Compare commits

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19 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Morgan
f06bd7fd00 wip access rules modification 2020-10-08 17:24:50 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
2cc498ed6d Remove accidental return statement 2020-10-08 17:14:34 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
23b50d6fb8 Merge branch 'develop' of github.com:matrix-org/synapse into soru/knock 2020-10-08 17:05:01 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
4d71836e19 Add xyz.amorgan.knock /versions string 2020-10-07 16:49:01 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
59e7ac7405 MSC2261 was never merged, remove it from comment 2020-10-05 19:59:01 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
62e8731ecb Add new experimental room version for knocking 2020-10-05 19:27:57 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
f2b0d1073c Return room_id to the client after a successful knock 2020-09-25 13:48:53 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
f73d4de691 Added typing, docstrings, comments 2020-09-25 13:36:33 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
2fd7cdc1b3 Update max migration schema version 2020-09-16 18:49:28 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
3054465582 Prepend an ordering to the db migration delta 2020-09-16 18:48:57 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
bb8a1de631 Update _remote_knock method for worker vs master store 2020-09-16 18:39:22 +01:00
Andrew Morgan
e83fd6cd22 Merge branch 'develop' of github.com:matrix-org/synapse into soru/knock 2020-09-16 18:30:42 +01:00
Sorunome
bcf6e071d3 fix typo 2020-01-19 17:07:59 +01:00
Sorunome
e87d27c4a2 add changelog file 2020-01-19 15:11:28 +01:00
Sorunome
1e63b595c3 fix lint 2020-01-19 15:09:46 +01:00
Sorunome
e409951319 get knock working over federation 2020-01-19 15:04:21 +01:00
Sorunome
ddd3584bdc draft for federation of knock (untested) 2020-01-19 12:35:59 +01:00
Sorunome
057740f283 remove unneeded print statements 2020-01-18 21:57:17 +01:00
Sorunome
16801e2b5c implement knock via non-federation 2020-01-18 21:53:35 +01:00
1132 changed files with 22332 additions and 59427 deletions

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@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Copyright 2019 The Matrix.org Foundation C.I.C.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
import logging
from synapse.storage.engines import create_engine
logger = logging.getLogger("create_postgres_db")
if __name__ == "__main__":
# Create a PostgresEngine.
db_engine = create_engine({"name": "psycopg2", "args": {}})
# Connect to postgres to create the base database.
# We use "postgres" as a database because it's bound to exist and the "synapse" one
# doesn't exist yet.
db_conn = db_engine.module.connect(
user="postgres", host="postgres", password="postgres", dbname="postgres"
)
db_conn.autocommit = True
cur = db_conn.cursor()
cur.execute("CREATE DATABASE synapse;")
cur.close()
db_conn.close()

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@@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2019 The Matrix.org Foundation C.I.C.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
import sys
import psycopg2
# a very simple replacment for `psql`, to make up for the lack of the postgres client
# libraries in the synapse docker image.
# We use "postgres" as a database because it's bound to exist and the "synapse" one
# doesn't exist yet.
db_conn = psycopg2.connect(
user="postgres", host="postgres", password="postgres", dbname="postgres"
)
db_conn.autocommit = True
cur = db_conn.cursor()
for c in sys.argv[1:]:
cur.execute(c)

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@@ -1,16 +1,13 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
# this script is run by buildkite in a plain `bionic` container; it installs the
# minimal requirements for tox and hands over to the py3-old tox environment.
# this script is run by buildkite in a plain `xenial` container; it installs the
# minimal requirements for tox and hands over to the py35-old tox environment.
set -ex
apt-get update
apt-get install -y python3 python3-dev python3-pip libxml2-dev libxslt-dev xmlsec1 zlib1g-dev tox
apt-get install -y python3.5 python3.5-dev python3-pip libxml2-dev libxslt-dev zlib1g-dev tox
export LANG="C.UTF-8"
# Prevent virtualenv from auto-updating pip to an incompatible version
export VIRTUALENV_NO_DOWNLOAD=1
exec tox -e py3-old,combine
exec tox -e py35-old,combine

View File

@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
#
# Test script for 'synapse_port_db'.
# - sets up synapse and deps
# - runs the port script on a prepopulated test sqlite db
# - also runs it against an new sqlite db
# Test script for 'synapse_port_db', which creates a virtualenv, installs Synapse along
# with additional dependencies needed for the test (such as coverage or the PostgreSQL
# driver), update the schema of the test SQLite database and run background updates on it,
# create an empty test database in PostgreSQL, then run the 'synapse_port_db' script to
# test porting the SQLite database to the PostgreSQL database (with coverage).
set -xe
cd `dirname $0`/../..
@@ -22,32 +22,15 @@ echo "--- Generate the signing key"
# Generate the server's signing key.
python -m synapse.app.homeserver --generate-keys -c .buildkite/sqlite-config.yaml
echo "--- Prepare test database"
echo "--- Prepare the databases"
# Make sure the SQLite3 database is using the latest schema and has no pending background update.
scripts-dev/update_database --database-config .buildkite/sqlite-config.yaml
# Create the PostgreSQL database.
./.buildkite/scripts/postgres_exec.py "CREATE DATABASE synapse"
./.buildkite/scripts/create_postgres_db.py
echo "+++ Run synapse_port_db against test database"
coverage run scripts/synapse_port_db --sqlite-database .buildkite/test_db.db --postgres-config .buildkite/postgres-config.yaml
#####
# Now do the same again, on an empty database.
echo "--- Prepare empty SQLite database"
# we do this by deleting the sqlite db, and then doing the same again.
rm .buildkite/test_db.db
scripts-dev/update_database --database-config .buildkite/sqlite-config.yaml
# re-create the PostgreSQL database.
./.buildkite/scripts/postgres_exec.py \
"DROP DATABASE synapse" \
"CREATE DATABASE synapse"
echo "+++ Run synapse_port_db against empty database"
echo "+++ Run synapse_port_db"
# Run the script
coverage run scripts/synapse_port_db --sqlite-database .buildkite/test_db.db --postgres-config .buildkite/postgres-config.yaml

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@@ -1,35 +1,22 @@
version: 2.1
version: 2
jobs:
dockerhubuploadrelease:
docker:
- image: docker:git
machine: true
steps:
- checkout
- docker_prepare
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG} .
- run: docker login --username $DOCKER_HUB_USERNAME --password $DOCKER_HUB_PASSWORD
# for release builds, we want to get the amd64 image out asap, so first
# we do an amd64-only build, before following up with a multiarch build.
- docker_build:
tag: -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}
platforms: linux/amd64
- docker_build:
tag: -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}
platforms: linux/amd64,linux/arm64
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}
dockerhubuploadlatest:
docker:
- image: docker:git
machine: true
steps:
- checkout
- docker_prepare
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest .
- run: docker login --username $DOCKER_HUB_USERNAME --password $DOCKER_HUB_PASSWORD
# for `latest`, we don't want the arm images to disappear, so don't update the tag
# until all of the platforms are built.
- docker_build:
tag: -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
platforms: linux/amd64,linux/arm64
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
workflows:
version: 2
build:
jobs:
- dockerhubuploadrelease:
@@ -42,37 +29,3 @@ workflows:
filters:
branches:
only: master
commands:
docker_prepare:
description: Sets up a remote docker server, downloads the buildx cli plugin, and enables multiarch images
parameters:
buildx_version:
type: string
default: "v0.4.1"
steps:
- setup_remote_docker:
# 19.03.13 was the most recent available on circleci at the time of
# writing.
version: 19.03.13
- run: apk add --no-cache curl
- run: mkdir -vp ~/.docker/cli-plugins/ ~/dockercache
- run: curl --silent -L "https://github.com/docker/buildx/releases/download/<< parameters.buildx_version >>/buildx-<< parameters.buildx_version >>.linux-amd64" > ~/.docker/cli-plugins/docker-buildx
- run: chmod a+x ~/.docker/cli-plugins/docker-buildx
# install qemu links in /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc on the docker instance running the circleci job
- run: docker run --rm --privileged multiarch/qemu-user-static --reset -p yes
# create a context named `builder` for the builds
- run: docker context create builder
# create a buildx builder using the new context, and set it as the default
- run: docker buildx create builder --use
docker_build:
description: Builds and pushed images to dockerhub using buildx
parameters:
platforms:
type: string
default: linux/amd64
tag:
type: string
steps:
- run: docker buildx build -f docker/Dockerfile --push --platform << parameters.platforms >> --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} << parameters.tag >> --progress=plain .

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@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
# Black reformatting (#5482).
32e7c9e7f20b57dd081023ac42d6931a8da9b3a3
# Target Python 3.5 with black (#8664).
aff1eb7c671b0a3813407321d2702ec46c71fa56
# Update black to 20.8b1 (#9381).
0a00b7ff14890987f09112a2ae696c61001e6cf1

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@@ -1,322 +0,0 @@
name: Tests
on:
push:
branches: ["develop", "release-*"]
pull_request:
jobs:
lint:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
toxenv:
- "check-sampleconfig"
- "check_codestyle"
- "check_isort"
- "mypy"
- "packaging"
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-python@v2
- run: pip install tox
- run: tox -e ${{ matrix.toxenv }}
lint-crlf:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Check line endings
run: scripts-dev/check_line_terminators.sh
lint-newsfile:
if: ${{ github.base_ref == 'develop' || contains(github.base_ref, 'release-') }}
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-python@v2
- run: pip install tox
- name: Patch Buildkite-specific test script
run: |
sed -i -e 's/\$BUILDKITE_PULL_REQUEST/${{ github.event.number }}/' \
scripts-dev/check-newsfragment
- run: scripts-dev/check-newsfragment
lint-sdist:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- uses: actions/setup-python@v2
with:
python-version: "3.x"
- run: pip install wheel
- run: python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
with:
name: Python Distributions
path: dist/*
# Dummy step to gate other tests on without repeating the whole list
linting-done:
if: ${{ always() }} # Run this even if prior jobs were skipped
needs: [lint, lint-crlf, lint-newsfile, lint-sdist]
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- run: "true"
trial:
if: ${{ !failure() }} # Allow previous steps to be skipped, but not fail
needs: linting-done
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
python-version: ["3.6", "3.7", "3.8", "3.9"]
database: ["sqlite"]
include:
# Newest Python without optional deps
- python-version: "3.9"
toxenv: "py-noextras,combine"
# Oldest Python with PostgreSQL
- python-version: "3.6"
database: "postgres"
postgres-version: "9.6"
# Newest Python with PostgreSQL
- python-version: "3.9"
database: "postgres"
postgres-version: "13"
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- run: sudo apt-get -qq install xmlsec1
- name: Set up PostgreSQL ${{ matrix.postgres-version }}
if: ${{ matrix.postgres-version }}
run: |
docker run -d -p 5432:5432 \
-e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=postgres \
-e POSTGRES_INITDB_ARGS="--lc-collate C --lc-ctype C --encoding UTF8" \
postgres:${{ matrix.postgres-version }}
- uses: actions/setup-python@v2
with:
python-version: ${{ matrix.python-version }}
- run: pip install tox
- name: Await PostgreSQL
if: ${{ matrix.postgres-version }}
timeout-minutes: 2
run: until pg_isready -h localhost; do sleep 1; done
- run: tox -e py,combine
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "--jobs=2"
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES: ${{ matrix.database == 'postgres' || '' }}
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_HOST: localhost
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_USER: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
- name: Dump logs
# Note: Dumps to workflow logs instead of using actions/upload-artifact
# This keeps logs colocated with failing jobs
# It also ignores find's exit code; this is a best effort affair
run: >-
find _trial_temp -name '*.log'
-exec echo "::group::{}" \;
-exec cat {} \;
-exec echo "::endgroup::" \;
|| true
trial-olddeps:
if: ${{ !failure() }} # Allow previous steps to be skipped, but not fail
needs: linting-done
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Test with old deps
uses: docker://ubuntu:bionic # For old python and sqlite
with:
workdir: /github/workspace
entrypoint: .buildkite/scripts/test_old_deps.sh
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "--jobs=2"
- name: Dump logs
# Note: Dumps to workflow logs instead of using actions/upload-artifact
# This keeps logs colocated with failing jobs
# It also ignores find's exit code; this is a best effort affair
run: >-
find _trial_temp -name '*.log'
-exec echo "::group::{}" \;
-exec cat {} \;
-exec echo "::endgroup::" \;
|| true
trial-pypy:
# Very slow; only run if the branch name includes 'pypy'
if: ${{ contains(github.ref, 'pypy') && !failure() }}
needs: linting-done
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
python-version: ["pypy-3.6"]
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- run: sudo apt-get -qq install xmlsec1 libxml2-dev libxslt-dev
- uses: actions/setup-python@v2
with:
python-version: ${{ matrix.python-version }}
- run: pip install tox
- run: tox -e py,combine
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "--jobs=2"
- name: Dump logs
# Note: Dumps to workflow logs instead of using actions/upload-artifact
# This keeps logs colocated with failing jobs
# It also ignores find's exit code; this is a best effort affair
run: >-
find _trial_temp -name '*.log'
-exec echo "::group::{}" \;
-exec cat {} \;
-exec echo "::endgroup::" \;
|| true
sytest:
if: ${{ !failure() }}
needs: linting-done
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
container:
image: matrixdotorg/sytest-synapse:${{ matrix.sytest-tag }}
volumes:
- ${{ github.workspace }}:/src
env:
BUILDKITE_BRANCH: ${{ github.head_ref }}
POSTGRES: ${{ matrix.postgres && 1}}
MULTI_POSTGRES: ${{ (matrix.postgres == 'multi-postgres') && 1}}
WORKERS: ${{ matrix.workers && 1 }}
REDIS: ${{ matrix.redis && 1 }}
BLACKLIST: ${{ matrix.workers && 'synapse-blacklist-with-workers' }}
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
include:
- sytest-tag: bionic
- sytest-tag: bionic
postgres: postgres
- sytest-tag: testing
postgres: postgres
- sytest-tag: bionic
postgres: multi-postgres
workers: workers
- sytest-tag: buster
postgres: multi-postgres
workers: workers
- sytest-tag: buster
postgres: postgres
workers: workers
redis: redis
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Prepare test blacklist
run: cat sytest-blacklist .buildkite/worker-blacklist > synapse-blacklist-with-workers
- name: Run SyTest
run: /bootstrap.sh synapse
working-directory: /src
- name: Dump results.tap
if: ${{ always() }}
run: cat /logs/results.tap
- name: Upload SyTest logs
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
if: ${{ always() }}
with:
name: Sytest Logs - ${{ job.status }} - (${{ join(matrix.*, ', ') }})
path: |
/logs/results.tap
/logs/**/*.log*
portdb:
if: ${{ !failure() }} # Allow previous steps to be skipped, but not fail
needs: linting-done
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
include:
- python-version: "3.6"
postgres-version: "9.6"
- python-version: "3.9"
postgres-version: "13"
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:${{ matrix.postgres-version }}
ports:
- 5432:5432
env:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: "postgres"
POSTGRES_INITDB_ARGS: "--lc-collate C --lc-ctype C --encoding UTF8"
options: >-
--health-cmd pg_isready
--health-interval 10s
--health-timeout 5s
--health-retries 5
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- run: sudo apt-get -qq install xmlsec1
- uses: actions/setup-python@v2
with:
python-version: ${{ matrix.python-version }}
- name: Patch Buildkite-specific test scripts
run: |
sed -i -e 's/host="postgres"/host="localhost"/' .buildkite/scripts/postgres_exec.py
sed -i -e 's/host: postgres/host: localhost/' .buildkite/postgres-config.yaml
sed -i -e 's|/src/||' .buildkite/{sqlite,postgres}-config.yaml
sed -i -e 's/\$TOP/\$GITHUB_WORKSPACE/' .coveragerc
- run: .buildkite/scripts/test_synapse_port_db.sh
complement:
if: ${{ !failure() }}
needs: linting-done
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
container:
# https://github.com/matrix-org/complement/blob/master/dockerfiles/ComplementCIBuildkite.Dockerfile
image: matrixdotorg/complement:latest
env:
CI: true
ports:
- 8448:8448
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
steps:
- name: Run actions/checkout@v2 for synapse
uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
path: synapse
- name: Run actions/checkout@v2 for complement
uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
repository: "matrix-org/complement"
path: complement
# Build initial Synapse image
- run: docker build -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest -f docker/Dockerfile .
working-directory: synapse
# Build a ready-to-run Synapse image based on the initial image above.
# This new image includes a config file, keys for signing and TLS, and
# other settings to make it suitable for testing under Complement.
- run: docker build -t complement-synapse -f Synapse.Dockerfile .
working-directory: complement/dockerfiles
# Run Complement
- run: go test -v -tags synapse_blacklist ./tests
env:
COMPLEMENT_BASE_IMAGE: complement-synapse:latest
working-directory: complement

6
.gitignore vendored
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@@ -6,25 +6,21 @@
*.egg
*.egg-info
*.lock
*.py[cod]
*.pyc
*.snap
*.tac
_trial_temp/
_trial_temp*/
/out
.DS_Store
__pycache__/
# stuff that is likely to exist when you run a server locally
/*.db
/*.log
/*.log.*
/*.log.config
/*.pid
/.python-version
/*.signing.key
/env/
/.venv*/
/homeserver*.yaml
/logs
/media_store/

