| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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# Conflicts:
# synapse/rest/admin/__init__.py
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This expands the current shadow-banning feature to be usable via
the admin API and adds documentation for it.
A shadow-banned users receives successful responses to their
client-server API requests, but the events are not propagated into rooms.
Shadow-banning a user should be used as a tool of last resort and may lead
to confusing or broken behaviour for the client.
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Co-authored-by: Erik Johnston <erik@matrix.org>
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We have seen a failure mode here where if there are many in flight
unfinished IDs then marking an ID as finished takes a lot of CPU (as
calling deque.remove iterates over the list)
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Introduced in #9104
This wasn't picked up by the tests as this is all fine the first time you run Synapse (after upgrading), but then when you restart the wrong value is pulled from `stream_positions`.
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* Use execute_batch in more places
* Newsfile
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`execute_batch` does fewer round trips in postgres than `executemany`, but does not give a correct `txn.rowcount` result after.
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We do this by allowing a single iteration to process multiple rooms at a
time, as there are often a lot of really tiny rooms, which can massively
slow things down.
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I don't think there's any need to use canonicaljson here.
Fixes: #4475.
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(#9115)
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t was doing a sequential scan on `destination_rooms`, which took
minutes.
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This only applies if the user's data is to be erased.
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These tables are unused, and can be dropped now the schema version has been bumped.
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Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
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* Dropped last_used column from access_tokens
Signed-off-by: Jerin J Titus <72017981+jerinjtitus@users.noreply.github.com>
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Also add a warning on the admin API documentation.
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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As per feedback.
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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* docs updates
* prettify SQL
* add missing copyright
* cursor_to_dict
* update touched files copyright years
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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You can't continue using a transaction once an exception has been
raised, so catching and dropping the error here is pointless and just
causes more errors.
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Also run linter.
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<identifier>/forward_extremities now gets forward extremities for a room, returning count and the list of extremities.
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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This allows for efficiently finding which users ignore a particular
user.
Co-authored-by: Erik Johnston <erik@matrix.org>
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This can happen when using a split out state database and we've upgraded
the schema version without there being any changes in the state schema.
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This table has been unused since Synapse v1.17.0.
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If we see stale extremities while persisting events, and notice that
they don't change the result of state resolution, we drop them.
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* Use the simple dictionary in fts for the user directory
* Clarify naming
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This improves type hinting and should use less memory.
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Removes faulty assertions and fixes the logic to ensure the max
stream token is always set.
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This is so that we can choose which algorithm to use based on the room ID.
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During user-interactive auth, do not offer password auth to users with no
password, nor SSO auth to users with no SSO.
Fixes #7559.
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It's important that we make sure our background updates happen in a defined
order, to avoid disasters like #6923.
Add an ordering to all of the background updates that have landed since #7190.
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This is another PR that grew out of #6739.
The existing code for checking whether a user is currently invited to a room when they want to leave the room looks like the following:
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/f737368a26bb9eea401fcc3a5bdd7e0b59e91f09/synapse/handlers/room_member.py#L518-L540
It calls `get_invite_for_local_user_in_room`, which will actually query *all* rooms the user has been invited to, before iterating over them and matching via the room ID. It will then return a tuple of a lot of information which we pull the event ID out of.
I need to do a similar check for knocking, but this code wasn't very efficient. I then tried to write a different implementation using `StateHandler.get_current_state` but this actually didn't work as we haven't *joined* the room yet - we've only been invited to it. That means that only certain tables in Synapse have our desired `invite` membership state. One of those tables is `local_current_membership`.
So I wrote a store method that just queries that table instead
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no stream_id is stored. (#8744)
* Make this line debug (it's noisy)
* Don't include from_key for presence if we are at 0
* Limit read receipts for all rooms to 100
* changelog.d/8744.bugfix
* Allow from_key to be None
* Update 8744.bugfix
* The from_key is superflous
* Update comment
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There's a handy function called maybe_store_room_on_invite which allows us to create an entry in the rooms table for a room and its version for which we aren't joined to yet, but we can reference when ingesting events about.
This is currently used for invites where we receive some stripped state about the room and pass it down via /sync to the client, without us being in the room yet.
There is a similar requirement for knocking, where we will eventually do the same thing, and need an entry in the rooms table as well. Thus, reusing this function works, however its name needs to be generalised a bit.
