Nothing written into it is encoded, so it makes little sense, but it
does break in python3 the way it was before.
The variable names were adjusted to be less misleading.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Tschira <nota@notafile.com>
Add federation_domain_whitelist
gives a way to restrict which domains your HS is allowed to federate with.
useful mainly for gracefully preventing a private but internet-connected HS from trying to federate to the wider public Matrix network
* [ ] split config options into allowed_local_3pids and registrations_require_3pid
* [ ] simplify and comment logic for picking registration flows
* [ ] fix docstring and move check_3pid_allowed into a new util module
* [ ] use check_3pid_allowed everywhere
@erikjohnston PTAL
lets homeservers specify a whitelist for 3PIDs that users are allowed to associate with.
Typically useful for stopping people from registering with non-work emails
... because these only really exist to confuse people nowadays.
Also bring log config more into line with the generated log config, by making `level_for_storage`
apply to the `synapse.storage.SQL` logger rather than `synapse.storage`.
Binding on 0.0.0.0 when :: is specified in the bind_addresses is now allowed.
This causes a warning explaining the behaviour.
Configuration changed to match.
See #2232
Signed-off-by: Silke Hofstra <silke@slxh.eu>
Most deployments are on Linux (or Mac OS), so this would actually bind
on both IPv4 and IPv6.
Resolves#1886.
Signed-off-by: Willem Mulder <willemmaster@hotmail.com>
Initial commit; this doesn't work yet - the LIKE filtering seems too aggressive.
It also needs _do_initial_spam to be aware of prepopulating the whole user_directory_search table with all users...
...and it needs a handle_user_signup() or something to be added so that new signups get incrementally added to the table too.
Committing it here as a WIP
The redact_content option never worked because it read the wrong config
section. The PR introducing it
(https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/2301) had feedback suggesting the
name be changed to not re-use the term 'redact' but this wasn't
incorporated.
This reanmes the option to give it a less confusing name, and also
means that people who've set the redact_content option won't suddenly
see a behaviour change when upgrading synapse, but instead can set
include_content if they want to.
This PR also updates the wording of the config comment to clarify
that this has no effect on event_id_only push.
Includes https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/2422
`os.path.exists` doesn't allow us to distinguish between permissions errors and
the path actually not existing, which repeatedly confuses people. It also means
that we try to overwrite existing key files, which is super-confusing. (cf
issues #2455, #2379). Use os.stat instead.
Also, don't recomemnd the the use of --generate-config, which screws everything
up if you're using debian (cf #2455).
Set the limit on the returned events in the timeline in the get and sync
operations. The default value is -1, means no upper limit.
For example, using `filter_timeline_limit: 5000`:
POST /_matrix/client/r0/user/user:id/filter
{
room: {
timeline: {
limit: 1000000000000000000
}
}
}
GET /_matrix/client/r0/user/user:id/filter/filter:id
{
room: {
timeline: {
limit: 5000
}
}
}
The server cuts down the room.timeline.limit.
The URLs used for notification emails were hardcoded to use either matrix.to
or vector.im; but for self-hosted setups where Riot is also self-hosted it
may be desirable to allow configuring an alternative Riot URL.
Fixes#1809.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Perez de Castro <aperez@igalia.com>
The debug 'full_twisted_stacktraces' flag caused synapse to rewrite
twisted deferreds to always fire the callback on the next reactor tick.
This was to force the deferred to always store the stacktraces on
exceptions, and thus be more likely to have a full stacktrace when it
reaches the final error handlers and gets printed to the logs.
Dynamically rewriting things is generally bad, and in particular this
change violates assumptions of various bits of Twisted. This wouldn't
necessarily be so bad, but it turns out this option has been turned on
on some production servers.
Turning the option can cause e.g. #1778.
For now, lets just entirely nuke this option.
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.