* docs: clarify WhatsApp allowlist behavior and document WHATSAPP_ALLOW_ALL_USERS
- Add WHATSAPP_ALLOW_ALL_USERS and WHATSAPP_DEBUG to env vars reference
- Warn that * is not a wildcard and silently blocks all messages
- Show WHATSAPP_ALLOWED_USERS as optional, not required
- Update troubleshooting with the * trap and debug mode tip
- Fix Security section to mention the allow-all alternative
Prompted by a user report in Discord where WHATSAPP_ALLOWED_USERS=*
caused all incoming messages to be silently dropped at the bridge level.
* feat: support * wildcard in platform allowlists
Follow the precedent set by SIGNAL_GROUP_ALLOWED_USERS which already
supports * as an allow-all wildcard.
Bridge (allowlist.js): matchesAllowedUser() now checks for * in the
allowedUsers set before iterating sender aliases.
Gateway (run.py): _is_authorized() checks for * in allowed_ids after
parsing the allowlist. This is generic — works for all platforms, not
just WhatsApp.
Updated docs to document * as a supported value instead of warning
against it. Added WHATSAPP_ALLOW_ALL_USERS and WHATSAPP_DEBUG to
the env vars reference.
Tests: JS allowlist test + 2 Python gateway tests (WhatsApp + Telegram
to verify cross-platform behavior).
WhatsApp DMs can arrive with LID sender IDs even when
WHATSAPP_ALLOWED_USERS is configured with phone numbers. The allowlist
check now reads bridge session mapping files (lid-mapping-*.json) to
resolve phone↔LID aliases, matching users regardless of which
identifier format the message uses.
Both the Python gateway (_is_user_authorized) and the Node bridge
(allowlist.js) now share the same mapping-file-based resolution logic.
Co-authored-by: Frederico Ribeiro <fr@tecompanytea.com>