Separated out from #6739.
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This should hopefully speed up `get_auth_chain_difference` a bit in the case of repeated state res on the same rooms.
`get_auth_chain_difference` does a breadth first walk of the auth graphs by repeatedly looking up events' auth events. Different state resolutions on the same room will end up doing a lot of the same event to auth events lookups, so by caching them we should speed things up in cases of repeated state resolutions on the same room.
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`adbapi.ConnectionPool` let's you turn on auto reconnect of DB connections. This is off by default.
As far as I can tell if its not enabled dead connections never get removed from the pool.
Maybe helps #8574
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Add `GET /_synapse/admin/v1/statistics/users/media` to get statisics about local media usage by users.
Related to #6094
It is the first API for statistics.
Goal is to avoid/reduce usage of sql queries like [Wiki analyzing Synapse](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/wiki/SQL-for-analyzing-Synapse-PostgreSQL-database-stats)
Signed-off-by: Dirk Klimpel dirk@klimpel.org
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We do a `SELECT MAX(stream_id) FROM e2e_cross_signing_keys` on startup.
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Fixes #6755
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Missed in #8671.
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another user. (#8616)
We do it this way round so that only the "owner" can delete the access token (i.e. `/logout/all` by the "owner" also deletes that token, but `/logout/all` by the "target user" doesn't).
A future PR will add an API for creating such a token.
When the target user and authenticated entity are different the `Processed request` log line will be logged with a: `{@admin:server as @bob:server} ...`. I'm not convinced by that format (especially since it adds spaces in there, making it harder to use `cut -d ' '` to chop off the start of log lines). Suggestions welcome.
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Fix serialisation errors when using third-party event rules.
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Not being able to serialise `frozendicts` is fragile, and it's annoying to have
to think about which serialiser you want. There's no real downside to
supporting frozendicts, so let's just have one json encoder.
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I was trying to make it so that we didn't have to start a background task when handling RDATA, but that is a bigger job (due to all the code in `generic_worker`). However I still think not pulling the event from the DB may help reduce some DB usage due to replication, even if most workers will simply go and pull that event from the DB later anyway.
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
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This allows trailing commas in multi-line arg lists.
Minor, but we might as well keep our formatting current with regard to
our minimum supported Python version.
Signed-off-by: Dan Callahan <danc@element.io>
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This is a requirement for [knocking](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/6739), and is abstracting some code that was originally used by the invite flow. I'm separating it out into this PR as it's a fairly contained change.
For a bit of context: when you invite a user to a room, you send them [stripped state events](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/unstable#put-matrix-federation-v2-invite-roomid-eventid) as part of `invite_room_state`. This is so that their client can display useful information such as the room name and avatar. The same requirement applies to knocking, as it would be nice for clients to be able to display a list of rooms you've knocked on - room name and avatar included.
The reason we're sending membership events down as well is in the case that you are invited to a room that does not have an avatar or name set. In that case, the client should use the displayname/avatar of the inviter. That information is located in the inviter's membership event.
This is optional as knocks don't really have any user in the room to link up to. When you knock on a room, your knock is sent by you and inserted into the room. It wouldn't *really* make sense to show the avatar of a random user - plus it'd be a data leak. So I've opted not to send membership events to the client here. The UX on the client for when you knock on a room without a name/avatar is a separate problem.
In essence this is just moving some inline code to a reusable store method.
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Add admin API `GET /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/media` to get information of users' uploaded files.
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This also fixes a bug by fixing handling of an account which doesn't expire.
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Split admin API for reported events in detail und list view.
API was introduced with #8217 in synapse v.1.21.0.
It makes the list (`GET /_synapse/admin/v1/event_reports`) less complex and provides a better overview.
The details can be queried with: `GET /_synapse/admin/v1/event_reports/<report_id>`.
It is similar to room and users API.
It is a kind of regression in `GET /_synapse/admin/v1/event_reports`. `event_json` was removed. But the api was introduced one version before and it is an admin API (not under spec).
Signed-off-by: Dirk Klimpel dirk@klimpel.org
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Related to: #6459, #3479
Add `DELETE /_synapse/admin/v1/media/<server_name>/<media_id>` to delete
a single file from server.
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* Fix user_daily_visits to not have duplicate rows for UA.
Fixes #8641.
* Newsfile
* Fix typo.
