get you going if you already know the basics of the atPlatform
and have used the Dart/Flutter packages
- Uses Maven
- The Maven target you want is 'install' which will put things in the 'target' output directory
- The CLI tools will give you the best overview of how to use the library as a whole. There are five CLIs
in the initial commit:
- Onboard - generate keys for a new @-sign. If you already have a .keys file, you can reuse it. Currently, the Java library expects keys for @alice to be in ./keys/@alice.keys
- REPL - you can use this to type @-protocol commands and see responses; but the best thing about the
REPL currently is that it shows the data notifications as they are received. The REPL code has the
essentials of what a 'receiving' client needs to do - i.e.
- create an AtClient
- add an event listener which
- receives data update/delete notification events (the event data contains the ciphertext)
- calls 'get' to decrypt
- Share - a simple 'sender' client - shares some data with another @-sign
- Get - gets data which was shared by another @-sign
- Delete - deletes data that this Atsign previously shared with another
- Uses Maven
As of May 3 2022, the Java client library can still be considered a 1.0.0-Beta version - i.e. there may occasionally be breaking changes, based on feedback from users of the library, until we get to a final version 1.0.0