1761
CHANGES.md

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

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@@ -1,31 +1,4 @@
Welcome to Synapse
This document aims to get you started with contributing to this repo!
- [1. Who can contribute to Synapse?](#1-who-can-contribute-to-synapse)
- [2. What do I need?](#2-what-do-i-need)
- [3. Get the source.](#3-get-the-source)
- [4. Install the dependencies](#4-install-the-dependencies)
* [Under Unix (macOS, Linux, BSD, ...)](#under-unix-macos-linux-bsd-)
* [Under Windows](#under-windows)
- [5. Get in touch.](#5-get-in-touch)
- [6. Pick an issue.](#6-pick-an-issue)
- [7. Turn coffee and documentation into code and documentation!](#7-turn-coffee-and-documentation-into-code-and-documentation)
- [8. Test, test, test!](#8-test-test-test)
* [Run the linters.](#run-the-linters)
* [Run the unit tests.](#run-the-unit-tests)
* [Run the integration tests.](#run-the-integration-tests)
- [9. Submit your patch.](#9-submit-your-patch)
* [Changelog](#changelog)
+ [How do I know what to call the changelog file before I create the PR?](#how-do-i-know-what-to-call-the-changelog-file-before-i-create-the-pr)
+ [Debian changelog](#debian-changelog)
* [Sign off](#sign-off)
- [10. Turn feedback into better code.](#10-turn-feedback-into-better-code)
- [11. Find a new issue.](#11-find-a-new-issue)
- [Notes for maintainers on merging PRs etc](#notes-for-maintainers-on-merging-prs-etc)
- [Conclusion](#conclusion)
# 1. Who can contribute to Synapse?
# Contributing code to Synapse
Everyone is welcome to contribute code to [matrix.org
projects](https://github.com/matrix-org), provided that they are willing to
@@ -36,179 +9,66 @@ license the code under the same terms as the project's overall 'outbound'
license - in our case, this is almost always Apache Software License v2 (see
[LICENSE](LICENSE)).
# 2. What do I need?
The code of Synapse is written in Python 3. To do pretty much anything, you'll need [a recent version of Python 3](https://wiki.python.org/moin/BeginnersGuide/Download).
The source code of Synapse is hosted on GitHub. You will also need [a recent version of git](https://github.com/git-guides/install-git).
For some tests, you will need [a recent version of Docker](https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/).
# 3. Get the source.
## How to contribute
The preferred and easiest way to contribute changes is to fork the relevant
project on GitHub, and then [create a pull request](
project on github, and then [create a pull request](
https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests/) to ask us to pull your
changes into our repo.
Please base your changes on the `develop` branch.
Some other points to follow:
```sh
git clone git@github.com:YOUR_GITHUB_USER_NAME/synapse.git
git checkout develop
```
* Please base your changes on the `develop` branch.
If you need help getting started with git, this is beyond the scope of the document, but you
can find many good git tutorials on the web.
* Please follow the [code style requirements](#code-style).
# 4. Install the dependencies
* Please include a [changelog entry](#changelog) with each PR.
## Under Unix (macOS, Linux, BSD, ...)
* Please [sign off](#sign-off) your contribution.
Once you have installed Python 3 and added the source, please open a terminal and
setup a *virtualenv*, as follows:
* Please keep an eye on the pull request for feedback from the [continuous
integration system](#continuous-integration-and-testing) and try to fix any
errors that come up.
```sh
cd path/where/you/have/cloned/the/repository
python3 -m venv ./env
source ./env/bin/activate
pip install -e ".[all,lint,mypy,test]"
pip install tox
```
* If you need to [update your PR](#updating-your-pull-request), just add new
commits to your branch rather than rebasing.
This will install the developer dependencies for the project.
## Under Windows
TBD
# 5. Get in touch.
Join our developer community on Matrix: #synapse-dev:matrix.org !
# 6. Pick an issue.
Fix your favorite problem or perhaps find a [Good First Issue](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22Good+First+Issue%22)
to work on.
# 7. Turn coffee and documentation into code and documentation!
## Code style
Synapse's code style is documented [here](docs/code_style.md). Please follow
it, including the conventions for the [sample configuration
file](docs/code_style.md#configuration-file-format).
There is a growing amount of documentation located in the [docs](docs)
directory. This documentation is intended primarily for sysadmins running their
own Synapse instance, as well as developers interacting externally with
Synapse. [docs/dev](docs/dev) exists primarily to house documentation for
Synapse developers. [docs/admin_api](docs/admin_api) houses documentation
regarding Synapse's Admin API, which is used mostly by sysadmins and external
service developers.
Many of the conventions are enforced by scripts which are run as part of the
[continuous integration system](#continuous-integration-and-testing). To help
check if you have followed the code style, you can run `scripts-dev/lint.sh`
locally. You'll need python 3.6 or later, and to install a number of tools:
If you add new files added to either of these folders, please use [GitHub-Flavoured
Markdown](https://guides.github.com/features/mastering-markdown/).
```
# Install the dependencies
pip install -e ".[lint]"
Some documentation also exists in [Synapse's GitHub
Wiki](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/wiki), although this is primarily
contributed to by community authors.
# 8. Test, test, test!
<a name="test-test-test"></a>
While you're developing and before submitting a patch, you'll
want to test your code.
## Run the linters.
The linters look at your code and do two things:
- ensure that your code follows the coding style adopted by the project;
- catch a number of errors in your code.
They're pretty fast, don't hesitate!
```sh
source ./env/bin/activate
# Run the linter script
./scripts-dev/lint.sh
```
Note that this script *will modify your files* to fix styling errors.
Make sure that you have saved all your files.
**Note that the script does not just test/check, but also reformats code, so you
may wish to ensure any new code is committed first**.
If you wish to restrict the linters to only the files changed since the last commit
(much faster!), you can instead run:
By default, this script checks all files and can take some time; if you alter
only certain files, you might wish to specify paths as arguments to reduce the
run-time:
```sh
source ./env/bin/activate
./scripts-dev/lint.sh -d
```
Or if you know exactly which files you wish to lint, you can instead run:
```sh
source ./env/bin/activate
./scripts-dev/lint.sh path/to/file1.py path/to/file2.py path/to/folder
```
## Run the unit tests.
The unit tests run parts of Synapse, including your changes, to see if anything
was broken. They are slower than the linters but will typically catch more errors.
```sh
source ./env/bin/activate
trial tests
```
If you wish to only run *some* unit tests, you may specify
another module instead of `tests` - or a test class or a method:
```sh
source ./env/bin/activate
trial tests.rest.admin.test_room tests.handlers.test_admin.ExfiltrateData.test_invite
```
If your tests fail, you may wish to look at the logs:
```sh
less _trial_temp/test.log
```
## Run the integration tests.
The integration tests are a more comprehensive suite of tests. They
run a full version of Synapse, including your changes, to check if
anything was broken. They are slower than the unit tests but will
typically catch more errors.
The following command will let you run the integration test with the most common
configuration:
```sh
$ docker run --rm -it -v /path/where/you/have/cloned/the/repository\:/src:ro -v /path/to/where/you/want/logs\:/logs matrixdotorg/sytest-synapse:py37
```
This configuration should generally cover your needs. For more details about other configurations, see [documentation in the SyTest repo](https://github.com/matrix-org/sytest/blob/develop/docker/README.md).
# 9. Submit your patch.
Once you're happy with your patch, it's time to prepare a Pull Request.
To prepare a Pull Request, please:
1. verify that [all the tests pass](#test-test-test), including the coding style;
2. [sign off](#sign-off) your contribution;
3. `git push` your commit to your fork of Synapse;
4. on GitHub, [create the Pull Request](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/creating-a-pull-request);
5. add a [changelog entry](#changelog) and push it to your Pull Request;
6. for most contributors, that's all - however, if you are a member of the organization `matrix-org`, on GitHub, please request a review from `matrix.org / Synapse Core`.
Before pushing new changes, ensure they don't produce linting errors. Commit any
files that were corrected.
Please ensure your changes match the cosmetic style of the existing project,
and **never** mix cosmetic and functional changes in the same commit, as it
makes it horribly hard to review otherwise.
## Changelog
@@ -358,36 +218,47 @@ Git allows you to add this signoff automatically when using the `-s`
flag to `git commit`, which uses the name and email set in your
`user.name` and `user.email` git configs.
## Continuous integration and testing
# 10. Turn feedback into better code.
[Buildkite](https://buildkite.com/matrix-dot-org/synapse) will automatically
run a series of checks and tests against any PR which is opened against the
project; if your change breaks the build, this will be shown in GitHub, with
links to the build results. If your build fails, please try to fix the errors
and update your branch.
Once the Pull Request is opened, you will see a few things:
To run unit tests in a local development environment, you can use:
1. our automated CI (Continuous Integration) pipeline will run (again) the linters, the unit tests, the integration tests and more;
2. one or more of the developers will take a look at your Pull Request and offer feedback.
- ``tox -e py35`` (requires tox to be installed by ``pip install tox``)
for SQLite-backed Synapse on Python 3.5.
- ``tox -e py36`` for SQLite-backed Synapse on Python 3.6.
- ``tox -e py36-postgres`` for PostgreSQL-backed Synapse on Python 3.6
(requires a running local PostgreSQL with access to create databases).
- ``./test_postgresql.sh`` for PostgreSQL-backed Synapse on Python 3.5
(requires Docker). Entirely self-contained, recommended if you don't want to
set up PostgreSQL yourself.
From this point, you should:
Docker images are available for running the integration tests (SyTest) locally,
see the [documentation in the SyTest repo](
https://github.com/matrix-org/sytest/blob/develop/docker/README.md) for more
information.
1. Look at the results of the CI pipeline.
- If there is any error, fix the error.
2. If a developer has requested changes, make these changes and let us know if it is ready for a developer to review again.
3. Create a new commit with the changes.
- Please do NOT overwrite the history. New commits make the reviewer's life easier.
- Push this commits to your Pull Request.
4. Back to 1.
## Updating your pull request
Once both the CI and the developers are happy, the patch will be merged into Synapse and released shortly!
If you decide to make changes to your pull request - perhaps to address issues
raised in a review, or to fix problems highlighted by [continuous
integration](#continuous-integration-and-testing) - just add new commits to your
branch, and push to GitHub. The pull request will automatically be updated.
# 11. Find a new issue.
Please **avoid** rebasing your branch, especially once the PR has been
reviewed: doing so makes it very difficult for a reviewer to see what has
changed since a previous review.
By now, you know the drill!
# Notes for maintainers on merging PRs etc
## Notes for maintainers on merging PRs etc
There are some notes for those with commit access to the project on how we
manage git [here](docs/dev/git.md).
# Conclusion
## Conclusion
That's it! Matrix is a very open and collaborative project as you might expect
given our obsession with open communication. If we're going to successfully

View File

@@ -1,45 +1,19 @@
# Installation Instructions
- [Choosing your server name](#choosing-your-server-name)
- [Picking a database engine](#picking-a-database-engine)
- [Installing Synapse](#installing-synapse)
- [Installing from source](#installing-from-source)
- [Platform-Specific Instructions](#platform-specific-instructions)
- [Prebuilt packages](#prebuilt-packages)
- [Setting up Synapse](#setting-up-synapse)
- [TLS certificates](#tls-certificates)
- [Client Well-Known URI](#client-well-known-uri)
- [Email](#email)
- [Registering a user](#registering-a-user)
- [Setting up a TURN server](#setting-up-a-turn-server)
- [URL previews](#url-previews)
- [Troubleshooting Installation](#troubleshooting-installation)
There are 3 steps to follow under **Installation Instructions**.
- [Installation Instructions](#installation-instructions)
- [Choosing your server name](#choosing-your-server-name)
- [Installing Synapse](#installing-synapse)
- [Installing from source](#installing-from-source)
- [Platform-specific prerequisites](#platform-specific-prerequisites)
- [Debian/Ubuntu/Raspbian](#debianubunturaspbian)
- [ArchLinux](#archlinux)
- [CentOS/Fedora](#centosfedora)
- [macOS](#macos)
- [OpenSUSE](#opensuse)
- [OpenBSD](#openbsd)
- [Windows](#windows)
- [Prebuilt packages](#prebuilt-packages)
- [Docker images and Ansible playbooks](#docker-images-and-ansible-playbooks)
- [Debian/Ubuntu](#debianubuntu)
- [Matrix.org packages](#matrixorg-packages)
- [Downstream Debian packages](#downstream-debian-packages)
- [Downstream Ubuntu packages](#downstream-ubuntu-packages)
- [Fedora](#fedora)
- [OpenSUSE](#opensuse-1)
- [SUSE Linux Enterprise Server](#suse-linux-enterprise-server)
- [ArchLinux](#archlinux-1)
- [Void Linux](#void-linux)
- [FreeBSD](#freebsd)
- [OpenBSD](#openbsd-1)
- [NixOS](#nixos)
- [Setting up Synapse](#setting-up-synapse)
- [Using PostgreSQL](#using-postgresql)
- [TLS certificates](#tls-certificates)
- [Client Well-Known URI](#client-well-known-uri)
- [Email](#email)
- [Registering a user](#registering-a-user)
- [Setting up a TURN server](#setting-up-a-turn-server)
- [URL previews](#url-previews)
- [Troubleshooting Installation](#troubleshooting-installation)
## Choosing your server name
# Choosing your server name
It is important to choose the name for your server before you install Synapse,
because it cannot be changed later.
@@ -55,24 +29,46 @@ that your email address is probably `user@example.com` rather than
`user@email.example.com`) - but doing so may require more advanced setup: see
[Setting up Federation](docs/federate.md).
## Installing Synapse
# Picking a database engine
### Installing from source
Synapse offers two database engines:
* [PostgreSQL](https://www.postgresql.org)
* [SQLite](https://sqlite.org/)
Almost all installations should opt to use PostgreSQL. Advantages include:
* significant performance improvements due to the superior threading and
caching model, smarter query optimiser
* allowing the DB to be run on separate hardware
For information on how to install and use PostgreSQL, please see
[docs/postgres.md](docs/postgres.md)
By default Synapse uses SQLite and in doing so trades performance for convenience.
SQLite is only recommended in Synapse for testing purposes or for servers with
light workloads.
# Installing Synapse
## Installing from source
(Prebuilt packages are available for some platforms - see [Prebuilt packages](#prebuilt-packages).)
When installing from source please make sure that the [Platform-specific prerequisites](#platform-specific-prerequisites) are already installed.
System requirements:
- POSIX-compliant system (tested on Linux & OS X)
- Python 3.5.2 or later, up to Python 3.9.
- Python 3.5.2 or later, up to Python 3.8.
- At least 1GB of free RAM if you want to join large public rooms like #matrix:matrix.org
Synapse is written in Python but some of the libraries it uses are written in
C. So before we can install Synapse itself we need a working C compiler and the
header files for Python C extensions. See [Platform-Specific
Instructions](#platform-specific-instructions) for information on installing
these on various platforms.
To install the Synapse homeserver run:
```sh
```
mkdir -p ~/synapse
virtualenv -p python3 ~/synapse/env
source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
@@ -89,7 +85,7 @@ prefer.
This Synapse installation can then be later upgraded by using pip again with the
update flag:
```sh
```
source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
pip install -U matrix-synapse
```
@@ -97,7 +93,7 @@ pip install -U matrix-synapse
Before you can start Synapse, you will need to generate a configuration
file. To do this, run (in your virtualenv, as before):
```sh
```
cd ~/synapse
python -m synapse.app.homeserver \
--server-name my.domain.name \
@@ -115,58 +111,70 @@ wise to back them up somewhere safe. (If, for whatever reason, you do need to
change your homeserver's keys, you may find that other homeserver have the
old key cached. If you update the signing key, you should change the name of the
key in the `<server name>.signing.key` file (the second word) to something
different. See the [spec](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/latest.html#retrieving-server-keys) for more information on key management).
different. See the
[spec](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/latest.html#retrieving-server-keys)
for more information on key management).
To actually run your new homeserver, pick a working directory for Synapse to
run (e.g. `~/synapse`), and:
```sh
```
cd ~/synapse
source env/bin/activate
synctl start
```
#### Platform-specific prerequisites
### Platform-Specific Instructions
Synapse is written in Python but some of the libraries it uses are written in
C. So before we can install Synapse itself we need a working C compiler and the
header files for Python C extensions.
##### Debian/Ubuntu/Raspbian
#### Debian/Ubuntu/Raspbian
Installing prerequisites on Ubuntu or Debian:
```sh
sudo apt install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \
```
sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \
python3-pip python3-setuptools sqlite3 \
libssl-dev virtualenv libjpeg-dev libxslt1-dev
```
##### ArchLinux
#### ArchLinux
Installing prerequisites on ArchLinux:
```sh
```
sudo pacman -S base-devel python python-pip \
python-setuptools python-virtualenv sqlite3
```
##### CentOS/Fedora
#### CentOS/Fedora
Installing prerequisites on CentOS or Fedora Linux:
Installing prerequisites on CentOS 8 or Fedora>26:
```sh
```
sudo dnf install libtiff-devel libjpeg-devel libzip-devel freetype-devel \
libwebp-devel libxml2-devel libxslt-devel libpq-devel \
python3-virtualenv libffi-devel openssl-devel python3-devel
libwebp-devel tk-devel redhat-rpm-config \
python3-virtualenv libffi-devel openssl-devel
sudo dnf groupinstall "Development Tools"
```
##### macOS
Installing prerequisites on CentOS 7 or Fedora<=25:
```
sudo yum install libtiff-devel libjpeg-devel libzip-devel freetype-devel \
lcms2-devel libwebp-devel tcl-devel tk-devel redhat-rpm-config \
python3-virtualenv libffi-devel openssl-devel
sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools"
```
Note that Synapse does not support versions of SQLite before 3.11, and CentOS 7
uses SQLite 3.7. You may be able to work around this by installing a more
recent SQLite version, but it is recommended that you instead use a Postgres
database: see [docs/postgres.md](docs/postgres.md).
#### macOS
Installing prerequisites on macOS:
```sh
```
xcode-select --install
sudo easy_install pip
sudo pip install virtualenv
@@ -176,23 +184,22 @@ brew install pkg-config libffi
On macOS Catalina (10.15) you may need to explicitly install OpenSSL
via brew and inform `pip` about it so that `psycopg2` builds:
```sh
```
brew install openssl@1.1
export LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib"
export CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include"
export LDFLAGS=-L/usr/local/Cellar/openssl\@1.1/1.1.1d/lib/
```
##### OpenSUSE
#### OpenSUSE
Installing prerequisites on openSUSE:
```sh
```
sudo zypper in -t pattern devel_basis
sudo zypper in python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 python-virtualenv \
python-devel libffi-devel libopenssl-devel libjpeg62-devel
```
##### OpenBSD
#### OpenBSD
A port of Synapse is available under `net/synapse`. The filesystem
underlying the homeserver directory (defaults to `/var/synapse`) has to be
@@ -206,72 +213,73 @@ mounted with `wxallowed` (cf. `mount(8)`).
Creating a `WRKOBJDIR` for building python under `/usr/local` (which on a
default OpenBSD installation is mounted with `wxallowed`):
```sh
```
doas mkdir /usr/local/pobj_wxallowed
```
Assuming `PORTS_PRIVSEP=Yes` (cf. `bsd.port.mk(5)`) and `SUDO=doas` are
configured in `/etc/mk.conf`:
```sh
```
doas chown _pbuild:_pbuild /usr/local/pobj_wxallowed
```
Setting the `WRKOBJDIR` for building python:
```sh
```
echo WRKOBJDIR_lang/python/3.7=/usr/local/pobj_wxallowed \\nWRKOBJDIR_lang/python/2.7=/usr/local/pobj_wxallowed >> /etc/mk.conf
```
Building Synapse:
```sh
```
cd /usr/ports/net/synapse
make install
```
##### Windows
#### Windows
If you wish to run or develop Synapse on Windows, the Windows Subsystem For
Linux provides a Linux environment on Windows 10 which is capable of using the
Debian, Fedora, or source installation methods. More information about WSL can
be found at <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10> for
Windows 10 and <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-on-server>
be found at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10 for
Windows 10 and https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-on-server
for Windows Server.
### Prebuilt packages
## Prebuilt packages
As an alternative to installing from source, prebuilt packages are available
for a number of platforms.
#### Docker images and Ansible playbooks
### Docker images and Ansible playbooks
There is an official synapse image available at
<https://hub.docker.com/r/matrixdotorg/synapse> which can be used with
There is an offical synapse image available at
https://hub.docker.com/r/matrixdotorg/synapse which can be used with
the docker-compose file available at [contrib/docker](contrib/docker). Further
information on this including configuration options is available in the README
on hub.docker.com.
Alternatively, Andreas Peters (previously Silvio Fricke) has contributed a
Dockerfile to automate a synapse server in a single Docker image, at
<https://hub.docker.com/r/avhost/docker-matrix/tags/>
https://hub.docker.com/r/avhost/docker-matrix/tags/
Slavi Pantaleev has created an Ansible playbook,
which installs the offical Docker image of Matrix Synapse
along with many other Matrix-related services (Postgres database, Element, coturn,
ma1sd, SSL support, etc.).
For more details, see
<https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy>
https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy
#### Debian/Ubuntu
##### Matrix.org packages
### Debian/Ubuntu
#### Matrix.org packages
Matrix.org provides Debian/Ubuntu packages of the latest stable version of
Synapse via <https://packages.matrix.org/debian/>. They are available for Debian
Synapse via https://packages.matrix.org/debian/. They are available for Debian
9 (Stretch), Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial), and later. To use them:
```sh
```
sudo apt install -y lsb-release wget apt-transport-https
sudo wget -O /usr/share/keyrings/matrix-org-archive-keyring.gpg https://packages.matrix.org/debian/matrix-org-archive-keyring.gpg
echo "deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/matrix-org-archive-keyring.gpg] https://packages.matrix.org/debian/ $(lsb_release -cs) main" |
@@ -291,7 +299,7 @@ The fingerprint of the repository signing key (as shown by `gpg
/usr/share/keyrings/matrix-org-archive-keyring.gpg`) is
`AAF9AE843A7584B5A3E4CD2BCF45A512DE2DA058`.
##### Downstream Debian packages
#### Downstream Debian packages
We do not recommend using the packages from the default Debian `buster`
repository at this time, as they are old and suffer from known security
@@ -303,49 +311,49 @@ for information on how to use backports.
If you are using Debian `sid` or testing, Synapse is available in the default
repositories and it should be possible to install it simply with:
```sh
```
sudo apt install matrix-synapse
```
##### Downstream Ubuntu packages
#### Downstream Ubuntu packages
We do not recommend using the packages in the default Ubuntu repository
at this time, as they are old and suffer from known security vulnerabilities.
The latest version of Synapse can be installed from [our repository](#matrixorg-packages).
#### Fedora
### Fedora
Synapse is in the Fedora repositories as `matrix-synapse`:
```sh
```
sudo dnf install matrix-synapse
```
Oleg Girko provides Fedora RPMs at
<https://obs.infoserver.lv/project/monitor/matrix-synapse>
https://obs.infoserver.lv/project/monitor/matrix-synapse
#### OpenSUSE
### OpenSUSE
Synapse is in the OpenSUSE repositories as `matrix-synapse`:
```sh
```
sudo zypper install matrix-synapse
```
#### SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
### SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
Unofficial package are built for SLES 15 in the openSUSE:Backports:SLE-15 repository at
<https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Backports:/SLE-15/standard/>
https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Backports:/SLE-15/standard/
#### ArchLinux
### ArchLinux
The quickest way to get up and running with ArchLinux is probably with the community package
<https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/any/matrix-synapse/>, which should pull in most of
https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/any/matrix-synapse/, which should pull in most of
the necessary dependencies.
pip may be outdated (6.0.7-1 and needs to be upgraded to 6.0.8-1 ):
```sh
```
sudo pip install --upgrade pip
```
@@ -354,28 +362,28 @@ ELFCLASS32 (x64 Systems), you may need to reinstall py-bcrypt to correctly
compile it under the right architecture. (This should not be needed if
installing under virtualenv):
```sh
```
sudo pip uninstall py-bcrypt
sudo pip install py-bcrypt
```
#### Void Linux
### Void Linux
Synapse can be found in the void repositories as 'synapse':
```sh
```
xbps-install -Su
xbps-install -S synapse
```
#### FreeBSD
### FreeBSD
Synapse can be installed via FreeBSD Ports or Packages contributed by Brendan Molloy from:
- Ports: `cd /usr/ports/net-im/py-matrix-synapse && make install clean`
- Packages: `pkg install py37-matrix-synapse`
- Ports: `cd /usr/ports/net-im/py-matrix-synapse && make install clean`
- Packages: `pkg install py37-matrix-synapse`
#### OpenBSD
### OpenBSD
As of OpenBSD 6.7 Synapse is available as a pre-compiled binary. The filesystem
underlying the homeserver directory (defaults to `/var/synapse`) has to be
@@ -384,35 +392,20 @@ and mounting it to `/var/synapse` should be taken into consideration.
Installing Synapse:
```sh
```
doas pkg_add synapse
```
#### NixOS
### NixOS
Robin Lambertz has packaged Synapse for NixOS at:
<https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/modules/services/misc/matrix-synapse.nix>
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/modules/services/misc/matrix-synapse.nix
## Setting up Synapse
# Setting up Synapse
Once you have installed synapse as above, you will need to configure it.
### Using PostgreSQL
By default Synapse uses [SQLite](https://sqlite.org/) and in doing so trades performance for convenience.
SQLite is only recommended in Synapse for testing purposes or for servers with
very light workloads.
Almost all installations should opt to use [PostgreSQL](https://www.postgresql.org). Advantages include:
- significant performance improvements due to the superior threading and
caching model, smarter query optimiser
- allowing the DB to be run on separate hardware
For information on how to install and use PostgreSQL in Synapse, please see
[docs/postgres.md](docs/postgres.md)
### TLS certificates
## TLS certificates
The default configuration exposes a single HTTP port on the local
interface: `http://localhost:8008`. It is suitable for local testing,
@@ -426,19 +419,19 @@ The recommended way to do so is to set up a reverse proxy on port
Alternatively, you can configure Synapse to expose an HTTPS port. To do
so, you will need to edit `homeserver.yaml`, as follows:
- First, under the `listeners` section, uncomment the configuration for the
* First, under the `listeners` section, uncomment the configuration for the
TLS-enabled listener. (Remove the hash sign (`#`) at the start of
each line). The relevant lines are like this:
```yaml
- port: 8448
type: http
tls: true
resources:
- names: [client, federation]
```
- port: 8448
type: http
tls: true
resources:
- names: [client, federation]
```
- You will also need to uncomment the `tls_certificate_path` and
* You will also need to uncomment the `tls_certificate_path` and
`tls_private_key_path` lines under the `TLS` section. You will need to manage
provisioning of these certificates yourself — Synapse had built-in ACME
support, but the ACMEv1 protocol Synapse implements is deprecated, not
@@ -453,7 +446,7 @@ so, you will need to edit `homeserver.yaml`, as follows:
For a more detailed guide to configuring your server for federation, see
[federate.md](docs/federate.md).
### Client Well-Known URI
## Client Well-Known URI
Setting up the client Well-Known URI is optional but if you set it up, it will
allow users to enter their full username (e.g. `@user:<server_name>`) into clients
@@ -464,7 +457,7 @@ about the actual homeserver URL you are using.
The URL `https://<server_name>/.well-known/matrix/client` should return JSON in
the following format.
```json
```
{
"m.homeserver": {
"base_url": "https://<matrix.example.com>"
@@ -474,7 +467,7 @@ the following format.
It can optionally contain identity server information as well.
```json
```
{
"m.homeserver": {
"base_url": "https://<matrix.example.com>"
@@ -491,11 +484,10 @@ Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) headers. A recommended value would be
view it.
In nginx this would be something like:
```nginx
```
location /.well-known/matrix/client {
return 200 '{"m.homeserver": {"base_url": "https://<matrix.example.com>"}}';
default_type application/json;
add_header Content-Type application/json;
add_header Access-Control-Allow-Origin *;
}
```
@@ -505,11 +497,11 @@ correctly. `public_baseurl` should be set to the URL that clients will use to
connect to your server. This is the same URL you put for the `m.homeserver`
`base_url` above.
```yaml
```
public_baseurl: "https://<matrix.example.com>"
```
### Email
## Email
It is desirable for Synapse to have the capability to send email. This allows
Synapse to send password reset emails, send verifications when an email address
@@ -524,28 +516,18 @@ and `notif_from` fields filled out. You may also need to set `smtp_user`,
If email is not configured, password reset, registration and notifications via
email will be disabled.
### Registering a user
## Registering a user
The easiest way to create a new user is to do so from a client like [Element](https://element.io/).
Alternatively, you can do so from the command line. This can be done as follows:
Alternatively you can do so from the command line if you have installed via pip.
1. If synapse was installed via pip, activate the virtualenv as follows (if Synapse was
installed via a prebuilt package, `register_new_matrix_user` should already be
on the search path):
```sh
cd ~/synapse
source env/bin/activate
synctl start # if not already running
```
2. Run the following command:
```sh
register_new_matrix_user -c homeserver.yaml http://localhost:8008
```
This can be done as follows:
This will prompt you to add details for the new user, and will then connect to
the running Synapse to create the new user. For example:
```
$ source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
$ synctl start # if not already running
$ register_new_matrix_user -c homeserver.yaml http://localhost:8008
New user localpart: erikj
Password:
Confirm password:
@@ -560,12 +542,12 @@ value is generated by `--generate-config`), but it should be kept secret, as
anyone with knowledge of it can register users, including admin accounts,
on your server even if `enable_registration` is `false`.
### Setting up a TURN server
## Setting up a TURN server
For reliable VoIP calls to be routed via this homeserver, you MUST configure
a TURN server. See [docs/turn-howto.md](docs/turn-howto.md) for details.
### URL previews
## URL previews
Synapse includes support for previewing URLs, which is disabled by default. To
turn it on you must enable the `url_preview_enabled: True` config parameter
@@ -575,18 +557,19 @@ This is critical from a security perspective to stop arbitrary Matrix users
spidering 'internal' URLs on your network. At the very least we recommend that
your loopback and RFC1918 IP addresses are blacklisted.
This also requires the optional `lxml` python dependency to be installed. This
in turn requires the `libxml2` library to be available - on Debian/Ubuntu this
means `apt-get install libxml2-dev`, or equivalent for your OS.
This also requires the optional `lxml` and `netaddr` python dependencies to be
installed. This in turn requires the `libxml2` library to be available - on
Debian/Ubuntu this means `apt-get install libxml2-dev`, or equivalent for
your OS.
### Troubleshooting Installation
# Troubleshooting Installation
`pip` seems to leak *lots* of memory during installation. For instance, a Linux
host with 512MB of RAM may run out of memory whilst installing Twisted. If this
happens, you will have to individually install the dependencies which are
failing, e.g.:
```sh
```
pip install twisted
```

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@@ -20,10 +20,9 @@ recursive-include scripts *
recursive-include scripts-dev *
recursive-include synapse *.pyi
recursive-include tests *.py
recursive-include tests *.pem
recursive-include tests *.p8
recursive-include tests *.crt
recursive-include tests *.key
include tests/http/ca.crt
include tests/http/ca.key
include tests/http/server.key
recursive-include synapse/res *
recursive-include synapse/static *.css

