Synapse: Matrix homeserver written in Python/Twisted.
Find a file
Eric Eastwood 1ca70fd312
Allow room creator to send MSC2716 related events in existing room versions (#10566)
* Allow room creator to send MSC2716 related events in existing room versions

Discussed at https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2716/#discussion_r682474869

Restoring `get_create_event_for_room_txn` from,
44bb3f0cf5

* Add changelog

* Stop people from trying to redact MSC2716 events in unsupported room versions

* Populate rooms.creator column for easy lookup

> From some [out of band discussion](https://matrix.to/#/!UytJQHLQYfvYWsGrGY:jki.re/$p2fKESoFst038x6pOOmsY0C49S2gLKMr0jhNMz_JJz0?via=jki.re&via=matrix.org), my plan is to use `rooms.creator`. But currently, we don't fill in `creator` for remote rooms when a user is invited to a room for example. So we need to add some code to fill in `creator` wherever we add to the `rooms` table. And also add a background update to fill in the rows missing `creator` (we can use the same logic that `get_create_event_for_room_txn` is doing by looking in the state events to get the `creator`).
>
> https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10566#issuecomment-901616642

* Remove and switch away from get_create_event_for_room_txn

* Fix no create event being found because no state events persisted yet

* Fix and add tests for rooms creator bg update

* Populate rooms.creator field for easy lookup

Part of https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10566

 - Fill in creator whenever we insert into the rooms table
 - Add background update to backfill any missing creator values

* Add changelog

* Fix usage

* Remove extra delta already included in #10697

* Don't worry about setting creator for invite

* Only iterate over rows missing the creator

See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10697#discussion_r695940898

* Use constant to fetch room creator field

See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10697#discussion_r696803029

* More protection from other random types

See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10697#discussion_r696806853

* Move new background update to end of list

See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10697#discussion_r696814181

* Fix query casing

* Fix ambiguity iterating over cursor instead of list

Fix `psycopg2.ProgrammingError: no results to fetch` error
when tests run with Postgres.

```
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES=1 SYNAPSE_TEST_LOG_LEVEL=INFO python -m twisted.trial tests.storage.databases.main.test_room
```

---

We use `txn.fetchall` because it will return the results as a
list or an empty list when there are no results.

Docs:

> `cursor` objects are iterable, so, instead of calling explicitly fetchone() in a loop, the object itself can be used:
>
> https://www.psycopg.org/docs/cursor.html#cursor-iterable

And I'm guessing iterating over a raw cursor does something weird when there are no results.

---

Test CI failure: https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10697/checks?check_run_id=3468916530
```
tests.test_visibility.FilterEventsForServerTestCase.test_large_room
===============================================================================
[FAIL]
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/tests/storage/databases/main/test_room.py", line 85, in test_background_populate_rooms_creator_column
    self.get_success(
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/tests/unittest.py", line 500, in get_success
    return self.successResultOf(d)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/trial/_synctest.py", line 700, in successResultOf
    self.fail(
twisted.trial.unittest.FailTest: Success result expected on <Deferred at 0x7f4022f3eb50 current result: None>, found failure result instead:
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 701, in errback
    self._startRunCallbacks(fail)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 764, in _startRunCallbacks
    self._runCallbacks()
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 858, in _runCallbacks
    current.result = callback(  # type: ignore[misc]
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 1751, in gotResult
    current_context.run(_inlineCallbacks, r, gen, status)
--- <exception caught here> ---
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 1657, in _inlineCallbacks
    result = current_context.run(
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/python/failure.py", line 500, in throwExceptionIntoGenerator
    return g.throw(self.type, self.value, self.tb)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/background_updates.py", line 224, in do_next_background_update
    await self._do_background_update(desired_duration_ms)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/background_updates.py", line 261, in _do_background_update
    items_updated = await update_handler(progress, batch_size)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/databases/main/room.py", line 1399, in _background_populate_rooms_creator_column
    end = await self.db_pool.runInteraction(
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/database.py", line 686, in runInteraction
    result = await self.runWithConnection(
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/database.py", line 791, in runWithConnection
    return await make_deferred_yieldable(
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 858, in _runCallbacks
    current.result = callback(  # type: ignore[misc]
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/tests/server.py", line 425, in <lambda>
    d.addCallback(lambda x: function(*args, **kwargs))
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/enterprise/adbapi.py", line 293, in _runWithConnection
    compat.reraise(excValue, excTraceback)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/python/deprecate.py", line 298, in deprecatedFunction
    return function(*args, **kwargs)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/python/compat.py", line 404, in reraise
    raise exception.with_traceback(traceback)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/.tox/py/lib/python3.9/site-packages/twisted/enterprise/adbapi.py", line 284, in _runWithConnection
    result = func(conn, *args, **kw)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/database.py", line 786, in inner_func
    return func(db_conn, *args, **kwargs)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/database.py", line 554, in new_transaction
    r = func(cursor, *args, **kwargs)
  File "/home/runner/work/synapse/synapse/synapse/storage/databases/main/room.py", line 1375, in _background_populate_rooms_creator_column_txn
    for room_id, event_json in txn:
psycopg2.ProgrammingError: no results to fetch
```

