Doing a password reset via SMS has never worked, and in any case is a silly
idea because msisdn recycling is a thing.
See also matrix-org/matrix-doc#2303.
Pull the checkers out to their own classes, rather than having them lost in a
massive 1000-line class which does everything.
This is also preparation for some more intelligent advertising of flows, as per #6100
because, frankly, it looked like it was written by an axe-murderer.
This should be a non-functional change, except that where `m.login.dummy` was
previously advertised *before* `m.login.terms`, it will now be advertised
afterwards. AFAICT that should have no effect, and will be more consistent with
the flows that involve passing a 3pid.
Second part of solving #6076Fixes#6076
We return a submit_url parameter on calls to POST */msisdn/requestToken so that clients know where to submit token information to.
Uses a SimpleHttpClient instance equipped with the federation_ip_range_blacklist list for requests to identity servers provided by user input. Does not use a blacklist when contacting identity servers specified by account_threepid_delegates. The homeserver trusts the latter and we don't want to prevent homeserver admins from specifying delegates that are on internal IP addresses.
Fixes#5935
As MSC2263 states, m.require_identity_server must be set to false when it does not require an identity server to be provided by the client for the purposes of email registration or password reset.
Adds an m.require_identity_server flag to /versionss unstable_flags section. This will advertise that Synapse no longer needs id_server as a parameter.
Implements MSC2290. This PR adds two new endpoints, /unstable/account/3pid/add and /unstable/account/3pid/bind. Depending on the progress of that MSC the unstable prefix may go away.
This PR also removes the blacklist on some 3PID tests which occurs in #6042, as the corresponding Sytest PR changes them to use the new endpoints.
Finally, it also modifies the account deactivation code such that it doesn't just try to deactivate 3PIDs that were bound to the user's account, but any 3PIDs that were bound through the homeserver on that user's account.
Fixes#6066
This register endpoint should be disabled if registration is disabled, otherwise we're giving anyone the ability to check if a username exists on a server when we don't need to be.
Error code is 403 (Forbidden) as that's the same returned by /register when registration is disabled.
In ancient times Synapse would only send emails when it was notifying a user about a message they received...
Now it can do all sorts of neat things!
Change the logging so it's not just about notifications.
Remove trailing slash ability from the password reset submit_token endpoint. Since we provide the link in an email, and have never sent it with a trailing slash, there's no point for us to accept them on the endpoint.
The validation links sent via email had their query parameters inserted without any URL-encoding. Surprisingly this didn't seem to cause any issues, but if a user were to put a `/` in their client_secret it could lead to problems.
* Allow passing SYNAPSE_WORKER envvar
* changelog.d
* Document SYNAPSE_WORKER.
Attempting to imply that you don't need to change this default
unless you're in worker mode.
Also aware that there's a bigger problem of attempting to document
a complete working configuration of workers using docker, as we
currently only document to use `synctl` for worker mode, and synctl
doesn't work that way in docker.
Fixes a bug where the default attribute maps were prioritised over
user-specified ones, resulting in incorrect mappings.
The problem is that if you call SPConfig.load() multiple times, it adds new
attribute mappers to a list. So by calling it with the default config first,
and then the user-specified config, we would always get the default mappers
before the user-specified mappers.
To solve this, let's merge the config dicts first, and then pass them to
SPConfig.
* make it clear that if you installed from a package manager, you should use
that to upgrade
* Document the new way of getting the server version (cf #4878)
* Write some words about downgrading.
This is a partial revert of #5893. The problem is that if we drop these tables
in the same release as removing the code that writes to them, it prevents users
users from being able to roll back to a previous release.
So let's leave the tables in place for now, and remember to drop them in a
subsequent release.
(Note that these tables haven't been *read* for *years*, so any missing rows
resulting from a temporary upgrade to vNext won't cause a problem.)
Removes the POST method from `/password_reset/<medium>/submit_token/` as it's only used by phone number verification which Synapse does not support yet.
3PID invites require making a request to an identity server to check that the invited 3PID has an Matrix ID linked, and if so, what it is.
These requests are being made on behalf of a user. The user will supply an identity server and an access token for that identity server. The homeserver will then forward this request with the access token (using an `Authorization` header) and, if the given identity server doesn't support v2 endpoints, will fall back to v1 (which doesn't require any access tokens).
Requires: ~~#5976~~
Broke in #5971
Basically the bug is that if get_current_state_deltas returns no new updates and we then take the max pos, its possible that we miss an update that happens in between the two calls. (e.g. get_current_state_deltas looks up to stream pos 5, then an event persists and so getting the max stream pos returns 6, meaning that next time we check for things with a stream pos bigger than 6)
This allows support users to be created even on MAU limits via
the admin API. Support users are excluded from MAU after creation,
so it makes sense to exclude them in creation - except if the
whole host is in disabled state.