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@@ -183,9 +183,8 @@ Using a reverse proxy with Synapse
It is recommended to put a reverse proxy such as
`nginx <https://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_proxy_module.html>`_,
`Apache <https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_proxy_http.html>`_,
`Caddy <https://caddyserver.com/docs/quick-starts/reverse-proxy>`_,
`HAProxy <https://www.haproxy.org/>`_ or
`relayd <https://man.openbsd.org/relayd.8>`_ in front of Synapse. One advantage of
`Caddy <https://caddyserver.com/docs/quick-starts/reverse-proxy>`_ or
`HAProxy <https://www.haproxy.org/>`_ 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.
@@ -244,8 +243,6 @@ Then update the ``users`` table in the database::
Synapse Development
===================
Join our developer community on Matrix: `#synapse-dev:matrix.org <https://matrix.to/#/#synapse-dev:matrix.org>`_
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 <INSTALL.md#installing-from-source>`_.
@@ -259,48 +256,23 @@ directory of your choice::
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]"
virtualenv -p python3 env
source env/bin/activate
python -m pip install --no-use-pep517 -e ".[all]"
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::
dependencies into a virtual env.
pip install -e "module-name"
Once this is done, you may wish to run Synapse's unit tests to
check that everything is installed correctly::
Once this is done, you may wish to run Synapse's unit tests, to
check that everything is installed as it should be::
python -m twisted.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)
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
This should end with a 'PASSED' result::
Ran 143 tests in 0.601s
PASSED (successes=143)
Running the Integration Tests
=============================
@@ -314,15 +286,6 @@ Testing with SyTest is recommended for verifying that changes related to the
Client-Server API are functioning correctly. See the `installation instructions
<https://github.com/matrix-org/sytest#installing>`_ 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
===============
@@ -393,17 +356,12 @@ massive excess of outgoing federation requests (see `discussion
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:
.. code-block:: yaml
presence:
enabled: false
``use_presence: false`` in the Synapse config file.
People can't accept room invitations from me
--------------------------------------------
The typical failure mode here is that you send an invitation to someone
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::

View File

@@ -5,16 +5,6 @@ Before upgrading check if any special steps are required to upgrade from the
version you currently have installed to the current version of Synapse. The extra
instructions that may be required are listed later in this document.
* Check that your versions of Python and PostgreSQL are still supported.
Synapse follows upstream lifecycles for `Python`_ and `PostgreSQL`_, and
removes support for versions which are no longer maintained.
The website https://endoflife.date also offers convenient summaries.
.. _Python: https://devguide.python.org/devcycle/#end-of-life-branches
.. _PostgreSQL: https://www.postgresql.org/support/versioning/
* If Synapse was installed using `prebuilt packages
<INSTALL.md#prebuilt-packages>`_, you will need to follow the normal process
for upgrading those packages.
@@ -85,335 +75,6 @@ for example:
wget https://packages.matrix.org/debian/pool/main/m/matrix-synapse-py3/matrix-synapse-py3_1.3.0+stretch1_amd64.deb
dpkg -i matrix-synapse-py3_1.3.0+stretch1_amd64.deb
Upgrading to v1.34.0
====================
`room_invite_state_types` configuration setting
-----------------------------------------------
The ``room_invite_state_types`` configuration setting has been deprecated and
replaced with ``room_prejoin_state``. See the `sample configuration file <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/v1.34.0/docs/sample_config.yaml#L1515>`_.
If you have set ``room_invite_state_types`` to the default value you should simply
remove it from your configuration file. The default value used to be:
.. code:: yaml
room_invite_state_types:
- "m.room.join_rules"
- "m.room.canonical_alias"
- "m.room.avatar"
- "m.room.encryption"
- "m.room.name"
If you have customised this value by adding addition state types, you should
remove ``room_invite_state_types`` and configure ``additional_event_types`` with
your customisations.
If you have customised this value by removing state types, you should rename
``room_invite_state_types`` to ``additional_event_types``, and set
``disable_default_event_types`` to ``true``.
Upgrading to v1.33.0
====================
Account Validity HTML templates can now display a user's expiration date
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This may affect you if you have enabled the account validity feature, and have made use of a
custom HTML template specified by the ``account_validity.template_dir`` or ``account_validity.account_renewed_html_path``
Synapse config options.
The template can now accept an ``expiration_ts`` variable, which represents the unix timestamp in milliseconds for the
future date of which their account has been renewed until. See the
`default template <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/release-v1.33.0/synapse/res/templates/account_renewed.html>`_
for an example of usage.
ALso note that a new HTML template, ``account_previously_renewed.html``, has been added. This is is shown to users
when they attempt to renew their account with a valid renewal token that has already been used before. The default
template contents can been found
`here <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/release-v1.33.0/synapse/res/templates/account_previously_renewed.html>`_,
and can also accept an ``expiration_ts`` variable. This template replaces the error message users would previously see
upon attempting to use a valid renewal token more than once.
Upgrading to v1.32.0
====================
Regression causing connected Prometheus instances to become overwhelmed
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
This release introduces `a regression <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/9853>`_
that can overwhelm connected Prometheus instances. This issue is not present in
Synapse v1.32.0rc1.
If you have been affected, please downgrade to 1.31.0. You then may need to
remove excess writeahead logs in order for Prometheus to recover. Instructions
for doing so are provided
`here <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/9854#issuecomment-823472183>`_.
Dropping support for old Python, Postgres and SQLite versions
-------------------------------------------------------------
In line with our `deprecation policy <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/release-v1.32.0/docs/deprecation_policy.md>`_,
we've dropped support for Python 3.5 and PostgreSQL 9.5, as they are no longer supported upstream.
This release of Synapse requires Python 3.6+ and PostgresSQL 9.6+ or SQLite 3.22+.
Removal of old List Accounts Admin API
--------------------------------------
The deprecated v1 "list accounts" admin API (``GET /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>``) has been removed in this version.
The `v2 list accounts API <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/admin_api/user_admin_api.rst#list-accounts>`_
has been available since Synapse 1.7.0 (2019-12-13), and is accessible under ``GET /_synapse/admin/v2/users``.
The deprecation of the old endpoint was announced with Synapse 1.28.0 (released on 2021-02-25).
Application Services must use type ``m.login.application_service`` when registering users
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In compliance with the
`Application Service spec <https://matrix.org/docs/spec/application_service/r0.1.2#server-admin-style-permissions>`_,
Application Services are now required to use the ``m.login.application_service`` type when registering users via the
``/_matrix/client/r0/register`` endpoint. This behaviour was deprecated in Synapse v1.30.0.
Please ensure your Application Services are up to date.
Upgrading to v1.29.0
====================
Requirement for X-Forwarded-Proto header
----------------------------------------
When using Synapse with a reverse proxy (in particular, when using the
`x_forwarded` option on an HTTP listener), Synapse now expects to receive an
`X-Forwarded-Proto` header on incoming HTTP requests. If it is not set, Synapse
will log a warning on each received request.
To avoid the warning, administrators using a reverse proxy should ensure that
the reverse proxy sets `X-Forwarded-Proto` header to `https` or `http` to
indicate the protocol used by the client.
Synapse also requires the `Host` header to be preserved.
See the `reverse proxy documentation <docs/reverse_proxy.md>`_, where the
example configurations have been updated to show how to set these headers.
(Users of `Caddy <https://caddyserver.com/>`_ are unaffected, since we believe it
sets `X-Forwarded-Proto` by default.)
Upgrading to v1.27.0
====================
Changes to callback URI for OAuth2 / OpenID Connect and SAML2
-------------------------------------------------------------
This version changes the URI used for callbacks from OAuth2 and SAML2 identity providers:
* If your server is configured for single sign-on via an OpenID Connect or OAuth2 identity
provider, you will need to add ``[synapse public baseurl]/_synapse/client/oidc/callback``
to the list of permitted "redirect URIs" at the identity provider.
See `docs/openid.md <docs/openid.md>`_ for more information on setting up OpenID
Connect.
* If your server is configured for single sign-on via a SAML2 identity provider, you will
need to add ``[synapse public baseurl]/_synapse/client/saml2/authn_response`` as a permitted
"ACS location" (also known as "allowed callback URLs") at the identity provider.
The "Issuer" in the "AuthnRequest" to the SAML2 identity provider is also updated to
``[synapse public baseurl]/_synapse/client/saml2/metadata.xml``. If your SAML2 identity
provider uses this property to validate or otherwise identify Synapse, its configuration
will need to be updated to use the new URL. Alternatively you could create a new, separate
"EntityDescriptor" in your SAML2 identity provider with the new URLs and leave the URLs in
the existing "EntityDescriptor" as they were.
Changes to HTML templates
-------------------------
The HTML templates for SSO and email notifications now have `Jinja2's autoescape <https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/api/#autoescaping>`_
enabled for files ending in ``.html``, ``.htm``, and ``.xml``. If you have customised
these templates and see issues when viewing them you might need to update them.
It is expected that most configurations will need no changes.
If you have customised the templates *names* for these templates, it is recommended
to verify they end in ``.html`` to ensure autoescape is enabled.
The above applies to the following templates:
* ``add_threepid.html``
* ``add_threepid_failure.html``
* ``add_threepid_success.html``
* ``notice_expiry.html``
* ``notice_expiry.html``
* ``notif_mail.html`` (which, by default, includes ``room.html`` and ``notif.html``)
* ``password_reset.html``
* ``password_reset_confirmation.html``
* ``password_reset_failure.html``
* ``password_reset_success.html``
* ``registration.html``
* ``registration_failure.html``
* ``registration_success.html``
* ``sso_account_deactivated.html``
* ``sso_auth_bad_user.html``
* ``sso_auth_confirm.html``
* ``sso_auth_success.html``
* ``sso_error.html``
* ``sso_login_idp_picker.html``
* ``sso_redirect_confirm.html``
Upgrading to v1.26.0
====================
Rolling back to v1.25.0 after a failed upgrade
----------------------------------------------
v1.26.0 includes a lot of large changes. If something problematic occurs, you
may want to roll-back to a previous version of Synapse. Because v1.26.0 also
includes a new database schema version, reverting that version is also required
alongside the generic rollback instructions mentioned above. In short, to roll
back to v1.25.0 you need to:
1. Stop the server
2. Decrease the schema version in the database:
.. code:: sql
UPDATE schema_version SET version = 58;
3. Delete the ignored users & chain cover data:
.. code:: sql
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS ignored_users;
UPDATE rooms SET has_auth_chain_index = false;
For PostgreSQL run:
.. code:: sql
TRUNCATE event_auth_chain_links;
TRUNCATE event_auth_chains;
For SQLite run:
.. code:: sql
DELETE FROM event_auth_chain_links;
DELETE FROM event_auth_chains;
4. Mark the deltas as not run (so they will re-run on upgrade).
.. code:: sql
DELETE FROM applied_schema_deltas WHERE version = 59 AND file = "59/01ignored_user.py";
DELETE FROM applied_schema_deltas WHERE version = 59 AND file = "59/06chain_cover_index.sql";
5. Downgrade Synapse by following the instructions for your installation method
in the "Rolling back to older versions" section above.
Upgrading to v1.25.0
====================
Last release supporting Python 3.5
----------------------------------
This is the last release of Synapse which guarantees support with Python 3.5,
which passed its upstream End of Life date several months ago.
We will attempt to maintain support through March 2021, but without guarantees.
In the future, Synapse will follow upstream schedules for ending support of
older versions of Python and PostgreSQL. Please upgrade to at least Python 3.6
and PostgreSQL 9.6 as soon as possible.
Blacklisting IP ranges
----------------------
Synapse v1.25.0 includes new settings, ``ip_range_blacklist`` and
``ip_range_whitelist``, for controlling outgoing requests from Synapse for federation,
identity servers, push, and for checking key validity for third-party invite events.
The previous setting, ``federation_ip_range_blacklist``, is deprecated. The new
``ip_range_blacklist`` defaults to private IP ranges if it is not defined.
If you have never customised ``federation_ip_range_blacklist`` it is recommended
that you remove that setting.
If you have customised ``federation_ip_range_blacklist`` you should update the
setting name to ``ip_range_blacklist``.
If you have a custom push server that is reached via private IP space you may
need to customise ``ip_range_blacklist`` or ``ip_range_whitelist``.
Upgrading to v1.24.0
====================
Custom OpenID Connect mapping provider breaking change
------------------------------------------------------
This release allows the OpenID Connect mapping provider to perform normalisation
of the localpart of the Matrix ID. This allows for the mapping provider to
specify different algorithms, instead of the [default way](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/appendices#mapping-from-other-character-sets).
If your Synapse configuration uses a custom mapping provider
(`oidc_config.user_mapping_provider.module` is specified and not equal to
`synapse.handlers.oidc_handler.JinjaOidcMappingProvider`) then you *must* ensure
that `map_user_attributes` of the mapping provider performs some normalisation
of the `localpart` returned. To match previous behaviour you can use the
`map_username_to_mxid_localpart` function provided by Synapse. An example is
shown below:
.. code-block:: python
from synapse.types import map_username_to_mxid_localpart
class MyMappingProvider:
def map_user_attributes(self, userinfo, token):
# ... your custom logic ...
sso_user_id = ...
localpart = map_username_to_mxid_localpart(sso_user_id)
return {"localpart": localpart}
Removal historical Synapse Admin API
------------------------------------
Historically, the Synapse Admin API has been accessible under:
* ``/_matrix/client/api/v1/admin``
* ``/_matrix/client/unstable/admin``
* ``/_matrix/client/r0/admin``
* ``/_synapse/admin/v1``
The endpoints with ``/_matrix/client/*`` prefixes have been removed as of v1.24.0.
The Admin API is now only accessible under:
* ``/_synapse/admin/v1``
The only exception is the `/admin/whois` endpoint, which is
`also available via the client-server API <https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.6.1#get-matrix-client-r0-admin-whois-userid>`_.
The deprecation of the old endpoints was announced with Synapse 1.20.0 (released
on 2020-09-22) and makes it easier for homeserver admins to lock down external
access to the Admin API endpoints.
Upgrading to v1.23.0
====================
Structured logging configuration breaking changes
-------------------------------------------------
This release deprecates use of the ``structured: true`` logging configuration for
structured logging. If your logging configuration contains ``structured: true``
then it should be modified based on the `structured logging documentation
<https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/structured_logging.md>`_.
The ``structured`` and ``drains`` logging options are now deprecated and should
be replaced by standard logging configuration of ``handlers`` and ``formatters``.
A future will release of Synapse will make using ``structured: true`` an error.
Upgrading to v1.22.0
====================

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Implement "knock" feature as per MSC2403. Contributed by Sorunome.

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Add a configuration option for always using the "userinfo endpoint" for OpenID Connect. This fixes support for some identity providers, e.g. GitLab. Contributed by Benjamin Koch.

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Allow `ThirdPartyEventRules` modules to query and manipulate whether a room is in the public rooms directory.

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Add support for olm fallback keys ([MSC2732](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2732)).

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Allow running background tasks in a separate worker process.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Add support for device dehydration ([MSC2697](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2697)).

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Add typing information to the device handler.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Check for unreachable code with mypy.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Add unit test for event persister sharding.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Allow events to be sent to clients sooner when using sharded event persisters.

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Configure `public_baseurl` when using demo scripts.

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Add SQL logging on queries that happen during startup.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Speed up unit tests when using PostgreSQL.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Remove redundant databae loads of stream_ordering for events we already have.

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Fix a longstanding bug where invalid ignored users in account data could break clients.

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Fix a bug where backfilling a room with an event that was missing the `redacts` field would break.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Allow running background tasks in a separate worker process.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Change default room version to "6", per [MSC2788](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/2788).

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Update the directions for using the manhole with coroutines.

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Reduce inconsistencies between codepaths for membership and non-membership events.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Combine `SpamCheckerApi` with the more generic `ModuleApi`.

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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Don't attempt to respond to some requests if the client has already disconnected.

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Allow `ThirdPartyEventRules` modules to query and manipulate whether a room is in the public rooms directory.

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Additional testing for `ThirdPartyEventRules`.

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Unblacklist some sytests.

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Include the log level in the phone home stats.

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Remove outdated sphinx documentation, scripts and configuration.

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Fix incremental sync returning an incorrect `prev_batch` token in timeline section, which when used to paginate returned events that were included in the incremental sync. Broken since v0.16.0.

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Clarify error message when plugin config parsers raise an error.

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Improve readme by adding new shield.io badges.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Ensure python uses `malloc` when running Synapse in Docker.

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@@ -24,7 +24,6 @@ import sys
import time
import urllib
from http import TwistedHttpClient
from typing import Optional
import nacl.encoding
import nacl.signing
@@ -93,7 +92,7 @@ class SynapseCmd(cmd.Cmd):
return self.config["user"].split(":")[1]
def do_config(self, line):
"""Show the config for this client: "config"
""" Show the config for this client: "config"
Edit a key value mapping: "config key value" e.g. "config token 1234"
Config variables:
user: The username to auth with.
@@ -361,7 +360,7 @@ class SynapseCmd(cmd.Cmd):
print(e)
def do_topic(self, line):
""" "topic [set|get] <roomid> [<newtopic>]"
""""topic [set|get] <roomid> [<newtopic>]"
Set the topic for a room: topic set <roomid> <newtopic>
Get the topic for a room: topic get <roomid>
"""
@@ -691,7 +690,7 @@ class SynapseCmd(cmd.Cmd):
self._do_presence_state(2, line)
def _parse(self, line, keys, force_keys=False):
"""Parses the given line.
""" Parses the given line.
Args:
line : The line to parse
@@ -719,10 +718,10 @@ class SynapseCmd(cmd.Cmd):
method,
path,
data=None,
query_params: Optional[dict] = None,
query_params={"access_token": None},
alt_text=None,
):
"""Runs an HTTP request and pretty prints the output.
""" Runs an HTTP request and pretty prints the output.
Args:
method: HTTP method
@@ -730,8 +729,6 @@ class SynapseCmd(cmd.Cmd):
data: Raw JSON data if any
query_params: dict of query parameters to add to the url
"""
query_params = query_params or {"access_token": None}
url = self._url() + path
if "access_token" in query_params:
query_params["access_token"] = self._tok()

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Copyright 2014-2016 OpenMarket Ltd
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
@@ -15,7 +16,6 @@
import json
import urllib
from pprint import pformat
from typing import Optional
from twisted.internet import defer, reactor
from twisted.web.client import Agent, readBody
@@ -23,10 +23,11 @@ from twisted.web.http_headers import Headers
class HttpClient:
"""Interface for talking json over http"""
""" Interface for talking json over http
"""
def put_json(self, url, data):
"""Sends the specifed json data using PUT
""" Sends the specifed json data using PUT
Args:
url (str): The URL to PUT data to.
@@ -40,7 +41,7 @@ class HttpClient:
pass
def get_json(self, url, args=None):
"""Gets some json from the given host homeserver and path
""" Gets some json from the given host homeserver and path
Args:
url (str): The URL to GET data from.
@@ -57,7 +58,7 @@ class HttpClient:
class TwistedHttpClient(HttpClient):
"""Wrapper around the twisted HTTP client api.
""" Wrapper around the twisted HTTP client api.
Attributes:
agent (twisted.web.client.Agent): The twisted Agent used to send the
@@ -85,9 +86,9 @@ class TwistedHttpClient(HttpClient):
body = yield readBody(response)
defer.returnValue(json.loads(body))
def _create_put_request(self, url, json_data, headers_dict: Optional[dict] = None):
"""Wrapper of _create_request to issue a PUT request"""
headers_dict = headers_dict or {}
def _create_put_request(self, url, json_data, headers_dict={}):
""" Wrapper of _create_request to issue a PUT request
"""
if "Content-Type" not in headers_dict:
raise defer.error(RuntimeError("Must include Content-Type header for PUTs"))
@@ -96,22 +97,15 @@ class TwistedHttpClient(HttpClient):
"PUT", url, producer=_JsonProducer(json_data), headers_dict=headers_dict
)
def _create_get_request(self, url, headers_dict: Optional[dict] = None):
"""Wrapper of _create_request to issue a GET request"""
return self._create_request("GET", url, headers_dict=headers_dict or {})
def _create_get_request(self, url, headers_dict={}):
""" Wrapper of _create_request to issue a GET request
"""
return self._create_request("GET", url, headers_dict=headers_dict)
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def do_request(
self,
method,
url,
data=None,
qparams=None,
jsonreq=True,
headers: Optional[dict] = None,
self, method, url, data=None, qparams=None, jsonreq=True, headers={}
):
headers = headers or {}
if qparams:
url = "%s?%s" % (url, urllib.urlencode(qparams, True))
@@ -132,12 +126,9 @@ class TwistedHttpClient(HttpClient):
defer.returnValue(json.loads(body))
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def _create_request(
self, method, url, producer=None, headers_dict: Optional[dict] = None
):
"""Creates and sends a request to the given url"""
headers_dict = headers_dict or {}
def _create_request(self, method, url, producer=None, headers_dict={}):
""" Creates and sends a request to the given url
"""
headers_dict["User-Agent"] = ["Synapse Cmd Client"]
retries_left = 5
@@ -194,7 +185,8 @@ class _RawProducer:
class _JsonProducer:
"""Used by the twisted http client to create the HTTP body from json"""
""" Used by the twisted http client to create the HTTP body from json
"""
def __init__(self, jsn):
self.data = jsn

View File

@@ -63,7 +63,8 @@ class CursesStdIO:
self.redraw()
def redraw(self):
"""method for redisplaying lines based on internal list of lines"""
""" method for redisplaying lines
based on internal list of lines """
self.stdscr.clear()
self.paintStatus(self.statusText)

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Copyright 2014-2016 OpenMarket Ltd
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
@@ -55,7 +56,7 @@ def excpetion_errback(failure):
class InputOutput:
"""This is responsible for basic I/O so that a user can interact with
""" This is responsible for basic I/O so that a user can interact with
the example app.
"""
@@ -67,7 +68,8 @@ class InputOutput:
self.server = server
def on_line(self, line):
"""This is where we process commands."""
""" This is where we process commands.
"""
try:
m = re.match(r"^join (\S+)$", line)
@@ -131,7 +133,7 @@ class IOLoggerHandler(logging.Handler):
class Room:
"""Used to store (in memory) the current membership state of a room, and
""" Used to store (in memory) the current membership state of a room, and
which home servers we should send PDUs associated with the room to.
"""
@@ -146,7 +148,8 @@ class Room:
self.have_got_metadata = False
def add_participant(self, participant):
"""Someone has joined the room"""
""" Someone has joined the room
"""
self.participants.add(participant)
self.invited.discard(participant)
@@ -157,13 +160,14 @@ class Room:
self.oldest_server = server
def add_invited(self, invitee):
"""Someone has been invited to the room"""
""" Someone has been invited to the room
"""
self.invited.add(invitee)
self.servers.add(origin_from_ucid(invitee))
class HomeServer(ReplicationHandler):
"""A very basic home server implentation that allows people to join a
""" A very basic home server implentation that allows people to join a
room and then invite other people.
"""
@@ -177,7 +181,8 @@ class HomeServer(ReplicationHandler):
self.output = output
def on_receive_pdu(self, pdu):
"""We just received a PDU"""
""" We just received a PDU
"""
pdu_type = pdu.pdu_type
if pdu_type == "sy.room.message":
@@ -194,20 +199,23 @@ class HomeServer(ReplicationHandler):
)
def _on_message(self, pdu):
"""We received a message"""
""" We received a message
"""
self.output.print_line(
"#%s %s %s" % (pdu.context, pdu.content["sender"], pdu.content["body"])
)
def _on_join(self, context, joinee):
"""Someone has joined a room, either a remote user or a local user"""
""" Someone has joined a room, either a remote user or a local user
"""
room = self._get_or_create_room(context)
room.add_participant(joinee)
self.output.print_line("#%s %s %s" % (context, joinee, "*** JOINED"))
def _on_invite(self, origin, context, invitee):
"""Someone has been invited"""
""" Someone has been invited
"""
room = self._get_or_create_room(context)
room.add_invited(invitee)
@@ -220,7 +228,8 @@ class HomeServer(ReplicationHandler):
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def send_message(self, room_name, sender, body):
"""Send a message to a room!"""
""" Send a message to a room!
"""
destinations = yield self.get_servers_for_context(room_name)
try:
@@ -238,7 +247,8 @@ class HomeServer(ReplicationHandler):
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def join_room(self, room_name, sender, joinee):
"""Join a room!"""
""" Join a room!
"""
self._on_join(room_name, joinee)
destinations = yield self.get_servers_for_context(room_name)
@@ -259,7 +269,8 @@ class HomeServer(ReplicationHandler):
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def invite_to_room(self, room_name, sender, invitee):
"""Invite someone to a room!"""
""" Invite someone to a room!
"""
self._on_invite(self.server_name, room_name, invitee)
destinations = yield self.get_servers_for_context(room_name)

