When figuring out which topological token to start a purge job at, we
need to do the following:
1. Figure out a timestamp before which events will be purged
2. Select the first stream ordering after that timestamp
3. Select info about the first event after that stream ordering
4. Build a topological token from that info
In some situations (e.g. quiet rooms with a short max_lifetime), there
might not be an event after the stream ordering at step 3, therefore we
abort the purge with the error `No event found`. To mitigate that, this
patch fetches the first event _before_ the stream ordering, instead of
after.
Currently we rely on `current_state_events` to figure out what rooms a
user was in and their last membership event in there. However, if the
server leaves the room then the table may be cleaned up and that
information is lost. So lets add a table that separately holds that
information.
AdditionalResource really doesn't add any value, and it gets in the way for
resources which want to support child resources or the like. So, if the
resource object already implements the IResource interface, don't bother
wrapping it.
Add some useful things, such as error types and logcontext handling, to the
API.
Make `hs` a private member to dissuade people from using it (hopefully
they aren't already).
Add a couple of new methods (`record_user_external_id` and
`generate_short_term_login_token`).
This was ill-advised. We can't modify verify_keys here, because the response
object has already been signed by the requested key.
Furthermore, it's somewhat unnecessary because existing versions of Synapse
(which get upset that the notary key isn't present in verify_keys) will fall
back to a direct fetch via `/key/v2/server`.
Also: more tests for fetching keys via perspectives: it would be nice if we actually tested when our fetcher can't talk to our notary impl.
The mount in the form of ./matrix-config:/etc overwrites the contents of the container /etc folder. Since all valid ca certificates are stored in /etc, the synapse.push.httppusher, for example, cannot validate the certificate from matrix.org.