Keeping track of a lower bound of stream ID where we've deleted everything below makes the queries much faster. Otherwise, every time we scan for rows to delete we'd re-scan across all the rows that have previously deleted (until the next table VACUUM).
Fetch information needed for push rule evaluation in parallel.
Ideally this would use query pipelining, but this is not
available in psycopg2.
Due to the database thread pool this may result in little
to no parallelization.
Co-authored-by: David Robertson <davidr@element.io>
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <patrickc@matrix.org>
Co-authored-by: Erik Johnston <erik@matrix.org>
Assert that the return type of callables wrapped in @cached
and @cachedList are cachable (aka immutable).
Using the new `TaskScheduler` meant that we'ed create lots of new
metrics (due to adding task ID to the desc of background process),
resulting in requests for metrics taking an increasing amount of CPU.
Adds three new configuration variables:
* destination_min_retry_interval is identical to before (10mn).
* destination_retry_multiplier is now 2 instead of 5, the maximum value will
be reached slower.
* destination_max_retry_interval is one day instead of (essentially) infinity.
Capping this will cause destinations to continue to be retried sometimes instead
of being lost forever. The previous value was 2 ^ 62 milliseconds.
The cached decorators always return a Deferred, which was not
properly propagated. It was close enough when wrapping coroutines,
but failed if a bare function was wrapped.
This change fixes two memory leaks during `trial` test runs.
Garbage collection is disabled during each test case and a gen-0 GC is
run at the end of each test. However, when the gen-0 GC is run, the
`TestCase` object usually still holds references to the `HomeServer`
used during the test. As a result, the `HomeServer` gets promoted to
gen-1 and then never garbage collected.
Fix this by periodically running full GCs.
Additionally, fix `HomeServer`s leaking after tests that touch inbound
federation due to `FederationRateLimiter`s adding themselves to a global
set, by turning the set into a `WeakSet`.
Resolves#15622.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
Additionally:
* Consistently use `freeze()` in test
---------
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de>
When there are many synchronous requests waiting on a
`_PerHostRatelimiter`, each request will be started recursively just
after the previous request has completed. Under the right conditions,
this leads to stack exhaustion.
A common way for requests to become synchronous is when the remote
client disconnects early, because the homeserver is overloaded and slow
to respond.
Avoid stack exhaustion under these conditions by deferring subsequent
requests until the next reactor tick.
Fixes#14480.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
PKCE can protect against certain attacks and is enabled by default. Support
can be controlled manually by setting the pkce_method of each oidc_providers
entry to 'auto' (default), 'always', or 'never'.
This is required by Twitter OAuth 2.0 support.