There appears to be a race where you can end up with entries in
`event_push_summary` with both a `NULL` and `main` thread ID.
Fixes#15736
Introduced in #15597
Updates the database schema to require a thread_id (by adding a
constraint that the column is non-null) for event_push_actions,
event_push_actions_staging, and event_push_actions_summary.
For PostgreSQL we add the constraint as NOT VALID, then
VALIDATE the constraint a background job to avoid locking
the table during an upgrade.
Each table is updated as a separate schema delta to avoid
deadlocks between them.
For SQLite we simply rebuild the table & copy the data.
Updates the database schema to require a thread_id (by adding a
constraint that the column is non-null) for event_push_actions,
event_push_actions_staging, and event_push_actions_summary.
For PostgreSQL we add the constraint as NOT VALID, then
VALIDATE the constraint a background job to avoid locking
the table during an upgrade.
For SQLite we simply rebuild the table & copy the data.
Cleans-up the schema delta files:
* Removes no-op functions.
* Adds missing type hints to function parameters.
* Fixes any issues with type hints.
This also renames one (very old) schema delta to avoid a conflict
that mypy complains about.
Clean-up from adding the thread_id column, which was initially
null but backfilled with values. It is desirable to require it to now
be non-null.
In addition to altering this column to be non-null, we clean up
obsolete background jobs, indexes, and just-in-time updating
code.
This makes it so that we rely on the `device_id` to delete pushers on logout,
instead of relying on the `access_token_id`. This ensures we're not removing
pushers on token refresh, and prepares for a world without access token IDs
(also known as the OIDC).
This actually runs the `set_device_id_for_pushers` background update, which
was forgotten in #13831.
Note that for backwards compatibility it still deletes pushers based on the
`access_token` until the background update finishes.
* Add `event_stream_ordering` column to membership state tables
Specifically this adds the column to `current_state_events`,
`local_current_membership` and `room_memberships`. Each of these tables
is regularly joined with the `events` table to get the stream ordering
and denormalising this into each table will yield significant query
performance improvements once used.
* Make denormalised `event_stream_ordering` columns foreign keys
* Add comment in schema file explaining new denormalised columns
* Add triggers to enforce consistency of `event_stream_ordering` columns
* Re-order purge room tables to account for foreign keys
* Bump schema version to 75
Co-authored-by: David Robertson <david.m.robertson1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
* Remove special-case method for new memberships only, use more generic method
* Only collect profiles from state events in public rooms
* Add a table to track stale remote user profiles
* Add store methods to set and delete rows in this new table
* Mark remote profiles as stale when a member state event comes in to a private room
* Newsfile
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <oliverw@matrix.org>
* Simplify by removing Optionality of `event_id`
* Replace names and avatars with None if they're set to dodgy things
I think this makes more sense anyway.
* Move schema delta to 74 (I missed the boat?)
* Turns out these can be None after all
---------
Signed-off-by: Olivier Wilkinson (reivilibre) <oliverw@matrix.org>
This adds an `event_stream_ordering` column to `current_state_events`,
`local_current_membership` and `room_memberships`. Each of these tables
is regularly joined with the `events` table to get the stream ordering
and denormalising this into each table will yield significant query
performance improvements once used. Includes a background job to
populate these values from the `events` table.
Same idea as https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/13703.
Signed off by Nick @ Beeper (@fizzadar).
if a Synapse deployment upgraded (from < 1.62.0 to >= 1.70.0) then it
is possible for schema deltas to run before background updates causing
drift in the database schema due to:
1. A delta registered a background update to create an index.
2. A delta dropped the above index if it exists (but it yet exist won't since
the background job hasn't run).
3. The code assumed the index was dropped.
To fix this we:
1. Cancel the background update which could create the index.
2. Drop the index again.
3. Drop a related index which is dropped by the background update.