| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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We do this to prevent foot guns. The default config uses a MemoryFilter,
but users are free to change to logging to files directly. If they do
then they have to ensure to set the `filters: [context]` on the right
handler, otherwise records get written with the wrong context.
Instead we move the logic to happen when we generate a record, which is
when we *log* rather than *handle*.
(It's possible to add filters to loggers in the config, however they
don't apply to descendant loggers and so they have to be manually set on
*every* logger used in the code base)
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We do this to prevent foot guns. The default config uses a MemoryFilter,
but users are free to change to logging to files directly. If they do
then they have to ensure to set the `filters: [context]` on the right
handler, otherwise records get written with the wrong context.
Instead we move the logic to happen when we generate a record, which is
when we *log* rather than *handle*.
(It's possible to add filters to loggers in the config, however they
don't apply to descendant loggers and so they have to be manually set on
*every* logger used in the code base)
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c.f. #8021
A lot of the code here is to change the `Completed 200 OK` logging to include the request URI so that we can drop the `Sending request...` log line.
Some notes:
1. We won't log retries, which may be confusing considering the time taken log line includes retries and sleeps.
2. The `_send_request_with_optional_trailing_slash` will always be logged *without* the forward slash, even if it succeeded only with the forward slash.
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* Change default log config to buffer by default.
This batches up writes to the filesystem, which is more efficient for
disk I/O. This means that it can take some time for logs to get written
to disk. Note that ERROR logs (and above) immediately flush the buffer.
This only effects new installs, as we only write the log config if
started with `--generate-config` (in the same way we do for generating
signing keys).
* Default to keeping last 4 days of logs.
This hopefully reduces the amount of logs kept for new servers. Keeping
the last 1GB of logs is likely overkill for new servers, but equally may
not be enough for busy ones.
Instead, we keep the last four days worth of logs, enough so that admins
can investigate any problems that happened over e.g. a long weekend.
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Hopefully this mostly speaks for itself. I also did a bit of cleaning up of the
error handling.
Fixes #8047
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I think this would have caught all the cases in
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7642 - and I think a 500 makes
more sense here than a 403
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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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babolivier/new_push_rules
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database to async (#8042)
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This solves the problem that the first few lines are logged twice on matrix.org. Hopefully the comments explain it.
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This has long been something I've wanted to do. Basically the `Daemonize` code
is both too flexible and not flexible enough, in that it offers a bunch of
features that we don't use (changing UID, closing FDs in the child, logging to
syslog) and doesn't offer a bunch that we could do with (redirecting stdout/err
to a file instead of /dev/null; having the parent not exit until the child is
running).
As a first step, I've lifted the Daemonize code and removed the bits we don't
use. This should be a non-functional change. Fixing everything else will come
later.
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We've [decided](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/5253#issuecomment-665976308) to remove the signature check for v1 lookups.
The signature check has been removed in v2 lookups. v1 lookups are currently deprecated. As mentioned in the above linked issue, this verification was causing deployments for the vector.im and matrix.org IS deployments, and this change is the simplest solution, without being unjustified.
Implementations are encouraged to use the v2 lookup API as it has [increased privacy benefits](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2134).
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`StatsHandler` handles updates to the `current_state_delta_stream`, and updates room stats such as the amount of state events, joined users, etc.
However, it counts every new join membership as a new user entering a room (and that user being in another room), whereas it's possible for a user's membership status to go from join -> join, for instance when they change their per-room profile information.
This PR adds a check for join->join membership transitions, and bails out early, as none of the further checks are necessary at that point.
Due to this bug, membership stats in many rooms have ended up being wildly larger than their true values. I am not sure if we also want to include a migration step which recalculates these statistics (possibly using the `_populate_stats_process_rooms` bg update).
Bug introduced in the initial implementation https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/4338.
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Signed-off-by: Michael Albert <michael.albert@awesome-technologies.de>
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erikj/add_rate_limiting_to_joins
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Thanks to some slightly overzealous cleanup in the
`delete_old_current_state_events`, it's possible to end up with no
`event_forward_extremities` in a room where we have outstanding local
invites. The user would then get a "no create event in auth events" when trying
to reject the invite.
We can hack around it by using the dangling invite as the prev event.
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Add option ```purge``` to ```POST /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>/delete```
Fixes: #3761
Signed-off-by: Dirk Klimpel dirk@klimpel.org
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Idea from matrix-org/synapse-dinsic#49
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Fixes #7901.