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
Some small fixes to `room_member.py` found while doing other PRs.
1. Add requester to the base `_remote_reject_invite` method.
2. `send_membership_event`'s docstring was out of date and took in a `remote_room_hosts` arg that was not used and no calling function provided.
Another small fixup noticed during work on a larger PR. The `origin` field of `add_display_name_to_third_party_invite` is not used and likely was just carried over from the `on_PUT` method of `FederationThirdPartyInviteExchangeServlet` which, like all other servlets, provides an `origin` argument.
Since it's not used anywhere in the handler function though, we should remove it from the function arguments.
Previously if the first registered user was a "support" or "bot" user,
when the first real user registers, the auto-join rooms were not
created.
Fix to exclude non-real (ie users with a special user type) users
when counting how many users there are to determine whether we should
auto-create a room.
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
This is a combination of a few different PRs, finally all being merged into `develop`:
* #5875
* #5876
* #5868 (This one added the `/versions` flag but the flag itself was actually [backed out](891afb57cb (diff-e591d42d30690ffb79f63bb726200891)) in #5969. What's left is just giving /versions access to the config file, which could be useful in the future)
* #5835
* #5969
* #5940
Clients should not actually use the new registration functionality until https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5972 is merged.
UPGRADE.rst, changelog entries and config file changes should all be reviewed closely before this PR is merged.
* Ensure the list media admin API is always available
This API is required for some external media repo implementations to operate (mostly for doing quarantine operations on a room).
* changelog
Remove all the "double return" statements which were a result of us removing all the instances of
```
defer.returnValue(...)
return
```
statements when we switched to python3 fully.
Python will return a tuple whether there are parentheses around the returned values or not.
I'm just sick of my editor complaining about this all over the place :)
Template config files
* Imagine a system composed entirely of x, y, z etc and the basic operations..
Wait George, why XOR? Why not just neq?
George: Eh, I didn't think of that..
Co-Authored-By: Erik Johnston <erik@matrix.org>
Some of the caches on worker processes were not being correctly invalidated
when a room's state was changed in a way that did not affect the membership
list of the room.
We need to make sure we send out cache invalidations even when no memberships
are changing.
Propagate opentracing contexts across workers
Also includes some Convenience modifications to opentracing for servlets, notably:
- Add boolean to skip the whitelisting check on inject
extract methods. - useful when injecting into carriers
locally. Otherwise we'd always have to include our
own servername and whitelist our servername
- start_active_span_from_request instead of header
- Add boolean to decide whether to extract context
from a request to a servlet
This type of registration was probably never used. It only includes the
user name in the HMAC but not the password.
Shared secret registration is still available via
client/r0/admin/register.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Stahl <manuel.stahl@awesome-technologies.de>
There's no point doing a raise_from here, because the exception is always
logged at warn with no stacktrace in the caller. Instead, let's try to give
better messages to reduce confusion.
In particular, this means that we won't log 'Failed to connect to remote
server' when we don't even attempt to connect to the remote server due to
blacklisting.
Get rid of the labyrinthine `recoverer_fn` code, and clean up the startup code
(it seemed to be previously inexplicably split between
`ApplicationServiceScheduler.start` and `_Recoverer.start`).
Add some docstrings too.
Hopefully, this will fix a stack overflow when recovering an appservice.
The recursion here leads to a huge chain of deferred callbacks, which then
overflows the stack when the chain completes. `inlineCallbacks` makes a better
job of this if we use iteration instead.
Clean up the code a bit too, while we're there.
Get rid of the labyrinthine `recoverer_fn` code, and clean up the startup code
(it seemed to be previously inexplicably split between
`ApplicationServiceScheduler.start` and `_Recoverer.start`).
Add some docstrings too.
Add authenticated_entity and servlet_names tags.
Functionally:
- Add a tag for authenticated_entity
- Add a tag for servlet_names
Stylistically:
Moved to importing methods directly from opentracing.
Fixes#5833
The emailconfig code was attempting to pull incorrect config file names. This corrects that, while also marking a difference between a config file variable that's a filepath versus a str containing HTML.
* allow devices to be marked as "hidden"
This is a prerequisite for cross-signing, as it allows us to create other things
that live within the device namespace, so they can be used for signatures.
This is intended as an amendment to #5674 as using M_UNKNOWN as the errcode makes it hard for clients to differentiate between an invalid password and a deactivated user (the problem we were trying to solve in the first place).
M_UNKNOWN was originally chosen as it was presumed than an MSC would have to be carried out to add a new code, but as Synapse often is the testing bed for new MSC implementations, it makes sense to try it out first in the wild and then add it into the spec if it is successful. Thus this PR return a new M_USER_DEACTIVATED code when a deactivated user attempts to login.
