For all the homeserver classes, only the FrontendProxyServer passes
its reactor when doing the http listen. Looking at previous PR's looks
like this was introduced to make it possible to write a test, otherwise
when you try to run a test with the test homeserver it tries to
do a real bind to a port. Passing the reactor that the homeserver
is instantiated with should probably be the right thing to do anyway?
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
For all the homeserver classes, only the FrontendProxyServer passes
its reactor when doing the http listen. Looking at previous PR's looks
like this was introduced to make it possible to write a test, otherwise
when you try to run a test with the test homeserver it tries to
do a real bind to a port. Passing the reactor that the homeserver
is instantiated with should probably be the right thing to do anyway?
Signed-off-by: Jason Robinson <jasonr@matrix.org>
This was caused by accidentally overwritting a `last_seen` variable
in a for loop, causing the wrong value to be written to the progress
table. The result of which was that we didn't scan sections of the table
when searching for duplicates, and so some duplicates did not get
deleted.
* Fix race when persisting create event
When persisting a chunk of DAG it is sometimes requried to do a state
resolution, which requires knowledge of the room version. If this
happens while we're persisting the create event then we need to use that
event rather than attempting to look it up in the database.
* Remove redundant WrappedConnection
The matrix federation client uses an HTTP connection pool, which times out its
idle HTTP connections, so there is no need for any of this business.
Since 0.13.0, pymacaroons works correctly with pynacl, so there
isn’t any more reason to depend on an outdated pynacl fork.
Signed-off-by: Andrej Shadura <andrew.shadura@collabora.co.uk>
* Correctly retry and back off if we get a HTTPerror response
* Refactor request sending to have better excpetions
MatrixFederationHttpClient blindly reraised exceptions to the caller
without differentiating "expected" failures (e.g. connection timeouts
etc) versus more severe problems (e.g. programming errors).
This commit adds a RequestSendFailed exception that is raised when
"expected" failures happen, allowing the TransactionQueue to log them as
warnings while allowing us to log other exceptions as actual exceptions.