Sherry on Nostr: 🫡🫡 nostr:note163jwlcg2pp8fd4wg2p5kcy3dy365lpnecl2tcl24jqhnh4f7g8xqn898c3
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quoting note163j…98c3This update marks a major milestone for the project. I know, with certainty, that MLS messaging over Nostr is going to work. That might sound a little crazy after so many months working on the project, and I was pretty confident, but until you’ve got running code, it’s all conjecture.
Late last week, I released a video of a working prototype of [White Noise](https://github.com/erskingardner/whitenoise) that shows the full flow; creating groups, inviting other users to join those groups, accepting invites, and sending messages back-and-forth. I’m thrilled that I’ve gotten this far but also appalled that it’s taken so long and disgusted at the state of the code in the app (I’ve been told I have unrelenting standards 😅).
If you missed the video last week...
note125c…v0fj
## What's Next?
In this update, I want to cover a few things about how I'm planning to proceed and how I’m splitting code out of the app into libraries that will help other developers implement MLS messaging in their own Nostr clients.
First off, many of you know that I've been building White Noise as a Rust app using the [Tauri](https://tauri.app) framework. The [OpenMLS](https://github.com/openmls/openmls) implementation is also written in Rust (with bindings for many other languages). So, when you hear me talking about library code, think Rust crates for now.
The first library, called [openmls-nostr](https://github.com/erskingardner/openmls-nostr), is an extension/abstraction on top of the openmls implementation of the MLS spec that helps Nostr clients interact more easily with that implementation in a way that feels native to Nostr. Mostly this will be helping developers interact with MLS primitives and ensure that they’re creating, validating, and serializing these objects in the right way at the right times.
The second isn’t a new library as a big contribution to the already excellent [rust-nostr](https://github.com/rust-nostr) library from Yuki Kishimoto (npub1drv…seet). The methods that will go in rust-nostr are highly abstracted and based specifically on the requirements of NIP-104. Mostly this will be helping developers to take those MLS primitives and publish or query them as Nostr events at the right times and to/from the right relays.
Most of this code was originally written directly in the White Noise library so this week I've started to pull code for both of those libraries out and move it to its new home. While I’ve been at it, I've been writing some tests and trying to document things.
An unfortunate offshoot of this is that the usable builds of White Noise are going to take a touch longer. I promise it’s still a very high priority but at this point I need to clean a few things up based on what I've learned thus far.
Another thing that is slowing down release is that; behind the scenes of the dev work, I’ve been battling with Apple for nearly 2 months now to get a proper developer team set up so that we can publish the app via TestFlight for MacOS and iOS. I’ve also been recently learning the intricacies of Android publishing (oh my dear god there are so many devices, OS versions, etc.).
With that in mind, if you know anyone who can help get me up to speed on CI/CD, release pipelines, and multi-platform distribution please hit me up. I would love to learn more and hopefully shortcut some of the pain.
Thanks again so much for all the support over the last few months! It means a lot to me and is a huge part of what is keeping me going on this. 🙏