Signed-off-by: Niklas Tittjung <nik_t.01@web.de>
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Synapse 1.18.0rc2 (2020-07-28)
==============================
Bugfixes
--------
- Fix an `AssertionError` exception introduced in v1.18.0rc1. ([\#7876](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7876))
- Fix experimental support for moving typing off master when worker is restarted, which is broken in v1.18.0rc1. ([\#7967](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7967))
Internal Changes
----------------
- Further optimise queueing of inbound replication commands. ([\#7876](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7876))
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IIRC this doesn't break tests because its only hit on reconnection, or something.
Basically, when a process needs to fetch missing updates for the `typing` stream it needs to query the writer instance via HTTP (as we don't write typing notifications to the DB), the problem was that the endpoint (`streams`) was only registered on master and specifically not on the typing writer worker.
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Most of the stuff we do for replication commands can be done synchronously. There's no point spinning up background processes if we're not going to need them.
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Handling of incoming typing stream updates from replication was not
hooked up on master, effecting set ups where typing was handled on a
different worker.
This is really only a problem if the master process is also handling
sync requests, which is unlikely for those that are at the stage of
moving typing off.
The other observable effect is that if a worker restarts or a
replication connect drops then the typing worker will issue a
`POSITION typing`, triggering master process to try and stream *all*
typing updates from position 0.
Fixes #7907
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Fixes previews of Twitter URLs by using their oEmbed endpoint to grab content.
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(#7944)
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Clients disconnecting before we finish processing the request happens from time
to time. We don't need to yell about it
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If we send out an event which refers to `prev_events` which other servers in
the federation are missing, then (after a round or two of backfill attempts),
they will end up asking us for `/state_ids` at a particular point in the DAG.
As per https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7893, this is quite
expensive, and we tend to see lots of very similar requests around the same
time.
We can therefore handle this much more efficiently by using a cache, which (a)
ensures that if we see the same request from multiple servers (or even the same
server, multiple times), then they share the result, and (b) any other servers
that miss the initial excitement can also benefit from the work.
[It's interesting to note that `/state` has a cache for exactly this
reason. `/state` is now essentially unused and replaced with `/state_ids`, but
evidently when we replaced it we forgot to add a cache to the new endpoint.]
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For inbound federation requests, if a given remote server makes too many
requests at once, we start stacking them up rather than processing them
immediatedly.
However, that means that there is a fair chance that the requesting server will
disconnect before we start processing the request. In that case, if it was a
read-only request (ie, a GET request), there is absolutely no point in
building a response (and some requests are quite expensive to handle).
Even in the case of a POST request, one of two things will happen:
* Most likely, the requesting server will retry the request and we'll get the
information anyway.
* Even if it doesn't, the requesting server has to assume that we didn't get
the memo, and act accordingly.
In short, we're better off aborting the request at this point rather than
ploughing on with what might be a quite expensive request.
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... it's a load of work which may be entirely redundant.
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I'm going to be doing more stuff synchronously, and I don't want to lose the
CPU metrics down the sofa.
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This had some dead code and some just plain wrong docstrings.
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Use Element CSS and logo in notification emails when app name is Element.
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
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The [postgres setup docs](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/develop/docs/postgres.md#set-up-database) recommend setting up your database with user `synapse_user`.
However, uncommenting the postgres defaults in the sample config leave you with user `synapse`.
This PR switches the sample config to recommend `synapse_user`. Took a me a second to figure this out, so assume this will beneficial to others.
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Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
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It serves no purpose and updating everytime we write to the device inbox
stream means all such transactions will conflict, causing lots of
transaction failures and retries.
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Fixes #7774
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It's somewhat expected for us to have unknown room versions in the
database due to room version experiments.
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objects. (#7849)
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When we get behind on replication, we tend to stack up background processes
behind a linearizer. Bg processes are heavy (particularly with respect to
prometheus metrics) and linearizers aren't terribly efficient once the queue
gets long either.
A better approach is to maintain a queue of requests to be processed, and
nominate a single process to work its way through the queue.
Fixes: #7444
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We shouldn't allow others to make_join through us if we've left the room;
reject such attempts with a 404.
Fixes #7835. Fixes #6958.
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This reuses the same scheme as federation sender sharding
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Fix guest user registration with lots of client readers
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partly just to show it works, but alwo to remove a bit of code duplication.
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I found these made pycharm have more of a clue as to what was going on in other places.
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It was correct at the time of our friend Jorik writing it (checking
git blame), but the world has moved now and it is no longer a
generator.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
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json. (#7836)
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When considering rooms to clean up in `delete_old_current_state_events`, skip
rooms which we are creating, which otherwise look a bit like rooms we have
left.