View File

@@ -3,4 +3,4 @@
0. Set up Prometheus and Grafana. Out of scope for this readme. Useful documentation about using Grafana with Prometheus: http://docs.grafana.org/features/datasources/prometheus/
1. Have your Prometheus scrape your Synapse. https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/metrics-howto.md
2. Import dashboard into Grafana. Download `synapse.json`. Import it to Grafana and select the correct Prometheus datasource. http://docs.grafana.org/reference/export_import/
3. Set up required recording rules. https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/tree/master/contrib/prometheus
3. Set up additional recording rules

View File

@@ -193,12 +193,15 @@ class TrivialXmppClient:
time.sleep(7)
print("SSRC spammer started")
while self.running:
ssrcMsg = "<presence to='%(tojid)s' xmlns='jabber:client'><x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/><c xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/caps' hash='sha-1' node='http://jitsi.org/jitsimeet' ver='0WkSdhFnAUxrz4ImQQLdB80GFlE='/><nick xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/nick'>%(nick)s</nick><stats xmlns='http://jitsi.org/jitmeet/stats'><stat name='bitrate_download' value='175'/><stat name='bitrate_upload' value='176'/><stat name='packetLoss_total' value='0'/><stat name='packetLoss_download' value='0'/><stat name='packetLoss_upload' value='0'/></stats><media xmlns='http://estos.de/ns/mjs'><source type='audio' ssrc='%(assrc)s' direction='sendre'/><source type='video' ssrc='%(vssrc)s' direction='sendre'/></media></presence>" % {
"tojid": "%s@%s/%s" % (ROOMNAME, ROOMDOMAIN, self.shortJid),
"nick": self.userId,
"assrc": self.ssrcs["audio"],
"vssrc": self.ssrcs["video"],
}
ssrcMsg = (
"<presence to='%(tojid)s' xmlns='jabber:client'><x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/><c xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/caps' hash='sha-1' node='http://jitsi.org/jitsimeet' ver='0WkSdhFnAUxrz4ImQQLdB80GFlE='/><nick xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/nick'>%(nick)s</nick><stats xmlns='http://jitsi.org/jitmeet/stats'><stat name='bitrate_download' value='175'/><stat name='bitrate_upload' value='176'/><stat name='packetLoss_total' value='0'/><stat name='packetLoss_download' value='0'/><stat name='packetLoss_upload' value='0'/></stats><media xmlns='http://estos.de/ns/mjs'><source type='audio' ssrc='%(assrc)s' direction='sendre'/><source type='video' ssrc='%(vssrc)s' direction='sendre'/></media></presence>"
% {
"tojid": "%s@%s/%s" % (ROOMNAME, ROOMDOMAIN, self.shortJid),
"nick": self.userId,
"assrc": self.ssrcs["audio"],
"vssrc": self.ssrcs["video"],
}
)
res = self.sendIq(ssrcMsg)
print("reply from ssrc announce: ", res)
time.sleep(10)