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
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* Move schema file
* Add a .
* Add matching changelog entry
* Fix sqlite
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Signed-off-by: Vasilis Gerakaris <vasilis.gerakaris@navarino.gr>
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* Add `DeferredCache.get_immediate` method
A bunch of things that are currently calling `DeferredCache.get` are only
really interested in the result if it's completed. We can optimise and simplify
this case.
* Remove unused 'default' parameter to DeferredCache.get()
* another get_immediate instance
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Most of these uses don't need a full-blown DeferredCache; LruCache is lighter and more appropriate.
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(#8577)
Fix the Connection protocol according to typeshed's assertions about sqlite3.Connection
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Optionally sends typing, presence, and read receipt information to appservices.
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Rename Cache to DeferredCache, and related changes
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Include user agent in user daily visits table.
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Autocommit means that we don't wrap the functions in transactions, and instead get executed directly. Introduced in #8456. This will help:
1. reduce the number of `could not serialize access due to concurrent delete` errors that we see (though there are a few functions that often cause serialization errors that we don't fix here);
2. improve the DB performance, as it no longer needs to deal with the overhead of `REPEATABLE READ` isolation levels; and
3. improve wall clock speed of these functions, as we no longer need to send `BEGIN` and `COMMIT` to the DB.
Some notes about the differences between autocommit mode and our default `REPEATABLE READ` transactions:
1. Currently `autocommit` only applies when using PostgreSQL, and is ignored when using SQLite (due to silliness with [Twisted DB classes](https://twistedmatrix.com/trac/ticket/9998)).
2. Autocommit functions may get retried on error, which means they can get applied *twice* (or more) to the DB (since they are not in a transaction the previous call would not get rolled back). This means that the functions need to be idempotent (or otherwise not care about being called multiple times). Read queries, simple deletes, and updates/upserts that replace rows (rather than generating new values from existing rows) are all idempotent.
3. Autocommit functions no longer get executed in [`REPEATABLE READ`](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/transaction-iso.html) isolation level, and so data can change queries, which is fine for single statement queries.
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We asserted that the IDs returned by postgres sequence was greater than
any we had seen, however this is technically racey as we may update the
current positions out of order.
We now assert that the sequences are correct on startup, so the
assertion is no longer really required, so we remove them.
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* Make sure a retention policy is a state event
* Changelog
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(#8476)
Should fix #3365.
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Currently background proccesses stream the events stream use the "minimum persisted position" (i.e. `get_current_token()`) rather than the vector clock style tokens. This is broadly fine as it doesn't matter if the background processes lag a small amount. However, in extreme cases (i.e. SyTests) where we only write to one event persister the background processes will never make progress.
This PR changes it so that the `MultiWriterIDGenerator` keeps the current position of a given instance as up to date as possible (i.e using the latest token it sees if its not in the process of persisting anything), and then periodically announces that over replication. This then allows the "minimum persisted position" to advance, albeit with a small lag.
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When pulling events out of the DB to send over replication we were not
filtering by instance name, and so we were sending events for other
instances.
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We call `_update_stream_positions_table_txn` a lot, which is an UPSERT
that can conflict in `REPEATABLE READ` isolation level. Instead of doing
a transaction consisting of a single query we may as well run it outside
of a transaction.
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Currently when using multiple event persisters we (in the worst case) don't tell clients about events until all event persisters have persisted new events after the original event. This is a suboptimal, especially if one of the event persisters goes down.
To handle this, we encode the position of each event persister in the room tokens so that we can send events to clients immediately. To reduce the size of the token we do two things:
1. We create a unique immutable persistent mapping between instance names and a generated small integer ID, which we can encode in the tokens instead of the instance name; and
2. We encode the "persisted upto position" of the room token and then only explicitly include instances that have positions strictly greater than that.
The new tokens look something like: `m3478~1.3488~2.3489`, where the first number is the min position, and the subsequent `-` separated pairs are the instance ID to positions map. (We use `.` and `~` as separators as they're URL safe and not already used by `StreamToken`).
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This allows a user to store an offline device on the server and
then restore it at a subsequent login.
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There's no need for it to be in the dict as well as the events table. Instead,
we store it in a separate attribute in the EventInternalMetadata object, and
populate that on load.
This means that we can rely on it being correctly populated for any event which
has been persited to the database.
