This is a split off #18033
This uses a few tricks to speed up the building of docker images:
- This switches to use `uv pip install` instead of `pip install`. This
saves a bunch of time, especially when cross-compiling
- I then looked at what packages were not using binary wheels: I
upgraded MarkupSafe to have binaries for py3.12, and got back to Python
3.12 because hiredis didn't have builds for py3.13 with the version we
were using
- The generation of the requirements.txt is arch-agnostic, so I've
switched this one to run on the build architecture, so that both arch
can share it
- The download of runtime depdendencies can be done on the build
architecture through manual `apt-get download` plus `dpkg --extract`
- We were using -slim images, but still installed a bunch of -dev
dependencies. Turns out, all the dev dependencies were already installed
in the non-slim image, which saves a bunch of time as well
This has been a problem with Element Web, as it will proble /register
with an empty body, which gave this error:
```
curl -d '{}' -HContent-Type:application/json /_matrix/client/v3/register
{"errcode": "M_UNKNOWN",
"error": "Invalid username"}
```
And Element Web would choke on it. This changes that so we reply
instead:
```
{"errcode": "M_FORBIDDEN",
"error": "Registration has been disabled. Only m.login.application_service registrations are allowed."}
```
Also adds a test for this.
See https://github.com/element-hq/element-web/issues/27993
---------
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <andrew@amorgan.xyz>
- Add `get_current_time_msec()` method to the [module
API](https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/latest/modules/writing_a_module.html)
for sound time comparisons with Synapse.
- Fixes#18104
Signed-off-by: Ahmed Qashlan <ahmedelqashlan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Eastwood <madlittlemods@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Erik Johnston <erikj@jki.re>
Adds new environment variables that can be used with the Docker image
(`SYNAPSE_HTTP_PROXY`/`SYNAPSE_HTTPS_PROXY`/`SYNAPSE_NO_PROXY`)
Useful for things like the [Secure Border
Gateway](https://element.io/server-suite/secure-border-gateways)
### Why is this necessary?
You can already configure the `HTTP_PROXY`/`HTTPS_PROXY` environment
variables to proxy outbound requests but setting this globally in the
Docker image affects all processes which isn't always desirable or
workable in the case where the proxy is running in the Docker image
itself (because the Debian packages will fail to download because the
proxy isn't up and running yet) . Adding Synapse specific environment
variables
(`SYNAPSE_HTTP_PROXY`/`SYNAPSE_HTTPS_PROXY`/`SYNAPSE_NO_PROXY`) makes
things much more targetable.
If a user search has many words we can end up creating really large
queries that take a long time for the database to process. Generally,
such searches don't return any results anyway (due to limits on user ID
and display name length).
We "fix" this by cheating and only searching for the first ten words.
Document consequences of replacing secrets. The covered config options
are `registration_shared_secret`, `macaroon_secret_key`, `form_secret`
and `worker_replication_secret`.
Even though I looked at the source code to check the added documentation
is right, I would appreciate additional verification of the statements
made.
In an hand-wavy attempt at classifying how bad the consequences of
secret replacement are, I added some explanations as warnings and others
as regular paragraphs.
Closes#17971
### Pull Request Checklist
<!-- Please read
https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html
before submitting your pull request -->
* [x] Pull request is based on the develop branch
* [x] Pull request includes a [changelog
file](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#changelog).
The entry should:
- Be a short description of your change which makes sense to users.
"Fixed a bug that prevented receiving messages from other servers."
instead of "Moved X method from `EventStore` to `EventWorkerStore`.".
- Use markdown where necessary, mostly for `code blocks`.
- End with either a period (.) or an exclamation mark (!).
- Start with a capital letter.
- Feel free to credit yourself, by adding a sentence "Contributed by
@github_username." or "Contributed by [Your Name]." to the end of the
entry.
* [x] [Code
style](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/code_style.html) is
correct
(run the
[linters](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#run-the-linters))
This is to help track down a possible, but very rare, worker deadlock
that was seen on matrix.org.
In theory, you could work back from an instance of these new logs to the
approximate time when the lock was obtained and focus the diagnostic
efforts there.
### Pull Request Checklist
<!-- Please read
https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html
before submitting your pull request -->
* [x] Pull request is based on the develop branch
* [x] Pull request includes a [changelog
file](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#changelog).
The entry should:
- Be a short description of your change which makes sense to users.
"Fixed a bug that prevented receiving messages from other servers."
instead of "Moved X method from `EventStore` to `EventWorkerStore`.".
- Use markdown where necessary, mostly for `code blocks`.
- End with either a period (.) or an exclamation mark (!).
- Start with a capital letter.
- Feel free to credit yourself, by adding a sentence "Contributed by
@github_username." or "Contributed by [Your Name]." to the end of the
entry.
* [x] [Code
style](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/code_style.html) is
correct
(run the
[linters](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#run-the-linters))
When updating 3pid for a user email from admin api and sending invalid
email the server throws 500 internal server error.
changed to 400 Bad request and returned the error message
Signed-off-by: qashlan <ahmedelqashlan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahmed Qashlan <ahmedelqashlan@gmail.com>
Some small cleanups after Python3.8 became EOL.
- Move some type imports from `typing_extensions` to `typing`
- Remove the `abi3-py38` feature from pyo3
### Pull Request Checklist
<!-- Please read
https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html
before submitting your pull request -->
* [x] Pull request is based on the develop branch
* [x] Pull request includes a [changelog
file](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#changelog).
The entry should:
- Be a short description of your change which makes sense to users.
"Fixed a bug that prevented receiving messages from other servers."
instead of "Moved X method from `EventStore` to `EventWorkerStore`.".