View File

@@ -20,7 +20,6 @@ Add a new job to the main prometheus.conf file:
```
### for Prometheus v2
Add a new job to the main prometheus.yml file:
```yaml
@@ -30,17 +29,14 @@ Add a new job to the main prometheus.yml file:
scheme: "https"
static_configs:
- targets: ["my.server.here:port"]
- targets: ['SERVER.LOCATION:PORT']
```
An example of a Prometheus configuration with workers can be found in
[metrics-howto.md](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/metrics-howto.md).
To use `synapse.rules` add
```yaml
rule_files:
- "/PATH/TO/synapse-v2.rules"
rule_files:
- "/PATH/TO/synapse-v2.rules"
```
Metrics are disabled by default when running synapse; they must be enabled

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#process_resource_utime"),
expr: "rate(process_cpu_seconds_total[2m]) * 100",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
name: "[[job]]",
min: 0,
max: 100,
renderer: "line",
@@ -22,12 +22,12 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
</script>
<h3>Memory</h3>
<div id="process_resident_memory_bytes"></div>
<div id="process_resource_maxrss"></div>
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#process_resident_memory_bytes"),
expr: "process_resident_memory_bytes",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
node: document.querySelector("#process_resource_maxrss"),
expr: "process_psutil_rss:max",
name: "Maxrss",
min: 0,
renderer: "line",
height: 150,
@@ -43,8 +43,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#process_fds"),
expr: "process_open_fds",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
expr: "process_open_fds{job='synapse'}",
name: "FDs",
min: 0,
renderer: "line",
height: 150,
@@ -62,8 +62,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#reactor_total_time"),
expr: "rate(python_twisted_reactor_tick_time_sum[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
expr: "rate(python_twisted_reactor_tick_time:total[2m]) / 1000",
name: "time",
max: 1,
min: 0,
renderer: "area",
@@ -80,8 +80,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#reactor_average_time"),
expr: "rate(python_twisted_reactor_tick_time_sum[2m]) / rate(python_twisted_reactor_tick_time_count[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
expr: "rate(python_twisted_reactor_tick_time:total[2m]) / rate(python_twisted_reactor_tick_time:count[2m]) / 1000",
name: "time",
min: 0,
renderer: "line",
height: 150,
@@ -97,14 +97,14 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#reactor_pending_calls"),
expr: "rate(python_twisted_reactor_pending_calls_sum[30s]) / rate(python_twisted_reactor_pending_calls_count[30s])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
expr: "rate(python_twisted_reactor_pending_calls:total[30s])/rate(python_twisted_reactor_pending_calls:count[30s])",
name: "calls",
min: 0,
renderer: "line",
height: 150,
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yTitle: "Pending Calls"
yTitle: "Pending Cals"
})
</script>
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_storage_query_time"),
expr: "sum(rate(synapse_storage_query_time_count[2m])) by (verb)",
expr: "rate(synapse_storage_query_time:count[2m])",
name: "[[verb]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
@@ -129,8 +129,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_storage_transaction_time"),
expr: "topk(10, rate(synapse_storage_transaction_time_count[2m]))",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[desc]]",
expr: "rate(synapse_storage_transaction_time:count[2m])",
name: "[[desc]]",
min: 0,
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
@@ -140,12 +140,12 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
</script>
<h3>Transaction execution time</h3>
<div id="synapse_storage_transactions_time_sec"></div>
<div id="synapse_storage_transactions_time_msec"></div>
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_storage_transactions_time_sec"),
expr: "rate(synapse_storage_transaction_time_sum[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[desc]]",
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_storage_transactions_time_msec"),
expr: "rate(synapse_storage_transaction_time:total[2m]) / 1000",
name: "[[desc]]",
min: 0,
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
@@ -154,33 +154,34 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
})
</script>
<h3>Average time waiting for database connection</h3>
<div id="synapse_storage_avg_waiting_time"></div>
<h3>Database scheduling latency</h3>
<div id="synapse_storage_schedule_time"></div>
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_storage_avg_waiting_time"),
expr: "rate(synapse_storage_schedule_time_sum[2m]) / rate(synapse_storage_schedule_time_count[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_storage_schedule_time"),
expr: "rate(synapse_storage_schedule_time:total[2m]) / 1000",
name: "Total latency",
min: 0,
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "s",
yTitle: "Time"
yUnits: "s/s",
yTitle: "Usage"
})
</script>
<h3>Cache request rate</h3>
<div id="synapse_cache_request_rate"></div>
<h3>Cache hit ratio</h3>
<div id="synapse_cache_ratio"></div>
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_cache_request_rate"),
expr: "rate(synapse_util_caches_cache:total[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[name]]",
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_cache_ratio"),
expr: "rate(synapse_util_caches_cache:total[2m]) * 100",
name: "[[name]]",
min: 0,
max: 100,
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
yUnits: "rps",
yTitle: "Cache request rate"
yUnits: "%",
yTitle: "Percentage"
})
</script>
@@ -190,7 +191,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_cache_size"),
expr: "synapse_util_caches_cache:size",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[name]]",
name: "[[name]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
yUnits: "",
@@ -205,8 +206,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_http_server_request_count_servlet"),
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_in_flight_requests_count[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[method]] [[servlet]]",
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_request_count:servlet[2m])",
name: "[[servlet]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "req/s",
@@ -218,8 +219,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_http_server_request_count_servlet_minus_events"),
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_in_flight_requests_count{servlet!=\"EventStreamRestServlet\", servlet!=\"SyncRestServlet\"}[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[method]] [[servlet]]",
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_request_count:servlet{servlet!=\"EventStreamRestServlet\", servlet!=\"SyncRestServlet\"}[2m])",
name: "[[servlet]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "req/s",
@@ -232,8 +233,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_http_server_response_time_avg"),
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_response_time_seconds_sum[2m]) / rate(synapse_http_server_response_count[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[servlet]]",
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_response_time_seconds[2m]) / rate(synapse_http_server_response_count[2m]) / 1000",
name: "[[servlet]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "s/req",
@@ -276,7 +277,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_http_server_response_ru_utime"),
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_response_ru_utime_seconds[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[servlet]]",
name: "[[servlet]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "s/s",
@@ -291,7 +292,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_http_server_response_db_txn_duration"),
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_response_db_txn_duration_seconds[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[servlet]]",
name: "[[servlet]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "s/s",
@@ -305,8 +306,8 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
<script>
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_http_server_send_time_avg"),
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_response_time_seconds_sum{servlet='RoomSendEventRestServlet'}[2m]) / rate(synapse_http_server_response_count{servlet='RoomSendEventRestServlet'}[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[servlet]]",
expr: "rate(synapse_http_server_response_time_second{servlet='RoomSendEventRestServlet'}[2m]) / rate(synapse_http_server_response_count{servlet='RoomSendEventRestServlet'}[2m]) / 1000",
name: "[[servlet]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "s/req",
@@ -322,7 +323,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_federation_client_sent"),
expr: "rate(synapse_federation_client_sent[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[type]]",
name: "[[type]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "req/s",
@@ -336,7 +337,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_federation_server_received"),
expr: "rate(synapse_federation_server_received[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]] [[type]]",
name: "[[type]]",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "req/s",
@@ -366,7 +367,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_notifier_listeners"),
expr: "synapse_notifier_listeners",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
name: "listeners",
min: 0,
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanizeNoSmallPrefix,
@@ -381,7 +382,7 @@ new PromConsole.Graph({
new PromConsole.Graph({
node: document.querySelector("#synapse_notifier_notified_events"),
expr: "rate(synapse_notifier_notified_events[2m])",
name: "[[job]]-[[index]]",
name: "events",
yAxisFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yHoverFormatter: PromConsole.NumberFormatter.humanize,
yUnits: "events/s",

View File

@@ -58,21 +58,3 @@ groups:
labels:
type: "PDU"
expr: 'synapse_federation_transaction_queue_pending_pdus + 0'
- record: synapse_storage_events_persisted_by_source_type
expr: sum without(type, origin_type, origin_entity) (synapse_storage_events_persisted_events_sep{origin_type="remote"})
labels:
type: remote
- record: synapse_storage_events_persisted_by_source_type
expr: sum without(type, origin_type, origin_entity) (synapse_storage_events_persisted_events_sep{origin_entity="*client*",origin_type="local"})
labels:
type: local
- record: synapse_storage_events_persisted_by_source_type
expr: sum without(type, origin_type, origin_entity) (synapse_storage_events_persisted_events_sep{origin_entity!="*client*",origin_type="local"})
labels:
type: bridges
- record: synapse_storage_events_persisted_by_event_type
expr: sum without(origin_entity, origin_type) (synapse_storage_events_persisted_events_sep)
- record: synapse_storage_events_persisted_by_origin
expr: sum without(type) (synapse_storage_events_persisted_events_sep)

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
# this script will use the api:
# https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/admin_api/purge_history_api.rst

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
DOMAIN=yourserver.tld
# add this user as admin in your home server:

View File

@@ -33,44 +33,33 @@ esac
# Use --builtin-venv to use the better `venv` module from CPython 3.4+ rather
# than the 2/3 compatible `virtualenv`.
# Pin pip to 20.3.4 to fix breakage in 21.0 on py3.5 (xenial)
dh_virtualenv \
--install-suffix "matrix-synapse" \
--builtin-venv \
--python "$SNAKE" \
--upgrade-pip-to="20.3.4" \
--upgrade-pip \
--preinstall="lxml" \
--preinstall="mock" \
--extra-pip-arg="--no-cache-dir" \
--extra-pip-arg="--compile" \
--extras="all,systemd,test"
--extras="all,systemd"
PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR="debian/matrix-synapse-py3"
VIRTUALENV_DIR="${PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR}${DH_VIRTUALENV_INSTALL_ROOT}/matrix-synapse"
TARGET_PYTHON="${VIRTUALENV_DIR}/bin/python"
case "$DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS" in
*nocheck*)
# Skip running tests if "nocheck" present in $DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
;;
# we copy the tests to a temporary directory so that we can put them on the
# PYTHONPATH without putting the uninstalled synapse on the pythonpath.
tmpdir=`mktemp -d`
trap "rm -r $tmpdir" EXIT
*)
# Copy tests to a temporary directory so that we can put them on the
# PYTHONPATH without putting the uninstalled synapse on the pythonpath.
tmpdir=`mktemp -d`
trap "rm -r $tmpdir" EXIT
cp -r tests "$tmpdir"
cp -r tests "$tmpdir"
PYTHONPATH="$tmpdir" \
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" -m twisted.trial --reporter=text -j2 tests
;;
esac
PYTHONPATH="$tmpdir" \
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" -B -m twisted.trial --reporter=text -j2 tests
# build the config file
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" "${VIRTUALENV_DIR}/bin/generate_config" \
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" -B "${VIRTUALENV_DIR}/bin/generate_config" \
--config-dir="/etc/matrix-synapse" \
--data-dir="/var/lib/matrix-synapse" |
perl -pe '
@@ -96,7 +85,7 @@ esac
' > "${PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR}/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml"
# build the log config file
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" "${VIRTUALENV_DIR}/bin/generate_log_config" \
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" -B "${VIRTUALENV_DIR}/bin/generate_log_config" \
--output-file="${PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR}/etc/matrix-synapse/log.yaml"
# add a dependency on the right version of python to substvars.

158
debian/changelog vendored
View File

@@ -1,161 +1,3 @@
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.33.2) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.33.2.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Tue, 11 May 2021 11:17:59 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.33.1) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.33.1.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Thu, 06 May 2021 14:06:33 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.33.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.33.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 05 May 2021 14:15:27 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.32.2) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.32.2.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 22 Apr 2021 12:43:52 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.32.1) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.32.1.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 21 Apr 2021 14:00:55 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.32.0) stable; urgency=medium
[ Dan Callahan ]
* Skip tests when DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS contains "nocheck".
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 1.32.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Tue, 20 Apr 2021 14:28:39 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.31.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.31.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Tue, 06 Apr 2021 13:08:29 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.30.1) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.30.1.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Fri, 26 Mar 2021 12:01:28 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.30.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.30.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Mon, 22 Mar 2021 13:15:34 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.29.0) stable; urgency=medium
[ Jonathan de Jong ]
* Remove the python -B flag (don't generate bytecode) in scripts and documentation.
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 1.29.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Mon, 08 Mar 2021 13:51:50 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.28.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.28.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Thu, 25 Feb 2021 10:21:57 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.27.0) stable; urgency=medium
[ Dan Callahan ]
* Fix build on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial).
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 1.27.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Tue, 16 Feb 2021 13:11:28 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.26.0) stable; urgency=medium
[ Richard van der Hoff ]
* Remove dependency on `python3-distutils`.
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 1.26.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 27 Jan 2021 12:43:35 -0500
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.25.0) stable; urgency=medium
[ Dan Callahan ]
* Update dependencies to account for the removal of the transitional
dh-systemd package from Debian Bullseye.
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 1.25.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 13 Jan 2021 10:14:55 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.24.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.24.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 09 Dec 2020 10:14:30 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.23.1) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.23.1.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 09 Dec 2020 10:40:39 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.23.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.23.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Wed, 18 Nov 2020 11:41:28 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.22.1) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.22.1.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Fri, 30 Oct 2020 15:25:37 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.22.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.22.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Tue, 27 Oct 2020 12:07:12 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.21.2) stable; urgency=medium
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 1.21.2.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Thu, 15 Oct 2020 09:23:27 -0400
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.21.1) stable; urgency=medium
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 1.21.1.
[ Andrew Morgan ]
* Explicitly install "test" python dependencies.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Tue, 13 Oct 2020 10:24:13 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.21.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.21.0.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Mon, 12 Oct 2020 15:47:44 +0100
matrix-synapse-py3 (1.20.1) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 1.20.1.

7
debian/control vendored
View File

@@ -3,11 +3,9 @@ Section: contrib/python
Priority: extra
Maintainer: Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org>
# keep this list in sync with the build dependencies in docker/Dockerfile-dhvirtualenv.
# TODO: Remove the dependency on dh-systemd after dropping support for Ubuntu xenial
# On all other supported releases, it's merely a transitional package which
# does nothing but depends on debhelper (> 9.20160709)
Build-Depends:
debhelper (>= 9.20160709) | dh-systemd,
debhelper (>= 9),
dh-systemd,
dh-virtualenv (>= 1.1),
libsystemd-dev,
libpq-dev,
@@ -31,6 +29,7 @@ Pre-Depends: dpkg (>= 1.16.1)
Depends:
adduser,
debconf,
python3-distutils|libpython3-stdlib (<< 3.6),
${misc:Depends},
${shlibs:Depends},
${synapse:pydepends},

2
debian/synctl.1 vendored
View File

@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ Configuration file may be generated as follows:
.
.nf
$ python \-m synapse\.app\.homeserver \-c config\.yaml \-\-generate\-config \-\-server\-name=<server name>
$ python \-B \-m synapse\.app\.homeserver \-c config\.yaml \-\-generate\-config \-\-server\-name=<server name>
.
.fi
.

2
debian/synctl.ronn vendored
View File

@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ process.
Configuration file may be generated as follows:
$ python -m synapse.app.homeserver -c config.yaml --generate-config --server-name=<server name>
$ python -B -m synapse.app.homeserver -c config.yaml --generate-config --server-name=<server name>
## ENVIRONMENT

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
set -e

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
DIR="$( cd "$( dirname "$0" )" && pwd )"
@@ -96,48 +96,18 @@ for port in 8080 8081 8082; do
# Check script parameters
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then
if [ $1 = "--no-rate-limit" ]; then
# messages rate limit
echo 'rc_messages_per_second: 1000' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
echo 'rc_message_burst_count: 1000' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
# Disable any rate limiting
ratelimiting=$(cat <<-RC
rc_message:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
rc_registration:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
rc_login:
address:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
account:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
failed_attempts:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
rc_admin_redaction:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
rc_joins:
local:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
remote:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
rc_3pid_validation:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
rc_invites:
per_room:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
per_user:
per_second: 1000
burst_count: 1000
RC
)
echo "${ratelimiting}" >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
# registration rate limit
printf 'rc_registration:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
# login rate limit
echo 'rc_login:' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
printf ' address:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
printf ' account:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
printf ' failed_attempts:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
fi
fi

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
DIR="$( cd "$( dirname "$0" )" && pwd )"

59
demo/webserver.py Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
import argparse
import BaseHTTPServer
import os
import SimpleHTTPServer
import cgi, logging
from daemonize import Daemonize
class SimpleHTTPRequestHandlerWithPOST(SimpleHTTPServer.SimpleHTTPRequestHandler):
UPLOAD_PATH = "upload"
"""
Accept all post request as file upload
"""
def do_POST(self):
path = os.path.join(self.UPLOAD_PATH, os.path.basename(self.path))
length = self.headers["content-length"]
data = self.rfile.read(int(length))
with open(path, "wb") as fh:
fh.write(data)
self.send_response(200)
self.send_header("Content-Type", "application/json")
self.end_headers()
# Return the absolute path of the uploaded file
self.wfile.write('{"url":"/%s"}' % path)
def setup():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument("directory")
parser.add_argument("-p", "--port", dest="port", type=int, default=8080)
parser.add_argument("-P", "--pid-file", dest="pid", default="web.pid")
args = parser.parse_args()
# Get absolute path to directory to serve, as daemonize changes to '/'
os.chdir(args.directory)
dr = os.getcwd()
httpd = BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer(("", args.port), SimpleHTTPRequestHandlerWithPOST)
def run():
os.chdir(dr)
httpd.serve_forever()
daemon = Daemonize(
app="synapse-webclient", pid=args.pid, action=run, auto_close_fds=False
)
daemon.start()
if __name__ == "__main__":
setup()

View File

@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
# docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --build-arg PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 .
#
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.8
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.7
###
### Stage 0: builder
@@ -28,32 +28,30 @@ RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \
libwebp-dev \
libxml++2.6-dev \
libxslt1-dev \
openssl \
rustc \
zlib1g-dev \
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
# Copy just what we need to pip install
# Build dependencies that are not available as wheels, to speed up rebuilds
RUN pip install --prefix="/install" --no-warn-script-location \
frozendict \
jaeger-client \
opentracing \
prometheus-client \
psycopg2 \
pycparser \
pyrsistent \
pyyaml \
simplejson \
threadloop \
thrift
# now install synapse and all of the python deps to /install.
COPY synapse /synapse/synapse/
COPY scripts /synapse/scripts/
COPY MANIFEST.in README.rst setup.py synctl /synapse/
COPY synapse/__init__.py /synapse/synapse/__init__.py
COPY synapse/python_dependencies.py /synapse/synapse/python_dependencies.py
# To speed up rebuilds, install all of the dependencies before we copy over
# the whole synapse project so that we this layer in the Docker cache can be
# used while you develop on the source
#
# This is aiming at installing the `install_requires` and `extras_require` from `setup.py`
RUN pip install --prefix="/install" --no-warn-script-location \
/synapse[all]
# Copy over the rest of the project
COPY synapse /synapse/synapse/
# Install the synapse package itself and all of its children packages.
#
# This is aiming at installing only the `packages=find_packages(...)` from `setup.py
RUN pip install --prefix="/install" --no-deps --no-warn-script-location /synapse
/synapse[all]
###
### Stage 1: runtime
@@ -61,11 +59,6 @@ RUN pip install --prefix="/install" --no-deps --no-warn-script-location /synapse
FROM docker.io/python:${PYTHON_VERSION}-slim
LABEL org.opencontainers.image.url='https://matrix.org/docs/projects/server/synapse'
LABEL org.opencontainers.image.documentation='https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docker/README.md'
LABEL org.opencontainers.image.source='https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse.git'
LABEL org.opencontainers.image.licenses='Apache-2.0'
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \
curl \
gosu \
@@ -73,10 +66,7 @@ RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \
libpq5 \
libwebp6 \
xmlsec1 \
libjemalloc2 \
libssl-dev \
openssl \
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
COPY --from=builder /install /usr/local
COPY ./docker/start.py /start.py
@@ -88,5 +78,5 @@ EXPOSE 8008/tcp 8009/tcp 8448/tcp
ENTRYPOINT ["/start.py"]
HEALTHCHECK --start-period=5s --interval=15s --timeout=5s \
CMD curl -fSs http://localhost:8008/health || exit 1
HEALTHCHECK --interval=1m --timeout=5s \
CMD curl -fSs http://localhost:8008/health || exit 1

View File

@@ -27,7 +27,6 @@ RUN env DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get install \
wget
# fetch and unpack the package
# TODO: Upgrade to 1.2.2 once xenial is dropped
RUN mkdir /dh-virtualenv
RUN wget -q -O /dh-virtualenv.tar.gz https://github.com/spotify/dh-virtualenv/archive/ac6e1b1.tar.gz
RUN tar -xv --strip-components=1 -C /dh-virtualenv -f /dh-virtualenv.tar.gz
@@ -51,22 +50,17 @@ FROM ${distro}
ARG distro=""
ENV distro ${distro}
# Python < 3.7 assumes LANG="C" means ASCII-only and throws on printing unicode
# http://bugs.python.org/issue19846
ENV LANG C.UTF-8
# Install the build dependencies
#
# NB: keep this list in sync with the list of build-deps in debian/control
# TODO: it would be nice to do that automatically.
# TODO: Remove the dh-systemd stanza after dropping support for Ubuntu xenial
# it's a transitional package on all other, more recent releases
RUN apt-get update -qq -o Acquire::Languages=none \
&& env DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get install \
-yqq --no-install-recommends -o Dpkg::Options::=--force-unsafe-io \
build-essential \
debhelper \
devscripts \
dh-systemd \
libsystemd-dev \
lsb-release \
pkg-config \
@@ -75,11 +69,7 @@ RUN apt-get update -qq -o Acquire::Languages=none \
python3-setuptools \
python3-venv \
sqlite3 \
libpq-dev \
xmlsec1 \
&& ( env DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get install \
-yqq --no-install-recommends -o Dpkg::Options::=--force-unsafe-io \
dh-systemd || true )
libpq-dev
COPY --from=builder /dh-virtualenv_1.2~dev-1_all.deb /

View File

@@ -1,23 +0,0 @@
# Inherit from the official Synapse docker image
FROM matrixdotorg/synapse
# Install deps
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get install -y supervisor redis nginx
# Remove the default nginx sites
RUN rm /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
# Copy Synapse worker, nginx and supervisord configuration template files
COPY ./docker/conf-workers/* /conf/
# Expose nginx listener port
EXPOSE 8080/tcp
# Volume for user-editable config files, logs etc.
VOLUME ["/data"]
# A script to read environment variables and create the necessary
# files to run the desired worker configuration. Will start supervisord.
COPY ./docker/configure_workers_and_start.py /configure_workers_and_start.py
ENTRYPOINT ["/configure_workers_and_start.py"]

View File

@@ -1,140 +0,0 @@
# Running tests against a dockerised Synapse
It's possible to run integration tests against Synapse
using [Complement](https://github.com/matrix-org/complement). Complement is a Matrix Spec
compliance test suite for homeservers, and supports any homeserver docker image configured
to listen on ports 8008/8448. This document contains instructions for building Synapse
docker images that can be run inside Complement for testing purposes.
Note that running Synapse's unit tests from within the docker image is not supported.
## Testing with SQLite and single-process Synapse
> Note that `scripts-dev/complement.sh` is a script that will automatically build
> and run an SQLite-based, single-process of Synapse against Complement.
The instructions below will set up Complement testing for a single-process,
SQLite-based Synapse deployment.
Start by building the base Synapse docker image. If you wish to run tests with the latest
release of Synapse, instead of your current checkout, you can skip this step. From the
root of the repository:
```sh
docker build -t matrixdotorg/synapse -f docker/Dockerfile .
```
This will build an image with the tag `matrixdotorg/synapse`.
Next, build the Synapse image for Complement. You will need a local checkout
of Complement. Change to the root of your Complement checkout and run:
```sh
docker build -t complement-synapse -f "dockerfiles/Synapse.Dockerfile" dockerfiles
```
This will build an image with the tag `complement-synapse`, which can be handed to
Complement for testing via the `COMPLEMENT_BASE_IMAGE` environment variable. Refer to
[Complement's documentation](https://github.com/matrix-org/complement/#running) for
how to run the tests, as well as the various available command line flags.
## Testing with PostgreSQL and single or multi-process Synapse
The above docker image only supports running Synapse with SQLite and in a
single-process topology. The following instructions are used to build a Synapse image for
Complement that supports either single or multi-process topology with a PostgreSQL
database backend.
As with the single-process image, build the base Synapse docker image. If you wish to run
tests with the latest release of Synapse, instead of your current checkout, you can skip
this step. From the root of the repository:
```sh
docker build -t matrixdotorg/synapse -f docker/Dockerfile .
```
This will build an image with the tag `matrixdotorg/synapse`.
Next, we build a new image with worker support based on `matrixdotorg/synapse:latest`.
Again, from the root of the repository:
```sh
docker build -t matrixdotorg/synapse-workers -f docker/Dockerfile-workers .
```
This will build an image with the tag` matrixdotorg/synapse-workers`.
It's worth noting at this point that this image is fully functional, and
can be used for testing against locally. See instructions for using the container
under
[Running the Dockerfile-worker image standalone](#running-the-dockerfile-worker-image-standalone)
below.
Finally, build the Synapse image for Complement, which is based on
`matrixdotorg/synapse-workers`. You will need a local checkout of Complement. Change to
the root of your Complement checkout and run:
```sh
docker build -t matrixdotorg/complement-synapse-workers -f dockerfiles/SynapseWorkers.Dockerfile dockerfiles
```
This will build an image with the tag `complement-synapse`, which can be handed to
Complement for testing via the `COMPLEMENT_BASE_IMAGE` environment variable. Refer to
[Complement's documentation](https://github.com/matrix-org/complement/#running) for
how to run the tests, as well as the various available command line flags.
## Running the Dockerfile-worker image standalone
For manual testing of a multi-process Synapse instance in Docker,
[Dockerfile-workers](Dockerfile-workers) is a Dockerfile that will produce an image
bundling all necessary components together for a workerised homeserver instance.
This includes any desired Synapse worker processes, a nginx to route traffic accordingly,
a redis for worker communication and a supervisord instance to start up and monitor all
processes. You will need to provide your own postgres container to connect to, and TLS
is not handled by the container.
Once you've built the image using the above instructions, you can run it. Be sure
you've set up a volume according to the [usual Synapse docker instructions](README.md).
Then run something along the lines of:
```
docker run -d --name synapse \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-p 8008:8008 \
-e SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME=my.matrix.host \
-e SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS=no \
-e POSTGRES_HOST=postgres \
-e POSTGRES_USER=postgres \
-e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=somesecret \
-e SYNAPSE_WORKER_TYPES=synchrotron,media_repository,user_dir \
-e SYNAPSE_WORKERS_WRITE_LOGS_TO_DISK=1 \
matrixdotorg/synapse-workers
```
...substituting `POSTGRES*` variables for those that match a postgres host you have
available (usually a running postgres docker container).
The `SYNAPSE_WORKER_TYPES` environment variable is a comma-separated list of workers to
use when running the container. All possible worker names are defined by the keys of the
`WORKERS_CONFIG` variable in [this script](configure_workers_and_start.py), which the
Dockerfile makes use of to generate appropriate worker, nginx and supervisord config
files.
Sharding is supported for a subset of workers, in line with the
[worker documentation](../docs/workers.md). To run multiple instances of a given worker
type, simply specify the type multiple times in `SYNAPSE_WORKER_TYPES`
(e.g `SYNAPSE_WORKER_TYPES=event_creator,event_creator...`).
Otherwise, `SYNAPSE_WORKER_TYPES` can either be left empty or unset to spawn no workers
(leaving only the main process). The container is configured to use redis-based worker
mode.
Logs for workers and the main process are logged to stdout and can be viewed with
standard `docker logs` tooling. Worker logs contain their worker name
after the timestamp.
Setting `SYNAPSE_WORKERS_WRITE_LOGS_TO_DISK=1` will cause worker logs to be written to
`<data_dir>/logs/<worker_name>.log`. Logs are kept for 1 week and rotate every day at 00:
00, according to the container's clock. Logging for the main process must still be
configured by modifying the homeserver's log config in your Synapse data volume.

View File

@@ -2,28 +2,26 @@
This Docker image will run Synapse as a single process. By default it uses a
sqlite database; for production use you should connect it to a separate
postgres database. The image also does *not* provide a TURN server.
postgres database.
This image should work on all platforms that are supported by Docker upstream.
Note that Docker's WS1-backend Linux Containers on Windows
platform is [experimental](https://github.com/docker/for-win/issues/6470) and
is not supported by this image.
The image also does *not* provide a TURN server.
## Volumes
By default, the image expects a single volume, located at `/data`, that will hold:
By default, the image expects a single volume, located at ``/data``, that will hold:
* configuration files;
* temporary files during uploads;
* uploaded media and thumbnails;
* the SQLite database if you do not configure postgres;
* the appservices configuration.
You are free to use separate volumes depending on storage endpoints at your
disposal. For instance, `/data/media` could be stored on a large but low
disposal. For instance, ``/data/media`` could be stored on a large but low
performance hdd storage while other files could be stored on high performance
endpoints.
In order to setup an application service, simply create an `appservices`
In order to setup an application service, simply create an ``appservices``
directory in the data volume and write the application service Yaml
configuration file there. Multiple application services are supported.
@@ -56,8 +54,6 @@ The following environment variables are supported in `generate` mode:
* `SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME` (mandatory): the server public hostname.
* `SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS` (mandatory, `yes` or `no`): whether to enable
anonymous statistics reporting.
* `SYNAPSE_HTTP_PORT`: the port Synapse should listen on for http traffic.
Defaults to `8008`.
* `SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR`: where additional config files (such as the log config
and event signing key) will be stored. Defaults to `/data`.
* `SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH`: path to the file to be generated. Defaults to
@@ -78,8 +74,6 @@ docker run -d --name synapse \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
```
(assuming 8008 is the port Synapse is configured to listen on for http traffic.)
You can then check that it has started correctly with:
```
@@ -89,7 +83,7 @@ docker logs synapse
If all is well, you should now be able to connect to http://localhost:8008 and
see a confirmation message.
The following environment variables are supported in `run` mode:
The following environment variables are supported in run mode:
* `SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR`: where additional config files are stored. Defaults to
`/data`.
@@ -100,20 +94,6 @@ The following environment variables are supported in `run` mode:
* `UID`, `GID`: the user and group id to run Synapse as. Defaults to `991`, `991`.
* `TZ`: the [timezone](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones) the container will run with. Defaults to `UTC`.
For more complex setups (e.g. for workers) you can also pass your args directly to synapse using `run` mode. For example like this:
```
docker run -d --name synapse \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-p 8008:8008 \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest run \
-m synapse.app.generic_worker \
--config-path=/data/homeserver.yaml \
--config-path=/data/generic_worker.yaml
```
If you do not provide `-m`, the value of the `SYNAPSE_WORKER` environment variable is used. If you do not provide at least one `--config-path` or `-c`, the value of the `SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH` environment variable is used instead.
## Generating an (admin) user
After synapse is running, you may wish to create a user via `register_new_matrix_user`.
@@ -191,16 +171,6 @@ whilst running the above `docker run` commands.
```
--no-healthcheck
```
## Disabling the healthcheck in docker-compose file
If you wish to disable the healthcheck via docker-compose, append the following to your service configuration.
```
healthcheck:
disable: true
```
## Setting custom healthcheck on docker run
If you wish to point the healthcheck at a different port with docker command, add the following
@@ -212,18 +182,12 @@ If you wish to point the healthcheck at a different port with docker command, ad
## Setting the healthcheck in docker-compose file
You can add the following to set a custom healthcheck in a docker compose file.
You will need docker-compose version >2.1 for this to work.
You will need version >2.1 for this to work.
```
healthcheck:
test: ["CMD", "curl", "-fSs", "http://localhost:8008/health"]
interval: 15s
timeout: 5s
interval: 1m
timeout: 10s
retries: 3
start_period: 5s
```
## Using jemalloc
Jemalloc is embedded in the image and will be used instead of the default allocator.
You can read about jemalloc by reading the Synapse [README](../README.md).

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
# The script to build the Debian package, as ran inside the Docker image.

View File

@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
# This file contains the base config for the reverse proxy, as part of ../Dockerfile-workers.
# configure_workers_and_start.py uses and amends to this file depending on the workers
# that have been selected.
{{ upstream_directives }}
server {
# Listen on an unoccupied port number
listen 8008;
listen [::]:8008;
server_name localhost;
# Nginx by default only allows file uploads up to 1M in size
# Increase client_max_body_size to match max_upload_size defined in homeserver.yaml
client_max_body_size 100M;
{{ worker_locations }}
# Send all other traffic to the main process
location ~* ^(\\/_matrix|\\/_synapse) {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8080;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
}
}

View File

@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
# This file contains the base for the shared homeserver config file between Synapse workers,
# as part of ./Dockerfile-workers.
# configure_workers_and_start.py uses and amends to this file depending on the workers
# that have been selected.
redis:
enabled: true
{{ shared_worker_config }}

View File

@@ -1,41 +0,0 @@
# This file contains the base config for supervisord, as part of ../Dockerfile-workers.
# configure_workers_and_start.py uses and amends to this file depending on the workers
# that have been selected.
[supervisord]
nodaemon=true
user=root
[program:nginx]
command=/usr/sbin/nginx -g "daemon off;"
priority=500
stdout_logfile=/dev/stdout
stdout_logfile_maxbytes=0
stderr_logfile=/dev/stderr
stderr_logfile_maxbytes=0
username=www-data
autorestart=true
[program:redis]
command=/usr/bin/redis-server /etc/redis/redis.conf --daemonize no
priority=1
stdout_logfile=/dev/stdout
stdout_logfile_maxbytes=0
stderr_logfile=/dev/stderr
stderr_logfile_maxbytes=0
username=redis
autorestart=true
[program:synapse_main]
command=/usr/local/bin/python -m synapse.app.homeserver --config-path="{{ main_config_path }}" --config-path=/conf/workers/shared.yaml
priority=10
# Log startup failures to supervisord's stdout/err
# Regular synapse logs will still go in the configured data directory
stdout_logfile=/dev/stdout
stdout_logfile_maxbytes=0
stderr_logfile=/dev/stderr
stderr_logfile_maxbytes=0
autorestart=unexpected
exitcodes=0
# Additional process blocks
{{ worker_config }}

View File

@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
