diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/code_style.rst | 159 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/password_auth_providers.rst | 99 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/url_previews.md (renamed from docs/url_previews.rst) | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/user_directory.md | 17 |
4 files changed, 231 insertions, 46 deletions
diff --git a/docs/code_style.rst b/docs/code_style.rst index 8d73d17beb..9c52cb3182 100644 --- a/docs/code_style.rst +++ b/docs/code_style.rst @@ -1,52 +1,119 @@ -Basically, PEP8 +- Everything should comply with PEP8. Code should pass + ``pep8 --max-line-length=100`` without any warnings. -- NEVER tabs. 4 spaces to indent. -- Max line width: 79 chars (with flexibility to overflow by a "few chars" if +- **Indenting**: + + - NEVER tabs. 4 spaces to indent. + + - follow PEP8; either hanging indent or multiline-visual indent depending + on the size and shape of the arguments and what makes more sense to the + author. In other words, both this:: + + print("I am a fish %s" % "moo") + + and this:: + + print("I am a fish %s" % + "moo") + + and this:: + + print( + "I am a fish %s" % + "moo", + ) + + ...are valid, although given each one takes up 2x more vertical space than + the previous, it's up to the author's discretion as to which layout makes + most sense for their function invocation. (e.g. if they want to add + comments per-argument, or put expressions in the arguments, or group + related arguments together, or want to deliberately extend or preserve + vertical/horizontal space) + +- **Line length**: + + Max line length is 79 chars (with flexibility to overflow by a "few chars" if the overflowing content is not semantically significant and avoids an explosion of vertical whitespace). -- Use camel case for class and type names -- Use underscores for functions and variables. -- Use double quotes. -- Use parentheses instead of '\\' for line continuation where ever possible - (which is pretty much everywhere) -- There should be max a single new line between: + + Use parentheses instead of ``\`` for line continuation where ever possible + (which is pretty much everywhere). + +- **Naming**: + + - Use camel case for class and type names + - Use underscores for functions and variables. + +- Use double quotes ``"foo"`` rather than single quotes ``'foo'``. + +- **Blank lines**: + + - There should be max a single new line between: + - statements - functions in a class -- There should be two new lines between: + + - There should be two new lines between: + - definitions in a module (e.g., between different classes) -- There should be spaces where spaces should be and not where there shouldn't be: - - a single space after a comma - - a single space before and after for '=' when used as assignment - - no spaces before and after for '=' for default values and keyword arguments. -- Indenting must follow PEP8; either hanging indent or multiline-visual indent - depending on the size and shape of the arguments and what makes more sense to - the author. In other words, both this:: - - print("I am a fish %s" % "moo") - - and this:: - - print("I am a fish %s" % - "moo") - - and this:: - - print( - "I am a fish %s" % - "moo" - ) - - ...are valid, although given each one takes up 2x more vertical space than - the previous, it's up to the author's discretion as to which layout makes most - sense for their function invocation. (e.g. if they want to add comments - per-argument, or put expressions in the arguments, or group related arguments - together, or want to deliberately extend or preserve vertical/horizontal - space) - -Comments should follow the `google code style <http://google.github.io/styleguide/pyguide.html?showone=Comments#Comments>`_. -This is so that we can generate documentation with -`sphinx <http://sphinxcontrib-napoleon.readthedocs.org/en/latest/>`_. See the -`examples <http://sphinxcontrib-napoleon.readthedocs.io/en/latest/example_google.html>`_ -in the sphinx documentation. - -Code should pass pep8 --max-line-length=100 without any warnings. + +- **Whitespace**: + + There should be spaces where spaces should be and not where there shouldn't + be: + + - a single space after a comma + - a single space before and after for '=' when used as assignment + - no spaces before and after for '=' for default values and keyword arguments. + +- **Comments**: should follow the `google code style + <http://google.github.io/styleguide/pyguide.html?showone=Comments#Comments>`_. + This is so that we can generate documentation with `sphinx + <http://sphinxcontrib-napoleon.readthedocs.org/en/latest/>`_. See the + `examples + <http://sphinxcontrib-napoleon.readthedocs.io/en/latest/example_google.html>`_ + in the sphinx documentation. + +- **Imports**: + + - Prefer to import classes and functions than packages or modules. + + Example:: + + from synapse.types import UserID + ... + user_id = UserID(local, server) + + is preferred over:: + + from synapse import types + ... + user_id = types.UserID(local, server) + + (or any other variant). + + This goes against the advice in the Google style guide, but it means that + errors in the name are caught early (at import time). + + - Multiple imports from the same package can be combined onto one line:: + + from synapse.types import GroupID, RoomID, UserID + + An effort should be made to keep the individual imports in alphabetical + order. + + If the list becomes long, wrap it with parentheses and split it over + multiple lines. + + - As per `PEP-8 <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#imports>`_, + imports should be grouped in the following order, with a blank line between + each group: + + 1. standard library imports + 2. related third party imports + 3. local application/library specific imports + + - Imports within each group should be sorted alphabetically by module name. + + - Avoid wildcard imports (``from synapse.types import *``) and relative + imports (``from .types import UserID``). diff --git a/docs/password_auth_providers.rst b/docs/password_auth_providers.