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-rw-r--r--synapse/storage/state.py394
1 files changed, 204 insertions, 190 deletions
diff --git a/synapse/storage/state.py b/synapse/storage/state.py
index 1980a87108..71b533c006 100644
--- a/synapse/storage/state.py
+++ b/synapse/storage/state.py
@@ -353,8 +353,158 @@ class StateFilter(object):
         return member_filter, non_member_filter
 
 
+class StateGroupBackgroundUpdateStore(SQLBaseStore):
+    """Defines functions related to state groups needed to run the state backgroud
+    updates.
+    """
+
+    def _count_state_group_hops_txn(self, txn, state_group):
+        """Given a state group, count how many hops there are in the tree.
+
+        This is used to ensure the delta chains don't get too long.
+        """
+        if isinstance(self.database_engine, PostgresEngine):
+            sql = """
+                WITH RECURSIVE state(state_group) AS (
+                    VALUES(?::bigint)
+                    UNION ALL
+                    SELECT prev_state_group FROM state_group_edges e, state s
+                    WHERE s.state_group = e.state_group
+                )
+                SELECT count(*) FROM state;
+            """
+
+            txn.execute(sql, (state_group,))
+            row = txn.fetchone()
+            if row and row[0]:
+                return row[0]
+            else:
+                return 0
+        else:
+            # We don't use WITH RECURSIVE on sqlite3 as there are distributions
+            # that ship with an sqlite3 version that doesn't support it (e.g. wheezy)
+            next_group = state_group
+            count = 0
+
+            while next_group:
+                next_group = self._simple_select_one_onecol_txn(
+                    txn,
+                    table="state_group_edges",
+                    keyvalues={"state_group": next_group},
+                    retcol="prev_state_group",
+                    allow_none=True,
+                )
+                if next_group:
+                    count += 1
+
+            return count
+
+    def _get_state_groups_from_groups_txn(
+        self, txn, groups, state_filter=StateFilter.all()
+    ):
+        results = {group: {} for group in groups}
+
+        where_clause, where_args = state_filter.make_sql_filter_clause()
+
+        # Unless the filter clause is empty, we're going to append it after an
+        # existing where clause
+        if where_clause:
+            where_clause = " AND (%s)" % (where_clause,)
+
+        if isinstance(self.database_engine, PostgresEngine):
+            # Temporarily disable sequential scans in this transaction. This is
+            # a temporary hack until we can add the right indices in
+            txn.execute("SET LOCAL enable_seqscan=off")
+
+            # The below query walks the state_group tree so that the "state"
+            # table includes all state_groups in the tree. It then joins
+            # against `state_groups_state` to fetch the latest state.
+            # It assumes that previous state groups are always numerically
+            # lesser.
+            # The PARTITION is used to get the event_id in the greatest state
+            # group for the given type, state_key.
+            # This may return multiple rows per (type, state_key), but last_value
+            # should be the same.
+            sql = """
+                WITH RECURSIVE state(state_group) AS (
+                    VALUES(?::bigint)
+                    UNION ALL
+                    SELECT prev_state_group FROM state_group_edges e, state s
+                    WHERE s.state_group = e.state_group
+                )
+                SELECT DISTINCT type, state_key, last_value(event_id) OVER (
+                    PARTITION BY type, state_key ORDER BY state_group ASC
+                    ROWS BETWEEN UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING
+                ) AS event_id FROM state_groups_state
+                WHERE state_group IN (
+                    SELECT state_group FROM state
+                )
+            """
+
+            for group in groups:
+                args = [group]
+                args.extend(where_args)
+
+                txn.execute(sql + where_clause, args)
+                for row in txn:
+                    typ, state_key, event_id = row
+                    key = (typ, state_key)
+                    results[group][key] = event_id
+        else:
+            max_entries_returned = state_filter.max_entries_returned()
+
+            # We don't use WITH RECURSIVE on sqlite3 as there are distributions
+            # that ship with an sqlite3 version that doesn't support it (e.g. wheezy)
+            for group in groups:
+                next_group = group
+
+                while next_group:
+                    # We did this before by getting the list of group ids, and
+                    # then passing that list to sqlite to get latest event for
+                    # each (type, state_key). However, that was terribly slow
+                    # without the right indices (which we can't add until
+                    # after we finish deduping state, which requires this func)
+                    args = [next_group]
+                    args.extend(where_args)
+
+                    txn.execute(
+                        "SELECT type, state_key, event_id FROM state_groups_state"
+                        " WHERE state_group = ? " + where_clause,
+                        args,
+                    )
+                    results[group].update(
+                        ((typ, state_key), event_id)
+                        for typ, state_key, event_id in txn
+                        if (typ, state_key) not in results[group]
+                    )
+
+                    # If the number of entries in the (type,state_key)->event_id dict
+                    # matches the number of (type,state_keys) types we were searching
+                    # for, then we must have found them all, so no need to go walk
+                    # further down the tree... UNLESS our types filter contained
+                    # wildcards (i.e. Nones) in which case we have to do an exhaustive
+                    # search
+                    if (
+                        max_entries_returned is not None
+                        and len(results[group]) == max_entries_returned
+                    ):
+                        break
+
+                    next_group = self._simple_select_one_onecol_txn(
+                        txn,
+                        table="state_group_edges",
+                        keyvalues={"state_group": next_group},
+                        retcol="prev_state_group",
+                        allow_none=True,
+                    )
+
+        return results
+
+
 # this inherits from EventsWorkerStore because it calls self.get_events
-class StateGroupWorkerStore(EventsWorkerStore, SQLBaseStore):
+class StateGroupWorkerStore(
+    EventsWorkerStore, StateGroupBackgroundUpdateStore, SQLBaseStore
+):
     """The parts of StateGroupStore that can be called from workers.
     """
 
