There's no point doing a raise_from here, because the exception is always
logged at warn with no stacktrace in the caller. Instead, let's try to give
better messages to reduce confusion.
In particular, this means that we won't log 'Failed to connect to remote
server' when we don't even attempt to connect to the remote server due to
blacklisting.
Get rid of the labyrinthine `recoverer_fn` code, and clean up the startup code
(it seemed to be previously inexplicably split between
`ApplicationServiceScheduler.start` and `_Recoverer.start`).
Add some docstrings too.
Hopefully, this will fix a stack overflow when recovering an appservice.
The recursion here leads to a huge chain of deferred callbacks, which then
overflows the stack when the chain completes. `inlineCallbacks` makes a better
job of this if we use iteration instead.
Clean up the code a bit too, while we're there.
Get rid of the labyrinthine `recoverer_fn` code, and clean up the startup code
(it seemed to be previously inexplicably split between
`ApplicationServiceScheduler.start` and `_Recoverer.start`).
Add some docstrings too.
Add authenticated_entity and servlet_names tags.
Functionally:
- Add a tag for authenticated_entity
- Add a tag for servlet_names
Stylistically:
Moved to importing methods directly from opentracing.
Fixes#5833
The emailconfig code was attempting to pull incorrect config file names. This corrects that, while also marking a difference between a config file variable that's a filepath versus a str containing HTML.
If we have recently seen a valid well-known for a domain we want to
retry on (non-final) errors a few times, to handle temporary blips in
networking/etc.
is cached and so does not always return a `Deferred`.
`await` does not silently pass-through non-Deferreds like `yield` used to.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <olivier@librepush.net>
This gives a bit of a grace period where we can attempt to refetch a
remote `well-known`, while still using the cached result if that fails.
Hopefully this will make the well-known resolution a bit more torelant
of failures, rather than it immediately treating failures as "no result"
and caching that for an hour.
It costs both us and the remote server for us to fetch the well known
for every single request we send, so we add a minimum cache period. This
is set to 5m so that we still honour the basic premise of "refetch
frequently".
When persisting events we calculate new stream orderings up front.
Before we notify about an event all events with lower stream orderings
must have finished being persisted.
This PR moves the assignment of stream ordering till *after* calculated
the new current state and split the batch of events into separate chunks
for persistence. This means that if it takes a long time to calculate
new current state then it will not block events in other rooms being
notified about.
This should help reduce some global pauses in the events stream which
can last for tens of seconds (if not longer), caused by some
particularly expensive state resolutions.
This hopefully addresses #5407 by gracefully handling an empty but
limited TimelineBatch. We also add some logging to figure out how this
is happening.