Commit Graph

4 Commits (42d261c32f13e2de7494a0ade77c1f7b646af1fe)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Eastwood 1b09b0832e
Allow use of both `@trace` and `@tag_args` stacked on the same function (#13453)
```py
@trace
@tag_args
async def get_oldest_event_ids_with_depth_in_room(...)
  ...
```

Before this PR, you would see a warning in the logs and the span was not exported:
```
2022-08-03 19:11:59,383 - synapse.logging.opentracing - 835 - ERROR - GET-0 - @trace may not have wrapped EventFederationWorkerStore.get_oldest_event_ids_with_depth_in_room correctly! The function is not async but returned a coroutine.
```
2022-08-09 14:32:33 -05:00
Patrick Cloke 50122754c8
Add missing types to opentracing. (#13345)
After this change `synapse.logging` is fully typed.
2022-07-21 12:01:52 +00:00
Patrick Cloke 6ad012ef89
More type hints for `synapse.logging` (#13103)
Completes type hints for synapse.logging.scopecontextmanager and (partially)
for synapse.logging.opentracing.
2022-06-30 13:05:06 +00:00
Richard van der Hoff 31b554c297
Fixes for opentracing scopes (#11869)
`start_active_span` was inconsistent as to whether it would activate the span
immediately, or wait for `scope.__enter__` to happen (it depended on whether
the current logcontext already had an associated scope). The inconsistency was
rather confusing if you were hoping to set up a couple of separate spans before
activating either.

Looking at the other implementations of opentracing `ScopeManager`s, the
intention is that it *should* be activated immediately, as the name
implies. Indeed, the idea is that you don't have to use the scope as a
contextmanager at all - you can just call `.close` on the result. Hence, our
cleanup has to happen in `.close` rather than `.__exit__`.

So, the main change here is to ensure that `start_active_span` does activate
the span, and that `scope.close()` does close the scope.

We also add some tests, which requires a `tracer` param so that we don't have
to rely on the global variable in unit tests.
2022-02-02 22:41:57 +00:00