Add vector versions for some notification icons (yay Illustrator)
Add comments reminding people to add their settings to GlobalSettings.
<plurals> support for notification_new_messages_title
Not sure why #ffffffff is resulting in black with targetSdk 17.
This bug was present in the Gallery app shipped with Android 2.0.
The time has come to say good-bye. We will never forget you! But only because you're part of our Git history.
For support of the dark and light themes.
Also:
Redefine mFolded and call it mIsFolded. Previously,
the view started with mFolded = false (which implies to me
the initial state is unfolded) and yet the view
started in a folded state, which seemed contradictory.
Create updateFoldedState() with code from onClick() (In
preparation for subsequent commit.)
It only applied to pre-ICS devices.
ConnectivityManager.ACTION_BACKGROUND_DATA_SETTING_CHANGED is no longer
broadcast.
ConnectivityManager.getBackgroundDataSetting() always returns true.
If the alias is empty or null, don't bother using KeyChainKeyManager.
If the alias is not empty, confirm that it is associated with a
certificate, otherwise throw a CertificateValidationException
which will notify the user of the problem and ask the user to
check the server settings.
Likewise, the user is notified if the client certificate was
not accepted by the server.
With this commit, KeyChainKeyManager no longer throws the exception and
AccountSetupCheckSettings no longer catches it.
It was being thrown when the server requested a client certificate but no
client certificate alias had been configured for the server.
The code was making the incorrect assumption that the server would only
request a client certificate when such a certificate was *required*.
However, servers can be configured to accept multiple forms of
authentication, including both password authentication and client
certificate authentication. So a server may request a certificate without
requiring it. If a user has not configured a client certificate, then
that should not be treated as an error because the configuration may be
valid and the server may accept it.
The only indication that a certificate is *required* is when a
SSLProtocolException is thrown, caused by a SSLHandshakeException
resulting from a fatal handshake alert message received from the server.
Unfortunately, such a message is fairly generic and only "indicates that
the sender was unable to negotiate an acceptable set of security
parameters given the options available." So there is no definitive way to
know that a client certificate is required.
Also, KeyChainKeyManager.getCertificateChain() and getPrivateKey() no
longer throw IllegalStateException(). These methods are permitted to
return null, and such a response is appropriate if the user has deleted
client certificates from the device. Again, this may or may not cause the
server to abort the connection, depending on whether the server *requires*
a client certificate.
The app's minSdkVersion = 15 (Android 4.0.3, Ice Cream Sandwich MR1),
so there's no need to test the API level.
This also removes '@SuppressLint("TrulyRandom")'. I find no
documentation for it, nor do I find any additional lint errors
with its removal.