# This is a configuration template for a single worker instance, and is
# used by Dockerfile-workers.
# Values will be change depending on whichever workers are selected when
# running that image.
worker_app: "{{ app }}"
worker_name: "{{ name }}"
# The replication listener on the main synapse process.
worker_replication_host: 127.0.0.1
worker_replication_http_port: 9093
worker_listeners:
- type: http
port: {{ port }}
{% if listener_resources %}
resources:
- names:
{%- for resource in listener_resources %}
- {{ resource }}
{%- endfor %}
{% endif %}
worker_log_config: {{ worker_log_config_filepath }}
{{ worker_extra_conf }}

View File

@@ -40,9 +40,7 @@ listeners:
compress: false
{% endif %}
# Allow configuring in case we want to reverse proxy 8008
# using another process in the same container
- port: {{ SYNAPSE_HTTP_PORT or 8008 }}
- port: 8008
tls: false
bind_addresses: ['::']
type: http
@@ -91,7 +89,8 @@ federation_rc_concurrent: 3
## Files ##
media_store_path: "/data/media"
max_upload_size: "{{ SYNAPSE_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE or "50M" }}"
uploads_path: "/data/uploads"
max_upload_size: "{{ SYNAPSE_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE or "10M" }}"
max_image_pixels: "32M"
dynamic_thumbnails: false
@@ -175,10 +174,18 @@ report_stats: False
## API Configuration ##
room_invite_state_types:
- "m.room.join_rules"
- "m.room.canonical_alias"
- "m.room.avatar"
- "m.room.name"
{% if SYNAPSE_APPSERVICES %}
app_service_config_files:
{% for appservice in SYNAPSE_APPSERVICES %} - "{{ appservice }}"
{% endfor %}
{% else %}
app_service_config_files: []
{% endif %}
macaroon_secret_key: "{{ SYNAPSE_MACAROON_SECRET_KEY }}"
@@ -191,10 +198,12 @@ old_signing_keys: {}
key_refresh_interval: "1d" # 1 Day.
# The trusted servers to download signing keys from.
trusted_key_servers:
- server_name: matrix.org
verify_keys:
"ed25519:auto": "Noi6WqcDj0QmPxCNQqgezwTlBKrfqehY1u2FyWP9uYw"
perspectives:
servers:
"matrix.org":
verify_keys:
"ed25519:auto":
key: "Noi6WqcDj0QmPxCNQqgezwTlBKrfqehY1u2FyWP9uYw"
password_config:
enabled: true

View File

@@ -2,34 +2,9 @@ version: 1
formatters:
precise:
{% if worker_name %}
format: '%(asctime)s - worker:{{ worker_name }} - %(name)s - %(lineno)d - %(levelname)s - %(request)s - %(message)s'
{% else %}
format: '%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(lineno)d - %(levelname)s - %(request)s - %(message)s'
{% endif %}
format: '%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(lineno)d - %(levelname)s - %(request)s - %(message)s'
handlers:
file:
class: logging.handlers.TimedRotatingFileHandler
formatter: precise
filename: {{ LOG_FILE_PATH or "homeserver.log" }}
when: "midnight"
backupCount: 6 # Does not include the current log file.
encoding: utf8
# Default to buffering writes to log file for efficiency. This means that
# there will be a delay for INFO/DEBUG logs to get written, but WARNING/ERROR
# logs will still be flushed immediately.
buffer:
class: logging.handlers.MemoryHandler
target: file
# The capacity is the number of log lines that are buffered before
# being written to disk. Increasing this will lead to better
# performance, at the expensive of it taking longer for log lines to
# be written to disk.
capacity: 10
flushLevel: 30 # Flush for WARNING logs as well
console:
class: logging.StreamHandler
formatter: precise
@@ -42,11 +17,6 @@ loggers:
root:
level: {{ SYNAPSE_LOG_LEVEL or "INFO" }}
{% if LOG_FILE_PATH %}
handlers: [console, buffer]
{% else %}
handlers: [console]
{% endif %}
disable_existing_loggers: false

View File

@@ -1,558 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2021 The Matrix.org Foundation C.I.C.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
# This script reads environment variables and generates a shared Synapse worker,
# nginx and supervisord configs depending on the workers requested.
#
# The environment variables it reads are:
# * SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME: The desired server_name of the homeserver.
# * SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS: Whether to report stats.
# * SYNAPSE_WORKER_TYPES: A comma separated list of worker names as specified in WORKER_CONFIG
# below. Leave empty for no workers, or set to '*' for all possible workers.
#
# NOTE: According to Complement's ENTRYPOINT expectations for a homeserver image (as defined
# in the project's README), this script may be run multiple times, and functionality should
# continue to work if so.
import os
import subprocess
import sys
import jinja2
import yaml
MAIN_PROCESS_HTTP_LISTENER_PORT = 8080
WORKERS_CONFIG = {
"pusher": {
"app": "synapse.app.pusher",
"listener_resources": [],
"endpoint_patterns": [],
"shared_extra_conf": {"start_pushers": False},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"user_dir": {
"app": "synapse.app.user_dir",
"listener_resources": ["client"],
"endpoint_patterns": [
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/user_directory/search$"
],
"shared_extra_conf": {"update_user_directory": False},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"media_repository": {
"app": "synapse.app.media_repository",
"listener_resources": ["media"],
"endpoint_patterns": [
"^/_matrix/media/",
"^/_synapse/admin/v1/purge_media_cache$",
"^/_synapse/admin/v1/room/.*/media.*$",
"^/_synapse/admin/v1/user/.*/media.*$",
"^/_synapse/admin/v1/media/.*$",
"^/_synapse/admin/v1/quarantine_media/.*$",
],
"shared_extra_conf": {"enable_media_repo": False},
"worker_extra_conf": "enable_media_repo: true",
},
"appservice": {
"app": "synapse.app.appservice",
"listener_resources": [],
"endpoint_patterns": [],
"shared_extra_conf": {"notify_appservices": False},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"federation_sender": {
"app": "synapse.app.federation_sender",
"listener_resources": [],
"endpoint_patterns": [],
"shared_extra_conf": {"send_federation": False},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"synchrotron": {
"app": "synapse.app.generic_worker",
"listener_resources": ["client"],
"endpoint_patterns": [
"^/_matrix/client/(v2_alpha|r0)/sync$",
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|v2_alpha|r0)/events$",
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0)/initialSync$",
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0)/rooms/[^/]+/initialSync$",
],
"shared_extra_conf": {},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"federation_reader": {
"app": "synapse.app.generic_worker",
"listener_resources": ["federation"],
"endpoint_patterns": [
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/event/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/state/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/state_ids/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/backfill/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/get_missing_events/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/publicRooms",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/query/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/make_join/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/make_leave/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/send_join/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/send_leave/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/invite/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/query_auth/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/event_auth/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/exchange_third_party_invite/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/user/devices/",
"^/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/get_groups_publicised$",
"^/_matrix/key/v2/query",
],
"shared_extra_conf": {},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"federation_inbound": {
"app": "synapse.app.generic_worker",
"listener_resources": ["federation"],
"endpoint_patterns": ["/_matrix/federation/(v1|v2)/send/"],
"shared_extra_conf": {},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"event_persister": {
"app": "synapse.app.generic_worker",
"listener_resources": ["replication"],
"endpoint_patterns": [],
"shared_extra_conf": {},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"background_worker": {
"app": "synapse.app.generic_worker",
"listener_resources": [],
"endpoint_patterns": [],
# This worker cannot be sharded. Therefore there should only ever be one background
# worker, and it should be named background_worker1
"shared_extra_conf": {"run_background_tasks_on": "background_worker1"},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"event_creator": {
"app": "synapse.app.generic_worker",
"listener_resources": ["client"],
"endpoint_patterns": [
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/redact",
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/send",
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/(join|invite|leave|ban|unban|kick)$",
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/join/",
"^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/profile/",
],
"shared_extra_conf": {},
"worker_extra_conf": "",
},
"frontend_proxy": {
"app": "synapse.app.frontend_proxy",
"listener_resources": ["client", "replication"],
"endpoint_patterns": ["^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/keys/upload"],
"shared_extra_conf": {},
"worker_extra_conf": (
"worker_main_http_uri: http://127.0.0.1:%d"
% (MAIN_PROCESS_HTTP_LISTENER_PORT,),
),
},
}
# Templates for sections that may be inserted multiple times in config files
SUPERVISORD_PROCESS_CONFIG_BLOCK = """
[program:synapse_{name}]
command=/usr/local/bin/python -m {app} \
--config-path="{config_path}" \
--config-path=/conf/workers/shared.yaml \
--config-path=/conf/workers/{name}.yaml
autorestart=unexpected
priority=500
exitcodes=0
stdout_logfile=/dev/stdout
stdout_logfile_maxbytes=0
stderr_logfile=/dev/stderr
stderr_logfile_maxbytes=0
"""
NGINX_LOCATION_CONFIG_BLOCK = """
location ~* {endpoint} {
proxy_pass {upstream};
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
}
"""
NGINX_UPSTREAM_CONFIG_BLOCK = """
upstream {upstream_worker_type} {
{body}
}
"""
# Utility functions
def log(txt: str):
"""Log something to the stdout.
Args:
txt: The text to log.
"""
print(txt)
def error(txt: str):
"""Log something and exit with an error code.
Args:
txt: The text to log in error.
"""
log(txt)
sys.exit(2)
def convert(src: str, dst: str, **template_vars):
"""Generate a file from a template
Args:
src: Path to the input file.
dst: Path to write to.
template_vars: The arguments to replace placeholder variables in the template with.
"""
# Read the template file
with open(src) as infile:
template = infile.read()
# Generate a string from the template. We disable autoescape to prevent template
# variables from being escaped.
rendered = jinja2.Template(template, autoescape=False).render(**template_vars)
# Write the generated contents to a file
#
# We use append mode in case the files have already been written to by something else
# (for instance, as part of the instructions in a dockerfile).
with open(dst, "a") as outfile:
# In case the existing file doesn't end with a newline
outfile.write("\n")
outfile.write(rendered)
def add_sharding_to_shared_config(
shared_config: dict,
worker_type: str,
worker_name: str,
worker_port: int,
) -> None:
"""Given a dictionary representing a config file shared across all workers,
append sharded worker information to it for the current worker_type instance.
Args:
shared_config: The config dict that all worker instances share (after being converted to YAML)
worker_type: The type of worker (one of those defined in WORKERS_CONFIG).
worker_name: The name of the worker instance.
worker_port: The HTTP replication port that the worker instance is listening on.
"""
# The instance_map config field marks the workers that write to various replication streams
instance_map = shared_config.setdefault("instance_map", {})
# Worker-type specific sharding config
if worker_type == "pusher":
shared_config.setdefault("pusher_instances", []).append(worker_name)
elif worker_type == "federation_sender":
shared_config.setdefault("federation_sender_instances", []).append(worker_name)
elif worker_type == "event_persister":
# Event persisters write to the events stream, so we need to update
# the list of event stream writers
shared_config.setdefault("stream_writers", {}).setdefault("events", []).append(
worker_name
)
# Map of stream writer instance names to host/ports combos
instance_map[worker_name] = {
"host": "localhost",
"port": worker_port,
}
elif worker_type == "media_repository":
# The first configured media worker will run the media background jobs
shared_config.setdefault("media_instance_running_background_jobs", worker_name)
def generate_base_homeserver_config():
"""Starts Synapse and generates a basic homeserver config, which will later be
modified for worker support.
Raises: CalledProcessError if calling start.py returned a non-zero exit code.
"""
# start.py already does this for us, so just call that.
# note that this script is copied in in the official, monolith dockerfile
os.environ["SYNAPSE_HTTP_PORT"] = str(MAIN_PROCESS_HTTP_LISTENER_PORT)
subprocess.check_output(["/usr/local/bin/python", "/start.py", "migrate_config"])
def generate_worker_files(environ, config_path: str, data_dir: str):
"""Read the desired list of workers from environment variables and generate
shared homeserver, nginx and supervisord configs.
Args:
environ: _Environ[str]
config_path: Where to output the generated Synapse main worker config file.
data_dir: The location of the synapse data directory. Where log and
user-facing config files live.
"""
# Note that yaml cares about indentation, so care should be taken to insert lines
# into files at the correct indentation below.
# shared_config is the contents of a Synapse config file that will be shared amongst
# the main Synapse process as well as all workers.
# It is intended mainly for disabling functionality when certain workers are spun up,
# and adding a replication listener.
# First read the original config file and extract the listeners block. Then we'll add
# another listener for replication. Later we'll write out the result.
listeners = [
{
"port": 9093,
"bind_address": "127.0.0.1",
"type": "http",
"resources": [{"names": ["replication"]}],
}
]
with open(config_path) as file_stream:
original_config = yaml.safe_load(file_stream)
original_listeners = original_config.get("listeners")
if original_listeners:
listeners += original_listeners
# The shared homeserver config. The contents of which will be inserted into the
# base shared worker jinja2 template.
#
# This config file will be passed to all workers, included Synapse's main process.
shared_config = {"listeners": listeners}
# The supervisord config. The contents of which will be inserted into the
# base supervisord jinja2 template.
#
# Supervisord will be in charge of running everything, from redis to nginx to Synapse
# and all of its worker processes. Load the config template, which defines a few
# services that are necessary to run.
supervisord_config = ""
# Upstreams for load-balancing purposes. This dict takes the form of a worker type to the
# ports of each worker. For example:
# {
# worker_type: {1234, 1235, ...}}
# }
# and will be used to construct 'upstream' nginx directives.
nginx_upstreams = {}
# A map of: {"endpoint": "upstream"}, where "upstream" is a str representing what will be
# placed after the proxy_pass directive. The main benefit to representing this data as a
# dict over a str is that we can easily deduplicate endpoints across multiple instances
# of the same worker.
#
# An nginx site config that will be amended to depending on the workers that are
# spun up. To be placed in /etc/nginx/conf.d.
nginx_locations = {}
# Read the desired worker configuration from the environment
worker_types = environ.get("SYNAPSE_WORKER_TYPES")
if worker_types is None:
# No workers, just the main process
worker_types = []
else:
# Split type names by comma
worker_types = worker_types.split(",")
# Create the worker configuration directory if it doesn't already exist
os.makedirs("/conf/workers", exist_ok=True)
# Start worker ports from this arbitrary port
worker_port = 18009
# A counter of worker_type -> int. Used for determining the name for a given
# worker type when generating its config file, as each worker's name is just
# worker_type + instance #
worker_type_counter = {}
# For each worker type specified by the user, create config values
for worker_type in worker_types:
worker_type = worker_type.strip()
worker_config = WORKERS_CONFIG.get(worker_type)
if worker_config:
worker_config = worker_config.copy()
else:
log(worker_type + " is an unknown worker type! It will be ignored")
continue
new_worker_count = worker_type_counter.setdefault(worker_type, 0) + 1
worker_type_counter[worker_type] = new_worker_count
# Name workers by their type concatenated with an incrementing number
# e.g. federation_reader1
worker_name = worker_type + str(new_worker_count)
worker_config.update(
{"name": worker_name, "port": worker_port, "config_path": config_path}
)
# Update the shared config with any worker-type specific options
shared_config.update(worker_config["shared_extra_conf"])
# Check if more than one instance of this worker type has been specified
worker_type_total_count = worker_types.count(worker_type)
if worker_type_total_count > 1:
# Update the shared config with sharding-related options if necessary
add_sharding_to_shared_config(
shared_config, worker_type, worker_name, worker_port
)
# Enable the worker in supervisord
supervisord_config += SUPERVISORD_PROCESS_CONFIG_BLOCK.format_map(worker_config)
# Add nginx location blocks for this worker's endpoints (if any are defined)
for pattern in worker_config["endpoint_patterns"]:
# Determine whether we need to load-balance this worker
if worker_type_total_count > 1:
# Create or add to a load-balanced upstream for this worker
nginx_upstreams.setdefault(worker_type, set()).add(worker_port)
# Upstreams are named after the worker_type
upstream = "http://" + worker_type
else:
upstream = "http://localhost:%d" % (worker_port,)
# Note that this endpoint should proxy to this upstream
nginx_locations[pattern] = upstream
# Write out the worker's logging config file
# Check whether we should write worker logs to disk, in addition to the console
extra_log_template_args = {}
if environ.get("SYNAPSE_WORKERS_WRITE_LOGS_TO_DISK"):
extra_log_template_args["LOG_FILE_PATH"] = "{dir}/logs/{name}.log".format(
dir=data_dir, name=worker_name
)
# Render and write the file
log_config_filepath = "/conf/workers/{name}.log.config".format(name=worker_name)
convert(
"/conf/log.config",
log_config_filepath,
worker_name=worker_name,
**extra_log_template_args,
)
# Then a worker config file
convert(
"/conf/worker.yaml.j2",
"/conf/workers/{name}.yaml".format(name=worker_name),
**worker_config,
worker_log_config_filepath=log_config_filepath,
)
worker_port += 1
# Build the nginx location config blocks
nginx_location_config = ""
for endpoint, upstream in nginx_locations.items():
nginx_location_config += NGINX_LOCATION_CONFIG_BLOCK.format(
endpoint=endpoint,
upstream=upstream,
)
# Determine the load-balancing upstreams to configure
nginx_upstream_config = ""
for upstream_worker_type, upstream_worker_ports in nginx_upstreams.items():
body = ""
for port in upstream_worker_ports:
body += " server localhost:%d;\n" % (port,)
# Add to the list of configured upstreams
nginx_upstream_config += NGINX_UPSTREAM_CONFIG_BLOCK.format(
upstream_worker_type=upstream_worker_type,
body=body,
)
# Finally, we'll write out the config files.
# Shared homeserver config
convert(
"/conf/shared.yaml.j2",
"/conf/workers/shared.yaml",
shared_worker_config=yaml.dump(shared_config),
)
# Nginx config
convert(
"/conf/nginx.conf.j2",
"/etc/nginx/conf.d/matrix-synapse.conf",
worker_locations=nginx_location_config,
upstream_directives=nginx_upstream_config,
)
# Supervisord config
convert(
"/conf/supervisord.conf.j2",
"/etc/supervisor/conf.d/supervisord.conf",
main_config_path=config_path,
worker_config=supervisord_config,
)
# Ensure the logging directory exists
log_dir = data_dir + "/logs"
if not os.path.exists(log_dir):
os.mkdir(log_dir)
def start_supervisord():
"""Starts up supervisord which then starts and monitors all other necessary processes
Raises: CalledProcessError if calling start.py return a non-zero exit code.
"""
subprocess.run(["/usr/bin/supervisord"], stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
def main(args, environ):
config_dir = environ.get("SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR", "/data")
config_path = environ.get("SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH", config_dir + "/homeserver.yaml")
data_dir = environ.get("SYNAPSE_DATA_DIR", "/data")
# override SYNAPSE_NO_TLS, we don't support TLS in worker mode,
# this needs to be handled by a frontend proxy
environ["SYNAPSE_NO_TLS"] = "yes"
# Generate the base homeserver config if one does not yet exist
if not os.path.exists(config_path):
log("Generating base homeserver config")
generate_base_homeserver_config()
# This script may be run multiple times (mostly by Complement, see note at top of file).
# Don't re-configure workers in this instance.
mark_filepath = "/conf/workers_have_been_configured"
if not os.path.exists(mark_filepath):
# Always regenerate all other config files
generate_worker_files(environ, config_path, data_dir)
# Mark workers as being configured
with open(mark_filepath, "w") as f:
f.write("")
# Start supervisord, which will start Synapse, all of the configured worker
# processes, redis, nginx etc. according to the config we created above.
start_supervisord()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main(sys.argv, os.environ)

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/bin/bash
# This script runs the PostgreSQL tests inside a Docker container. It expects
# the relevant source files to be mounted into /src (done automatically by the

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,6 @@
import codecs
import glob
import os
import platform
import subprocess
import sys
@@ -180,7 +179,7 @@ def run_generate_config(environ, ownership):
def main(args, environ):
mode = args[1] if len(args) > 1 else "run"
mode = args[1] if len(args) > 1 else None
desired_uid = int(environ.get("UID", "991"))
desired_gid = int(environ.get("GID", "991"))
synapse_worker = environ.get("SYNAPSE_WORKER", "synapse.app.homeserver")
@@ -206,60 +205,41 @@ def main(args, environ):
config_dir, config_path, environ, ownership
)
if mode != "run":
if mode is not None:
error("Unknown execution mode '%s'" % (mode,))
args = args[2:]
config_dir = environ.get("SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR", "/data")
config_path = environ.get("SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH", config_dir + "/homeserver.yaml")
if "-m" not in args:
args = ["-m", synapse_worker] + args
jemallocpath = "/usr/lib/%s-linux-gnu/libjemalloc.so.2" % (platform.machine(),)
if os.path.isfile(jemallocpath):
environ["LD_PRELOAD"] = jemallocpath
environ["PYTHONMALLOC"] = "malloc"
else:
log("Could not find %s, will not use" % (jemallocpath,))
# if there are no config files passed to synapse, try adding the default file
if not any(p.startswith("--config-path") or p.startswith("-c") for p in args):
config_dir = environ.get("SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR", "/data")
config_path = environ.get(
"SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH", config_dir + "/homeserver.yaml"
)
if not os.path.exists(config_path):
if "SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME" in environ:
error(
"""\
if not os.path.exists(config_path):
if "SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME" in environ:
error(
"""\
Config file '%s' does not exist.
The synapse docker image no longer supports generating a config file on-the-fly
based on environment variables. You can migrate to a static config file by
running with 'migrate_config'. See the README for more details.
"""
% (config_path,)
)
error(
"Config file '%s' does not exist. You should either create a new "
"config file by running with the `generate` argument (and then edit "
"the resulting file before restarting) or specify the path to an "
"existing config file with the SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH variable."
% (config_path,)
)
args += ["--config-path", config_path]
error(
"Config file '%s' does not exist. You should either create a new "
"config file by running with the `generate` argument (and then edit "
"the resulting file before restarting) or specify the path to an "
"existing config file with the SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH variable."
% (config_path,)
)
log("Starting synapse with args " + " ".join(args))
log("Starting synapse with config file " + config_path)
args = ["python"] + args
args = ["python", "-m", synapse_worker, "--config-path", config_path]
if ownership is not None:
args = ["gosu", ownership] + args
os.execve("/usr/sbin/gosu", args, environ)
os.execv("/usr/sbin/gosu", args)
else:
os.execve("/usr/local/bin/python", args, environ)
os.execv("/usr/local/bin/python", args)
if __name__ == "__main__":

View File

@@ -1,172 +0,0 @@
# Show reported events
This API returns information about reported events.
The api is:
```
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/event_reports?from=0&limit=10
```
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an `access_token` for a
server admin: see [README.rst](README.rst).
It returns a JSON body like the following:
```json
{
"event_reports": [
{
"event_id": "$bNUFCwGzWca1meCGkjp-zwslF-GfVcXukvRLI1_FaVY",
"id": 2,
"reason": "foo",
"score": -100,
"received_ts": 1570897107409,
"canonical_alias": "#alias1:matrix.org",
"room_id": "!ERAgBpSOcCCuTJqQPk:matrix.org",
"name": "Matrix HQ",
"sender": "@foobar:matrix.org",
"user_id": "@foo:matrix.org"
},
{
"event_id": "$3IcdZsDaN_En-S1DF4EMCy3v4gNRKeOJs8W5qTOKj4I",
"id": 3,
"reason": "bar",
"score": -100,
"received_ts": 1598889612059,
"canonical_alias": "#alias2:matrix.org",
"room_id": "!eGvUQuTCkHGVwNMOjv:matrix.org",
"name": "Your room name here",
"sender": "@foobar:matrix.org",
"user_id": "@bar:matrix.org"
}
],
"next_token": 2,
"total": 4
}
```
To paginate, check for `next_token` and if present, call the endpoint again with `from`
set to the value of `next_token`. This will return a new page.
If the endpoint does not return a `next_token` then there are no more reports to
paginate through.
**URL parameters:**
* `limit`: integer - Is optional but is used for pagination, denoting the maximum number
of items to return in this call. Defaults to `100`.
* `from`: integer - Is optional but used for pagination, denoting the offset in the
returned results. This should be treated as an opaque value and not explicitly set to
anything other than the return value of `next_token` from a previous call. Defaults to `0`.
* `dir`: string - Direction of event report order. Whether to fetch the most recent
first (`b`) or the oldest first (`f`). Defaults to `b`.
* `user_id`: string - Is optional and filters to only return users with user IDs that
contain this value. This is the user who reported the event and wrote the reason.
* `room_id`: string - Is optional and filters to only return rooms with room IDs that
contain this value.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `id`: integer - ID of event report.
* `received_ts`: integer - The timestamp (in milliseconds since the unix epoch) when this
report was sent.
* `room_id`: string - The ID of the room in which the event being reported is located.
* `name`: string - The name of the room.
* `event_id`: string - The ID of the reported event.
* `user_id`: string - This is the user who reported the event and wrote the reason.
* `reason`: string - Comment made by the `user_id` in this report. May be blank.
* `score`: integer - Content is reported based upon a negative score, where -100 is
"most offensive" and 0 is "inoffensive".
* `sender`: string - This is the ID of the user who sent the original message/event that
was reported.
* `canonical_alias`: string - The canonical alias of the room. `null` if the room does not
have a canonical alias set.
* `next_token`: integer - Indication for pagination. See above.
* `total`: integer - Total number of event reports related to the query
(`user_id` and `room_id`).
# Show details of a specific event report
This API returns information about a specific event report.
The api is:
```
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/event_reports/<report_id>
```
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an `access_token` for a
server admin: see [README.rst](README.rst).
It returns a JSON body like the following:
```jsonc
{
"event_id": "$bNUFCwGzWca1meCGkjp-zwslF-GfVcXukvRLI1_FaVY",
"event_json": {
"auth_events": [
"$YK4arsKKcc0LRoe700pS8DSjOvUT4NDv0HfInlMFw2M",
"$oggsNXxzPFRE3y53SUNd7nsj69-QzKv03a1RucHu-ws"
],
"content": {
"body": "matrix.org: This Week in Matrix",
"format": "org.matrix.custom.html",
"formatted_body": "<strong>matrix.org</strong>:<br><a href=\"https://matrix.org/blog/\"><strong>This Week in Matrix</strong></a>",
"msgtype": "m.notice"
},
"depth": 546,
"hashes": {
"sha256": "xK1//xnmvHJIOvbgXlkI8eEqdvoMmihVDJ9J4SNlsAw"
},
"origin": "matrix.org",
"origin_server_ts": 1592291711430,
"prev_events": [
"$YK4arsKKcc0LRoe700pS8DSjOvUT4NDv0HfInlMFw2M"
],
"prev_state": [],
"room_id": "!ERAgBpSOcCCuTJqQPk:matrix.org",
"sender": "@foobar:matrix.org",
"signatures": {
"matrix.org": {
"ed25519:a_JaEG": "cs+OUKW/iHx5pEidbWxh0UiNNHwe46Ai9LwNz+Ah16aWDNszVIe2gaAcVZfvNsBhakQTew51tlKmL2kspXk/Dg"
}
},
"type": "m.room.message",
"unsigned": {
"age_ts": 1592291711430,
}
},
"id": <report_id>,
"reason": "foo",
"score": -100,
"received_ts": 1570897107409,
"canonical_alias": "#alias1:matrix.org",
"room_id": "!ERAgBpSOcCCuTJqQPk:matrix.org",
"name": "Matrix HQ",
"sender": "@foobar:matrix.org",
"user_id": "@foo:matrix.org"
}
```
**URL parameters:**
* `report_id`: string - The ID of the event report.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `id`: integer - ID of event report.
* `received_ts`: integer - The timestamp (in milliseconds since the unix epoch) when this
report was sent.
* `room_id`: string - The ID of the room in which the event being reported is located.
* `name`: string - The name of the room.
* `event_id`: string - The ID of the reported event.
* `user_id`: string - This is the user who reported the event and wrote the reason.
* `reason`: string - Comment made by the `user_id` in this report. May be blank.
* `score`: integer - Content is reported based upon a negative score, where -100 is
"most offensive" and 0 is "inoffensive".
* `sender`: string - This is the ID of the user who sent the original message/event that
was reported.
* `canonical_alias`: string - The canonical alias of the room. `null` if the room does not
have a canonical alias set.
* `event_json`: object - Details of the original event that was reported.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,129 @@
Show reported events
====================
This API returns information about reported events.
The api is::
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/event_reports?from=0&limit=10
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
It returns a JSON body like the following:
.. code:: jsonc
{
"event_reports": [
{
"content": {
"reason": "foo",
"score": -100
},
"event_id": "$bNUFCwGzWca1meCGkjp-zwslF-GfVcXukvRLI1_FaVY",
"event_json": {
"auth_events": [
"$YK4arsKKcc0LRoe700pS8DSjOvUT4NDv0HfInlMFw2M",
"$oggsNXxzPFRE3y53SUNd7nsj69-QzKv03a1RucHu-ws"
],
"content": {
"body": "matrix.org: This Week in Matrix",
"format": "org.matrix.custom.html",
"formatted_body": "<strong>matrix.org</strong>:<br><a href=\"https://matrix.org/blog/\"><strong>This Week in Matrix</strong></a>",
"msgtype": "m.notice"
},
"depth": 546,
"hashes": {
"sha256": "xK1//xnmvHJIOvbgXlkI8eEqdvoMmihVDJ9J4SNlsAw"
},
"origin": "matrix.org",
"origin_server_ts": 1592291711430,
"prev_events": [
"$YK4arsKKcc0LRoe700pS8DSjOvUT4NDv0HfInlMFw2M"
],
"prev_state": [],
"room_id": "!ERAgBpSOcCCuTJqQPk:matrix.org",
"sender": "@foobar:matrix.org",
"signatures": {
"matrix.org": {
"ed25519:a_JaEG": "cs+OUKW/iHx5pEidbWxh0UiNNHwe46Ai9LwNz+Ah16aWDNszVIe2gaAcVZfvNsBhakQTew51tlKmL2kspXk/Dg"
}
},
"type": "m.room.message",
"unsigned": {
"age_ts": 1592291711430,
}
},
"id": 2,
"reason": "foo",
"received_ts": 1570897107409,
"room_alias": "#alias1:matrix.org",
"room_id": "!ERAgBpSOcCCuTJqQPk:matrix.org",
"sender": "@foobar:matrix.org",
"user_id": "@foo:matrix.org"
},
{
"content": {
"reason": "bar",
"score": -100
},
"event_id": "$3IcdZsDaN_En-S1DF4EMCy3v4gNRKeOJs8W5qTOKj4I",
"event_json": {
// hidden items
// see above
},
"id": 3,
"reason": "bar",
"received_ts": 1598889612059,
"room_alias": "#alias2:matrix.org",
"room_id": "!eGvUQuTCkHGVwNMOjv:matrix.org",
"sender": "@foobar:matrix.org",
"user_id": "@bar:matrix.org"
}
],
"next_token": 2,
"total": 4
}
To paginate, check for ``next_token`` and if present, call the endpoint again
with ``from`` set to the value of ``next_token``. This will return a new page.
If the endpoint does not return a ``next_token`` then there are no more
reports to paginate through.
**URL parameters:**
- ``limit``: integer - Is optional but is used for pagination,
denoting the maximum number of items to return in this call. Defaults to ``100``.
- ``from``: integer - Is optional but used for pagination,
denoting the offset in the returned results. This should be treated as an opaque value and
not explicitly set to anything other than the return value of ``next_token`` from a previous call.
Defaults to ``0``.
- ``dir``: string - Direction of event report order. Whether to fetch the most recent first (``b``) or the
oldest first (``f``). Defaults to ``b``.
- ``user_id``: string - Is optional and filters to only return users with user IDs that contain this value.
This is the user who reported the event and wrote the reason.
- ``room_id``: string - Is optional and filters to only return rooms with room IDs that contain this value.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
- ``id``: integer - ID of event report.
- ``received_ts``: integer - The timestamp (in milliseconds since the unix epoch) when this report was sent.
- ``room_id``: string - The ID of the room in which the event being reported is located.
- ``event_id``: string - The ID of the reported event.
- ``user_id``: string - This is the user who reported the event and wrote the reason.
- ``reason``: string - Comment made by the ``user_id`` in this report. May be blank.
- ``content``: object - Content of reported event.
- ``reason``: string - Comment made by the ``user_id`` in this report. May be blank.
- ``score``: integer - Content is reported based upon a negative score, where -100 is "most offensive" and 0 is "inoffensive".
- ``sender``: string - This is the ID of the user who sent the original message/event that was reported.
- ``room_alias``: string - The alias of the room. ``null`` if the room does not have a canonical alias set.
- ``event_json``: object - Details of the original event that was reported.
- ``next_token``: integer - Indication for pagination. See above.
- ``total``: integer - Total number of event reports related to the query (``user_id`` and ``room_id``).

View File

@@ -1,25 +1,6 @@
# Contents
- [Querying media](#querying-media)
* [List all media in a room](#list-all-media-in-a-room)
* [List all media uploaded by a user](#list-all-media-uploaded-by-a-user)
- [Quarantine media](#quarantine-media)
* [Quarantining media by ID](#quarantining-media-by-id)
* [Quarantining media in a room](#quarantining-media-in-a-room)
* [Quarantining all media of a user](#quarantining-all-media-of-a-user)
* [Protecting media from being quarantined](#protecting-media-from-being-quarantined)
- [Delete local media](#delete-local-media)
* [Delete a specific local media](#delete-a-specific-local-media)
* [Delete local media by date or size](#delete-local-media-by-date-or-size)
- [Purge Remote Media API](#purge-remote-media-api)
# Querying media
These APIs allow extracting media information from the homeserver.
## List all media in a room
# List all media in a room
This API gets a list of known media in a room.
However, it only shows media from unencrypted events or rooms.
The API is:
```
@@ -29,25 +10,19 @@ To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an `access_token` for a
server admin: see [README.rst](README.rst).
The API returns a JSON body like the following:
```json
```
{
"local": [
"mxc://localhost/xwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcba",
"mxc://localhost/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwx"
],
"remote": [
"mxc://matrix.org/xwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcba",
"mxc://matrix.org/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwx"
]
"local": [
"mxc://localhost/xwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcba",
"mxc://localhost/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwx"
],
"remote": [
"mxc://matrix.org/xwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcba",
"mxc://matrix.org/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwx"
]
}
```
## List all media uploaded by a user
Listing all media that has been uploaded by a local user can be achieved through
the use of the [List media of a user](user_admin_api.rst#list-media-of-a-user)
Admin API.
# Quarantine media
Quarantining media means that it is marked as inaccessible by users. It applies
@@ -72,7 +47,7 @@ form of `abcdefg12345...`.
Response:
```json
```
{}
```
@@ -92,18 +67,14 @@ Where `room_id` is in the form of `!roomid12345:example.org`.
Response:
```json
```
{
"num_quarantined": 10
"num_quarantined": 10 # The number of media items successfully quarantined
}
```
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `num_quarantined`: integer - The number of media items successfully quarantined
Note that there is a legacy endpoint, `POST
/_synapse/admin/v1/quarantine_media/<room_id>`, that operates the same.
/_synapse/admin/v1/quarantine_media/<room_id >`, that operates the same.
However, it is deprecated and may be removed in a future release.
## Quarantining all media of a user
@@ -120,155 +91,12 @@ POST /_synapse/admin/v1/user/<user_id>/media/quarantine
{}
```
URL Parameters
* `user_id`: string - User ID in the form of `@bob:example.org`
Where `user_id` is in the form of `@bob:example.org`.
Response:
```json
```
{
"num_quarantined": 10
"num_quarantined": 10 # The number of media items successfully quarantined
}
```
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `num_quarantined`: integer - The number of media items successfully quarantined
## Protecting media from being quarantined
This API protects a single piece of local media from being quarantined using the
above APIs. This is useful for sticker packs and other shared media which you do
not want to get quarantined, especially when
[quarantining media in a room](#quarantining-media-in-a-room).
Request:
```
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/media/protect/<media_id>
{}
```
Where `media_id` is in the form of `abcdefg12345...`.
Response:
```json
{}
```
# Delete local media
This API deletes the *local* media from the disk of your own server.
This includes any local thumbnails and copies of media downloaded from
remote homeservers.
This API will not affect media that has been uploaded to external
media repositories (e.g https://github.com/turt2live/matrix-media-repo/).
See also [Purge Remote Media API](#purge-remote-media-api).
## Delete a specific local media
Delete a specific `media_id`.
Request:
```
DELETE /_synapse/admin/v1/media/<server_name>/<media_id>
{}
```
URL Parameters
* `server_name`: string - The name of your local server (e.g `matrix.org`)
* `media_id`: string - The ID of the media (e.g `abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwx`)
Response:
```json
{
"deleted_media": [
"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwx"
],
"total": 1
}
```
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `deleted_media`: an array of strings - List of deleted `media_id`
* `total`: integer - Total number of deleted `media_id`
## Delete local media by date or size
Request:
```
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/media/<server_name>/delete?before_ts=<before_ts>
{}
```
URL Parameters
* `server_name`: string - The name of your local server (e.g `matrix.org`).
* `before_ts`: string representing a positive integer - Unix timestamp in ms.
Files that were last used before this timestamp will be deleted. It is the timestamp of
last access and not the timestamp creation.
* `size_gt`: Optional - string representing a positive integer - Size of the media in bytes.
Files that are larger will be deleted. Defaults to `0`.
* `keep_profiles`: Optional - string representing a boolean - Switch to also delete files
that are still used in image data (e.g user profile, room avatar).
If `false` these files will be deleted. Defaults to `true`.
Response:
```json
{
"deleted_media": [
"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwx",
"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwz"
],
"total": 2
}
```
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `deleted_media`: an array of strings - List of deleted `media_id`
* `total`: integer - Total number of deleted `media_id`
# Purge Remote Media API
The purge remote media API allows server admins to purge old cached remote media.
The API is:
```
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/purge_media_cache?before_ts=<unix_timestamp_in_ms>
{}
```
URL Parameters
* `unix_timestamp_in_ms`: string representing a positive integer - Unix timestamp in ms.
All cached media that was last accessed before this timestamp will be removed.
Response:
```json
{
"deleted": 10
}
```
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `deleted`: integer - The number of media items successfully deleted
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an `access_token` for a
server admin: see [README.rst](README.rst).
If the user re-requests purged remote media, synapse will re-request the media
from the originating server.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
Purge Remote Media API
======================
The purge remote media API allows server admins to purge old cached remote
media.
The API is::
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/purge_media_cache?before_ts=<unix_timestamp_in_ms>
{}
\... which will remove all cached media that was last accessed before
``<unix_timestamp_in_ms>``.
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
If the user re-requests purged remote media, synapse will re-request the media
from the originating server.

View File

@@ -1,13 +1,12 @@
Deprecated: Purge room API
==========================
**The old Purge room API is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
See the new [Delete Room API](rooms.md#delete-room-api) for more details.**
Purge room API
==============
This API will remove all trace of a room from your database.
All local users must have left the room before it can be removed.
See also: [Delete Room API](rooms.md#delete-room-api)
The API is:
```