* Move code not under the MSC2716 room version underneath an experimental config option

See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10566#issuecomment-906437909

* Add ordering to rooms creator background update

See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10697#discussion_r696815277

* Add comment to better document constant

See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/10697#discussion_r699674458

* Use constant field
2021-09-04 00:58:49 -05:00
.ci Run a nightly CI build against Twisted trunk. (#10651) 2021-08-23 11:12:45 +01:00
.github Avoid duplicate issues from Twisted trunk failures (#10672) 2021-08-23 13:06:49 +00:00
changelog.d Allow room creator to send MSC2716 related events in existing room versions (#10566) 2021-09-04 00:58:49 -05:00
contrib Update the Synapse Grafana dashboard (#10570) 2021-08-16 12:57:09 +02:00
debian 1.42.0rc1 2021-09-01 11:47:24 +01:00
demo Handle all new rate limits in demo scripts (#9858) 2021-04-22 17:49:42 +01:00
docker Make PeriodicallyFlushingMemoryHandler the default logging handler. (#10518) 2021-08-17 13:13:11 +01:00
docs Fix documentation of directory name for remote thumbnails (#10556) 2021-09-02 14:07:53 +01:00
scripts Add a partial index to presence_stream to speed up startups (#10748) 2021-09-03 17:16:56 +01:00
scripts-dev Ensure the base Docker image is rebuilt when running complement with workers. (#10686) 2021-08-25 10:18:23 -04:00
snap Added explicit Python build tools to snap requirements (#7213) 2020-04-17 17:28:00 +01:00
stubs Speed up MultiWriterIdGenerator when lots of IDs are in flight. (#10755) 2021-09-03 18:23:46 +01:00
synapse Allow room creator to send MSC2716 related events in existing room versions (#10566) 2021-09-04 00:58:49 -05:00
synmark Remove redundant "coding: utf-8" lines (#9786) 2021-04-14 15:34:27 +01:00
tests Ignore rooms with unknown room versions in the spaces summary. (#10727) 2021-09-01 17:01:08 +00:00
.codecov.yml Disable codecov reports to GH comments. 2019-07-31 10:56:02 +01:00
.coveragerc set TOP in sytest containers 2021-08-11 20:08:48 +01:00
.dockerignore Reduce the amount of stuff we send in the docker context (#5564) 2019-06-27 11:18:51 +01:00
.editorconfig Add a basic .editorconfig 2018-12-03 22:38:47 -06:00
.git-blame-ignore-revs Add a list of hashes to ignore during git blame. (#9560) 2021-03-09 07:34:55 -05:00
.gitignore Compile and render Synapse's docs into a browsable, mobile-friendly and searchable website (#10086) 2021-06-03 17:20:40 +01:00
AUTHORS.rst Automatically delete empty groups/communities (#6453) 2019-12-16 12:12:40 +00:00
book.toml Compile and render Synapse's docs into a browsable, mobile-friendly and searchable website (#10086) 2021-06-03 17:20:40 +01:00
CHANGES.md Make minor changes to changelog 2021-09-01 13:49:16 +01:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Advertise matrix-org.github.io/synapse docs (#10595) 2021-08-31 11:29:27 +01:00
INSTALL.md Fix broken links in INSTALL.md (#10331) 2021-07-08 15:46:13 +01:00
LICENSE Reference Matrix Home Server 2014-08-12 15:10:52 +01:00
MANIFEST.in Teach MANIFEST and tox about ci->.ci 2021-08-11 20:08:14 +01:00
mypy.ini Additional type hints for client REST servlets (part 5) (#10736) 2021-09-03 09:22:22 -04:00
pylint.cfg Added pylint config file: ignore missing-docstring messages. 2014-10-24 10:22:09 +01:00
pyproject.toml Bump black configuration to target py36 (#9781) 2021-04-13 10:41:34 +01:00
README.rst Advertise matrix-org.github.io/synapse docs (#10595) 2021-08-31 11:29:27 +01:00
setup.cfg Fix (final) Bugbear violations (#9838) 2021-04-20 11:50:49 +01:00
setup.py Extend the release script to tag and create the releases. (#10496) 2021-08-03 10:23:45 +00:00
synctl Improve the error message printed by synctl when synapse fails to start. (#10059) 2021-05-27 10:35:06 +01:00
sytest-blacklist Unblacklist fixed tests (#10357) 2021-07-09 17:51:15 +01:00
test_postgresql.sh Use interpreter from $PATH instead of absolute paths in various scripts using /usr/bin/env (#9689) 2021-03-25 16:53:54 +00:00
tox.ini Teach MANIFEST and tox about ci->.ci 2021-08-11 20:08:14 +01:00
UPGRADE.rst fix broken link to upgrade notes (#10631) 2021-08-18 12:38:37 +01:00

