on_notifier_poke no longer runs synchonously, so we have to do a different hack
to make sure that the replication data has been sent. Let's actually listen for
its arrival.
This is more involved than it might otherwise be, because the current
implementation just drops its logcontexts and runs everything in the sentinel
context.
It turns out that we aren't actually using a bunch of the functionality here
(notably suppress_failures and the fact that Distributor.fire returns a
deferred), so the easiest way to fix this is actually by simplifying a bunch of
code.
Newer syntax
attr.ib(factory=dict)
is just a syntactic sugar for
attr.ib(default=attr.Factory(dict))
It was introduced in newest version of attrs package (18.1.0)
and doesn't work with older versions.
We should either require minimum version of attrs to be 18.1.0,
or use older (slightly more verbose) syntax.
Requiring newest version is not a good solution because
Linux distributions may have older version of attrs (17.4.0 in Fedora 28),
and requiring to build (and package)
newer version just to use newer syntactic sugar in only one test
is just too much.
It's much better to fix that test to use older syntax.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Girko <ol@infoserver.lv>
We need to do a bit more validation when we get a server name, but don't want
to be re-doing it all over the shop, so factor out a separate
parse_and_validate_server_name, and do the extra validation.
Also, use it to verify the server name in the config file.
a61738b removed a call to run_on_reactor from a unit test, but that call was
doing something useful, in making the function in question asynchronous.
Reinstate the call and add a check that we are testing what we wanted to be
testing.
Make sure that server_names used in auth headers are sane, and reject them with
a sensible error code, before they disappear off into the depths of the system.
When _get_state_for_groups is given a wildcard filter, just do a complete
lookup. Hopefully this will give us the best of both worlds by not filling up
the ram if we only need one or two keys, but also making the cache still work
for the federation reader usecase.
This is only used by filter_events_for_client, so we can simplify the whole
thing by just doing one user at a time, and removing a dead storage function to
boot.
The transaction cache has some code which tries to stop it caching failures,
but if the callback function failed straight away, then things would happen
backwards and we'd end up with the failure stuck in the cache.
This simplifies things as it is, but will also allow us to change the
way we traverse topologically without having to update the way push
actions work.
So, it turns out that if you have a first `Deferred` `D1`, you can add a
callback which returns another `Deferred` `D2`, and `D2` must then complete
before any further callbacks on `D1` will execute (and later callbacks on `D1`
get the *result* of `D2` rather than `D2` itself).
So, `D1` might have `called=True` (as in, it has started running its
callbacks), but any new callbacks added to `D1` won't get run until `D2`
completes - so if you `yield D1` in an `inlineCallbacks` function, your `yield`
will 'block'.
In conclusion: some of our assumptions in `logcontext` were invalid. We need to
make sure that we don't optimise out the logcontext juggling when this
situation happens. Fortunately, it is easy to detect by checking `D1.paused`.
This closes#2602
v1auth was created to account for the differences in status code between
the v1 and v2_alpha revisions of the protocol (401 vs 403 for invalid
tokens). However since those protocols were merged, this makes the r0
version/endpoint internally inconsistent, and violates the
specification for the r0 endpoint.
This might break clients that rely on this inconsistency with the
specification. This is said to affect the legacy angular reference
client. However, I feel that restoring parity with the spec is more
important. Either way, it is critical to inform developers about this
change, in case they rely on the illegal behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Tschira <nota@notafile.com>
In most cases, we limit the number of prev_events for a given event to 10
events. This fixes a particular code path which created events with huge
numbers of prev_events.
This is a mixed commit that fixes various small issues
* print parentheses
* 01 is invalid syntax (it was octal in py2)
* [x for i in 1, 2] is invalid syntax
* six moves
Signed-off-by: Adrian Tschira <nota@notafile.com>
These worked accidentally before (python2 doesn't complain if you
compare incompatible types) but under py3 this blows up spectacularly
Signed-off-by: Adrian Tschira <nota@notafile.com>