View File

@@ -18,8 +18,7 @@ To fetch the nonce, you need to request one from the API::
Once you have the nonce, you can make a ``POST`` to the same URL with a JSON
body containing the nonce, username, password, whether they are an admin
(optional, False by default), and a HMAC digest of the content. Also you can
set the displayname (optional, ``username`` by default).
(optional, False by default), and a HMAC digest of the content.
As an example::
@@ -27,7 +26,6 @@ As an example::
> {
"nonce": "thisisanonce",
"username": "pepper_roni",
"displayname": "Pepper Roni",
"password": "pizza",
"admin": true,
"mac": "mac_digest_here"

View File

@@ -1,17 +1,3 @@
# Contents
- [List Room API](#list-room-api)
* [Parameters](#parameters)
* [Usage](#usage)
- [Room Details API](#room-details-api)
- [Room Members API](#room-members-api)
- [Delete Room API](#delete-room-api)
* [Parameters](#parameters-1)
* [Response](#response)
* [Undoing room shutdowns](#undoing-room-shutdowns)
- [Make Room Admin API](#make-room-admin-api)
- [Forward Extremities Admin API](#forward-extremities-admin-api)
- [Event Context API](#event-context-api)
# List Room API
The List Room admin API allows server admins to get a list of rooms on their
@@ -90,7 +76,7 @@ GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms
Response:
```jsonc
```
{
"rooms": [
{
@@ -142,7 +128,7 @@ GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms?search_term=TWIM
Response:
```json
```
{
"rooms": [
{
@@ -177,7 +163,7 @@ GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms?order_by=size
Response:
```jsonc
```
{
"rooms": [
{
@@ -233,14 +219,14 @@ GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms?order_by=size&from=100
Response:
```jsonc
```
{
"rooms": [
{
"room_id": "!mscvqgqpHYjBGDxNym:matrix.org",
"name": "Music Theory",
"canonical_alias": "#musictheory:matrix.org",
"joined_members": 127,
"joined_members": 127
"joined_local_members": 2,
"version": "1",
"creator": "@foo:matrix.org",
@@ -257,7 +243,7 @@ Response:
"room_id": "!twcBhHVdZlQWuuxBhN:termina.org.uk",
"name": "weechat-matrix",
"canonical_alias": "#weechat-matrix:termina.org.uk",
"joined_members": 137,
"joined_members": 137
"joined_local_members": 20,
"version": "4",
"creator": "@foo:termina.org.uk",
@@ -279,10 +265,12 @@ Response:
Once the `next_token` parameter is no longer present, we know we've reached the
end of the list.
# Room Details API
# DRAFT: Room Details API
The Room Details admin API allows server admins to get all details of a room.
This API is still a draft and details might change!
The following fields are possible in the JSON response body:
* `room_id` - The ID of the room.
@@ -292,7 +280,6 @@ The following fields are possible in the JSON response body:
* `canonical_alias` - The canonical (main) alias address of the room.
* `joined_members` - How many users are currently in the room.
* `joined_local_members` - How many local users are currently in the room.
* `joined_local_devices` - How many local devices are currently in the room.
* `version` - The version of the room as a string.
* `creator` - The `user_id` of the room creator.
* `encryption` - Algorithm of end-to-end encryption of messages. Is `null` if encryption is not active.
@@ -315,16 +302,15 @@ GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>
Response:
```json
```
{
"room_id": "!mscvqgqpHYjBGDxNym:matrix.org",
"name": "Music Theory",
"avatar": "mxc://matrix.org/AQDaVFlbkQoErdOgqWRgiGSV",
"topic": "Theory, Composition, Notation, Analysis",
"canonical_alias": "#musictheory:matrix.org",
"joined_members": 127,
"joined_members": 127
"joined_local_members": 2,
"joined_local_devices": 2,
"version": "1",
"creator": "@foo:matrix.org",
"encryption": null,
@@ -358,51 +344,23 @@ GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>/members
Response:
```json
```
{
"members": [
"@foo:matrix.org",
"@bar:matrix.org",
"@foobar:matrix.org"
],
"@foobar:matrix.org
],
"total": 3
}
```
# Room State API
The Room State admin API allows server admins to get a list of all state events in a room.
The response includes the following fields:
* `state` - The current state of the room at the time of request.
## Usage
A standard request:
```
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>/state
{}
```
Response:
```json
{
"state": [
{"type": "m.room.create", "state_key": "", "etc": true},
{"type": "m.room.power_levels", "state_key": "", "etc": true},
{"type": "m.room.name", "state_key": "", "etc": true}
]
}
```
# Delete Room API
The Delete Room admin API allows server admins to remove rooms from server
and block these rooms.
It is a combination and improvement of "[Shutdown room](shutdown_room.md)"
and "[Purge room](purge_room.md)" API.
Shuts down a room. Moves all local users and room aliases automatically to a
new room if `new_room_user_id` is set. Otherwise local users only
@@ -426,8 +384,8 @@ the new room. Users on other servers will be unaffected.
The API is:
```
DELETE /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>
```json
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>/delete
```
with a body of:
@@ -483,10 +441,6 @@ The following JSON body parameters are available:
future attempts to join the room. Defaults to `false`.
* `purge` - Optional. If set to `true`, it will remove all traces of the room from your database.
Defaults to `true`.
* `force_purge` - Optional, and ignored unless `purge` is `true`. If set to `true`, it
will force a purge to go ahead even if there are local users still in the room. Do not
use this unless a regular `purge` operation fails, as it could leave those users'
clients in a confused state.
The JSON body must not be empty. The body must be at least `{}`.
@@ -499,226 +453,3 @@ The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `local_aliases` - An array of strings representing the local aliases that were migrated from
the old room to the new.
* `new_room_id` - A string representing the room ID of the new room.
## Undoing room shutdowns
*Note*: This guide may be outdated by the time you read it. By nature of room shutdowns being performed at the database level,
the structure can and does change without notice.
First, it's important to understand that a room shutdown is very destructive. Undoing a shutdown is not as simple as pretending it
never happened - work has to be done to move forward instead of resetting the past. In fact, in some cases it might not be possible
to recover at all:
* If the room was invite-only, your users will need to be re-invited.
* If the room no longer has any members at all, it'll be impossible to rejoin.
* The first user to rejoin will have to do so via an alias on a different server.
With all that being said, if you still want to try and recover the room:
1. For safety reasons, shut down Synapse.
2. In the database, run `DELETE FROM blocked_rooms WHERE room_id = '!example:example.org';`
* For caution: it's recommended to run this in a transaction: `BEGIN; DELETE ...;`, verify you got 1 result, then `COMMIT;`.
* The room ID is the same one supplied to the shutdown room API, not the Content Violation room.
3. Restart Synapse.
You will have to manually handle, if you so choose, the following:
* Aliases that would have been redirected to the Content Violation room.
* Users that would have been booted from the room (and will have been force-joined to the Content Violation room).
* Removal of the Content Violation room if desired.
## Deprecated endpoint
The previous deprecated API will be removed in a future release, it was:
```
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>/delete
```
It behaves the same way than the current endpoint except the path and the method.
# Make Room Admin API
Grants another user the highest power available to a local user who is in the room.
If the user is not in the room, and it is not publicly joinable, then invite the user.
By default the server admin (the caller) is granted power, but another user can
optionally be specified, e.g.:
```
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id_or_alias>/make_room_admin
{
"user_id": "@foo:example.com"
}
```
# Forward Extremities Admin API
Enables querying and deleting forward extremities from rooms. When a lot of forward
extremities accumulate in a room, performance can become degraded. For details, see
[#1760](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/1760).
## Check for forward extremities
To check the status of forward extremities for a room:
```
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id_or_alias>/forward_extremities
```
A response as follows will be returned:
```json
{
"count": 1,
"results": [
{
"event_id": "$M5SP266vsnxctfwFgFLNceaCo3ujhRtg_NiiHabcdefgh",
"state_group": 439,
"depth": 123,
"received_ts": 1611263016761
}
]
}
```
## Deleting forward extremities
**WARNING**: Please ensure you know what you're doing and have read
the related issue [#1760](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/1760).
Under no situations should this API be executed as an automated maintenance task!
If a room has lots of forward extremities, the extra can be
deleted as follows:
```
DELETE /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id_or_alias>/forward_extremities
```
A response as follows will be returned, indicating the amount of forward extremities
that were deleted.
```json
{
"deleted": 1
}
```
# Event Context API
This API lets a client find the context of an event. This is designed primarily to investigate abuse reports.
```
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/rooms/<room_id>/context/<event_id>
```
This API mimmicks [GET /_matrix/client/r0/rooms/{roomId}/context/{eventId}](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.6.1#get-matrix-client-r0-rooms-roomid-context-eventid). Please refer to the link for all details on parameters and reseponse.
Example response:
```json
{
"end": "t29-57_2_0_2",
"events_after": [
{
"content": {
"body": "This is an example text message",
"msgtype": "m.text",
"format": "org.matrix.custom.html",
"formatted_body": "<b>This is an example text message</b>"
},
"type": "m.room.message",
"event_id": "$143273582443PhrSn:example.org",
"room_id": "!636q39766251:example.com",
"sender": "@example:example.org",
"origin_server_ts": 1432735824653,
"unsigned": {
"age": 1234
}
}
],
"event": {
"content": {
"body": "filename.jpg",
"info": {
"h": 398,
"w": 394,
"mimetype": "image/jpeg",
"size": 31037
},
"url": "mxc://example.org/JWEIFJgwEIhweiWJE",
"msgtype": "m.image"
},
"type": "m.room.message",
"event_id": "$f3h4d129462ha:example.com",
"room_id": "!636q39766251:example.com",
"sender": "@example:example.org",
"origin_server_ts": 1432735824653,
"unsigned": {
"age": 1234
}
},
"events_before": [
{
"content": {
"body": "something-important.doc",
"filename": "something-important.doc",
"info": {
"mimetype": "application/msword",
"size": 46144
},
"msgtype": "m.file",
"url": "mxc://example.org/FHyPlCeYUSFFxlgbQYZmoEoe"
},
"type": "m.room.message",
"event_id": "$143273582443PhrSn:example.org",
"room_id": "!636q39766251:example.com",
"sender": "@example:example.org",
"origin_server_ts": 1432735824653,
"unsigned": {
"age": 1234
}
}
],
"start": "t27-54_2_0_2",
"state": [
{
"content": {
"creator": "@example:example.org",
"room_version": "1",
"m.federate": true,
"predecessor": {
"event_id": "$something:example.org",
"room_id": "!oldroom:example.org"
}
},
"type": "m.room.create",
"event_id": "$143273582443PhrSn:example.org",
"room_id": "!636q39766251:example.com",
"sender": "@example:example.org",
"origin_server_ts": 1432735824653,
"unsigned": {
"age": 1234
},
"state_key": ""
},
{
"content": {
"membership": "join",
"avatar_url": "mxc://example.org/SEsfnsuifSDFSSEF",
"displayname": "Alice Margatroid"
},
"type": "m.room.member",
"event_id": "$143273582443PhrSn:example.org",
"room_id": "!636q39766251:example.com",
"sender": "@example:example.org",
"origin_server_ts": 1432735824653,
"unsigned": {
"age": 1234
},
"state_key": "@alice:example.org"
}
]
}
```

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,4 @@
# Deprecated: Shutdown room API
**The old Shutdown room API is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
See the new [Delete Room API](rooms.md#delete-room-api) for more details.**
# Shutdown room API
Shuts down a room, preventing new joins and moves local users and room aliases automatically
to a new room. The new room will be created with the user specified by the
@@ -13,6 +10,8 @@ disallow any further invites or joins.
The local server will only have the power to move local user and room aliases to
the new room. Users on other servers will be unaffected.
See also: [Delete Room API](rooms.md#delete-room-api)
## API
You will need to authenticate with an access token for an admin user.

View File

@@ -1,83 +0,0 @@
# Users' media usage statistics
Returns information about all local media usage of users. Gives the
possibility to filter them by time and user.
The API is:
```
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/statistics/users/media
```
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an `access_token`
for a server admin: see [README.rst](README.rst).
A response body like the following is returned:
```json
{
"users": [
{
"displayname": "foo_user_0",
"media_count": 2,
"media_length": 134,
"user_id": "@foo_user_0:test"
},
{
"displayname": "foo_user_1",
"media_count": 2,
"media_length": 134,
"user_id": "@foo_user_1:test"
}
],
"next_token": 3,
"total": 10
}
```
To paginate, check for `next_token` and if present, call the endpoint
again with `from` set to the value of `next_token`. This will return a new page.
If the endpoint does not return a `next_token` then there are no more
reports to paginate through.
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
* `limit`: string representing a positive integer - Is optional but is
used for pagination, denoting the maximum number of items to return
in this call. Defaults to `100`.
* `from`: string representing a positive integer - Is optional but used for pagination,
denoting the offset in the returned results. This should be treated as an opaque value
and not explicitly set to anything other than the return value of `next_token` from a
previous call. Defaults to `0`.
* `order_by` - string - The method in which to sort the returned list of users. Valid values are:
- `user_id` - Users are ordered alphabetically by `user_id`. This is the default.
- `displayname` - Users are ordered alphabetically by `displayname`.
- `media_length` - Users are ordered by the total size of uploaded media in bytes.
Smallest to largest.
- `media_count` - Users are ordered by number of uploaded media. Smallest to largest.
* `from_ts` - string representing a positive integer - Considers only
files created at this timestamp or later. Unix timestamp in ms.
* `until_ts` - string representing a positive integer - Considers only
files created at this timestamp or earlier. Unix timestamp in ms.
* `search_term` - string - Filter users by their user ID localpart **or** displayname.
The search term can be found in any part of the string.
Defaults to no filtering.
* `dir` - string - Direction of order. Either `f` for forwards or `b` for backwards.
Setting this value to `b` will reverse the above sort order. Defaults to `f`.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
* `users` - An array of objects, each containing information
about the user and their local media. Objects contain the following fields:
- `displayname` - string - Displayname of this user.
- `media_count` - integer - Number of uploaded media by this user.
- `media_length` - integer - Size of uploaded media in bytes by this user.
- `user_id` - string - Fully-qualified user ID (ex. `@user:server.com`).
* `next_token` - integer - Opaque value used for pagination. See above.
* `total` - integer - Total number of users after filtering.