Synapse (get support on #synapse:matrix.org) (discuss development on #synapse-dev:matrix.org) (Rendered documentation on GitHub Pages) (check license in LICENSE file) (latest version released on PyPi) (supported python versions)

Introduction

Matrix is an ambitious new ecosystem for open federated Instant Messaging and VoIP. The basics you need to know to get up and running are:

  • Everything in Matrix happens in a room. Rooms are distributed and do not exist on any single server. Rooms can be located using convenience aliases like #matrix:matrix.org or #test:localhost:8448.
  • Matrix user IDs look like @matthew:matrix.org (although in the future you will normally refer to yourself and others using a third party identifier (3PID): email address, phone number, etc rather than manipulating Matrix user IDs)

The overall architecture is:

client <----> homeserver <=====================> homeserver <----> client
       https://somewhere.org/_matrix      https://elsewhere.net/_matrix

#matrix:matrix.org is the official support room for Matrix, and can be accessed by any client from https://matrix.org/docs/projects/try-matrix-now.html or via IRC bridge at irc://irc.libera.chat/matrix.

Synapse is currently in rapid development, but as of version 0.5 we believe it is sufficiently stable to be run as an internet-facing service for real usage!

About Matrix

Matrix specifies a set of pragmatic RESTful HTTP JSON APIs as an open standard, which handle:

  • Creating and managing fully distributed chat rooms with no single points of control or failure
  • Eventually-consistent cryptographically secure synchronisation of room state across a global open network of federated servers and services
  • Sending and receiving extensible messages in a room with (optional) end-to-end encryption
  • Inviting, joining, leaving, kicking, banning room members
  • Managing user accounts (registration, login, logout)
  • Using 3rd Party IDs (3PIDs) such as email addresses, phone numbers, Facebook accounts to authenticate, identify and discover users on Matrix.
  • Placing 1:1 VoIP and Video calls

These APIs are intended to be implemented on a wide range of servers, services and clients, letting developers build messaging and VoIP functionality on top of the entirely open Matrix ecosystem rather than using closed or proprietary solutions. The hope is for Matrix to act as the building blocks for a new generation of fully open and interoperable messaging and VoIP apps for the internet.

