Some tables, like device_inbox, take a long time to query at startup for
the stream change cache prefills. This is likely because they are slower
growing streams and so are more fragmented on disk. For now, lets pull
fewer entries out to make startup quicker.
In future, we should add a better index to make it even faster.
We might as well treat all refresh_tokens as invalid. Just return a 403 from
/tokenrefresh, so that we don't have a load of dead, untestable code hanging
around.
Still TODO: removing the table from the schema.
Add a 'devices' table to the storage, as well as a 'device_id' column to
refresh_tokens.
Allow the client to pass a device_id, and initial_device_display_name, to
/login. If login is successful, then register the device in the devices table
if it wasn't known already. If no device_id was supplied, make one up.
Associate the device_id with the access token and refresh token, so that we can
get at it again later. Ensure that the device_id is copied from the refresh
token to the access_token when the token is refreshed.
If rejecting a remote invite fails with an error response don't fail
the entire request; instead mark the invite as locally rejected.
This fixes the bug where users can get stuck invites which they can
neither accept nor reject.
Rather than loading them lazily. This allows us to remove all
the yield statements and spurious arguments for the get_next
methods.
It also allows us to replace all instances of get_next_txn with
get_next since get_next no longer needs to access the db.
This is for setting up dependencies that require work on startup. This
is useful for the DataStore that wants to read a bunch from the database
before initiliazing.