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This fixes a bug where `m.ignored_user_list` was assumed to be a dict,
leading to odd behavior for users who set it to something else.
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This is so we can tell what is going on when things are taking a while to start up.
The main change here is to ensure that transactions that are created during startup get correctly logged like normal transactions.
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Synapse 1.21.0rc2 (2020-10-02)
==============================
Features
--------
- Convert additional templates from inline HTML to Jinja2 templates. ([\#8444](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8444))
Bugfixes
--------
- Fix a regression in v1.21.0rc1 which broke thumbnails of remote media. ([\#8438](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8438))
- Do not expose the experimental `uk.half-shot.msc2778.login.application_service` flow in the login API, which caused a compatibility problem with Element iOS. ([\#8440](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8440))
- Fix malformed log line in new federation "catch up" logic. ([\#8442](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8442))
- Fix DB query on startup for negative streams which caused long start up times. Introduced in [\#8374](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8374). ([\#8447](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8447))
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For negative streams we have to negate the internal stream ID before
querying the DB.
The effect of this bug was to query far too many rows, slowing start up
time, but we would correctly filter the results afterwards so there was
no ill effect.
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The idea is that in future tokens will encode a mapping of instance to position. However, we don't want to include the full instance name in the string representation, so instead we'll have a mapping between instance name and an immutable integer ID in the DB that we can use instead. We'll then do the lookup when we serialize/deserialize the token (we could alternatively pass around an `Instance` type that includes both the name and ID, but that turns out to be a lot more invasive).
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Hopefully, N(extremities) * N(state_events) is a more realistic approximation
to "how big a problem is this room?".
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This was a bit unweildy for what I wanted: in particular, I wanted to assign
each measurement straight into a bucket, rather than storing an intermediate
Counter which didn't do any bucketing at all.
I've replaced it with something that is hopefully a bit easier to use.
(I'm not entirely sure what the difference between a HistogramMetricFamily and
a GaugeHistogramMetricFamily is, but given our counters can go down as well as
up the latter *sounds* more accurate?)
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* Fix table scan of events on worker startup.
This happened because we assumed "new" writers had an initial stream
position of 0, so the replication code tried to fetch all events written
by the instance between 0 and the current position.
Instead, set the initial position of new writers to the current
persisted up to position, on the assumption that new writers won't have
written anything before that point.
* Consider old writers coming back as "new".
Otherwise we'd try and fetch entries between the old stale token and the
current position, even though it won't have written any rows.
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
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For some reason, an apparently unrelated PR upset mypy about this module. Here are a number of little fixes.
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This is an attempt to fix #8403.
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Co-authored-by: Benjamin Koch <bbbsnowball@gmail.com>
This adds configuration flags that will match a user to pre-existing users
when logging in via OpenID Connect. This is useful when switching to
an existing SSO system.
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Fixes #8395.
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On startup `MultiWriteIdGenerator` fetches the maximum stream ID for
each instance from the table and uses that as its initial "current
position" for each writer. This is problematic as a) it involves either
a scan of events table or an index (neither of which is ideal), and b)
if rows are being persisted out of order elsewhere while the process
restarts then using the maximum stream ID is not correct. This could
theoretically lead to race conditions where e.g. events that are
persisted out of order are not sent down sync streams.
We fix this by creating a new table that tracks the current positions of
each writer to the stream, and update it each time we finish persisting
a new entry. This is a relatively small overhead when persisting events.
However for the cache invalidation stream this is a much bigger relative
overhead, so instead we note that for invalidation we don't actually
care about reliability over restarts (as there's no caches to
invalidate) and simply don't bother reading and writing to the new table
in that particular case.
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The idea is to remove some of the places we pass around `int`, where it can represent one of two things:
1. the position of an event in the stream; or
2. a token that partitions the stream, used as part of the stream tokens.
The valid operations are then:
1. did a position happen before or after a token;
2. get all events that happened before or after a token; and
3. get all events between two tokens.
(Note that we don't want to allow other operations as we want to change the tokens to be vector clocks rather than simple ints)
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This will allow us to hit the DB after we've finished using the generated stream ID.
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When updating room_stats_state, we try to check for null bytes slipping
in to the
content for state events. It turns out we had added guest_access as a
field to
room_stats_state without including it in the null byte check.
Lo and behold, a null byte in a m.room.guest_access event then breaks
room_stats_state
updates.