Synapse is a reference "homeserver" implementation of Matrix from the core development team at matrix.org, written in Python/Twisted. It is intended to showcase the concept of Matrix and let folks see the spec in the context of a codebase and let you run your own homeserver and generally help bootstrap the ecosystem.

In Matrix, every user runs one or more Matrix clients, which connect through to a Matrix homeserver. The homeserver stores all their personal chat history and user account information - much as a mail client connects through to an IMAP/SMTP server. Just like email, you can either run your own Matrix homeserver and control and own your own communications and history or use one hosted by someone else (e.g. matrix.org) - there is no single point of control or mandatory service provider in Matrix, unlike WhatsApp, Facebook, Hangouts, etc.

We'd like to invite you to join #matrix:matrix.org (via https://matrix.org/docs/projects/try-matrix-now.html), run a homeserver, take a look at the Matrix spec, and experiment with the APIs and Client SDKs.

Thanks for using Matrix!

Support

For support installing or managing Synapse, please join #synapse:matrix.org_ (from a matrix.org account if necessary) and ask questions there. We do not use GitHub issues for support requests, only for bug reports and feature requests.

Synapse's documentation is nicely rendered on GitHub Pages, with its source available in docs_.

Synapse Installation

Connecting to Synapse from a client

The easiest way to try out your new Synapse installation is by connecting to it from a web client.

Unless you are running a test instance of Synapse on your local machine, in general, you will need to enable TLS support before you can successfully connect from a client: see TLS certificates.

An easy way to get started is to login or register via Element at https://app.element.io/#/login or https://app.element.io/#/register respectively. You will need to change the server you are logging into from matrix.org and instead specify a Homeserver URL of https://<server_name>:8448 (or just https://<server_name> if you are using a reverse proxy). If you prefer to use another client, refer to our client breakdown.

If all goes well you should at least be able to log in, create a room, and start sending messages.

Registering a new user from a client

By default, registration of new users via Matrix clients is disabled. To enable it, specify enable_registration: true in homeserver.yaml. (It is then recommended to also set up CAPTCHA - see docs/CAPTCHA_SETUP.md.)

Once enable_registration is set to true, it is possible to register a user via a Matrix client.

Your new user name will be formed partly from the server_name, and partly from a localpart you specify when you create the account. Your name will take the form of:

@localpart:my.domain.name

(pronounced "at localpart on my dot domain dot name").

As when logging in, you will need to specify a "Custom server". Specify your desired localpart in the 'User name' box.

Security note

Matrix serves raw, user-supplied data in some APIs -- specifically the content repository endpoints.

Whilst we make a reasonable effort to mitigate against XSS attacks (for instance, by using CSP), a Matrix homeserver should not be hosted on a domain hosting other web applications. This especially applies to sharing the domain with Matrix web clients and other sensitive applications like webmail. See https://developer.github.com/changes/2014-04-25-user-content-security for more information.

Ideally, the homeserver should not simply be on a different subdomain, but on a completely different registered domain (also known as top-level site or eTLD+1). This is because some attacks are still possible as long as the two applications share the same registered domain.

To illustrate this with an example, if your Element Web or other sensitive web application is hosted on A.example1.com, you should ideally host Synapse on example2.com. Some amount of protection is offered by hosting on B.example1.com instead, so this is also acceptable in some scenarios. However, you should not host your Synapse on A.example1.com.