View File

@@ -29,14 +29,8 @@ It returns a JSON body like the following:
}
],
"avatar_url": "<avatar_url>",
"admin": 0,
"deactivated": 0,
"shadow_banned": 0,
"password_hash": "$2b$12$p9B4GkqYdRTPGD",
"creation_ts": 1560432506,
"appservice_id": null,
"consent_server_notice_sent": null,
"consent_version": null
"admin": false,
"deactivated": false
}
URL parameters:
@@ -99,8 +93,6 @@ Body parameters:
- ``deactivated``, optional. If unspecified, deactivation state will be left
unchanged on existing accounts and set to ``false`` for new accounts.
A user cannot be erased by deactivating with this API. For details on deactivating users see
`Deactivate Account <#deactivate-account>`_.
If the user already exists then optional parameters default to the current value.
@@ -111,16 +103,35 @@ List Accounts
=============
This API returns all local user accounts.
By default, the response is ordered by ascending user ID.
The API is::
The api is::
GET /_synapse/admin/v2/users?from=0&limit=10&guests=false
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
A response body like the following is returned:
The parameter ``from`` is optional but used for pagination, denoting the
offset in the returned results. This should be treated as an opaque value and
not explicitly set to anything other than the return value of ``next_token``
from a previous call.
The parameter ``limit`` is optional but is used for pagination, denoting the
maximum number of items to return in this call. Defaults to ``100``.
The parameter ``user_id`` is optional and filters to only return users with user IDs
that contain this value. This parameter is ignored when using the ``name`` parameter.
The parameter ``name`` is optional and filters to only return users with user ID localparts
**or** displaynames that contain this value.
The parameter ``guests`` is optional and if ``false`` will **exclude** guest users.
Defaults to ``true`` to include guest users.
The parameter ``deactivated`` is optional and if ``true`` will **include** deactivated users.
Defaults to ``false`` to exclude deactivated users.
A JSON body is returned with the following shape:
.. code:: json
@@ -128,20 +139,20 @@ A response body like the following is returned:
"users": [
{
"name": "<user_id1>",
"password_hash": "<password_hash1>",
"is_guest": 0,
"admin": 0,
"user_type": null,
"deactivated": 0,
"shadow_banned": 0,
"displayname": "<User One>",
"avatar_url": null
}, {
"name": "<user_id2>",
"password_hash": "<password_hash2>",
"is_guest": 0,
"admin": 1,
"user_type": null,
"deactivated": 0,
"shadow_banned": 0,
"displayname": "<User Two>",
"avatar_url": "<avatar_url>"
}
@@ -156,66 +167,6 @@ with ``from`` set to the value of ``next_token``. This will return a new page.
If the endpoint does not return a ``next_token`` then there are no more users
to paginate through.
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - Is optional and filters to only return users with user IDs
that contain this value. This parameter is ignored when using the ``name`` parameter.
- ``name`` - Is optional and filters to only return users with user ID localparts
**or** displaynames that contain this value.
- ``guests`` - string representing a bool - Is optional and if ``false`` will **exclude** guest users.
Defaults to ``true`` to include guest users.
- ``deactivated`` - string representing a bool - Is optional and if ``true`` will **include** deactivated users.
Defaults to ``false`` to exclude deactivated users.
- ``limit`` - string representing a positive integer - Is optional but is used for pagination,
denoting the maximum number of items to return in this call. Defaults to ``100``.
- ``from`` - string representing a positive integer - Is optional but used for pagination,
denoting the offset in the returned results. This should be treated as an opaque value and
not explicitly set to anything other than the return value of ``next_token`` from a previous call.
Defaults to ``0``.
- ``order_by`` - The method by which to sort the returned list of users.
If the ordered field has duplicates, the second order is always by ascending ``name``,
which guarantees a stable ordering. Valid values are:
- ``name`` - Users are ordered alphabetically by ``name``. This is the default.
- ``is_guest`` - Users are ordered by ``is_guest`` status.
- ``admin`` - Users are ordered by ``admin`` status.
- ``user_type`` - Users are ordered alphabetically by ``user_type``.
- ``deactivated`` - Users are ordered by ``deactivated`` status.
- ``shadow_banned`` - Users are ordered by ``shadow_banned`` status.
- ``displayname`` - Users are ordered alphabetically by ``displayname``.
- ``avatar_url`` - Users are ordered alphabetically by avatar URL.
- ``dir`` - Direction of media order. Either ``f`` for forwards or ``b`` for backwards.
Setting this value to ``b`` will reverse the above sort order. Defaults to ``f``.
Caution. The database only has indexes on the columns ``name`` and ``created_ts``.
This means that if a different sort order is used (``is_guest``, ``admin``,
``user_type``, ``deactivated``, ``shadow_banned``, ``avatar_url`` or ``displayname``),
this can cause a large load on the database, especially for large environments.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
- ``users`` - An array of objects, each containing information about an user.
User objects contain the following fields:
- ``name`` - string - Fully-qualified user ID (ex. ``@user:server.com``).
- ``is_guest`` - bool - Status if that user is a guest account.
- ``admin`` - bool - Status if that user is a server administrator.
- ``user_type`` - string - Type of the user. Normal users are type ``None``.
This allows user type specific behaviour. There are also types ``support`` and ``bot``.
- ``deactivated`` - bool - Status if that user has been marked as deactivated.
- ``shadow_banned`` - bool - Status if that user has been marked as shadow banned.
- ``displayname`` - string - The user's display name if they have set one.
- ``avatar_url`` - string - The user's avatar URL if they have set one.
- ``next_token``: string representing a positive integer - Indication for pagination. See above.
- ``total`` - integer - Total number of media.
Query current sessions for a user
=================================
@@ -225,13 +176,6 @@ The api is::
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/whois/<user_id>
and::
GET /_matrix/client/r0/admin/whois/<userId>
See also: `Client Server API Whois
<https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.6.1#get-matrix-client-r0-admin-whois-userid>`_
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
@@ -294,25 +238,6 @@ server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
The erase parameter is optional and defaults to ``false``.
An empty body may be passed for backwards compatibility.
The following actions are performed when deactivating an user:
- Try to unpind 3PIDs from the identity server
- Remove all 3PIDs from the homeserver
- Delete all devices and E2EE keys
- Delete all access tokens
- Delete the password hash
- Removal from all rooms the user is a member of
- Remove the user from the user directory
- Reject all pending invites
- Remove all account validity information related to the user
The following additional actions are performed during deactivation if ``erase``
is set to ``true``:
- Remove the user's display name
- Remove the user's avatar URL
- Mark the user as erased
Reset password
==============
@@ -329,7 +254,7 @@ with a body of:
{
"new_password": "<secret>",
"logout_devices": true
"logout_devices": true,
}
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
@@ -402,10 +327,6 @@ A response body like the following is returned:
"total": 2
}
The server returns the list of rooms of which the user and the server
are member. If the user is local, all the rooms of which the user is
member are returned.
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
@@ -420,154 +341,6 @@ The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
- ``total`` - Number of rooms.
List media of a user
====================
Gets a list of all local media that a specific ``user_id`` has created.
By default, the response is ordered by descending creation date and ascending media ID.
The newest media is on top. You can change the order with parameters
``order_by`` and ``dir``.
The API is::
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/media
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
A response body like the following is returned:
.. code:: json
{
"media": [
{
"created_ts": 100400,
"last_access_ts": null,
"media_id": "qXhyRzulkwLsNHTbpHreuEgo",
"media_length": 67,
"media_type": "image/png",
"quarantined_by": null,
"safe_from_quarantine": false,
"upload_name": "test1.png"
},
{
"created_ts": 200400,
"last_access_ts": null,
"media_id": "FHfiSnzoINDatrXHQIXBtahw",
"media_length": 67,
"media_type": "image/png",
"quarantined_by": null,
"safe_from_quarantine": false,
"upload_name": "test2.png"
}
],
"next_token": 3,
"total": 2
}
To paginate, check for ``next_token`` and if present, call the endpoint again
with ``from`` set to the value of ``next_token``. This will return a new page.
If the endpoint does not return a ``next_token`` then there are no more
reports to paginate through.
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - string - fully qualified: for example, ``@user:server.com``.
- ``limit``: string representing a positive integer - Is optional but is used for pagination,
denoting the maximum number of items to return in this call. Defaults to ``100``.
- ``from``: string representing a positive integer - Is optional but used for pagination,
denoting the offset in the returned results. This should be treated as an opaque value and
not explicitly set to anything other than the return value of ``next_token`` from a previous call.
Defaults to ``0``.
- ``order_by`` - The method by which to sort the returned list of media.
If the ordered field has duplicates, the second order is always by ascending ``media_id``,
which guarantees a stable ordering. Valid values are:
- ``media_id`` - Media are ordered alphabetically by ``media_id``.
- ``upload_name`` - Media are ordered alphabetically by name the media was uploaded with.
- ``created_ts`` - Media are ordered by when the content was uploaded in ms.
Smallest to largest. This is the default.
- ``last_access_ts`` - Media are ordered by when the content was last accessed in ms.
Smallest to largest.
- ``media_length`` - Media are ordered by length of the media in bytes.
Smallest to largest.
- ``media_type`` - Media are ordered alphabetically by MIME-type.
- ``quarantined_by`` - Media are ordered alphabetically by the user ID that
initiated the quarantine request for this media.
- ``safe_from_quarantine`` - Media are ordered by the status if this media is safe
from quarantining.
- ``dir`` - Direction of media order. Either ``f`` for forwards or ``b`` for backwards.
Setting this value to ``b`` will reverse the above sort order. Defaults to ``f``.
If neither ``order_by`` nor ``dir`` is set, the default order is newest media on top
(corresponds to ``order_by`` = ``created_ts`` and ``dir`` = ``b``).
Caution. The database only has indexes on the columns ``media_id``,
``user_id`` and ``created_ts``. This means that if a different sort order is used
(``upload_name``, ``last_access_ts``, ``media_length``, ``media_type``,
``quarantined_by`` or ``safe_from_quarantine``), this can cause a large load on the
database, especially for large environments.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
- ``media`` - An array of objects, each containing information about a media.
Media objects contain the following fields:
- ``created_ts`` - integer - Timestamp when the content was uploaded in ms.
- ``last_access_ts`` - integer - Timestamp when the content was last accessed in ms.
- ``media_id`` - string - The id used to refer to the media.
- ``media_length`` - integer - Length of the media in bytes.
- ``media_type`` - string - The MIME-type of the media.
- ``quarantined_by`` - string - The user ID that initiated the quarantine request
for this media.
- ``safe_from_quarantine`` - bool - Status if this media is safe from quarantining.
- ``upload_name`` - string - The name the media was uploaded with.
- ``next_token``: integer - Indication for pagination. See above.
- ``total`` - integer - Total number of media.
Login as a user
===============
Get an access token that can be used to authenticate as that user. Useful for
when admins wish to do actions on behalf of a user.
The API is::
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/login
{}
An optional ``valid_until_ms`` field can be specified in the request body as an
integer timestamp that specifies when the token should expire. By default tokens
do not expire.
A response body like the following is returned:
.. code:: json
{
"access_token": "<opaque_access_token_string>"
}
This API does *not* generate a new device for the user, and so will not appear
their ``/devices`` list, and in general the target user should not be able to
tell they have been logged in as.
To expire the token call the standard ``/logout`` API with the token.
Note: The token will expire if the *admin* user calls ``/logout/all`` from any
of their devices, but the token will *not* expire if the target user does the
same.
User devices
============
@@ -602,8 +375,7 @@ A response body like the following is returned:
"last_seen_ts": 1474491775025,
"user_id": "<user_id>"
}
],
"total": 2
]
}
**Parameters**
@@ -628,8 +400,6 @@ The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
devices was last seen. (May be a few minutes out of date, for efficiency reasons).
- ``user_id`` - Owner of device.
- ``total`` - Total number of user's devices.
Delete multiple devices
------------------
Deletes the given devices for a specific ``user_id``, and invalidates
@@ -755,227 +525,3 @@ The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - fully qualified: for example, ``@user:server.com``.
- ``device_id`` - The device to delete.
List all pushers
================
Gets information about all pushers for a specific ``user_id``.
The API is::
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/pushers
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
A response body like the following is returned:
.. code:: json
{
"pushers": [
{
"app_display_name":"HTTP Push Notifications",
"app_id":"m.http",
"data": {
"url":"example.com"
},
"device_display_name":"pushy push",
"kind":"http",
"lang":"None",
"profile_tag":"",
"pushkey":"a@example.com"
}
],
"total": 1
}
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - fully qualified: for example, ``@user:server.com``.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
- ``pushers`` - An array containing the current pushers for the user
- ``app_display_name`` - string - A string that will allow the user to identify
what application owns this pusher.
- ``app_id`` - string - This is a reverse-DNS style identifier for the application.
Max length, 64 chars.
- ``data`` - A dictionary of information for the pusher implementation itself.
- ``url`` - string - Required if ``kind`` is ``http``. The URL to use to send
notifications to.
- ``format`` - string - The format to use when sending notifications to the
Push Gateway.
- ``device_display_name`` - string - A string that will allow the user to identify
what device owns this pusher.
- ``profile_tag`` - string - This string determines which set of device specific rules
this pusher executes.
- ``kind`` - string - The kind of pusher. "http" is a pusher that sends HTTP pokes.
- ``lang`` - string - The preferred language for receiving notifications
(e.g. 'en' or 'en-US')
- ``profile_tag`` - string - This string determines which set of device specific rules
this pusher executes.
- ``pushkey`` - string - This is a unique identifier for this pusher.
Max length, 512 bytes.
- ``total`` - integer - Number of pushers.
See also `Client-Server API Spec <https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/latest#get-matrix-client-r0-pushers>`_
Shadow-banning users
====================
Shadow-banning is a useful tool for moderating malicious or egregiously abusive users.
A shadow-banned users receives successful responses to their client-server API requests,
but the events are not propagated into rooms. This can be an effective tool as it
(hopefully) takes longer for the user to realise they are being moderated before
pivoting to another account.
Shadow-banning a user should be used as a tool of last resort and may lead to confusing
or broken behaviour for the client. A shadow-banned user will not receive any
notification and it is generally more appropriate to ban or kick abusive users.
A shadow-banned user will be unable to contact anyone on the server.
The API is::
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/shadow_ban
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
An empty JSON dict is returned.
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - The fully qualified MXID: for example, ``@user:server.com``. The user must
be local.
Override ratelimiting for users
===============================
This API allows to override or disable ratelimiting for a specific user.
There are specific APIs to set, get and delete a ratelimit.
Get status of ratelimit
-----------------------
The API is::
GET /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/override_ratelimit
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
A response body like the following is returned:
.. code:: json
{
"messages_per_second": 0,
"burst_count": 0
}
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - The fully qualified MXID: for example, ``@user:server.com``. The user must
be local.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
- ``messages_per_second`` - integer - The number of actions that can
be performed in a second. `0` mean that ratelimiting is disabled for this user.
- ``burst_count`` - integer - How many actions that can be performed before
being limited.
If **no** custom ratelimit is set, an empty JSON dict is returned.
.. code:: json
{}
Set ratelimit
-------------
The API is::
POST /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/override_ratelimit
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
A response body like the following is returned:
.. code:: json
{
"messages_per_second": 0,
"burst_count": 0
}
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - The fully qualified MXID: for example, ``@user:server.com``. The user must
be local.
Body parameters:
- ``messages_per_second`` - positive integer, optional. The number of actions that can
be performed in a second. Defaults to ``0``.
- ``burst_count`` - positive integer, optional. How many actions that can be performed
before being limited. Defaults to ``0``.
To disable users' ratelimit set both values to ``0``.
**Response**
The following fields are returned in the JSON response body:
- ``messages_per_second`` - integer - The number of actions that can
be performed in a second.
- ``burst_count`` - integer - How many actions that can be performed before
being limited.
Delete ratelimit
----------------
The API is::
DELETE /_synapse/admin/v1/users/<user_id>/override_ratelimit
To use it, you will need to authenticate by providing an ``access_token`` for a
server admin: see `README.rst <README.rst>`_.
An empty JSON dict is returned.
.. code:: json
{}
**Parameters**
The following parameters should be set in the URL:
- ``user_id`` - The fully qualified MXID: for example, ``@user:server.com``. The user must
be local.

View File

@@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
digraph auth {
nodesep=0.5;
rankdir="RL";
C [label="Create (1,1)"];
BJ [label="Bob's Join (2,1)", color=red];
BJ2 [label="Bob's Join (2,2)", color=red];
BJ2 -> BJ [color=red, dir=none];
subgraph cluster_foo {
A1 [label="Alice's invite (4,1)", color=blue];
A2 [label="Alice's Join (4,2)", color=blue];
A3 [label="Alice's Join (4,3)", color=blue];
A3 -> A2 -> A1 [color=blue, dir=none];
color=none;
}
PL1 [label="Power Level (3,1)", color=darkgreen];
PL2 [label="Power Level (3,2)", color=darkgreen];
PL2 -> PL1 [color=darkgreen, dir=none];
{rank = same; C; BJ; PL1; A1;}
A1 -> C [color=grey];
A1 -> BJ [color=grey];
PL1 -> C [color=grey];
BJ2 -> PL1 [penwidth=2];
A3 -> PL2 [penwidth=2];
A1 -> PL1 -> BJ -> C [penwidth=2];
}

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View File

@@ -1,108 +0,0 @@
# Auth Chain Difference Algorithm
The auth chain difference algorithm is used by V2 state resolution, where a
naive implementation can be a significant source of CPU and DB usage.
### Definitions
A *state set* is a set of state events; e.g. the input of a state resolution
algorithm is a collection of state sets.
The *auth chain* of a set of events are all the events' auth events and *their*
auth events, recursively (i.e. the events reachable by walking the graph induced
by an event's auth events links).
The *auth chain difference* of a collection of state sets is the union minus the
intersection of the sets of auth chains corresponding to the state sets, i.e an
event is in the auth chain difference if it is reachable by walking the auth
event graph from at least one of the state sets but not from *all* of the state
sets.
## Breadth First Walk Algorithm
A way of calculating the auth chain difference without calculating the full auth
chains for each state set is to do a parallel breadth first walk (ordered by
depth) of each state set's auth chain. By tracking which events are reachable
from each state set we can finish early if every pending event is reachable from
every state set.
This can work well for state sets that have a small auth chain difference, but
can be very inefficient for larger differences. However, this algorithm is still
used if we don't have a chain cover index for the room (e.g. because we're in
the process of indexing it).
## Chain Cover Index
Synapse computes auth chain differences by pre-computing a "chain cover" index
for the auth chain in a room, allowing efficient reachability queries like "is
event A in the auth chain of event B". This is done by assigning every event a
*chain ID* and *sequence number* (e.g. `(5,3)`), and having a map of *links*
between chains (e.g. `(5,3) -> (2,4)`) such that A is reachable by B (i.e. `A`
is in the auth chain of `B`) if and only if either:
1. A and B have the same chain ID and `A`'s sequence number is less than `B`'s
sequence number; or
2. there is a link `L` between `B`'s chain ID and `A`'s chain ID such that
`L.start_seq_no` <= `B.seq_no` and `A.seq_no` <= `L.end_seq_no`.
There are actually two potential implementations, one where we store links from
each chain to every other reachable chain (the transitive closure of the links
graph), and one where we remove redundant links (the transitive reduction of the
links graph) e.g. if we have chains `C3 -> C2 -> C1` then the link `C3 -> C1`
would not be stored. Synapse uses the former implementations so that it doesn't
need to recurse to test reachability between chains.
### Example
An example auth graph would look like the following, where chains have been
formed based on type/state_key and are denoted by colour and are labelled with
`(chain ID, sequence number)`. Links are denoted by the arrows (links in grey
are those that would be remove in the second implementation described above).
![Example](auth_chain_diff.dot.png)
Note that we don't include all links between events and their auth events, as
most of those links would be redundant. For example, all events point to the
create event, but each chain only needs the one link from it's base to the
create event.
## Using the Index
This index can be used to calculate the auth chain difference of the state sets
by looking at the chain ID and sequence numbers reachable from each state set:
1. For every state set lookup the chain ID/sequence numbers of each state event
2. Use the index to find all chains and the maximum sequence number reachable
from each state set.
3. The auth chain difference is then all events in each chain that have sequence
numbers between the maximum sequence number reachable from *any* state set and
the minimum reachable by *all* state sets (if any).
Note that steps 2 is effectively calculating the auth chain for each state set
(in terms of chain IDs and sequence numbers), and step 3 is calculating the
difference between the union and intersection of the auth chains.
### Worked Example
For example, given the above graph, we can calculate the difference between
state sets consisting of:
1. `S1`: Alice's invite `(4,1)` and Bob's second join `(2,2)`; and
2. `S2`: Alice's second join `(4,3)` and Bob's first join `(2,1)`.
Using the index we see that the following auth chains are reachable from each
state set:
1. `S1`: `(1,1)`, `(2,2)`, `(3,1)` & `(4,1)`
2. `S2`: `(1,1)`, `(2,1)`, `(3,2)` & `(4,3)`
And so, for each the ranges that are in the auth chain difference:
1. Chain 1: None, (since everything can reach the create event).
2. Chain 2: The range `(1, 2]` (i.e. just `2`), as `1` is reachable by all state
sets and the maximum reachable is `2` (corresponding to Bob's second join).
3. Chain 3: Similarly the range `(1, 2]` (corresponding to the second power
level).
4. Chain 4: The range `(1, 3]` (corresponding to both of Alice's joins).
So the final result is: Bob's second join `(2,2)`, the second power level
`(3,2)` and both of Alice's joins `(4,2)` & `(4,3)`.

View File

@@ -8,16 +8,16 @@ errors in code.
The necessary tools are detailed below.
First install them with:
pip install -e ".[lint,mypy]"
- **black**
The Synapse codebase uses [black](https://pypi.org/project/black/)
as an opinionated code formatter, ensuring all comitted code is
properly formatted.
First install `black` with:
pip install --upgrade black
Have `black` auto-format your code (it shouldn't change any
functionality) with:
@@ -28,6 +28,10 @@ First install them with:
`flake8` is a code checking tool. We require code to pass `flake8`
before being merged into the codebase.
Install `flake8` with:
pip install --upgrade flake8 flake8-comprehensions
Check all application and test code with:
flake8 synapse tests
@@ -37,6 +41,10 @@ First install them with:
`isort` ensures imports are nicely formatted, and can suggest and
auto-fix issues such as double-importing.
Install `isort` with:
pip install --upgrade isort
Auto-fix imports with:
isort -rc synapse tests
@@ -128,9 +136,6 @@ Some guidelines follow:
will be if no sub-options are enabled).
- Lines should be wrapped at 80 characters.
- Use two-space indents.
- `true` and `false` are spelt thus (as opposed to `True`, etc.)
- Use single quotes (`'`) rather than double-quotes (`"`) or backticks
(`` ` ``) to refer to configuration options.
Example:

View File

@@ -1,33 +0,0 @@
Deprecation Policy for Platform Dependencies
============================================
Synapse has a number of platform dependencies, including Python and PostgreSQL.
This document outlines the policy towards which versions we support, and when we
drop support for versions in the future.
Policy
------
Synapse follows the upstream support life cycles for Python and PostgreSQL,
i.e. when a version reaches End of Life Synapse will withdraw support for that
version in future releases.
Details on the upstream support life cycles for Python and PostgreSQL are
documented at https://endoflife.date/python and
https://endoflife.date/postgresql.
Context
-------
It is important for system admins to have a clear understanding of the platform
requirements of Synapse and its deprecation policies so that they can
effectively plan upgrading their infrastructure ahead of time. This is
especially important in contexts where upgrading the infrastructure requires
auditing and approval from a security team, or where otherwise upgrading is a
long process.
By following the upstream support life cycles Synapse can ensure that its
dependencies continue to get security patches, while not requiring system admins
to constantly update their platform dependencies to the latest versions.

View File

@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ easy to run CAS implementation built on top of Django.
You should now have a Django project configured to serve CAS authentication with
a single user created.
## Configure Synapse (and Element) to use CAS
## Configure Synapse (and Riot) to use CAS
1. Modify your `homeserver.yaml` to enable CAS and point it to your locally
running Django test server:
@@ -51,9 +51,9 @@ and that the CAS server is on port 8000, both on localhost.
## Testing the configuration
Then in Element:
Then in Riot:
1. Visit the login page with a Element pointing at your homeserver.
1. Visit the login page with a Riot pointing at your homeserver.
2. Click the Single Sign-On button.
3. Login using the credentials created with `createsuperuser`.
4. You should be logged in.

View File

@@ -5,45 +5,8 @@ The "manhole" allows server administrators to access a Python shell on a running
Synapse installation. This is a very powerful mechanism for administration and
debugging.
**_Security Warning_**
Note that this will give administrative access to synapse to **all users** with
shell access to the server. It should therefore **not** be enabled in
environments where untrusted users have shell access.
***
To enable it, first uncomment the `manhole` listener configuration in
`homeserver.yaml`. The configuration is slightly different if you're using docker.
#### Docker config
If you are using Docker, set `bind_addresses` to `['0.0.0.0']` as shown:
```yaml
listeners:
- port: 9000
bind_addresses: ['0.0.0.0']
type: manhole
```
When using `docker run` to start the server, you will then need to change the command to the following to include the
`manhole` port forwarding. The `-p 127.0.0.1:9000:9000` below is important: it
ensures that access to the `manhole` is only possible for local users.
```bash
docker run -d --name synapse \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-p 8008:8008 \
-p 127.0.0.1:9000:9000 \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
```
#### Native config
If you are not using docker, set `bind_addresses` to `['::1', '127.0.0.1']` as shown.
The `bind_addresses` in the example below is important: it ensures that access to the
`manhole` is only possible for local users).
`homeserver.yaml`:
```yaml
listeners:
@@ -52,7 +15,12 @@ listeners:
type: manhole
```
#### Accessing synapse manhole
(`bind_addresses` in the above is important: it ensures that access to the
manhole is only possible for local users).
Note that this will give administrative access to synapse to **all users** with
shell access to the server. It should therefore **not** be enabled in
environments where untrusted users have shell access.
Then restart synapse, and point an ssh client at port 9000 on localhost, using
the username `matrix`:

View File

@@ -136,34 +136,24 @@ the server's database.
### Lifetime limits
Server admins can set limits on the values of `max_lifetime` to use when
purging old events in a room. These limits can be defined as such in the
`retention` section of the configuration file:
**Note: this feature is mainly useful within a closed federation or on
servers that don't federate, because there currently is no way to
enforce these limits in an open federation.**
Server admins can restrict the values their local users are allowed to
use for both `min_lifetime` and `max_lifetime`. These limits can be
defined as such in the `retention` section of the configuration file:
```yaml
allowed_lifetime_min: 1d
allowed_lifetime_max: 1y
```
The limits are considered when running purge jobs. If necessary, the
effective value of `max_lifetime` will be brought between
`allowed_lifetime_min` and `allowed_lifetime_max` (inclusive).
This means that, if the value of `max_lifetime` defined in the room's state
is lower than `allowed_lifetime_min`, the value of `allowed_lifetime_min`
will be used instead. Likewise, if the value of `max_lifetime` is higher
than `allowed_lifetime_max`, the value of `allowed_lifetime_max` will be
used instead.
In the example above, we ensure Synapse never deletes events that are less
than one day old, and that it always deletes events that are over a year
old.
If a default policy is set, and its `max_lifetime` value is lower than
`allowed_lifetime_min` or higher than `allowed_lifetime_max`, the same
process applies.
Both parameters are optional; if one is omitted Synapse won't use it to
adjust the effective value of `max_lifetime`.
Here, `allowed_lifetime_min` is the lowest value a local user can set
for both `min_lifetime` and `max_lifetime`, and `allowed_lifetime_max`
is the highest value. Both parameters are optional (e.g. setting
`allowed_lifetime_min` but not `allowed_lifetime_max` only enforces a
minimum and no maximum).
Like other settings in this section, these parameters can be expressed
either as a duration or as a number of milliseconds.

View File

@@ -13,12 +13,10 @@
can be enabled by adding the \"metrics\" resource to the existing
listener as such:
```yaml
resources:
- names:
- client
- metrics
```
resources:
- names:
- client
- metrics
This provides a simple way of adding metrics to your Synapse
installation, and serves under `/_synapse/metrics`. If you do not
@@ -33,13 +31,11 @@
Add a new listener to homeserver.yaml:
```yaml
listeners:
- type: metrics
port: 9000
bind_addresses:
- '0.0.0.0'
```
listeners:
- type: metrics
port: 9000
bind_addresses:
- '0.0.0.0'
For both options, you will need to ensure that `enable_metrics` is
set to `True`.
@@ -51,13 +47,10 @@
It needs to set the `metrics_path` to a non-default value (under
`scrape_configs`):
```yaml
- job_name: "synapse"
scrape_interval: 15s
metrics_path: "/_synapse/metrics"
static_configs:
- targets: ["my.server.here:port"]
```
- job_name: "synapse"
metrics_path: "/_synapse/metrics"
static_configs:
- targets: ["my.server.here:port"]
where `my.server.here` is the IP address of Synapse, and `port` is
the listener port configured with the `metrics` resource.
@@ -67,9 +60,6 @@
1. Restart Prometheus.
1. Consider using the [grafana dashboard](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/tree/master/contrib/grafana/)
and required [recording rules](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/tree/master/contrib/prometheus/)
## Monitoring workers
To monitor a Synapse installation using
@@ -84,9 +74,9 @@ To allow collecting metrics from a worker, you need to add a
under `worker_listeners`:
```yaml
- type: metrics
bind_address: ''
port: 9101
- type: metrics
bind_address: ''
port: 9101
```
The `bind_address` and `port` parameters should be set so that
@@ -95,38 +85,6 @@ don't clash with an existing worker.
With this example, the worker's metrics would then be available
on `http://127.0.0.1:9101`.
Example Prometheus target for Synapse with workers:
```yaml
- job_name: "synapse"
scrape_interval: 15s
metrics_path: "/_synapse/metrics"
static_configs:
- targets: ["my.server.here:port"]
labels:
instance: "my.server"
job: "master"
index: 1
- targets: ["my.workerserver.here:port"]
labels:
instance: "my.server"
job: "generic_worker"
index: 1
- targets: ["my.workerserver.here:port"]
labels:
instance: "my.server"
job: "generic_worker"
index: 2
- targets: ["my.workerserver.here:port"]
labels:
instance: "my.server"
job: "media_repository"
index: 1
```
Labels (`instance`, `job`, `index`) can be defined as anything.
The labels are used to group graphs in grafana.
## Renaming of metrics & deprecation of old names in 1.2
Synapse 1.2 updates the Prometheus metrics to match the naming

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