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author | Eric Eastwood <erice@element.io> | 2021-08-03 05:08:57 -0500 |
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committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2021-08-03 10:08:57 +0000 |
commit | 2bae2c632ff595bda770212678521e04288f00a9 (patch) | |
tree | e453a439117a83d120a4635c7b78670a6e22c409 /docs/development | |
parent | Fix the `tests-done` github actions step, again (#10512) (diff) | |
download | synapse-2bae2c632ff595bda770212678521e04288f00a9.tar.xz |
Add developer documentation to explain room DAG concepts like `outliers` and `state_groups` (#10464)
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-rw-r--r-- | docs/development/room-dag-concepts.md | 79 |
1 files changed, 79 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/development/room-dag-concepts.md b/docs/development/room-dag-concepts.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..5eed72bec6 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/development/room-dag-concepts.md @@ -0,0 +1,79 @@ +# Room DAG concepts + +## Edges + +The word "edge" comes from graph theory lingo. An edge is just a connection +between two events. In Synapse, we connect events by specifying their +`prev_events`. A subsequent event points back at a previous event. + +``` +A (oldest) <---- B <---- C (most recent) +``` + + +## Depth and stream ordering + +Events are normally sorted by `(topological_ordering, stream_ordering)` where +`topological_ordering` is just `depth`. In other words, we first sort by `depth` +and then tie-break based on `stream_ordering`. `depth` is incremented as new +messages are added to the DAG. Normally, `stream_ordering` is an auto +incrementing integer, but backfilled events start with `stream_ordering=-1` and decrement. + +--- + + - `/sync` returns things in the order they arrive at the server (`stream_ordering`). + - `/messages` (and `/backfill` in the federation API) return them in the order determined by the event graph `(topological_ordering, stream_ordering)`. + +The general idea is that, if you're following a room in real-time (i.e. +`/sync`), you probably want to see the messages as they arrive at your server, +rather than skipping any that arrived late; whereas if you're looking at a +historical section of timeline (i.e. `/messages`), you want to see the best +representation of the state of the room as others were seeing it at the time. + + +## Forward extremity + +Most-recent-in-time events in the DAG which are not referenced by any other events' `prev_events` yet. + +The forward extremities of a room are used as the `prev_events` when the next event is sent. + + +## Backwards extremity + +The current marker of where we have backfilled up to and will generally be the +oldest-in-time events we know of in the DAG. + +This is an event where we haven't fetched all of the `prev_events` for. + +Once we have fetched all of its `prev_events`, it's unmarked as a backwards +extremity (although we may have formed new backwards extremities from the prev +events during the backfilling process). + + +## Outliers + +We mark an event as an `outlier` when we haven't figured out the state for the +room at that point in the DAG yet. + +We won't *necessarily* have the `prev_events` of an `outlier` in the database, +but it's entirely possible that we *might*. The status of whether we have all of +the `prev_events` is marked as a [backwards extremity](#backwards-extremity). + +For example, when we fetch the event auth chain or state for a given event, we +mark all of those claimed auth events as outliers because we haven't done the +state calculation ourself. + + +## State groups + +For every non-outlier event we need to know the state at that event. Instead of +storing the full state for each event in the DB (i.e. a `event_id -> state` +mapping), which is *very* space inefficient when state doesn't change, we +instead assign each different set of state a "state group" and then have +mappings of `event_id -> state_group` and `state_group -> state`. + + +### Stage group edges + +TODO: `state_group_edges` is a further optimization... + notes from @Azrenbeth, https://pastebin.com/seUGVGeT |