This allows to retain posts and boosts of remote actors with local
follows regardless of age.
With the "full" setting this can be taken further treating such
followed actors just like local users even keeping all posts they
liked or reacated to.
Pinned objects and their threads will be refetched
on user refresh which by default happens after a day
once a user is encountered again in any form including a mention.
We observed pruning pinned objects usually results in heavy load for
hours after a database prune due to a clogged up remote fetch queue as
pinned posts and their threads of many (most?) users get refetched.
Thus do not prune pinned posts by default.
Keeping closer to earlier behaviour this will still prune threads of
pinned posts regardless of --keep-threads if nothing else prevenets it.
Statmenets for keeping and breaking threads vastly differ
and the whole if block doesn't even fit on one screen.
Thus move each version out into its own function to
improve readability
Since bcfbfbcff5 (part of
<https://akkoma.dev/AkkomaGang/akkoma/pulls/789>), the overhead for
cleaning up orphaned attachments has been drattically reduced.
Most admins are unaware of this option even existing, but may notice an
increase in the size of the uploads directory (or S3 bucket size if used
instead) even if auto-expiring posts are used. This should hopefully
make this problem more manageable.
For those that still encounter performance issues, the setting can still
be disabled if needed.
In theory a pedantic reading of the spec indeed suggests
DMs must only be delivered to personal inboxes. However,
in practice the normative force of real-world implementations
disagrees. Mastodon, Iceshrimp.NET and GtS (the latter notably has a
config option to never use sharedInboxes) all unconditionally prefer
sharedInbox for everything without ill effect. This saves on duplicate
deliveries on the sending and processing on the receiving end.
(Typically the receiving side ends up rejecting
all but the first copy as duplicates)
Furthermore current determine_inbox logic also actually needs up
forcing personal inboxes for follower-only posts, unless they
additionally explicitly address at least one specific actor.
This is even much wasteful and directly contradicts
the explicit intent of the spec.
There’s one part where the use of sharedInbox falls apart,
namely spec-compliant bcc and bto addressing. AP spec requires
bcc/bto fields to be stripped before delivery and then implicitly
reconstructed by the receiver based on the addressed personal inbox.
In practice however, this addressing mode is almost unused. Neither of
the three implementations brought up above supports it and while *oma
does use bcc for list addressing, it does not use it in a spec-compliant
way and even copies same-host recipients into cc before delivery.
Messages with bcc addressing are handled in another function clause,
always force personal inboxes for every recipient and not affected by
this commit.
In theory it would be beneficial to use sharedInbox there too for all
but bcc recipients. But in practice list addressing has been broken for
quite some time already and is not actually exposed in any frontend,
as discussed in https://akkoma.dev/AkkomaGang/akkoma/issues/812.
Therefore any changes here have virtually no effect anyway
and all code concerning it may just be outright removed.
Currently FlakeId.flake_id crashes if receiving non-UTF-8 binaries,
but we use it e.g. in the /:nick_or_id path used in akkoma-fe user
profiles.
With the upgrade such invalid binaries simply fail the id check.
Reported-in: https://meta.akkoma.dev/t/frontend-unicodeconversionerror/847
This allows discovering a page represents an ActivityPub object
and also where to find the underlying representation.
Other servers already implement this and some tools
came to rely or profit from it.
The alternate link is provided both with the "application/activity+json"
format as used by Mastodon and the standard-compliant media type.
Just like the feed provider, ActivityPub links are always enabled
unless access to local posts is restricted and not configurable.
The commit is based on earlier work by Charlotte 🦝 Deleńkec
but with fixes and some tweaks.
Co-authored-by: Charlotte 🦝 Deleńkec <lotte@chir.rs>
:discard marks jobs as "discarded", i.e. jobs which permanently failed
due to e.g. exhausting all retries or explicitly being discared due to a
fatal error.
:cancel marks jobs as "cancelled" which does not imply failure.
While neither method counts as a job "exception" in the set of
telemetries we currently export via Prometheus, the different state
is visible in the (not-exported) metadata of oban job telemetry.
We can use handlers of those events to build bespoke statistics.