Fixes #7834.
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* Fix client reader sharding tests
* Newsfile
* Fix typing
* Update changelog.d/7853.misc
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
* Move mocking of http_client to tests
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
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As far as I can tell from the sentry logs, the only time this has actually done
anything in the last two years is when we had two master workers running at
once, and even then, it made a bit of a mess of it (see
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7845#issuecomment-658238739).
Generally I feel like this code is doing more harm than good.
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The Delete Room admin API allows server admins to remove rooms from server
and block these rooms.
`DELETE /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>`
It is a combination and improvement of "[Shutdown room](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/develop/docs/admin_api/shutdown_room.md)" and "[Purge room](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/develop/docs/admin_api/purge_room.md)" API.
Fixes: #6425
It also fixes a bug in [synapse/storage/data_stores/main/room.py](synapse/storage/data_stores/main/room.py) in ` get_room_with_stats`.
It should return `None` if the room is unknown. But it returns an `IndexError`.
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/901b1fa561e3cc661d78aa96d59802cf2078cb0d/synapse/storage/data_stores/main/room.py#L99-L105
Related to:
- #5575
- https://github.com/Awesome-Technologies/synapse-admin/issues/17
Signed-off-by: Dirk Klimpel dirk@klimpel.org
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We didn't do this for e.g. registration emails.
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Fixes https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7821, introduced in https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/7639
Turns out PyYAML translates `off` into a `False` boolean if it's
unquoted (see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/36463531/pyyaml-automatically-converting-certain-keys-to-boolean-values),
which seems to be a liberal interpretation of this bit of the YAML spec: https://yaml.org/spec/1.1/current.html#id864510
An alternative fix would be to implement the solution mentioned in the
SO post linked above, but I'm aware it might break existing setups
(which might use these values in the configuration file) so it's
probably better just to add an extra check for this one. We should be
aware that this is a thing for the next times we do that though.
I didn't find any other occurrence of this bug elsewhere in the
codebase.
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The replication client requires that arguments are given as keyword
arguments, which was not done in this case. We also pull out the logic
so that we can catch and handle any exceptions raised, rather than
leaving them unhandled.
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When fetching the state of a room over federation we receive the event
IDs of the state and auth chain. We then fetch those events that we
don't already have.
However, we used a function that recursively fetched any missing auth
events for the fetched events, which can lead to a lot of recursion if
the server is missing most of the auth chain. This work is entirely
pointless because would have queued up the missing events in the auth
chain to be fetched already.
Let's just diable the recursion, since it only gets called from one
place anyway.
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use `Failure()` to fish out the real exception.
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It seems auth_events can be either a list or a tuple, depending on Things.
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Fixes #2181.
The basic premise is that, when we
fail to reject an invite via the remote server, we can generate our own
out-of-band leave event and persist it as an outlier, so that we have something
to send to the client.
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... instead of duplicating `config.signing_key[0]` everywhere
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This table is no longer used, so we may as well stop populating it. Removing it
would prevent people rolling back to older releases of Synapse, so that can
happen in a future release.
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* Fix spec compliance; tweaks without values are valid
(default to True, which is only concretely specified for
`highlight`, but it seems only reasonable to generalise)
* Changelog for 7766.
* Add documentation to `tweaks_for_actions`
May as well tidy up when I'm here.
* Add a test for `tweaks_for_actions`
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Fixes https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7641
The package was pinned to <0.8.0 without an obvious reasoning with
7ad1d7635
in https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5636
while the version selection looks to just try to exclude an arbitrary
next minor version number that might introduce API breaking changes.
Selecting the next minor number might be a good conservative selection.
Downstream distributions already reported success patching out the version
requirements.
This also fixes the integration of upgraded packages into openSUSE packages,
e.g. for openSUSE Tumbleweed which already ships prometheus_client >= 0.8 .
Signed-off-by: Oliver Kurz <okurz@suse.de>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
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The CI appears to use the latest version of isort, which is a problem when isort gets a major version bump. Rather than try to pin the version, I've done the necessary to make isort5 happy with synapse.
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fixes #7016
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Synapse 1.16.0rc2 (2020-07-02)
==============================
Synapse 1.16.0rc2 includes the security fixes released with Synapse 1.15.2.
Please see [below](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/CHANGES.md#synapse-1152-2020-07-02) for more details.