Note that all of the above refers exclusively to the domain used in Synapse's public_baseurl setting. In particular, it has no bearing on the domain mentioned in MXIDs hosted on that server.

Following this advice ensures that even if an XSS is found in Synapse, the impact to other applications will be minimal.

Upgrading an existing Synapse

The instructions for upgrading synapse are in the upgrade notes. Please check these instructions as upgrading may require extra steps for some versions of synapse.

Using a reverse proxy with Synapse

It is recommended to put a reverse proxy such as nginx, Apache, Caddy, HAProxy or relayd in front of Synapse. One advantage of doing so is that it means that you can expose the default https port (443) to Matrix clients without needing to run Synapse with root privileges.

For information on configuring one, see docs/reverse_proxy.md.

Identity Servers

Identity servers have the job of mapping email addresses and other 3rd Party IDs (3PIDs) to Matrix user IDs, as well as verifying the ownership of 3PIDs before creating that mapping.

They are not where accounts or credentials are stored - these live on home servers. Identity Servers are just for mapping 3rd party IDs to matrix IDs.

This process is very security-sensitive, as there is obvious risk of spam if it is too easy to sign up for Matrix accounts or harvest 3PID data. In the longer term, we hope to create a decentralised system to manage it (matrix-doc #712), but in the meantime, the role of managing trusted identity in the Matrix ecosystem is farmed out to a cluster of known trusted ecosystem partners, who run 'Matrix Identity Servers' such as Sydent, whose role is purely to authenticate and track 3PID logins and publish end-user public keys.

You can host your own copy of Sydent, but this will prevent you reaching other users in the Matrix ecosystem via their email address, and prevent them finding you. We therefore recommend that you use one of the centralised identity servers at https://matrix.org or https://vector.im for now.

To reiterate: the Identity server will only be used if you choose to associate an email address with your account, or send an invite to another user via their email address.

Password reset

Users can reset their password through their client. Alternatively, a server admin can reset a users password using the admin API or by directly editing the database as shown below.

First calculate the hash of the new password:

$ ~/synapse/env/bin/hash_password
Password:
Confirm password:
$2a$12$xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Then update the users table in the database:

UPDATE users SET password_hash='$2a$12$xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'
    WHERE name='@test:test.com';

Synapse Development

The best place to get started is our guide for contributors. This is part of our larger documentation, which includes information for synapse developers as well as synapse administrators.

Developers might be particularly interested in:

Alongside all that, join our developer community on Matrix: #synapse-dev:matrix.org, featuring real humans!

Quick start

Before setting up a development environment for synapse, make sure you have the system dependencies (such as the python header files) installed - see Installing from source.

To check out a synapse for development, clone the git repo into a working directory of your choice:

git clone https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse.git
cd synapse

Synapse has a number of external dependencies, that are easiest to install using pip and a virtualenv:

python3 -m venv ./env
source ./env/bin/activate
pip install -e ".[all,test]"

This will run a process of downloading and installing all the needed dependencies into a virtual env. If any dependencies fail to install, try installing the failing modules individually:

pip install -e "module-name"

We recommend using the demo which starts 3 federated instances running on ports 8080 - 8082

./demo/start.sh

(to stop, you can use ./demo/stop.sh)

If you just want to start a single instance of the app and run it directly:

# Create the homeserver.yaml config once
python -m synapse.app.homeserver \
  --server-name my.domain.name \
  --config-path homeserver.yaml \
  --generate-config \
  --report-stats=[yes|no]

# Start the app
python -m synapse.app.homeserver --config-path homeserver.yaml

Running the unit tests

After getting up and running, you may wish to run Synapse's unit tests to check that everything is installed correctly:

trial tests

This should end with a 'PASSED' result (note that exact numbers will differ):

Ran 1337 tests in 716.064s

PASSED (skips=15, successes=1322)

For more tips on running the unit tests, like running a specific test or to see the logging output, see the CONTRIBUTING doc.

