- better validation on user input
- fix an early task completion
- when checking membership in rooms, check for rooms user has been
banned from as well
Two changes: a) use a batch lookup function instead of a loop, b) check
existing data to see if we already have what we need and only fetch what
we don't.
Adds the option to load the Redis password from a file, instead of
giving it in the config directly. The code is similar to how it’s done
for `registration_shared_secret_path`. I changed the example in the
documentation to represent the best practice regarding the handling of
secrets.
Reading secrets from files has the security advantage of separating the
secrets from the config. It also simplifies secrets management in
Kubernetes.
Added a note in the documentation suggesting that users may set
`PYTHONMALLOC=malloc` when using `jemalloc`. This allows jemalloc to
track memory usage more accurately by bypassing Python's internal
small-object allocator (`pymalloc`), helping to ensure that
`cache_autotuning` functions as expected.
This doc change aims to provide more clarity for users configuring
jemalloc with Synapse.
Based on:
4ac783549c/synapse/metrics/jemalloc.py (L198-L201)
There is a bug with the `StreamChangeCache` where it would incorrectly
return that all entities had changed if asked for entities changed
*since* the earliest stream position.
Note that for streams we use the inequalities: `$min_stream_id <
stream_id <= $max_stream_id`, i.e. when we ask the stream change cache
for all things that have changed since `$stream_id` we don't care for
events that happened *at* `$stream_id`.
Specifically: `_earliest_known_stream_pos` is the position at which we
know that we'll have entries for all changes since that point, we can
use the cache for any stream IDs that equal
`_earliest_known_stream_pos`.
`_earliest_known_stream_pos` is set in three places:
- On startup we set it either to:
- the current maximum stream ID, with not prefilled values; or
- the minimum of the latest N values we pulled from the DB
- When we evict items from the bottom, we set it to the stream ID of the
evicted items.
This was changed in https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/14435,
but I think we were overly conservative there.
---------
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
Based on #17765.
Basically the idea is to reduce the overhead of calling
`ObservableDeferred` in a loop. The two gains are: a) just using a list
of deferreds rather than the machinery of `ObservableDeferred`, and b)
only calling `PreseverLoggingContext` once.
`PreseverLoggingContext` in particular is expensive to call a lot as
each time it needs to call `get_thread_resource_usage` twice, so that it
an update the CPU metrics of the log context.
The notifier is quite inefficient when it has to wake up many user
streams all at once
From a silly benchmark this takes the time to notify 1M user streams
from ~30s to ~5s
This works as instead of passing *all* rooms to `record_sent_rooms` we
only need to pass rooms that were previously not in the LIVE state.
This came from a py-spy where we were spending ~10% CPU calling these
functions. Note that `record_sent_rooms` is a no-op for rooms that are
already in the `LIVE` state, so we only need to call them for
`PREVIOUSLY` or `INITIAL` rooms.
This was a note added in the PR to move to AGPL, which we failed to
remove before landing.
(The context for this was that we needed to decide if we were going to
change which debian repository we published too, but decided not to in
the end)
Bumps [types-setuptools](https://github.com/python/typeshed) from
74.1.0.20240907 to 75.1.0.20240917.
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