* Accept a Sequence of events in synapse.appservice
This avoids some casts/ignores in the tests I'm about to fixup. It seems
that `List[Mock]` is not a subtype of `List[EventBase]`, but
`Sequence[Mock]` is a subtype of `Sequence[EventBase]`. So presumably
`Mock` is considered a subtype of anything, much like `Any`.
* make tests.appservice.test_scheduler pass mypy
* Extra hints in tests.appservice.test_scheduler
* Extra hints in tests.appservice.test_api
* Extra hints in tests.appservice.test_appservice
* Disallow untyped defs
* Changelog
Co-authored-by: Brad Murray <brad@beeper.com>
Co-authored-by: Nick Barrett <nick@beeper.com>
Copy the suppress_edits push rule from Beeper to implement MSC3958.
9415a1284b/rust/src/push/base_rules.rs (L98-L114)
Ensure that the list of servers in a partial state room always contains
the server we joined off.
Also refactor `get_partial_state_servers_at_join` to return `None` when
the given room is no longer partial stated, to explicitly indicate when
the room has partial state. Otherwise it's not clear whether an empty
list means that the room has full state, or the room is partial stated,
but the server we joined off told us that there are no servers in the
room.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
Since pyo3-log is initialized very early in the Python start-up
it caches the state of the loggers before they're fully initialized
(and thus are essentially disabled). Whenever we reload the
logging configuration we now also tell pyo3-log to discard
any cached logging configuration it has; it will refetch the
current logging configuration from Python at the next point
it logs.
This fixes Rust log lines not appearing in the homeserver logs.
If a sync request does not need to calculate per-room entries &
is not generating presence & is not generating device list data
(e.g. during initial sync) avoid the expensive calculation of room
specific data.
This is a micro-optimisation for clients syncing simply to receive
to-device information.
This expands the previous optimisation from being only for initial
sync to being for all sync requests.
It also inverts some of the logic to be inclusive instead of exclusive.
The `parse_enum` helper pulls an enum value from the query string
(by delegating down to the parse_string helper with values generated
from the enum).
This is used to pull out "f" and "b" in most places and then we thread
the resulting Direction enum throughout more code.
The previous assumption was that the stream_id column was unique
(for a room ID, receipt type, user ID tuple), but this turned out to be
incorrect.
Now find the max stream ID, then map this back to a database-specific
row identifier and delete other rows which match the (room ID, receipt type,
user ID) tuple, but *not* the row ID.
`run_in_background` calls re-use the current logging context. When they
are not awaited, they can complete after the current logging context has
been marked as finished, which leads to log spam. Use
`run_as_background_process` instead.
Fixes one of the instances of #13090.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
#14910 fixed the regression introduced by #13873 where sqlite database
migrations would no longer run inside a transaction. However, it
committed the transaction before Synapse updated its bookkeeping of
which migrations have been run, which means that migrations may be run
again after they have completed successfully.
Leave the transaction open at the end of `executescript`, to restore the
old, correct behaviour. Also make the PostgreSQL behaviour consistent
with SQLite.
Fixes#14909.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@matrix.org>
* Better test for bad values in power levels events
The previous test only checked that Synapse didn't raise an exception,
but didn't check that we had correctly interpreted the value of the
dodgy power level.
It also conflated two things: bad room notification levels, and bad user
levels. There _is_ logic for converting the latter to integers, but we
should test it separately.
* Check we ignore types that don't convert to int
* Handle `None` values in `notifications.room`
* Changelog
* Also test that bad values are rejected by event auth
* Docstring
* linter scripttttttttt
* Test boolean values in PL content
* Reject boolean power levels
* Changelog
* Perfer `type(x) is int` to `isinstance(x, int)`
This covered all additional instances I could see where `x` was
user-controlled.
The remaining cases are
```
$ rg -s 'isinstance.*[^_]int'
tests/replication/_base.py
576: if isinstance(obj, int):
synapse/util/caches/stream_change_cache.py
136: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
214: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
246: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
267: assert isinstance(stream_pos, int)
synapse/replication/tcp/external_cache.py
133: if isinstance(result, int):
synapse/metrics/__init__.py
100: if isinstance(calls, (int, float)):
synapse/handlers/appservice.py
262: assert isinstance(new_token, int)
synapse/config/_util.py
62: if isinstance(p, int):
```
which cover metrics, logic related to `jsonschema`, and replication and
data streams. AFAICS these are all internal to Synapse
* Changelog
* Better test for bad values in power levels events
The previous test only checked that Synapse didn't raise an exception,
but didn't check that we had correctly interpreted the value of the
dodgy power level.
It also conflated two things: bad room notification levels, and bad user
levels. There _is_ logic for converting the latter to integers, but we
should test it separately.
* Check we ignore types that don't convert to int
* Handle `None` values in `notifications.room`
* Changelog
* Also test that bad values are rejected by event auth
* Docstring
* linter scripttttttttt
MSC3952 defines push rules which searches for mentions in a list of
Matrix IDs in the event body, instead of searching the entire event
body for display name / local part.
This is implemented behind an experimental configuration flag and
does not yet implement the backwards compatibility pieces of the MSC.