When pushing events in partial state rooms down incremental /sync, we
try to find the `m.room.member` state event for their senders by digging
through their auth events, so that we can present the membership to the
client. Events usually have a membership event in their auth events,
with the exception of the `m.room.create` event and a user's first join
into the room.
When implementing #13477, we took the case of a user's first join into
account, but forgot to handle the `m.room.create` case. This change
fixes that.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
This removes the experimental configuration option and
always escapes the push rule condition keys.
Also escapes any (experimental) push rule condition keys
in the base rules which contain dot in a field name.
Enables MSC3925 support by default, which:
* Includes the full edit event in the bundled aggregations of an
edited event.
* Stops modifying the original event's content to return the new
content from the edit event.
This is a backwards-incompatible change that is considered to be
"correct" by the spec.
AbstractStreamIdTracker (now) has only a single sub-class: AbstractStreamIdGenerator,
combine them to simplify some code and remove any direct references to
AbstractStreamIdTracker.
This replaces the specific `is_user_mention` push rule condition
used in MSC3952 with the generic `exact_event_property_contains`
push rule condition from MSC3966.
It turns out that no clients rely on server-side aggregation of `m.annotation`
relationships: it's just not very useful as currently implemented.
It's also non-trivial to calculate.
I want to remove it from MSC2677, so to keep the implementation in line, let's
remove it here.
Internally the push rules module uses a `pattern_type` property for `event_match`
conditions (and `related_event_match`) to mark the condition as matching the
current user's Matrix ID or localpart.
This is leaky to the Client-Server API where a user can successfully set a condition
which provides `pattern_type` instead of `pattern` (note that there's no benefit to
doing this -- the user can just use their own Matrix ID or localpart instead). When
serializing back to the client the `pattern_type` property is converted into a proper
`pattern`.
The following changes are made to avoid this:
* Separate the `KnownCondition::EventMatch` enum value into `EventMatch`
and `EventMatchType`, each with their own expected properties. (Note that a
similar change is made for `RelatedEventMatch`.)
* Make it such that the `pattern_type` variants serialize to the same condition kind,
but cannot be deserialized (since they're only provided by base rules).
* As a final tweak, convert `user_id` vs. `user_localpart` values into an enum.