An error occured if a filter was supplied with `event_fields` which did not include
`unsigned`.
In that case, bundled aggregations are still added as the spec states it is allowed
for servers to add additional fields.
To handle cancellation, we ensure that `after_callback`s and
`exception_callback`s are always run, since the transaction will
complete on another thread regardless of cancellation.
We also wait until everything is done before releasing the
`CancelledError`, so that logging contexts won't get used after they
have been finished.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
* Moves the relation pagination tests to a separate class.
* Move the assertion of the response code into the `_send_relation` helper.
* Moves some helpers into the base-class.
These decorators mostly support cancellation already. Add cancellation
tests and fix use of finished logging contexts by delaying cancellation,
as suggested by @erikjohnston.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
`delay_cancellation` behaves like `stop_cancellation`, except it
delays `CancelledError`s until the original `Deferred` resolves.
This is handy for unifying cleanup paths and ensuring that uncancelled
coroutines don't use finished logcontexts.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
The unstable identifiers are still supported if the experimental configuration
flag is enabled. The unstable identifiers will be removed in a future release.
This is allowed per MSC2675, although the original implementation did
not allow for it and would return an empty chunk / not bundle aggregations.
The main thing to improve is that the various caches get cleared properly
when an event is redacted, and that edits must not leak if the original
event is redacted (as that would presumably leak something similar to
the original event content).
Since the object it returns is a ReplicationCommandHandler.
This is clean-up from adding support to Redis where the command handler
was added as an additional layer of abstraction from the TCP protocol.
* `@cached` can now take an `uncached_args` which is an iterable of names to not use in the cache key.
* Requires `@cached`, @cachedList` and `@lru_cache` to use keyword arguments for clarity.
* Asserts that keyword-only arguments in cached functions are not accepted. (I tested this briefly and I don't believe this works properly.)
This field is only to be used in the Server-Server API, and not the
Client-Server API, but was being leaked when a federation response
was used in the /hierarchy API.
* Fix incorrect argument in test case
* Add copyright header
* Docstring and __all__
* Exclude dev depenencies
* Use changelog from #12088
* Include version in error messages
This will hopefully distinguish between the version of the source code
and the version of the distribution package that is installed.
* Linter script is your friend
* Remove unused mocks from `test_typing`
It's not clear what these do. `get_user_by_access_token` has the wrong
signature, including the return type. Tests all pass without these. I
think we should nuke them.
* Changelog
* Fixup imports
* Add type hints to `tests/rest/client`
* newsfile
* fix imports
* add `test_account.py`
* Remove one type hint in `test_report_event.py`
* change `on_create_room` to `async`
* update new functions in `test_third_party_rules.py`
* Add `test_filter.py`
* add `test_rooms.py`
* change to `assertEquals` to `assertEqual`
* lint
* Pull runtime dep checks into their own module
* Reimplement `check_requirements` using `importlib`
I've tried to make this clearer. We start by working out which of
Synapse's requirements we need to be installed here and now. I was
surprised that there wasn't an easier way to see which packages were
installed by a given extra.
I've pulled out the error messages into functions that deal with "is
this for an extra or not". And I've rearranged the loop over two
different sets of requirements into one loop with a "must be instaled"
flag.
I hope you agree that this is clearer.
* Test cases
When we get a partial_state response from send_join, store information in the
database about it:
* store a record about the room as a whole having partial state, and stash the
list of member servers too.
* flag the join event itself as having partial state
* also, for any new events whose prev-events are partial-stated, note that
they will *also* be partial-stated.
We don't yet make any attempt to interpret this data, so API calls (and a bunch
of other things) are just going to get incorrect data.
* Fix 'Unhandled error in Deferred'
Fixes a CRITICAL "Unhandled error in Deferred" log message which happened when
a function wrapped with `@cachedList` failed
* Minor optimisation to cachedListDescriptor
we can avoid re-using `missing`, which saves looking up entries in
`deferreds_map`, and means we don't need to copy it.
* Improve type annotation on CachedListDescriptor
* fix incorrect unwrapFirstError import
this was being imported from the wrong place
* Refactor `concurrently_execute` to use `yieldable_gather_results`
* Improve exception handling in `yieldable_gather_results`
Try to avoid swallowing so many stack traces.
