MSC3983 provides a way to request multiple OTKs at once from appservices,
this extends this concept to the Client-Server API.
Note that this will likely be spit out into a separate MSC, but is currently part of
MSC3983.
It can be useful to always return the fallback key when attempting to
claim keys. This adds an unstable endpoint for `/keys/claim` which
always returns fallback keys in addition to one-time-keys.
The fallback key(s) are not marked as "used" unless there are no
corresponding OTKs.
This is currently defined in MSC3983 (although likely to be split out
to a separate MSC). The endpoint shape may change or be requested
differently (i.e. a keyword parameter on the current endpoint), but the
core logic should be reasonable.
If enabled, for users which are exclusively owned by an application
service then the appservice will be queried for devices in addition
to any information stored in the Synapse database.
Experimental support for MSC3983 is behind a configuration flag.
If enabled, for users which are exclusively owned by an application
service then the appservice will be queried for one-time keys *if*
there are none uploaded to Synapse.
The previous version of the code could mutate a cached value,
but only if the input requested all devices of a user *and* a specific
device.
To avoid this nonsensical situation we no longer fetch a specific
device ID if all of a user's devices are returned.
This was the last untyped handler from the HomeServer object. Since
it was being treated as Any (and thus unchecked) it was being used
incorrectly in a few places.
Remove type hints from comments which have been added
as Python type hints. This helps avoid drift between comments
and reality, as well as removing redundant information.
Also adds some missing type hints which were simple to fill in.
When a remote user leaves the last room shared with the homeserver, we
have to mark their device list as unsubscribed, otherwise we would hold
on to a stale device list in our cache. Crucially, the device list would
remain cached even after the remote user rejoined the room, which could
lead to E2EE failures until the next change to the remote user's device
list.
Fixes#13651.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
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>
Adds missing type hints to methods in the synapse.handlers
module and requires all methods to have type hints there.
This also removes the unused construct_auth_difference method
from the FederationHandler.
Part of #9744
Removes all redundant `# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-` lines from files, as python 3 automatically reads source code as utf-8 now.
`Signed-off-by: Jonathan de Jong <jonathan@automatia.nl>`
- Update black version to the latest
- Run black auto formatting over the codebase
- Run autoformatting according to [`docs/code_style.md
`](80d6dc9783/docs/code_style.md)
- Update `code_style.md` docs around installing black to use the correct version
it seems to be possible that only one of them ends up to be cached.
when this was the case, the missing one was not fetched via federation,
and clients then failed to validate cross-signed devices.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Jelten <jj@sft.lol>
slots use less memory (and attribute access is faster) while slightly
limiting the flexibility of the class attributes. This focuses on objects
which are instantiated "often" and for short periods of time.
... and to show that it does something slightly different to
`_get_e2e_device_keys_txn`.
`include_all_devices` and `include_deleted_devices` were never used (and
`include_deleted_devices` was broken, since that would cause `None`s in the
result which were not handled in the loop below.
Add some typing too.
It looks like `user_device_resync` was ignoring cross-signing keys from the results received from the remote server. This patch fixes this, by processing these keys using the same process `_handle_signing_key_updates` does (and effectively factor that part out of that function).