@@ -694,107 +844,6 @@ class StateGroupWorkerStore(EventsWorkerStore, SQLBaseStore):
 
         return results
 
-    def _get_state_groups_from_groups_txn(
-        self, txn, groups, state_filter=StateFilter.all()
-    ):
-        results = {group: {} for group in groups}
-
-        where_clause, where_args = state_filter.make_sql_filter_clause()
-
-        # Unless the filter clause is empty, we're going to append it after an
-        # existing where clause
-        if where_clause:
-            where_clause = " AND (%s)" % (where_clause,)
-
-        if isinstance(self.database_engine, PostgresEngine):
-            # Temporarily disable sequential scans in this transaction. This is
-            # a temporary hack until we can add the right indices in
-            txn.execute("SET LOCAL enable_seqscan=off")
-
-            # The below query walks the state_group tree so that the "state"
-            # table includes all state_groups in the tree. It then joins
-            # against `state_groups_state` to fetch the latest state.
-            # It assumes that previous state groups are always numerically
-            # lesser.
-            # The PARTITION is used to get the event_id in the greatest state
-            # group for the given type, state_key.
-            # This may return multiple rows per (type, state_key), but last_value
-            # should be the same.
-            sql = """
-                WITH RECURSIVE state(state_group) AS (
-                    VALUES(?::bigint)
-                    UNION ALL
-                    SELECT prev_state_group FROM state_group_edges e, state s
-                    WHERE s.state_group = e.state_group
-                )
-                SELECT DISTINCT type, state_key, last_value(event_id) OVER (
-                    PARTITION BY type, state_key ORDER BY state_group ASC
-                    ROWS BETWEEN UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING
-                ) AS event_id FROM state_groups_state
-                WHERE state_group IN (
-                    SELECT state_group FROM state
-                )
-            """
-
-            for group in groups:
-                args = [group]
-                args.extend(where_args)
-
-                txn.execute(sql + where_clause, args)
-                for row in txn:
-                    typ, state_key, event_id = row
-                    key = (typ, state_key)
-                    results[group][key] = event_id
-        else:
-            max_entries_returned = state_filter.max_entries_returned()
-
-            # We don't use WITH RECURSIVE on sqlite3 as there are distributions
-            # that ship with an sqlite3 version that doesn't support it (e.g. wheezy)
-            for group in groups:
-                next_group = group
-
-                while next_group:
-                    # We did this before by getting the list of group ids, and
-                    # then passing that list to sqlite to get latest event for
-                    # each (type, state_key). However, that was terribly slow
-                    # without the right indices (which we can't add until
-                    # after we finish deduping state, which requires this func)
-                    args = [next_group]
-                    args.extend(where_args)
-
-                    txn.execute(
-                        "SELECT type, state_key, event_id FROM state_groups_state"
-                        " WHERE state_group = ? " + where_clause,
-                        args,
-                    )
-                    results[group].update(
-                        ((typ, state_key), event_id)
-                        for typ, state_key, event_id in txn
-                        if (typ, state_key) not in results[group]
-                    )
-
-                    # If the number of entries in the (type,state_key)->event_id dict
-                    # matches the number of (type,state_keys) types we were searching
-                    # for, then we must have found them all, so no need to go walk
-                    # further down the tree... UNLESS our types filter contained
-                    # wildcards (i.e. Nones) in which case we have to do an exhaustive
-                    # search
-                    if (
-                        max_entries_returned is not None
-                        and len(results[group]) == max_entries_returned
-                    ):
-                        break
-
-                    next_group = self._simple_select_one_onecol_txn(
-                        txn,
-                        table="state_group_edges",
-                        keyvalues={"state_group": next_group},
-                        retcol="prev_state_group",
-                        allow_none=True,
-                    )
-
-        return results
-
     @defer.inlineCallbacks
     def get_state_for_events(self, event_ids, state_filter=StateFilter.all()):
         """Given a list of event_ids and type tuples, return a list of state
@@ -1238,66 +1287,8 @@ class StateGroupWorkerStore(EventsWorkerStore, SQLBaseStore):
 
