I'm going to need some more flexibility in handling login types in password
auth providers, so as a first step, move some stuff from LoginRestServlet into
AuthHandler.
In particular, we pass everything other than SAML, JWT and token logins down to
the AuthHandler, which now has responsibility for checking the login type and
fishing the password out of the login dictionary, as well as qualifying the
user_id if need be. Ideally SAML, JWT and token would go that way too, but
there's no real need for it right now and I'm trying to minimise impact.
This commit *should* be non-functional.
Since we didn't instansiate the PusherPool at start time it could fail
at run time, which it did for some users.
This may or may not fix things for those users, but it should happen at
start time and stop the server from starting.
The _get_joined_users_from_context cache stores a mapping from user_id
to avatar_url and display_name. Instead of storing those in a dict,
store them in a namedtuple as that uses much less memory.
We also try converting the string to ascii to further reduce the size.
We somehow specced APIs with reason strings, preserve the content
in the events and even have the clients display them, but failed
to actually pass the parameter through to the event content.
administrators can now:
- Set displayname of users
- Update user avatars
- Search for users by user_id
- Browse all users in a paginated API
- Reset user passwords
- Deactivate users
Helpers for doing paginated queries has also been added to storage
Signed-off-by: Morteza Araby <morteza.araby@ericsson.com>
This was broken when device list updates were implemented, as Mailer
could no longer instantiate an AuthHandler due to a dependency on
federation sending.
This returns the currently joined members in the room with their display
names and avatar urls. This is more efficient than /members for large
rooms where you don't need the full events.
The 'time' caveat on the access tokens was something of a lie, since we weren't
enforcing it; more pertinently its presence stops us ever adding useful time
caveats.
Let's move in the right direction by not lying in our caveats.
Since we're not doing refresh tokens any more, we should start killing off the
dead code paths. /tokenrefresh itself is a bit of a thornier subject, since
there might be apps out there using it, but we can at least not generate
refresh tokens on new logins.