The `expire_access_token` didn't do what it sounded like it should do. What it
actually did was make Synapse enforce the 'time' caveat on macaroons used as
access tokens, but since our access token macaroons never contained such a
caveat, it was always a no-op.
(The code to add 'time' caveats was removed back in v0.18.5, in #1656)
* Fix debian packages for sid being called buster.
I don't know why the sid images return buster as its codename in
`lsb_release` but it does, so lets just grab the codename from the
distro we pass into dockerfile
* Newsfile
There was some inconsistent behaviour in the caching layer around how
exceptions were handled - particularly synchronously-thrown ones.
This seems to be most easily handled by pushing the creation of
ObservableDeferreds down from CacheDescriptor to the Cache.
`None` is not a valid event id, so queuing up a database fetch for it seems
like a silly thing to do.
I considered making `get_event` return `None` if `event_id is None`, but then
its interaction with `allow_none` seemed uninituitive, and strong typing ftw.
* Fix servlet metric names
Co-Authored-By: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
* Remove redundant check
* Cover all return paths
* Add decerators for tracing functions
* Use the new clean contexts
* Context and edu utils
* Move opentracing setters
* Move whitelisting
* Sectioning comments
* Better args wrapper
* Docstrings
Co-Authored-By: Erik Johnston <erik@matrix.org>
* Remove unused methods.
* Don't use global
* One tracing decorator to rule them all.
* Refactor Keyring._start_key_lookups
There's an awful lot of deferreds and dictionaries flying around here. The
whole thing can be made much simpler and achieve the same effect.
* Add a delay to key lookup lock release to fix stack overflow
A tactical call_later here should fix#5723
* changelog
* Opentracing survival guide
* Update decorator names in doc
* Doc cleanup
These are all alterations as a result of comments in #5703, it
includes mostly typos and clarifications. The most interesting
changes are:
- Split developer and user docs into two sections
- Add a high level description of OpenTracing
* newsfile
* Move contributer specific info to docstring.
* Sample config.
* Trailing whitespace.
* Update 5703.misc
* Apply suggestions from code review
Mostly just rewording parts of the docs for clarity.
Co-Authored-By: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
Clean up config settings and dead code.
This is mostly about cleaning up the config format, to bring it into line with our conventions. In particular:
* There should be a blank line after `## Section ##' headings
* There should be a blank line between each config setting
* There should be a `#`-only line between a comment and the setting it describes
* We don't really do the `# #` style commenting-out of whole sections if we can help it
* rename `tracer_enabled` to `enabled`
While we're here, do more config parsing upfront, which makes it easier to use
later on.
Also removes redundant code from LogContextScopeManager.
Also changes the changelog fragment to a `feature` - it's exciting!
* Convert BaseFederationServlet._wrap to async
Empirically, this fixes some lost stacktraces. It should be safe because the
wrapped function is called from JsonResource._async_render, which is already
async.
* Convert the rest of synapse.federation.transport.server to async
We may as well do the whole file while we're here.
* changelog
* flake8
This is basically a contrived way of adding a `Recommends` on `libpq5`, to fix#5653.
The way this is supposed to happen in debhelper is to run
`dh_shlibdeps`, which in turn runs `dpkg-shlibdeps`, which spits things out
into `debian/<package>.substvars` whence they can later be included by
`control`.
Previously, we had disabled `dh_shlibdeps`, mostly because `dpkg-shlibdeps`
gets confused about PIL's interdependent objects, but that's not really the
right thing to do and there is another way to work around that.
Since we don't always use postgres, we don't necessarily want a hard Depends on
libpq5, so I've actually ended up adding an explicit invocation of
`dpkg-shlibdeps` for `psycopg2`.
I've also updated the build-depends list for the package, which was missing a
couple of entries.
We can now use `_get_events_from_cache_or_db` rather than going right back to
the database, which means that (a) we can benefit from caching, and (b) it
opens the way forward to more extensive checks on the original event.
We now always require the original event to exist before we will serve up a
redaction.
Ensures that redactions are correctly authenticated for recent room versions.
There are a few things going on here:
* `_fetch_event_rows` is updated to return a dict rather than a list of rows.
* Rather than returning multiple copies of an event which was redacted
multiple times, it returns the redactions as a list within the dict.
* It also returns the actual rejection reason, rather than merely the fact
that it was rejected, so that we don't have to query the table again in
`_get_event_from_row`.
* The redaction handling is factored out of `_get_event_from_row`, and now
checks if any of the redactions are valid.
A couple of changes here:
* get rid of a redundant `allow_rejected` condition - we should already have filtered out any rejected
events before we get to that point in the code, and the redundancy is confusing. Instead, let's stick in
an assertion just to make double-sure we aren't leaking rejected events by mistake.
