The main differences are:
- values with delimiters (such as colons) should be quoted, so always
quote the origin, since it could contain a colon followed by a port
number
- should allow more than one space after "X-Matrix"
- quoted values with backslash-escaped characters should be unescaped
- names should be case insensitive
A minor optimization to avoid unnecessary copying/building
identical dictionaries when filtering private read receipts.
Also clarifies comments and cleans-up some tests.
Parse the `m.relates_to` event content field (which describes relations)
in a single place, this is used during:
* Event persistence.
* Validation of the Client-Server API.
* Fetching bundled aggregations.
* Processing of push rules.
Each of these separately implement the logic and each made slightly
different assumptions about what was valid. Some had minor / potential
bugs.
Enable cancellation of `GET /rooms/$room_id/members`,
`GET /rooms/$room_id/state` and
`GET /rooms/$room_id/state/$state_key/*` requests.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
`BaseFederationServlet` wraps its endpoints in a bunch of async code
that has not been vetted for compatibility with cancellation.
Fail CI if a `@cancellable` flag is applied to a federation endpoint.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
While `ReplicationEndpoint`s register themselves via `JsonResource`,
they pass a method that calls the handler, instead of the handler itself,
to `register_paths`. As a result, `JsonResource` will not correctly pick
up the `@cancellable` flag and we have to apply it ourselves.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
Both `RestServlet`s and `BaseFederationServlet`s register their handlers
with `HttpServer.register_paths` / `JsonResource.register_paths`. Update
`JsonResource` to respect the `@cancellable` flag on handlers registered
in this way.
Although `ReplicationEndpoint` also registers itself using
`register_paths`, it does not pass the handler method that would have the
`@cancellable` flag directly, and so needs separate handling.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
`DirectServeHtmlResource` and `DirectServeJsonResource` both inherit
from `_AsyncResource`. These classes expect to be subclassed with
`_async_render_*` methods.
This commit has no effect on `JsonResource`, despite inheriting from
`_AsyncResource`. `JsonResource` has its own `_async_render` override
which will need to be updated separately.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
Refactor how the `EventContext` class works, with the intention of reducing the amount of state we fetch from the DB during event processing.
The idea here is to get rid of the cached `current_state_ids` and `prev_state_ids` that live in the `EventContext`, and instead defer straight to the database (and its caching).
One change that may have a noticeable effect is that we now no longer prefill the `get_current_state_ids` cache on a state change. However, that query is relatively light, since its just a case of reading a table from the DB (unlike fetching state at an event which is more heavyweight). For deployments with workers this cache isn't even used.
Part of #12684
All async request processing goes through `_AsyncResource`, so this is
the only place where a `Deferred` needs to be captured for cancellation.
Unfortunately, the same isn't true for determining whether a request
can be cancelled. Each of `RestServlet`, `BaseFederationServlet`,
`DirectServe{Html,Json}Resource` and `ReplicationEndpoint` have
different wrappers around the method doing the request handling and they
all need to be handled separately.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>
Also expose the `SynapseRequest` from `FakeChannel` in tests, so that
we can call `Request.connectionLost` to simulate a client disconnecting.
Signed-off-by: Sean Quah <seanq@element.io>