This has long been something I've wanted to do. Basically the `Daemonize` code
is both too flexible and not flexible enough, in that it offers a bunch of
features that we don't use (changing UID, closing FDs in the child, logging to
syslog) and doesn't offer a bunch that we could do with (redirecting stdout/err
to a file instead of /dev/null; having the parent not exit until the child is
running).
As a first step, I've lifted the Daemonize code and removed the bits we don't
use. This should be a non-functional change. Fixing everything else will come
later.
Fixes https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/7641
The package was pinned to <0.8.0 without an obvious reasoning with
7ad1d7635
in https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5636
while the version selection looks to just try to exclude an arbitrary
next minor version number that might introduce API breaking changes.
Selecting the next minor number might be a good conservative selection.
Downstream distributions already reported success patching out the version
requirements.
This also fixes the integration of upgraded packages into openSUSE packages,
e.g. for openSUSE Tumbleweed which already ships prometheus_client >= 0.8 .
Signed-off-by: Oliver Kurz <okurz@suse.de>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
Older versions of `parameterized` package have no `parameterized_class` decorator. This decorator is used in tests.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Girko <ol@infoserver.lv>
This ended up being a bit more invasive than I'd hoped for (not helped by
generic_worker duplicating some of the code from homeserver), but hopefully
it's an improvement.
The idea is that, rather than storing unstructured `dict`s in the config for
the listener configurations, we instead parse it into a structured
`ListenerConfig` object.
For the record, the reason we need this is as follows:
each RDATA command comes down the redis pipe as a subscription message. txredisapi as written needs at least three reactor ticks to read each subscription message from the tcp buffer. Hence, once the process gets loaded, it starts getting behind, and eventually redis knifes the connection. it then takes ages for the master to work its way through the backlog, before it reconnects again, during which any commands from any workers are dropped.
* Configure and initialise tracer
Includes config options for the tracer and sets up JaegerClient.
* Scope manager using LogContexts
We piggy-back our tracer scopes by using log context.
The current log context gives us the current scope. If new scope is
created we create a stack of scopes in the context.
* jaeger is a dependency now
* Carrier inject and extraction for Twisted Headers
* Trace federation requests on the way in and out.
The span is created in _started_processing and closed in
_finished_processing because we need a meaningful log context.
* Create logcontext for new scope.
Instead of having a stack of scopes in a logcontext we create a new
context for a new scope if the current logcontext already has a scope.
* Remove scope from logcontext if logcontext is top level
* Disable tracer if not configured
* typo
* Remove dependence on jaeger internals
* bools
* Set service name
* :Explicitely state that the tracer is disabled
* Black is the new black
* Newsfile
* Code style
* Use the new config setup.
* Generate config.
* Copyright
* Rename config to opentracing
* Remove user whitelisting
* Empty whitelist by default
* User ConfigError instead of RuntimeError
* Use isinstance
* Use tag constants for opentracing.
* Remove debug comment and no need to explicitely record error
* Two errors a "s(c)entry"
* Docstrings!
* Remove debugging brainslip
* Homeserver Whitlisting
* Better opentracing config comment
* linting
* Inclue worker name in service_name
* Make opentracing an optional dependency
* Neater config retreival
* Clean up dummy tags
* Instantiate tracing as object instead of global class
* Inlcude opentracing as a homeserver member.
* Thread opentracing to the request level
* Reference opetnracing through hs
* Instantiate dummy opentracin g for tests.
* About to revert, just keeping the unfinished changes just in case
* Revert back to global state, commit number:
9ce4a3d906
* Use class level methods in tracerutils
* Start and stop requests spans in a place where we
have access to the authenticated entity
* Seen it, isort it
* Make sure to close the active span.
* I'm getting black and blue from this.
* Logger formatting
Co-Authored-By: Erik Johnston <erik@matrix.org>
* Outdated comment
* Import opentracing at the top
* Return a contextmanager
* Start tracing client requests from the servlet
* Return noop context manager if not tracing
* Explicitely say that these are federation requests
* Include servlet name in client requests
* Use context manager
* Move opentracing to logging/
* Seen it, isort it again!