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..d8a7b61cdc --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/password_auth_providers.rst @@ -0,0 +1,99 @@ +Password auth provider modules +============================== + +Password auth providers offer a way for server administrators to integrate +their Synapse installation with an existing authentication system. + +A password auth provider is a Python class which is dynamically loaded into +Synapse, and provides a number of methods by which it can integrate with the +authentication system. + +This document serves as a reference for those looking to implement their own +password auth providers. + +Required methods +---------------- + +Password auth provider classes must provide the following methods: + +*class* ``SomeProvider.parse_config``\(*config*) + + This method is passed the ``config`` object for this module from the + homeserver configuration file. + + It should perform any appropriate sanity checks on the provided + configuration, and return an object which is then passed into ``__init__``. + +*class* ``SomeProvider``\(*config*, *account_handler*) + + The constructor is passed the config object returned by ``parse_config``, + and a ``synapse.module_api.ModuleApi`` object which allows the + password provider to check if accounts exist and/or create new ones. + +Optional methods +---------------- + +Password auth provider classes may optionally provide the following methods. + +*class* ``SomeProvider.get_db_schema_files``\() + + This method, if implemented, should return an Iterable of ``(name, + stream)`` pairs of database schema files. Each file is applied in turn at + initialisation, and a record is then made in the database so that it is + not re-applied on the next start. + +``someprovider.get_supported_login_types``\() + + This method, if implemented, should return a ``dict`` mapping from a login + type identifier (such as ``m.login.password``) to an iterable giving the + fields which must be provided by the user in the submission to the + ``/login`` api. These fields are passed in the ``login_dict`` dictionary + to ``check_auth``. + + For example, if a password auth provider wants to implement a custom login + type of ``com.example.custom_login``, where the client is expected to pass + the fields ``secret1`` and ``secret2``, the provider should implement this + method and return the following dict:: + + {"com.example.custom_login": ("secret1", "secret2")} + +``someprovider.check_auth``\(*username*, *login_type*, *login_dict*) + + This method is the one that does the real work. If implemented, it will be + called for each login attempt where the login type matches one of the keys + returned by ``get_supported_login_types``. + + It is passed the (possibly UNqualified) ``user`` provided by the client, + the login type, and a dictionary of login secrets passed by the client. + + The method should return a Twisted ``Deferred`` object, which resolves to + the canonical ``@localpart:domain`` user id if authentication is successful, + and ``None`` if not. + + Alternatively, the ``Deferred`` can resolve to a ``(str, func)`` tuple, in + which case the second field is a callback which will be called with the + result from the ``/login`` call (including ``access_token``, ``device_id``, + etc.) + +``someprovider.check_password``\(*user_id*, *password*) + + This method provides a simpler interface than ``get_supported_login_types`` + and ``check_auth`` for password auth providers that just want to provide a + mechanism for validating ``m.login.password`` logins. + + Iif implemented, it will be called to check logins with an + ``m.login.password`` login type. It is passed a qualified + ``@localpart:domain`` user id, and the password provided by the user. + + The method should return a Twisted ``Deferred`` object, which resolves to + ``True`` if authentication is successful, and ``False`` if not. + +``someprovider.on_logged_out``\(*user_id*, *device_id*, *access_token*) + + This method, if implemented, is called when a user logs out. It is passed + the qualified user ID, the ID of the deactivated device (if any: access + tokens are occasionally created without an associated device ID), and the + (now deactivated) access token. + + It may return a Twisted ``Deferred`` object; the logout request will wait + for the deferred to complete but the result is ignored. diff --git a/docs/url_previews.rst b/docs/url_previews.md index 634d9d907f..665554e165 100644 --- a/docs/url_previews.rst +++ b/docs/url_previews.md @@ -56,6 +56,7 @@ As a first cut, let's do #2 and have the receiver hit the API to calculate its o API --- +``` GET /_matrix/media/r0/preview_url?url=http://wherever.com 200 OK { @@ -66,6 +67,7 @@ GET /_matrix/media/r0/preview_url?url=http://wherever.com "og:description" : "“Synapse 0.12 is out! Lots of polishing, performance &amp; bugfixes: /sync API, /r0 prefix, fulltext search, 3PID invites https://t.co/5alhXLLEGP”" "og:site_name" : "Twitter" } +``` * Downloads the URL * If HTML, just stores it in RAM and parses it for OG meta tags diff --git a/docs/user_directory.md b/docs/user_directory.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..4c8ee44f37 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/user_directory.md @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +User Directory API Implementation +================================= + +The user directory is currently maintained based on the 'visible' users +on this particular server - i.e. ones which your account shares a room with, or +who are present in a publicly viewable room present on the server. + +The directory info is stored in various tables, which can (typically after +DB corruption) get stale or out of sync. If this happens, for now the +quickest solution to fix it is: + +``` +UPDATE user_directory_stream_pos SET stream_id = NULL; +``` + +and restart the synapse, which should then start a background task to +flush the current tables and regenerate the directory. |