Based on the `roles` payload in the JWT, the rooms will now give mod permission to Citra Community Moderators. To notify the client of its permissions, a new response, IdJoinSuccessAsMod is added, and there's now a new RoomMember::State called Moderator.
The user would be notified if the message contains "@" followed by the user's nickname or forum username. An alert would be shown, and the icon and message in the status bar would be changed. All notification is only shown if the chat window currently does not have focus.
Also added a connected_notification icon for showing in the status bar.
The ban list is stored in a format so-called CitraRoom-BanList-1 and just first stores username ban list, one entry per line, then an empty line and then store the ip ban list.
To allow for passing moderation errors around without impacting the State, this commit also separates the previous State enum into two enums: State, and Error. The State enum now only contains generic states like disconnected or connected, and the Error enum describes the specific error happened.
citra_qt/multiplayer/{state, message} is changed accordingly.
Displayed username along with nickname (when they are not identical); Requested and displayed user's avatar; Made the dialog bigger for extended names.
Added a few functions to web_backend (GetImage, GetPlain) to support getting data in multiple content-types.
Added a no_avatar icon for users without avatars.
Added verify_backend to load user_data for members. and removed method to generate UID as this is now done server-side.
Added GetUsername function and a "token" param to room_member.
Also added a username to ChatEntry, so that the username can be shown (along with nicknames) in the chat dialog.
These slots are only ever attached to event handling mechanisms within
the class itself, they're never used externally. Because of this, we can
make the functions private.
This also removes redundant usages of the private access specifier.
The previous code could potentially be a compilation issue waiting to
occur, given we forward declare the type for a std::unique_ptr. If the
complete definition of the forward declared type isn't visible in a
translation unit that the class is used in, then it would fail to
compile.
Defaulting the destructor in a cpp file ensures the std::unique_ptr's
destructor is only invoked where its complete type is known.