* speed up room summaries by pulling their data from room_memberships rather than room state
* disable LL for incr syncs, and log incr sync stats (#3840)
When a user joined a room any existing tags were not sent down the sync
stream. Ordinarily this isn't a problem because the user needs to be in
the room to have set tags in it, however synapse will sometimes add tags
for a user to a room, e.g. for server notices, which need to come down
sync.
* attempt at deduplicating lazy-loaded members
as per the proposal; we can deduplicate redundant lazy-loaded members
which are sent in the same sync sequence. we do this heuristically
rather than requiring the client to somehow tell us which members it
has chosen to cache, by instead caching the last N members sent to
a client, and not sending them again. For now we hardcode N to 100.
Each cache for a given (user,device) tuple is in turn cached for up to
X minutes (to avoid the caches building up). For now we hardcode X to 30.
* add include_redundant_members filter option & make it work
* remove stale todo
* add tests for _get_some_state_from_cache
* incorporate review
The sync API often returns events in a topological rather than stream
ordering, e.g. when the user joined the room or on initial sync. When
this happens we can reuse existing pagination storage functions.
There is no reason to return a tuple of tokens when the last token is
always the token passed as an argument. Changing it makes it consistent
with other storage APIs
Adds a `.wrap` method to ResponseCache which wraps up the boilerplate of a
(get, set) pair, and then use it throughout the codebase.
This will be largely non-functional, but does include the following functional
changes:
* federation_server.on_context_state_request: drops use of _server_linearizer
which looked redundant and could cause incorrect cache misses by yielding
between the get and the set.
* RoomListHandler.get_remote_public_room_list(): fixes logcontext leaks
* the wrap function includes some logging. I'm hoping this won't be too noisy
on production.