This PR adds the check for guest_access. A further PR will improve this
function so that this hopefully does not happen again in future.
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Fixes: #8359
Trying to reactivate a user with the admin API (`PUT /_synapse/admin/v2/users/<user_name>`) causes an internal server error.
Seems to be a regression in #8033.
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Add an admin API to read entries of table `event_reports`. API: `GET /_synapse/admin/v1/event_reports`
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Synapse 1.20.0rc5 (2020-09-18)
==============================
In addition to the below, Synapse 1.20.0rc5 also includes the bug fix that was included in 1.19.3.
Features
--------
- Add flags to the `/versions` endpoint for whether new rooms default to using E2EE. ([\#8343](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8343))
Bugfixes
--------
- Fix rate limiting of federation `/send` requests. ([\#8342](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8342))
- Fix a longstanding bug where back pagination over federation could get stuck if it failed to handle a received event. ([\#8349](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8349))
Internal Changes
----------------
- Blacklist [MSC2753](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2753) SyTests until it is implemented. ([\#8285](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8285))
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Instead of just using the most recent extremities let's pick the
ones that will give us results that the pagination request cares about,
i.e. pick extremities only if they have a smaller depth than the
pagination token.
This is useful when we fail to backfill an extremity, as we no longer
get stuck requesting that same extremity repeatedly.
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Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
* Fix _set_destination_retry_timings
This came about because the code assumed that retry_interval
could not be NULL — which has been challenged by catch-up.
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This converts calls like super(Foo, self) -> super().
Generated with:
sed -i "" -Ee 's/super\([^\(]+\)/super()/g' **/*.py
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slots use less memory (and attribute access is faster) while slightly
limiting the flexibility of the class attributes. This focuses on objects
which are instantiated "often" and for short periods of time.
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This is *not* ready for production yet. Caveats:
1. We should write some tests...
2. The stream token that we use for events can get stalled at the minimum position of all writers. This means that new events may not be processed and e.g. sent down sync streams if a writer isn't writing or is slow.
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missing push rules in `.../actions` and `.../enabled` (#7796)
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
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This fixes an issue where different methods (crop/scale) overwrite each other.
This first tries the new path. If that fails and we are looking for a
remote thumbnail, it tries the old path. If that still isn't found, it
continues as normal.
This should probably be removed in the future, after some of the newer
thumbnails were generated with the new path on most deployments. Then
the overhead should be minimal if the other thumbnails need to be
regenerated.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Werner <nicolas.werner@hotmail.de>
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The intention here is to change `StreamToken.room_key` to be a `RoomStreamToken` in a future PR, but that is a big enough change without this refactoring too.
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It did not correctly handle IDs finishing being persisted out of
order, resulting in the `current_position` lagging until new IDs are
persisted.
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'populate_stats_process_rooms' again (#8243)
Fixes https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/8238
Alongside the delta file, some changes were also necessary to the codebase to remove references to the now defunct `populate_stats_process_rooms_2` background job. Thankfully the latter doesn't seem to have made it into any documentation yet :)
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This takes about 10 seconds in the best case; often more.
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Fix unread counts making sync fail if the value of the `unread_count`
column in `event_push_summary` is `None`.
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I'm hoping this will provide some pointers for debugging
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7968.
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Fixes: #6467
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All the callers want this info in the same place, so let's reduce the
duplication by doing it here.
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* Fixup `ALTER TABLE` database queries
Make the new columns nullable, because doing otherwise can wedge a
server with a big database, as setting a default value rewrites the
table.
* Switch back to using the notifications count in the push badge
Clients are likely to be confused if we send a push but the badge count
is the unread messages one, and not the notifications one.
* Changelog
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ordering after transmission (#8247)
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
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Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
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Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
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* Revert "Add experimental support for sharding event persister. (#8170)"
This reverts commit 82c1ee1c22a87b9e6e3179947014b0f11c0a1ac3.
* Changelog
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I think this is simpler (and moves stuff out of the db threads)
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We have three things which all call `_get_e2e_device_keys_and_signatures_txn`
with their own `runInteraction`. Factor out the common code.
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We can use the existing `_get_e2e_device_keys_and_signatures_txn` instead of
creating our own txn function
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This is *not* ready for production yet. Caveats:
1. We should write some tests...
2. The stream token that we use for events can get stalled at the minimum position of all writers. This means that new events may not be processed and e.g. sent down sync streams if a writer isn't writing or is slow.