Running the Integration Tests

Synapse is accompanied by SyTest, a Matrix homeserver integration testing suite, which uses HTTP requests to access the API as a Matrix client would. It is able to run Synapse directly from the source tree, so installation of the server is not required.

Testing with SyTest is recommended for verifying that changes related to the Client-Server API are functioning correctly. See the SyTest installation instructions for details.

Platform dependencies

Synapse uses a number of platform dependencies such as Python and PostgreSQL, and aims to follow supported upstream versions. See the docs/deprecation_policy.md document for more details.

Troubleshooting

Need help? Join our community support room on Matrix: #synapse:matrix.org

Running out of File Handles

If synapse runs out of file handles, it typically fails badly - live-locking at 100% CPU, and/or failing to accept new TCP connections (blocking the connecting client). Matrix currently can legitimately use a lot of file handles, thanks to busy rooms like #matrix:matrix.org containing hundreds of participating servers. The first time a server talks in a room it will try to connect simultaneously to all participating servers, which could exhaust the available file descriptors between DNS queries & HTTPS sockets, especially if DNS is slow to respond. (We need to improve the routing algorithm used to be better than full mesh, but as of March 2019 this hasn't happened yet).

If you hit this failure mode, we recommend increasing the maximum number of open file handles to be at least 4096 (assuming a default of 1024 or 256). This is typically done by editing /etc/security/limits.conf

Separately, Synapse may leak file handles if inbound HTTP requests get stuck during processing - e.g. blocked behind a lock or talking to a remote server etc. This is best diagnosed by matching up the 'Received request' and 'Processed request' log lines and looking for any 'Processed request' lines which take more than a few seconds to execute. Please let us know at #synapse:matrix.org if you see this failure mode so we can help debug it, however.

Help!! Synapse is slow and eats all my RAM/CPU!

First, ensure you are running the latest version of Synapse, using Python 3 with a PostgreSQL database.

Synapse's architecture is quite RAM hungry currently - we deliberately cache a lot of recent room data and metadata in RAM in order to speed up common requests. We'll improve this in the future, but for now the easiest way to either reduce the RAM usage (at the risk of slowing things down) is to set the almost-undocumented SYNAPSE_CACHE_FACTOR environment variable. The default is 0.5, which can be decreased to reduce RAM usage in memory constrained enviroments, or increased if performance starts to degrade.

However, degraded performance due to a low cache factor, common on machines with slow disks, often leads to explosions in memory use due backlogged requests. In this case, reducing the cache factor will make things worse. Instead, try increasing it drastically. 2.0 is a good starting value.

Using libjemalloc can also yield a significant improvement in overall memory use, and especially in terms of giving back RAM to the OS. To use it, the library must simply be put in the LD_PRELOAD environment variable when launching Synapse. On Debian, this can be done by installing the libjemalloc1 package and adding this line to /etc/default/matrix-synapse:

LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libjemalloc.so.1

This can make a significant difference on Python 2.7 - it's unclear how much of an improvement it provides on Python 3.x.

If you're encountering high CPU use by the Synapse process itself, you may be affected by a bug with presence tracking that leads to a massive excess of outgoing federation requests (see discussion). If metrics indicate that your server is also issuing far more outgoing federation requests than can be accounted for by your users' activity, this is a likely cause. The misbehavior can be worked around by setting the following in the Synapse config file:

presence:
    enabled: false

People can't accept room invitations from me

The typical failure mode here is that you send an invitation to someone to join a room or direct chat, but when they go to accept it, they get an error (typically along the lines of "Invalid signature"). They might see something like the following in their logs:

2019-09-11 19:32:04,271 - synapse.federation.transport.server - 288 - WARNING - GET-11752 - authenticate_request failed: 401: Invalid signature for server <server> with key ed25519:a_EqML: Unable to verify signature for <server>

This is normally caused by a misconfiguration in your reverse-proxy. See docs/reverse_proxy.md and double-check that your settings are correct.