- Use markdown where necessary, mostly for `code blocks`.
- End with either a period (.) or an exclamation mark (!).
- Start with a capital letter.
- Feel free to credit yourself, by adding a sentence "Contributed by
@github_username." or "Contributed by [Your Name]." to the end of the
entry.
* [x] [Code
style](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/code_style.html) is
correct
(run the
[linters](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#run-the-linters))
---------
Co-authored-by: Quentin Gliech <quenting@element.io>
In the current `attribute_requirements` implementation it is only
possible to allow exact matching attribute values. Multiple allowed
values for one attribute are not possible as described in #13238.
### Pull Request Checklist
<!-- Please read
https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html
before submitting your pull request -->
* [x] Pull request is based on the develop branch
* [x] Pull request includes a [changelog
file](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#changelog).
The entry should:
- Be a short description of your change which makes sense to users.
"Fixed a bug that prevented receiving messages from other servers."
instead of "Moved X method from `EventStore` to `EventWorkerStore`.".
- Use markdown where necessary, mostly for `code blocks`.
- End with either a period (.) or an exclamation mark (!).
- Start with a capital letter.
- Feel free to credit yourself, by adding a sentence "Contributed by
@github_username." or "Contributed by [Your Name]." to the end of the
entry.
* [x] [Code
style](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/code_style.html) is
correct
(run the
[linters](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#run-the-linters))
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Neuser <pzkz@infra.run>
Co-authored-by: Quentin Gliech <quenting@element.io>
We log incorrect ones as we want to catch bugs where Synapse returns bad
tokens. However, sometimes clients just send tokens that are e.g. empty.
---------
Co-authored-by: Eric Eastwood <erice@element.io>
### Pull Request Checklist
<!-- Please read
https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html
before submitting your pull request -->
* [X] Pull request is based on the develop branch
* [X] Pull request includes a [changelog
file](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#changelog).
The entry should:
- Be a short description of your change which makes sense to users.
"Fixed a bug that prevented receiving messages from other servers."
instead of "Moved X method from `EventStore` to `EventWorkerStore`.".
- Use markdown where necessary, mostly for `code blocks`.
- End with either a period (.) or an exclamation mark (!).
- Start with a capital letter.
- Feel free to credit yourself, by adding a sentence "Contributed by
@github_username." or "Contributed by [Your Name]." to the end of the
entry.
* [X] [Code
style](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/code_style.html) is
correct
(run the
[linters](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/development/contributing_guide.html#run-the-linters))
I forgot the guide applies to Oracle Linux as well. In fact, I ran a
small homeserver on OEL a few months back.
I did minimal installations on Rocky and OEL on VirtualBox and noticed
Codeready/Powertools repos aren't required, so I removed those commands
from the guide. I switched `RHEL`-references to `EL`.
#17423 was merged before I remembered about OEL but a new PR shouldn't
hurt :)
---------
Co-authored-by: Quentin Gliech <quenting@element.io>
Regressed as part of https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/pull/18107
This does two things:
1. Only check if the state groups have been deleted when calculating the
event context (as that's when we will insert them). This avoids lots of
checks for read operations.
2. Don't lock the `state_groups` rows when doing the check. This adds
overhead, and it doesn't prevent any races.
Broke in #17916, as the signature inspection incorrectly looks at the
wrapper function. We fix this by setting the signature on the wrapper
function to that of the wrapped function via `@functools.wraps`.
Another PR on my quest to a `*_path` variant for every secret. Adds two
config options `admin_token_path` and `client_secret_path` to the
experimental config under `experimental_features.msc3861`. Also includes
tests.
I tried to be a good citizen here by following `attrs` conventions and
not rewriting the corresponding non-path variants in the class, but
instead adding methods to retrieve the value.
Reading secrets from files has the security advantage of separating the
secrets from the config. It also simplifies secrets management in
Kubernetes. Also useful to NixOS users.
When purging history, we try and delete any state groups that become
unreferenced (i.e. there are no longer any events that directly
reference them). When we delete a state group that is referenced by
another state group, we "de-delta" that state group so that it no longer
refers to the state group that is deleted.
There are two bugs with this approach that we fix here:
1. There is a common pattern where we end up storing two state groups
when persisting a state event: the state before and after the new state
event, where the latter is stored as a delta to the former. When
deleting state groups we only deleted the "new" state and left (and
potentially de-deltaed) the old state. This was due to a bug/typo when
trying to find referenced state groups.
2. There are times where we store unreferenced state groups in the DB,
during the purging of history these would not get rechecked and instead
always de-deltaed. Instead, we should check for this case and delete any
unreferenced state groups rather than de-deltaing them.
The effect of the above bugs is that when purging history we'd end up
with lots of unreferenced state groups that had been de-deltaed (i.e.
stored as the full state). This can lead to dramatic increases in
storage space used.
Currently we don't really have anything that stops us from deleting
state groups when an in-flight event references it. This is a fairly
rare race currently, but we want to be able to more aggressively delete
state groups so it is important to address this to ensure that the
database remains valid.
This implements the locking, but doesn't actually use it.
See the class docstring of the new data store for an explanation for how
this works.
---------
Co-authored-by: Devon Hudson <devon.dmytro@gmail.com>
This is so workers can call these functions.
This was preventing the [Delete Room Admin
API](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/admin_api/rooms.html#version-2-new-version)
from succeeding when `block: true` was specified. This was because we
had `run_background_tasks_on` configured to run on a separate worker.
As workers weren't able to call the `block_room` storage function before
this PR, the (delete room) task failed when taken off the queue by the
worker.
Previously, a value like `5q` would be interpreted as 5 milliseconds. We
should just raise an error instead of letting someone run with a
misconfiguration.