* factor out a `_get_events_from_cache_or_db` method, which is going to be important for a
forthcoming fix to redactions.
Alpine Linux 3.8 is still supported, but it seems like
it's quite outdated now.
While Python should be the same on both, all other libraries, etc.,
are much newer in Alpine 3.9 and 3.10.
Signed-off-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
First of all, let's get rid of `TOKEN_NOT_FOUND_HTTP_STATUS`. It was a hack we
did at one point when it was possible to return either a 403 or a 401 if the
creds were missing. We always return a 401 in these cases now (thankfully), so
it's not needed.
Let's also stop abusing `AuthError` for these cases. Honestly they have nothing
that relates them to the other places that `AuthError` is used, other than the
fact that they are loosely under the 'Auth' banner. It makes no sense for them
to share exception classes.
Instead, let's add a couple of new exception classes: `InvalidClientTokenError`
and `MissingClientTokenError`, for the `M_UNKNOWN_TOKEN` and `M_MISSING_TOKEN`
cases respectively - and an `InvalidClientCredentialsError` base class for the
two of them.
* Configure and initialise tracer
Includes config options for the tracer and sets up JaegerClient.
* Scope manager using LogContexts
We piggy-back our tracer scopes by using log context.
The current log context gives us the current scope. If new scope is
created we create a stack of scopes in the context.
* jaeger is a dependency now
* Carrier inject and extraction for Twisted Headers
* Trace federation requests on the way in and out.
The span is created in _started_processing and closed in
_finished_processing because we need a meaningful log context.
* Create logcontext for new scope.
Instead of having a stack of scopes in a logcontext we create a new
context for a new scope if the current logcontext already has a scope.
* Remove scope from logcontext if logcontext is top level
* Disable tracer if not configured
* typo
* Remove dependence on jaeger internals
* bools
* Set service name
* :Explicitely state that the tracer is disabled
* Black is the new black
* Newsfile
* Code style
* Use the new config setup.
* Generate config.
* Copyright
* Rename config to opentracing
* Remove user whitelisting
* Empty whitelist by default
* User ConfigError instead of RuntimeError
* Use isinstance
* Use tag constants for opentracing.
* Remove debug comment and no need to explicitely record error
* Two errors a "s(c)entry"
* Docstrings!
* Remove debugging brainslip
* Homeserver Whitlisting
* Better opentracing config comment
* linting
* Inclue worker name in service_name
* Make opentracing an optional dependency
* Neater config retreival
* Clean up dummy tags
* Instantiate tracing as object instead of global class
* Inlcude opentracing as a homeserver member.
* Thread opentracing to the request level
* Reference opetnracing through hs
* Instantiate dummy opentracin g for tests.
* About to revert, just keeping the unfinished changes just in case
* Revert back to global state, commit number:
9ce4a3d9067bf9889b86c360c05ac88618b85c4f
* Use class level methods in tracerutils
* Start and stop requests spans in a place where we
have access to the authenticated entity
* Seen it, isort it
* Make sure to close the active span.
* I'm getting black and blue from this.
* Logger formatting
Co-Authored-By: Erik Johnston <erik@matrix.org>
* Outdated comment
* Import opentracing at the top
* Return a contextmanager
* Start tracing client requests from the servlet
* Return noop context manager if not tracing
* Explicitely say that these are federation requests
* Include servlet name in client requests
* Use context manager
* Move opentracing to logging/
* Seen it, isort it again!
* Ignore twisted return exceptions on context exit
* Escape the scope
* Scopes should be entered to make them useful.
* Nicer decorator names
* Just one init, init?
* Don't need to close something that isn't open
* Docs make you smarter
this is only used in one place, so it's clearer if we inline it and reduce the
API surface.
Also, fixes a buglet where we would create an access token even if we were
about to block the user (we would never return the AT, so the user could never
use it, but it was still created and added to the db.)
A fix for PR #5626, which returned the original event content as part of a call to /relations.
Only problem was that we were attempting to aggregate the relations on top of it when we did so. We now set bundle_aggregations to False in the get_event call.
We also do this when pulling the relation events as well, because edits of edits are not something we'd like to support here.
FederationDeniedError is a subclass of SynapseError, which is a subclass of
CodeMessageException, so if e is a FederationDeniedError, then this check for
FederationDeniedError will never be reached since it will be caught by the
check for CodeMessageException above. The check for CodeMessageException does
almost the same thing as this check (since FederationDeniedError initialises
with code=403 and msg="Federation denied with %s."), so may as well just keep
allowing it to handle this case.
When asking for the relations of an event, include the original event in the response. This will mostly be used for efficiently showing edit history, but could be useful in other circumstances.
Nothing uses this now, so we can remove the dead code, and clean up the
API.
Since we're changing the shape of the return value anyway, we take the
opportunity to give the method a better name.