         return self.runInteraction("store_state_group", _store_state_group_txn)
 
-    def _count_state_group_hops_txn(self, txn, state_group):
-        """Given a state group, count how many hops there are in the tree.
-
-        This is used to ensure the delta chains don't get too long.
-        """
-        if isinstance(self.database_engine, PostgresEngine):
-            sql = """
-                WITH RECURSIVE state(state_group) AS (
-                    VALUES(?::bigint)
-                    UNION ALL
-                    SELECT prev_state_group FROM state_group_edges e, state s
-                    WHERE s.state_group = e.state_group
-                )
-                SELECT count(*) FROM state;
-            """
-
-            txn.execute(sql, (state_group,))
-            row = txn.fetchone()
-            if row and row[0]:
-                return row[0]
-            else:
-                return 0
-        else:
-            # We don't use WITH RECURSIVE on sqlite3 as there are distributions
-            # that ship with an sqlite3 version that doesn't support it (e.g. wheezy)
-            next_group = state_group
-            count = 0
-
-            while next_group:
-                next_group = self._simple_select_one_onecol_txn(
-                    txn,
-                    table="state_group_edges",
-                    keyvalues={"state_group": next_group},
-                    retcol="prev_state_group",
-                    allow_none=True,
-                )
-                if next_group:
-                    count += 1
-
-            return count
-
 
-class StateStore(StateGroupWorkerStore, BackgroundUpdateStore):
-    """ Keeps track of the state at a given event.
-
-    This is done by the concept of `state groups`. Every event is a assigned
-    a state group (identified by an arbitrary string), which references a
-    collection of state events. The current state of an event is then the
-    collection of state events referenced by the event's state group.
-
-    Hence, every change in the current state causes a new state group to be
-    generated. However, if no change happens (e.g., if we get a message event
-    with only one parent it inherits the state group from its parent.)
-
-    There are three tables:
-      * `state_groups`: Stores group name, first event with in the group and
-        room id.
-      * `event_to_state_groups`: Maps events to state groups.
-      * `state_groups_state`: Maps state group to state events.
-    """
+class StateBackgroundUpdateStore(StateGroupBackgroundUpdateStore, BackgroundUpdateStore):
 