Improved Documentation
----------------------
- Update postgres image in example `docker-compose.yaml` to tag `12-alpine`. ([\#7696](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7696))
Internal Changes
----------------
- Add some metrics for inbound and outbound federation latencies: `synapse_federation_server_pdu_process_time` and `synapse_event_processing_lag_by_event`. ([\#7771](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7771))
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Introduced in #7755, not yet released.
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* Remove obsolete comment about ancient temporary code
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
* Implement hack to set push priority
based on whether the tweaks indicate the event might cause
effects.
* Changelog for 7765
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
* Antilint
* Add tests for push priority
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
* Update synapse/push/httppusher.py
Co-authored-by: Brendan Abolivier <babolivier@matrix.org>
* Antilint
* Remove needless invites from tests.
Co-authored-by: Brendan Abolivier <babolivier@matrix.org>
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my editor was complaining about unset variables, so let's add some early
returns to fix that and reduce indentation/cognitive load.
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This makes it much easier to find where streams are referenced.
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fix a few things to make this pass mypy.
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State res v2 across large data sets can be very CPU intensive, and if
all the relevant events are in the cache the algorithm will run from
start to finish within a single reactor tick. This can result in
blocking the reactor tick for several seconds, which can have major
repercussions on other requests.
To fix this we simply add the occaisonal `sleep(0)` during iterations to
yield execution until the next reactor tick. The aim is to only do this
for large data sets so that we don't impact otherwise quick resolutions.=
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HTTP requires the response to contain a Content-Length header unless chunked encoding is being used.
Prometheus metrics endpoint did not set this, causing software such as prometheus-proxy to not be able to scrape synapse for metrics.
Signed-off-by: Christian Svensson <blue@cmd.nu>
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Fix unread counts in sync
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* Always return an unread_count in get_unread_event_push_actions_by_room_for_user
* Don't always expect unread_count to be there so we don't take out sync entirely if something goes wrong
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Older versions of `parameterized` package have no `parameterized_class` decorator. This decorator is used in tests.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Girko <ol@infoserver.lv>
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This requires a new config option to specify which media repo should be
responsible for running background jobs to e.g. clear out expired URL
preview caches.
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Implementation of https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2625
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This is a potential solution to https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/3374
and https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/5953
as raised by Mozilla at https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/10868.
This lets you define a push rule action which increases the badge count (unread notification)
count on a given room, but doesn't actually send a push for that notification via email or HTTP.
We might want to define this as the default behaviour for group chats in future
to solve https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/3268 at last.
This is implemented as a string action rather than a tweak because:
* Other pushers don't care about the tweak, given they won't ever get pushed
* The DB can store the tweak more efficiently using the existing `notify` table.
* It avoids breaking the default_notif/highlight_action optimisations.
Clients which generate their own notifs (e.g. desktop notifs from Riot/Web
would need to be aware of the new push action) to uphold it.
An alternative way to do this would be to maintain a `msg_count` alongside
`highlight_count` and `notification_count` in `unread_notifications` in sync responses.
However, doing this by counting the rows in `events` since the `stream_position`
of the user's last read receipt turns out to be painfully slow (~200ms), perhaps
due to the size of the events table. So instead, we use the highly optimised
existing event_push_actions (and event_push_actions_staging) table to maintain
the counts - using the code paths which already exist for tracking unread
notification counts efficiently. These queries are typically ~3ms or so.
The biggest issues I see here are:
* We're slightly repurposing the `notif` field on `event_push_actions` to
track whether a given action actually sent a `push` or not. This doesn't
seem unreasonable, but it's slightly naughty given that previously the
field explicitly tracked whether `notify` was true for the action (and
as a result, it was uselessly always set to 1 in the DB).
* We're going to put more load on the `event_push_actions` table for all the
random group chats which people had previously muted. In practice i don't
think there are many of these though.
* There isn't an MSC for this yet (although this comment could become one).
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The aim here is to make it easier to reason about when streams are limited and when they're not, by moving the logic into the database functions themselves. This should mean we can kill of `db_query_to_update_function` function.
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This ended up being a bit more invasive than I'd hoped for (not helped by
generic_worker duplicating some of the code from homeserver), but hopefully
it's an improvement.
The idea is that, rather than storing unstructured `dict`s in the config for
the listener configurations, we instead parse it into a structured
`ListenerConfig` object.
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Fixes https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7683
Broke in: #7649
We had a `yield` acting on a coroutine. To be fair this one is a bit difficult to notice as there's a function in the middle that just passes the coroutine along.
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