* Ignore twisted return exceptions on context exit
* Escape the scope
* Scopes should be entered to make them useful.
* Nicer decorator names
* Just one init, init?
* Don't need to close something that isn't open
* Docs make you smarter
Fixes https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/5431
`jinja2` was being imported even when it wasn't strictly necessary. This made it required to run Synapse, even if the functionality that required it wasn't enabled. This was causing new Synapse installations to crash on startup.
Email modules are now required.
* remove 2.7 from CI and publishing
* fill out classifiers and also make it not be installed on 3.5
* some minor bumps so that the old deps work on python 3.5
Sends password reset emails from the homeserver instead of proxying to the identity server. This is now the default behaviour for security reasons. If you wish to continue proxying password reset requests to the identity server you must now enable the email.trust_identity_server_for_password_resets option.
This PR is a culmination of 3 smaller PRs which have each been separately reviewed:
* #5308
* #5345
* #5368
Using systemd-python allows for logging to the systemd journal,
as is documented in: `synapse/contrib/systemd/log_config.yaml`.
Signed-off-by: Silke Hofstra <silke@slxh.eu>
Since 0.13.0, pymacaroons works correctly with pynacl, so there
isn’t any more reason to depend on an outdated pynacl fork.
Signed-off-by: Andrej Shadura <andrew.shadura@collabora.co.uk>
This implements both a SAML2 metadata endpoint (at
`/_matrix/saml2/metadata.xml`), and a SAML2 response receiver (at
`/_matrix/saml2/authn_response`). If the SAML2 response matches what's been
configured, we complete the SSO login flow by redirecting to the client url
(aka `RelayState` in SAML2 jargon) with a login token.
What we don't yet have is anything to build a SAML2 request and redirect the
user to the identity provider. That is left as an exercise for the reader.
* Rip out half-implemented m.login.saml2 support
This was implemented in an odd way that left most of the work to the client, in
a way that I really didn't understand. It's going to be a pain to maintain, so
let's start by ripping it out.
* drop undocumented dependency on dateutil
It turns out we were relying on dateutil being pulled in transitively by
pysaml2. There's no need for that bloat.
As of #4027, we require psutil to be installed, so it should be in our
dependency list. We can also remove some of the conditional import code
introduced by #992.
Fixes#4062.
in bcrypt 3.1.0 checkpw got introduced (already 2 years ago)
This makes use of that with enhancements which might get introduced
by that
Signed-Off-by: Matthias Kesler <krombel@krombel.de>
The package was pinned to <4.0 with 07cf96eb because "from saml2 import
config" did not work. This seems to have been fixed in the mean time in the
saml2 package and therefore should not stop to use a more recent version.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Kurz <okurz@suse.de>
py-bcrypt has been unmaintained for a long while, while bcrypt is
actively maintained. And since ff8b87118d
we're compatible with the bcrypt anyway.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Löthberg <johannes@kyriasis.com>
Use the pure-python ldap3 library, which eliminates the need for a
system dependency.
Offer both a `search` and `simple_bind` mode, for more sophisticated
ldap scenarios.
- `search` tries to find a matching DN within the `user_base` while
employing the `user_filter`, then tries the bind when a single
matching DN was found.
- `simple_bind` tries the bind against a specific DN by combining the
localpart and `user_base`
Offer support for STARTTLS on a plain connection.
The configuration was changed to reflect these new possibilities.
Signed-off-by: Martin Weinelt <hexa@darmstadt.ccc.de>
Add url_preview_ip_range_blacklist to let admins specify internal IP ranges that must not be spidered.
Add url_preview_url_blacklist to let admins specify URL patterns that must not be spidered.
Implement a custom SpiderEndpoint and associated support classes to implement url_preview_ip_range_blacklist
Add commentary and generally address PR feedback