I thought ruff check would also format, but it doesn't.
This runs ruff format in CI and dev scripts. The first commit is just a
run of `ruff format .` in the root directory.
Update `filters.is_encrypted` and `filters.types`/`filters.not_types` to
be robust when dealing with remote invite rooms in Sliding Sync.
Part of
[MSC3575](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec-proposals/pull/3575):
Sliding Sync
Follow-up to https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/pull/17434
We now take into account current state, fallback to stripped state
for invite/knock rooms, then historical state. If we can't determine
the info needed to filter a room (either from state or stripped state),
it is filtered out.
Add `event.internal_metadata.instance_name` (the worker instance that persisted the event) to go alongside the existing `event.internal_metadata.stream_ordering`.
`instance_name` is useful to properly compare and query for events with a token since you need to compare both the `stream_ordering` and `instance_name` against the vector clock/`instance_map` in the `RoomStreamToken`.
This is pre-requisite work and may be used in https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/pull/17293
Adding `event.internal_metadata.instance_name` was first mentioned in the initial Sliding Sync PR while pairing with @erikjohnston, see 09609cb0db (diff-5cd773fb307aa754bd3948871ba118b1ef0303f4d72d42a2d21e38242bf4e096R405-R410)
Spawning from https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/pull/17187#discussion_r1619492779 around wanting to put `SlidingSyncBody` (parse the request in the rest layer), `SlidingSyncConfig` (from the rest layer, pass to the handler), `SlidingSyncResponse` (pass the response from the handler back to the rest layer to respond) somewhere that doesn't contaminate the imports and cause circular import issues.
- Moved Pydantic parsing models to `synapse/types/rest`
- Moved handler types to `synapse/types/handlers`
This PR ports the logic from the
[synapse_auto_accept_invite](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse-auto-accept-invite)
module into synapse.
I went with the naive approach of injecting the "module" next to where
third party modules are currently loaded. If there is a better/preferred
way to handle this, I'm all ears. It wasn't obvious to me if there was a
better location to add this logic that would cleanly apply to all
incoming invite events.
Relies on https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/pull/17166 to fix linter
errors.
During the migration the automated script to update the copyright
headers accidentally got rid of some of the existing copyright lines.
Reinstate them.
There are a couple of things we need to be careful of here:
1. The current python code does no validation when loading from the DB,
so we need to be careful to ignore such errors (at least on jki.re there
are some old events with internal metadata fields of the wrong type).
2. We want to be memory efficient, as we often have many hundreds of
thousands of events in the cache at a time.
---------
Co-authored-by: Quentin Gliech <quenting@element.io>
We remove these fields as they're just duplicating data the event
already stores, and (for reasons 🤫) I'd like to simplify
the class to only store simple types.
I'm not entirely convinced that we shouldn't instead add helper methods
to the event class to generate stream tokens, but I don't really think
that's where they belong either
For now this maintains compatible with old Synapses by falling back
to using transaction semantics on a per-access token. A future version
of Synapse will drop support for this.
The location of the redacts field changes in room version 11. Ensure
it is copied to the *new* location for *old* room versions for
forwards-compatibility with clients.
Note that copying it to the *old* location for the *new* room version
was previously handled.
And fix a bug in the implementation of the updated redaction
format (MSC2174) where the top-level redacts field was not
properly added for backwards-compatibility.
The event_fields property in filters should use the proper
escape rules, namely backslashes can be escaped with
an additional backslash.
This adds tests (adapted from matrix-js-sdk) and implements
the logic to properly split the event_fields strings.
Instrument `state` and `state_group` storage related things (tracing) so it's a little more clear where these database transactions are coming from as there is a lot of wires crossing in these functions.
Part of `/messages` performance investigation: https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/13356
MSC3389 proposes protecting the relation type & parent event ID
from redaction. This keeps the relation information intact after
redaction which helps with some UX flaws (e.g. deleting an
event causes it to no longer be in a thread, which is confusing).
This moves `redacts` from being a top-level property to
a `content` property in a new room version.
MSC2176 (which was previously implemented) states to not
`redact` this property.
Invalid mentions data received over the Client-Server API should
be rejected with a 400 error. This will hopefully stop clients from
sending invalid data, although does not help with data received
over federation.
Additionally:
* Consistently use `freeze()` in test
---------
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de>
Enables MSC3925 support by default, which:
* Includes the full edit event in the bundled aggregations of an
edited event.
* Stops modifying the original event's content to return the new
content from the edit event.
This is a backwards-incompatible change that is considered to be
"correct" by the spec.
It turns out that no clients rely on server-side aggregation of `m.annotation`
relationships: it's just not very useful as currently implemented.
It's also non-trivial to calculate.
I want to remove it from MSC2677, so to keep the implementation in line, let's
remove it here.
* Removes the `v1` directory from `test.rest.media.v1`.
* Moves the non-REST code from `synapse.rest.media.v1` to `synapse.media`.
* Flatten the `v1` directory from `synapse.rest.media`, but leave compatiblity
with 3rd party media repositories and spam checkers.