The _get_joined_users_from_context cache stores a mapping from user_id
to avatar_url and display_name. Instead of storing those in a dict,
store them in a namedtuple as that uses much less memory.
We also try converting the string to ascii to further reduce the size.
Currently the cache descriptors store deferreds rather than raw values,
this is a simple way of triggering only one database hit and sharing the
result if two callers attempt to get the same value.
However, there are a few caches that simply store a mapping from string
to string (or int). These caches can have a large number of entries,
under the assumption that each entry is small. However, the size of a
deferred (specifically the size of ObservableDeferred) is signigicantly
larger than that of the raw value, 2kb vs 32b.
This PR therefore changes the cache descriptors to store the raw values
rather than the deferreds.
As a side effect cached storage function now either return a deferred or
the actual value, as the cached list decriptor already does. This is
fine as we always end up just yield'ing on the returned value
eventually, which handles that case correctly.
Using _simple_select_list is fairly expensive for functions that return
a lot of rows and/or get called a lot. (This is because it carefully
constructs a list of dicts).
get_current_state_ids gets called a lot on startup and e.g. when the IRC
bridge decided to send tonnes of joins/leaves (as it invalidates the
cache). We therefore replace it with a custon txn function that builds
up the final result dict without building up and intermediate
representation.
Instead of using the cache invalidation replication stream to invalidate
the _get_presence_cache, we can instead rely on the presence replication
stream. This reduces the amount of replication traffic considerably.
background_updates was using `call_later` in a way that leaked the logcontext
into the reactor.
We could have rewritten it to do it properly, but given that we weren't using
the fancier facilities provided by `call_later`, we might as well just use
`async.sleep`, which does the logcontext stuff properly.