This will mainly be useful when dealing with module callbacks, which are
all typed as returning `Awaitable`s instead of coroutines or
`Deferred`s.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
Just after a task acquires a contended `Linearizer` lock, it sleeps.
If the task is cancelled during this sleep, we need to release the lock.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
Refactor and convert `Linearizer` to async. This makes a `Linearizer`
cancellation bug easier to fix.
Also refactor to use an async context manager, which eliminates an
unlikely footgun where code that doesn't immediately use the context
manager could forget to release the lock.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
These decorators mostly support cancellation already. Add cancellation
tests and fix use of finished logging contexts by delaying cancellation,
as suggested by @erikjohnston.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
`delay_cancellation` behaves like `stop_cancellation`, except it
delays `CancelledError`s until the original `Deferred` resolves.
This is handy for unifying cleanup paths and ensuring that uncancelled
coroutines don't use finished logcontexts.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
* `@cached` can now take an `uncached_args` which is an iterable of names to not use in the cache key.
* Requires `@cached`, @cachedList` and `@lru_cache` to use keyword arguments for clarity.
* Asserts that keyword-only arguments in cached functions are not accepted. (I tested this briefly and I don't believe this works properly.)
* Fix incorrect argument in test case
* Add copyright header
* Docstring and __all__
* Exclude dev depenencies
* Use changelog from #12088
* Include version in error messages
This will hopefully distinguish between the version of the source code
and the version of the distribution package that is installed.
* Linter script is your friend
* Pull runtime dep checks into their own module
* Reimplement `check_requirements` using `importlib`
I've tried to make this clearer. We start by working out which of
Synapse's requirements we need to be installed here and now. I was
surprised that there wasn't an easier way to see which packages were
installed by a given extra.
I've pulled out the error messages into functions that deal with "is
this for an extra or not". And I've rearranged the loop over two
different sets of requirements into one loop with a "must be instaled"
flag.
I hope you agree that this is clearer.
* Test cases
* Fix 'Unhandled error in Deferred'
Fixes a CRITICAL "Unhandled error in Deferred" log message which happened when
a function wrapped with `@cachedList` failed
* Minor optimisation to cachedListDescriptor
we can avoid re-using `missing`, which saves looking up entries in
`deferreds_map`, and means we don't need to copy it.
* Improve type annotation on CachedListDescriptor
* fix incorrect unwrapFirstError import
this was being imported from the wrong place
* Refactor `concurrently_execute` to use `yieldable_gather_results`
* Improve exception handling in `yieldable_gather_results`
Try to avoid swallowing so many stack traces.
* mark unwrapFirstError deprecated
* changelog
Part of the Tchap Synapse mainlining.
This allows modules to implement extra logic to figure out whether a given 3PID can be added to the local homeserver. In the Tchap use case, this will allow a Synapse module to interface with the custom endpoint /internal_info.
This adds some opentracing annotations to ResponseCache, to make it easier to see what's going on; in particular, it adds a link back to the initial trace which is actually doing the work of generating the response.
When all entries in an `LruCache` have a size of 0 according to the
provided `size_callback`, and `drop_from_cache` is called on a cache
node, the node would be unlinked from the LRU linked list but remain in
the cache dictionary. An assertion would be later be tripped due to the
inconsistency.
Avoid unintentionally calling `__len__` and use a strict `is None`
check instead when unwrapping the weak reference.
Updating mypy past version 0.9 means that third-party stubs are no-longer distributed with typeshed. See http://mypy-lang.blogspot.com/2021/06/mypy-0900-released.html for details.
We therefore pull in stub packages in setup.py
Additionally, some modules that we were previously ignoring import failures for now have stubs. So let's use them.
The rest of this change consists of fixups to make the newer mypy + stubs pass CI.
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>