     STATE_GROUP_DEDUPLICATION_UPDATE_NAME = "state_group_state_deduplication"
     STATE_GROUP_INDEX_UPDATE_NAME = "state_group_state_type_index"
@@ -1305,7 +1296,7 @@ class StateStore(StateGroupWorkerStore, BackgroundUpdateStore):
     EVENT_STATE_GROUP_INDEX_UPDATE_NAME = "event_to_state_groups_sg_index"
 
     def __init__(self, db_conn, hs):
-        super(StateStore, self).__init__(db_conn, hs)
+        super(StateBackgroundUpdateStore, self).__init__(db_conn, hs)
         self.register_background_update_handler(
             self.STATE_GROUP_DEDUPLICATION_UPDATE_NAME,
             self._background_deduplicate_state,
@@ -1327,34 +1318,6 @@ class StateStore(StateGroupWorkerStore, BackgroundUpdateStore):
             columns=["state_group"],
         )
 
-    def _store_event_state_mappings_txn(self, txn, events_and_contexts):
-        state_groups = {}
-        for event, context in events_and_contexts:
-            if event.internal_metadata.is_outlier():
-                continue
-
-            # if the event was rejected, just give it the same state as its
-            # predecessor.
-            if context.rejected:
-                state_groups[event.event_id] = context.prev_group
-                continue
-
-            state_groups[event.event_id] = context.state_group
-
-        self._simple_insert_many_txn(
-            txn,
-            table="event_to_state_groups",
-            values=[
-                {"state_group": state_group_id, "event_id": event_id}
-                for event_id, state_group_id in iteritems(state_groups)
-            ],
-        )
-
-        for event_id, state_group_id in iteritems(state_groups):
-            txn.call_after(
-                self._get_state_group_for_event.prefill, (event_id,), state_group_id
-            )
-
     @defer.inlineCallbacks
     def _background_deduplicate_state(self, progress, batch_size):
         """This background update will slowly deduplicate state by reencoding
@@ -1527,3 +1490,54 @@ class StateStore(StateGroupWorkerStore, BackgroundUpdateStore):
         yield self._end_background_update(self.STATE_GROUP_INDEX_UPDATE_NAME)
 
         return 1
+
+
+class StateStore(StateGroupWorkerStore, StateBackgroundUpdateStore):
+    """ Keeps track of the state at a given event.
+
+    This is done by the concept of `state groups`. Every event is a assigned
+    a state group (identified by an arbitrary string), which references a
+    collection of state events. The current state of an event is then the
+    collection of state events referenced by the event's state group.
+
+    Hence, every change in the current state causes a new state group to be
+    generated. However, if no change happens (e.g., if we get a message event
+    with only one parent it inherits the state group from its parent.)
+
+    There are three tables:
+      * `state_groups`: Stores group name, first event with in the group and
+        room id.
+      * `event_to_state_groups`: Maps events to state groups.
+      * `state_groups_state`: Maps state group to state events.
+    """
+
+    def __init__(self, db_conn, hs):
+        super(StateStore, self).__init__(db_conn, hs)
+
+    def _store_event_state_mappings_txn(self, txn, events_and_contexts):
+        state_groups = {}
+        for event, context in events_and_contexts:
+            if event.internal_metadata.is_outlier():
+                continue
+
+            # if the event was rejected, just give it the same state as its
+            # predecessor.
+            if context.rejected:
+                state_groups[event.event_id] = context.prev_group
+                continue
+
+            state_groups[event.event_id] = context.state_group
+
+        self._simple_insert_many_txn(
+            txn,
+            table="event_to_state_groups",
+            values=[
+                {"state_group": state_group_id, "event_id": event_id}
+                for event_id, state_group_id in iteritems(state_groups)
+            ],
+        )
+
+        for event_id, state_group_id in iteritems(state_groups):
+            txn.call_after(
+                self._get_state_group_for_event.prefill, (event_id,), state_group_id
+            )