Otherwise things will get confused.
An alternative would be to make sure that for lagging stream we don't
return anything (and make sure the returned next_batch token doesn't go
backwards). But that is a faff.
Weakness in auth chain indexing allows DoS from remote room members
through disk fill and high CPU usage.
A remote Matrix user with malicious intent, sharing a room with Synapse
instances before 1.104.1, can dispatch specially crafted events to
exploit a weakness in how the auth chain cover index is calculated. This
can induce high CPU consumption and accumulate excessive data in the
database of such instances, resulting in a denial of service.
Servers in private federations, or those that do not federate, are not
affected.
During the migration the automated script to update the copyright
headers accidentally got rid of some of the existing copyright lines.
Reinstate them.
If simple_{insert,upsert,update}_many_txn is called without any data
to modify then return instead of executing the query.
This matches the behavior of simple_{select,delete}_many_txn.
The event persistence code used to handle multiple rooms
at a time, but was simplified to only ever be called with a
single room at a time (different rooms are now handled in
parallel). The code is still generic to multiple rooms causing
a lot of work that is unnecessary (e.g. unnecessary loops, and
partitioning data by room).
This strips out the ability to handle multiple rooms at once, greatly
simplifying the code.
Just to standardize on the normal helpers, it might also have
a slight perf improvement on PostgreSQL which will now use
`ANY (?)` instead of `IN (?, ?, ...)`.
This splits thinsg into two queries, but most of the time we won't have
new event backwards extremities so this shouldn't actually add an extra
RTT for the majority of cases.
Note this removes the check for events with no prev events, but that was
part of MSC2716 work that has since been removed.
This avoids calling cursor_to_dict and then immediately
unpacking the values in the dict for other users. By not
creating the intermediate dictionary we can avoid allocating
the dictionary and strings for the keys, which should generally
be more performant.
Additionally this improves type hints by avoid Dict[str, Any]
dictionaries coming out of the database layer.
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.
* Add `event_stream_ordering` column to membership state tables
Specifically this adds the column to `current_state_events`,
`local_current_membership` and `room_memberships`. Each of these tables
is regularly joined with the `events` table to get the stream ordering
and denormalising this into each table will yield significant query
performance improvements once used.
* Make denormalised `event_stream_ordering` columns foreign keys
* Add comment in schema file explaining new denormalised columns
* Add triggers to enforce consistency of `event_stream_ordering` columns
* Re-order purge room tables to account for foreign keys
* Bump schema version to 75
Co-authored-by: David Robertson <david.m.robertson1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
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.
Fixes#12801.
Complement tests are at
https://github.com/matrix-org/complement/pull/567.
Avoid blocking on full state when handling a subsequent join into a
partial state room.
Also always perform a remote join into partial state rooms, since we do
not know whether the joining user has been banned and want to avoid
leaking history to banned users.
Signed-off-by: Mathieu Velten <mathieuv@matrix.org>
Co-authored-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
Co-authored-by: David Robertson <davidr@element.io>
This adds an `event_stream_ordering` column to `current_state_events`,
`local_current_membership` and `room_memberships`. Each of these tables
is regularly joined with the `events` table to get the stream ordering
and denormalising this into each table will yield significant query
performance improvements once used. Includes a background job to
populate these values from the `events` table.
Same idea as https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/13703.
Signed off by Nick @ Beeper (@fizzadar).
* Perfer `type(x) is int` to `isinstance(x, int)`
This covered all additional instances I could see where `x` was
user-controlled.
The remaining cases are
```
$ rg -s 'isinstance.*[^_]int'
tests/replication/_base.py
576: if isinstance(obj, int):
synapse/util/caches/stream_change_cache.py
136: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
214: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
246: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
267: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
synapse/replication/tcp/external_cache.py
133: if isinstance(result, int):
synapse/metrics/__init__.py
100: if isinstance(calls, (int, float)):
synapse/handlers/appservice.py
262: assert isinstance(new_token, int)
synapse/config/_util.py
62: if isinstance(p, int):
```
which cover metrics, logic related to `jsonschema`, and replication and
data streams. AFAICS these are all internal to Synapse
* Changelog
Avoid an n+1 query problem and fetch the bundled aggregations for
m.reference relations in a single query instead of a query per event.
This applies similar logic for as was previously done for edits in
8b309adb43 (#11660; threads
in b65acead42 (#11752); and
annotations in 1799a54a54 (#14491).
Remove type hints from comments which have been added
as Python type hints. This helps avoid drift between comments
and reality, as well as removing redundant information.
Also adds some missing type hints which were simple to fill in.
When the last event in a thread is redacted we need to update
the threads table:
* Find the new latest event in the thread and store it into the table; or
* Remove the thread from the table if it is no longer a thread (i.e. all
events in the thread were redacted).
Implement the /threads endpoint from MSC3856.
This is currently unstable and behind an experimental configuration
flag.
It includes a background update to backfill data, results from
the /threads endpoint will be partial until that finishes.
This moves all the invalidations into a single place and de-duplicates
the code involved in invalidating caches for a given event by using
the base class method.
Adds a `thread_id` column to the `event_push_actions`, `event_push_actions_staging`,
and `event_push_summary` tables. This will notifications to be segmented by the thread
in a future pull request. The `thread_id` column stores the root event ID or the special
value `"main"`.
The `thread_id` column for `event_push_actions` and `event_push_summary` is
backfilled with `"main"` for all existing rows. New entries into `event_push_actions`
and `event_push_actions_staging` will get the proper thread ID.
`receipts_linearized` and `receipts_graph` also gain a `thread_id` column, which is similar,
except `NULL` is a special value meaning the receipt is "unthreaded".
See MSC3771 and MSC3773 for where this data will be useful.