* mark unwrapFirstError deprecated
* changelog
...and various code supporting it.
The /spaces endpoint was from an old version of MSC2946 and included
both a Client-Server and Server-Server API. Note that the unstable
/hierarchy endpoint (from the final version of MSC2946) is not yet
removed.
* Fix `PushRuleEvaluator` to work on frozendicts
frozendicts do not (necessarily) inherit from dict, so this needs to handle
them correctly.
* Fix event filtering for frozen events
Looks like this one was introduced by #11194.
Don't attempt to add non-string `value`s to `event_search` and add a
background update to clear out bad rows from `event_search` when
using sqlite.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
This is an endpoint that we have server-side support for, but no client-side support. It's going to be useful for resyncing partial-stated rooms, so let's introduce it.
When the server leaves a room the `get_rooms_for_user` cache is not
correctly invalidated for the remote users in the room. This means that
subsequent calls to `get_rooms_for_user` for the remote users would
incorrectly include the room (it shouldn't be included because the
server no longer knows anything about the room).
If the latest event in a thread was edited than the original
event content was included in bundled aggregation for
threads instead of the edited event content.
* Make `get_auth_chain_ids` return a Set
It has a set internally, and a set is often useful where it gets used, so let's
avoid converting to an intermediate list.
* Minor refactors in `on_send_join_request`
A little bit of non-functional groundwork
* Implement MSC3706: partial state in /send_join response
If ther are more than 100 to-device messages pending for a device
`/sync` will only return the first 100, however the next batch token was
incorrectly calculated and so all other pending messages would be
dropped.
This is due to `txn.rowcount` only returning the number of rows that
*changed*, rather than the number *selected* in SQLite.
If we prepopulate the test homeserver with a key for a remote homeserver, we
can make federation requests to it without having to stub out the
authenticator. This has two advantages:
* means that what we are testing is closer to reality (ie, we now have
complete tests for the incoming-request-authorisation flow)
* some tests require that other objects be signed by the remote server (eg,
the event in `/send_join`), and doing that would require a whole separate
set of mocking out. It's much simpler just to use real keys.
This implements an allow list for content types for which Synapse will attempt URL preview. If a URL resolves to a resource with a content type which isn't in the list, the download will terminate immediately.
This makes sense given that Synapse would never successfully generate a URL preview for such files in the first place, and helps prevent issues with streaming media servers, such as #8302.
Signed-off-by: Denis Kasak dkasak@termina.org.uk
Part of the Tchap Synapse mainlining.
This allows modules to implement extra logic to figure out whether a given 3PID can be added to the local homeserver. In the Tchap use case, this will allow a Synapse module to interface with the custom endpoint /internal_info.
`start_active_span` was inconsistent as to whether it would activate the span
immediately, or wait for `scope.__enter__` to happen (it depended on whether
the current logcontext already had an associated scope). The inconsistency was
rather confusing if you were hoping to set up a couple of separate spans before
activating either.
Looking at the other implementations of opentracing `ScopeManager`s, the
intention is that it *should* be activated immediately, as the name
implies. Indeed, the idea is that you don't have to use the scope as a
contextmanager at all - you can just call `.close` on the result. Hence, our
cleanup has to happen in `.close` rather than `.__exit__`.
So, the main change here is to ensure that `start_active_span` does activate
the span, and that `scope.close()` does close the scope.
We also add some tests, which requires a `tracer` param so that we don't have
to rely on the global variable in unit tests.
Only allow files which file size and content types match configured
limits to be set as avatar.
Most of the inspiration from the non-test code comes from matrix-org/synapse-dinsic#19
This is in the context of mainlining the Tchap fork of Synapse. Currently in Tchap usernames are derived from the user's email address (extracted from the UIA results, more specifically the m.login.email.identity step).
This change also exports the check_username method from the registration handler as part of the module API, so that a module can check if the username it's trying to generate is correct and doesn't conflict with an existing one, and fallback gracefully if not.
Co-authored-by: David Robertson <davidr@element.io>