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* Add shared_rooms api
* Add changelog
* Add .
* Wrap response in {"rooms": }
* linting
* Add unstable_features key
* Remove options from isort that aren't part of 5.x
`-y` and `-rc` are now default behaviour and no longer exist.
`dont-skip` is no longer required
https://timothycrosley.github.io/isort/CHANGELOG/#500-penny-july-4-2020
* Update imports to make isort happy
* Add changelog
* Update tox.ini file with correct invocation
* fix linting again for isort
* Vendor prefix unstable API
* Fix to match spec
* import Codes
* import Codes
* Use FORBIDDEN
* Update changelog.d/7785.feature
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
* Implement get_shared_rooms_for_users
* a comma
* trailing whitespace
* Handle the easy feedback
* Switch to using runInteraction
* Add tests
* Feedback
* Seperate unstable endpoint from v2
* Add upgrade node
* a line
* Fix style by adding a blank line at EOF.
* Update synapse/storage/databases/main/user_directory.py
Co-authored-by: Tulir Asokan <tulir@maunium.net>
* Update synapse/storage/databases/main/user_directory.py
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update UPGRADE.rst
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
* Fix UPGRADE/CHANGELOG unstable paths
unstable unstable unstable
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tulir Asokan <tulir@maunium.net>
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tulir Asokan <tulir@maunium.net>
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this makes it a bit clearer what's going on.
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... to `_get_e2e_device_keys_and_signatures_txn`, to better reflect what it
does.
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(#8203)
This is so that we can use it for the backfill events stream.
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* Move `get_devices_with_keys_by_user` to `EndToEndKeyWorkerStore`
this seems a better fit for it.
This commit simply moves the existing code: no other changes at all.
* Rename `get_devices_with_keys_by_user`
to better reflect what it does.
* get_device_stream_token abstract method
To avoid referencing fields which are declared in the derived classes, make
`get_device_stream_token` abstract, and define that in the classes which define
`_device_list_id_gen`.
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... and to show that it does something slightly different to
`_get_e2e_device_keys_txn`.
`include_all_devices` and `include_deleted_devices` were never used (and
`include_deleted_devices` was broken, since that would cause `None`s in the
result which were not handled in the loop below.
Add some typing too.
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async (#8197)
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There's not much point in returning all the others, and some people have a
silly number of devices.
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This was forgotten in #8164.
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insert_many, delete_*) (#8168)
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(#8171)
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This is mainly so that `StreamIdGenerator` and `MultiWriterIdGenerator`
will have the same interface, allowing them to be used interchangeably.
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Some fixes to wording I noticed after merging #7377.
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* Search in columns 'name' and 'displayname' in the admin users endpoint
Signed-off-by: Manuel Stahl <manuel.stahl@awesome-technologies.de>
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request_token_inhibit_3pid_errors is turned on (#7991)
* Don't raise session_id errors on submit_token if request_token_inhibit_3pid_errors is set
* Changelog
* Also wait some time before responding to /requestToken
* Incorporate review
* Update synapse/storage/databases/main/registration.py
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
* Incorporate review
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
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It turns out that not all out-of-band membership events are labelled as such,
so we need to be more accepting here.
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... otherwise it gets leaked.
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It's just a thin wrapper around two ID gens to make `get_current_token`
and `get_next` return tuples. This can easily be replaced by calling the
appropriate methods on the underlying ID gens directly.
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The function is used for two purposes: 1) for subscribers of streams to
get a token they can use to get further updates with, and 2) for
replication to track position of the writers of the stream.
For streams with a single writer the two scenarios produce the same
result, however the situation becomes complicated for streams with
multiple writers. The current `MultiWriterIdGenerator` does not
correctly handle the first case (which is not an issue as its only used
for the `caches` stream which nothing subscribes to outside of
replication).
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async/await (#8063)
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Change HomeServer definition to work with typing.
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Duplicating function signatures between server.py and server.pyi is
silly. This commit changes that by changing all `build_*` methods to
`get_*` methods and changing the `_make_dependency_method` to work work
as a descriptor that caches the produced value.
There are some changes in other files that were made to fix the typing
in server.py.
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With an undocumented configuration setting to enable them for specific users.
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babolivier/new_push_rules
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