Speed up incremental sync by avoiding extra work. We first look at the
state delta changes and only fetch and calculate further derived things
if they have changed.
Instead of having a large cache of `room_id -> bool` about whether a
room is partially stated, replace with a "fetch rooms the user is which
are partially-stated". This is a lot faster as the set of partially
stated rooms at any point across the whole server is small, and so such
a query is fast.
The main issue with the bulk cache lookup is the CPU time looking all
the rooms up in the cache.
We ended up spending ~10% CPU creating a new dictionary and
`_RoomMembershipForUser`, so let's avoid creating new dicts and copying
by returning `newly_joined`, `newly_left` and `is_dm` as sets directly.
---------
Co-authored-by: Eric Eastwood <eric.eastwood@beta.gouv.fr>
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.
This is to make it easier to reuse the logic when adding support for the
new tables
---------
Co-authored-by: Eric Eastwood <eric.eastwood@beta.gouv.fr>
Regressed in #17543.
The `max_download_size` config is not available on workers that don't
load the media repo.
Besides, we should honour the max_size param that was passed into the
function.
This will help mitigating any discrepancies between the issuer
configured and the one returned by the OIDC provider.
This also removes the need for configuring the `account_management_url`
explicitely, as it will now be loaded from the OIDC discovery, as per
MSC2965.
Because we may now fetch stuff for the .well-known/matrix/client
endpoint, this also transforms the client well-known resource to be
asynchronous.
This is so that we can cache it.
We also move the sliding sync types to
`synapse/types/handlers/sliding_sync.py`. This is mainly in-prep for
The only change in behaviour is that
`RoomSyncConfig.combine_sync_config(..)` now returns a new room sync
config rather than mutating in-place.
Reviewable commit-by-commit.
---------
Co-authored-by: Eric Eastwood <eric.eastwood@beta.gouv.fr>
This will help mitigating any discrepancies between the issuer
configured and the one returned by the OIDC provider.
This also removes the need for configuring the `account_management_url`
explicitely, as it will now be loaded from the OIDC discovery, as per
MSC2965.
Because we may now fetch stuff for the .well-known/matrix/client
endpoint, this also transforms the client well-known resource to be
asynchronous.
Fix outlier re-persisting causing problems with sliding sync tables
Follow-up to https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/pull/17512
When running on `matrix.org`, we discovered that a remote invite is
first persisted as an `outlier` and then re-persisted again where it is
de-outliered. The first the time, the `outlier` is persisted with one
`stream_ordering` but when persisted again and de-outliered, it is
assigned a different `stream_ordering` that won't end up being used.
Since we call `_calculate_sliding_sync_table_changes()` before
`_update_outliers_txn()` which fixes this discrepancy (always use the
`stream_ordering` from the first time it was persisted), we're working
with an unreliable `stream_ordering` value that will possibly be unused
and not make it into the `events` table.
This is so that we can cache it.
We also move the sliding sync types to
`synapse/types/handlers/sliding_sync.py`. This is mainly in-prep for
#17599 to avoid circular imports.
The only change in behaviour is that
`RoomSyncConfig.combine_sync_config(..)` now returns a new room sync
config rather than mutating in-place.
Reviewable commit-by-commit.
---------
Co-authored-by: Eric Eastwood <eric.eastwood@beta.gouv.fr>