If configured an OIDC IdP can log a user's session out of
Synapse when they log out of the identity provider.
The IdP sends a request directly to Synapse (and must be
configured with an endpoint) when a user logs out.
* Return NOT_JSON if decode fails and defer set_timeline_upper_limit call until after check_valid_filter. Fixes#13661. Signed-off-by: Ryan Miguel <miguel.ryanj@gmail.com>.
* Reword changelog
The root node of a thread (and events related to it) are considered
"part of a thread" when validating receipts. This allows clients which
show the root node in both the main timeline and the threaded timeline
to easily send receipts in either.
Note that threaded notifications are not created for these events, these
events created notifications on the main timeline.
The callers either set a default limit or manually handle a None-limit
later on (by setting a default value).
Update the callers to always instantiate PaginationConfig with a default
limit and then assume the limit is non-None.
Stabilize the threads API (MSC3856) by supporting (only) the v1
path for the endpoint.
This also marks the API as safe for workers since it is a read-only
API.
Implement the /threads endpoint from MSC3856.
This is currently unstable and behind an experimental configuration
flag.
It includes a background update to backfill data, results from
the /threads endpoint will be partial until that finishes.
Attempt to parse any valid information from an oEmbed response
(instead of bailing at the first unexpected data). This should allow
for more partial oEmbed data to be returned, resulting in better /
more URL previews, even if those URL previews are only partial.
When retrieving counts of notifications segment the results based on the
thread ID, but choose whether to return them as individual threads or as
a single summed field by letting the client opt-in via a sync flag.
The summarization code is also updated to be per thread, instead of per
room.
Keep the old behavior (of including the original_event field) for any
requests to the /unstable version of the endpoint, but do not include
the field when the /v1 version is used.
This should avoid new clients from depending on this field, but will
not help with current dependencies.
MSC3316 declares that both /rooms/{roomId}/send and /rooms/{roomId}/state
should accept a ts parameter for appservices. This change expands support
to /state and adds tests.
Since MSC3715 has passed FCP, the stable parameter can be used.
This currently falls back to the unstable parameter if the stable
parameter is not provided (and MSC3715 support is enabled in
the configuration).
We incorrectly didn't use the returned `Responder` if the client had
disconnected, which meant that the resource used by the Responder
wasn't correctly released.
In particular, this exhausted the thread pools so that *all* requests
timed out.
Media downloaded as part of a URL preview is normally deleted after two days.
However, while a background database migration is running, the process is
stopped. A long-running database migration can therefore cause the media
store to fill up with old preview files.
This logic was added in #2697 to make sure that we didn't try to run the expiry
without an index on `local_media_repository.created_ts`; the original logic that
needs that index was added in #2478 (in `get_url_cache_media_before`, as
amended by 93247a424a), and is still present.
Given that the background update was added before Synapse v1.0.0, just drop
this check and assume the index exists.