* Reload auth events from db after fetching and persisting
In `_update_auth_events_and_context_for_auth`, when we fetch the remote auth
tree and persist the returned events: load the missing events from the database
rather than using the copies we got from the remote server.
This is mostly in preparation for additional refactors, but does have an
advantage in that if we later get around to checking the rejected status, we'll
be able to make use of it.
* Factor out `_get_remote_auth_chain_for_event` from `_update_auth_events_and_context_for_auth`
* changelog
Co-authored-by: Dirk Klimpel <5740567+dklimpel@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: reivilibre <olivier@librepush.net>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
This avoids the overhead of searching through the various
configuration classes by directly referencing the class that
the attributes are in.
It also improves type hints since mypy can now resolve the
types of the configuration variables.
Constructing an EventContext for an outlier is actually really simple, and
there's no sense in going via an `async` method in the `StateHandler`.
This also means that we can resolve a bunch of FIXMEs.
* add test to check if null code points are being inserted
* add logic to detect and replace null code points before insertion into db
* lints
* add license to test
* change approach to null substitution
* add type hint for SearchEntry
* Add changelog entry
Signed-off-by: H.Shay <shaysquared@gmail.com>
* updated changelog
* update chanelog message
* remove duplicate changelog
* Update synapse/storage/databases/main/events.py remove extra space
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
* rename and move test file, update tests, delete old test file
* fix typo in comments
* update _find_highlights_in_postgres to replace null byte with space
* replace null byte in sqlite search insertion
* beef up and reorganize test for this pr
* update changelog
* add type hints and update docstring
* check db engine directly vs using env variable
* refactor tests to be less repetetive
* move rplace logic into seperate function
* requested changes
* Fix typo.
* Update synapse/storage/databases/main/search.py
Co-authored-by: reivilibre <olivier@librepush.net>
* Update changelog.d/10820.misc
Co-authored-by: Aaron Raimist <aaron@raim.ist>
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: reivilibre <olivier@librepush.net>
Co-authored-by: Aaron Raimist <aaron@raim.ist>
The invalidation was missing in `_claim_e2e_one_time_key_returning`,
which is used on SQLite 3.24+ and Postgres. This could break e2ee if
nothing else happened to invalidate the caches before the keys ran out.
Signed-off-by: Tulir Asokan <tulir@beeper.com>
* Improved titles (fall back to the author name if there's not title) and include the site name.
* Handle photo/video payloads.
* Include the original URL in the Open Graph response.
* Fix the expiration time (by properly converting from seconds to milliseconds).
The deprecated /initialSync endpoint maintains a cache of responses,
using parameter values as part of the cache key. When a `from` or `to`
parameter is specified, it gets converted into a `StreamToken`, which
contains a `RoomStreamToken` and forms part of the cache key.
`RoomStreamToken`s need to be made hashable for this to work.
I meant to do this before, in #10591, but because I'm stupid I forgot to do it
for V2 and V3 events.
I've factored the common code out to `EventBase` to save us having two copies
of it.
This means that for `FrozenEvent` we replace `self.get("event_id", None)` with
`self.event_id`, which I think is safe. `get()` is an alias for
`self._dict.get()`, whereas `event_id()` is an `@property` method which looks
up `self._event_id`, which is populated during construction from the same
dict. We don't seem to rely on the fallback, because if the `event_id` key is
absent from the dict then construction of the `EventBase` object will
fail.
Long story short, the only way this could change behaviour is if
`event_dict["event_id"]` is changed *after* the `EventBase` object is
constructed without updating the `_event_id` field, or vice versa - either of
which would be very problematic anyway and the behavior of `str(event)` is the
least of our worries.
The major change is moving the decision of whether to use oEmbed
further up the call-stack. This reverts the _download_url method to
being a "dumb" functionwhich takes a single URL and downloads it
(as it was before #7920).
This also makes more minor refactorings:
* Renames internal variables for clarity.
* Factors out shared code between the HTML and rich oEmbed
previews.
* Fixes tests to preview an oEmbed image.
* add tests for checking if room search works with non-ascii char
* change encoding on parse_string to UTF-8
* lints
* properly encode search term
* lints
* add changelog file
* update changelog number
* set changelog entry filetype to .bugfix
* Revert "set changelog entry filetype to .bugfix"
This reverts commit be8e5a314251438ec4ec7dbc59ba32162c93e550.
* update changelog message and file type
* change parse_string default encoding back to ascii and update room search admin api calll to parse string
* refactor tests
* Update tests/rest/admin/test_room.py
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Patrick Cloke <clokep@users.noreply.github.com>
It's a simplification, but one that'll help make the user directory logic easier
to follow with the other changes upcoming. It's not strictly required for those
changes, but this will help simplify the resulting logic that listens for
`m.room.member` events and generally make the logic easier to follow.
This means the config option `search_all_users` ends up controlling the
search query only, and not the data we store. The cost of doing so is an
extra row in the `user_directory` and `user_directory_search` tables for
each local user which
- belongs to no public rooms
- belongs to no private rooms of size ≥ 2
I think the cost of this will be marginal (since they'll already have entries
in `users` and `profiles` anyway).
As a small upside, a homeserver whose directory was built with this
change can toggle `search_all_users` without having to rebuild their
directory.
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
Adds missing type hints to methods in the synapse.handlers
module and requires all methods to have type hints there.
This also removes the unused construct_auth_difference method
from the FederationHandler.
We added a bunch of spans in #10704, but this ended up adding a lot of
redundant spans for rooms where nothing changed, so instead we only
start the span if there might be something interesting going on.
In `MatrixFederationHttpClient._send_request()`, we make a HTTP request
using an `Agent`, wrap that request in a timeout and await the resulting
`Deferred`. On its own, the `Agent` performing the HTTP request
correctly stashes and restores the logging context while waiting.
The addition of the timeout introduces a path where the logging context
is not restored when execution resumes.
To address this, we wrap the timeout `Deferred` in a
`make_deferred_yieldable()` to stash the logging context and restore it
on completion of the `await`. However this is not sufficient, since by
the time we construct the timeout `Deferred`, the `Agent` has already
stashed and cleared the logging context when using
`make_deferred_yieldable()` to produce its `Deferred` for the request.
Hence, we wrap the `Agent` request in a `run_in_background()` to "fork"
and preserve the logging context so that we can stash and restore it
when `await`ing the timeout `Deferred`.
This approach is similar to the one used with `defer.gatherResults`.
Note that the code is still not fully correct. When a timeout occurs,
the request remains running in the background (existing behavior which
is nothing to do with the new call to `run_in_background`) and may
re-start the logging context after it has finished.
I had one of these error messages yesterday and assumed it was an
invalid auth token (because that was an HTTP query parameter in the
test) I was working on. In fact, it was an invalid next batch token for
syncing.
We've already batched up the events previously, and assume in other
places in the events.py file that we have. Removing this makes it easier
to adjust the batch sizes in one place.