Ideally we'd like to distinguish in the receiver worker between
"invalid" and "already present or delete of unknown" documents,
but this is cumbersome to get get right with a list of
free-form, human-readable descriptions oof the violated constraints.
For now, just count both as an fatal error.
# but that is cumbersome to get right with a list of string error descriptions
CUrrently internal actors are supposed to be identified in the database
by either a NULL nickname or a nickname prefixed by "internal.". For old
installations this is true, but only if they were created over five
years ago before 70410dfafd.
Newer installations will use "relay" as the nickname of the realy actor
causing ii to be treated as a regular user.
In particular this means all installations in the last five years never
made use of the reduced endpoint case, thus it is dropped.
Simplify this distinction by properly marking internal actors asa an
Application type in the database. This was already implemented before by
ilja in https://akkoma.dev/AkkomaGang/akkoma/pulls/457 but accidentally
reverted during a translation update in
eba3cce77b. This commit effectively
restores this patch together with further changes.
Also service actors unconditionally expose follow* collections atm,
eventhough the internal fetch actor doesn't actually implement them.
Since they are optional per spec and with Mastodon omitting them too
for its instance actor proving the practical viability, we should just
omit them. The relay actor however should continue to expose such
collections and they are properly implemented here.
Here too we now just use the values or their absence in the database.
We do not have any other internal.* actors besides fetch atm.
Fixes: https://akkoma.dev/AkkomaGang/akkoma/issues/855
Co-authored-by: ilja space <git@ilja.space>
E.g. \*oma federates (most) follower-only posts multiple times
to each personal inbox. This commonly leads to race conditions
with jobs of several copies running at the same time and getting
past the initial "already known" check but then later all but
one will crash with an exception from the unique db index.
Since the only special thing we do with copies anyway is to discard them,
just don't create such duplicate jobs in the first place.
For the same reason and since failed jobs don't count towards
duplicates, this should have virtually no effect on federation.
Since we later only consider the Create activity for
access permission checks, but the semantically more
sensible set of fields are the object’s.
Changing the check itself to use the object may have unintended
consequences on already existing legacy posts as the old code
which processed it when it arrived may have never considered
effects on the objects addressing fields.
While the object itself has the expected adressing for an
"unlisted" post, we always use the Create activity’s
adressing fields for permission checks.
To avoid unintended effects on legacy objects
we will continue to use the activity for access perm checks,
but fix its addressing fields based on its object data.
Ref: https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma/-/issues/3323
With the current strategy the individual
and cumulative backoff looks like this
(the + part denotes max extra random delay):
attempt backoff_single cumulative
1 16+30 16+30
2 47+60 63+90
3 243+90 ≈ 4min 321+180
4 1024+120 ≈17min 1360+300 ≈23+5min
5 3125+150 ≈20min 4500+450 ≈75+8min
6 7776+180 ≈ 2.1h 12291+630 ≈3.4h
7 16807+210 ≈ 4.6h 29113+840 ≈8h
8 32768+240 ≈ 9.1h 61896+1080 ≈17h
9 59049+270 ≈16.4h 120960+1350 ≈33h
10 100000+300 ≈27.7h 220975+1650 ≈61h
We default to 5 retries meaning the least backoff runs with attempt=4.
Therefore outgoing activiities might already be permanently dropped by a
downtime of only 23 minutes which doesn't seem too implausible to occur.
Furthermore it seems excessive to retry this quickly this often at the
beginning.
At the same time, we’d like to have at least one quick'ish retry to deal
with transient issues and maintain reasonable federation responsiveness.
If an admin wants to tolerate one -day downtime of remotes,
retries need to be almost doubled.
The new backoff strategy implemented in this commit instead
switches to an exponetial after a few initial attempts:
attempt backoff_single cumulative
1 16+30 16+30
2 143+60 159+90
3 2202+90 ≈37min 2361+180 ≈40min
4 8160+120 ≈ 2.3h 10521+300 ≈ 3h
5 77393+150 ≈21.5h 87914+450 ≈24h
Initial retries are still fast, but the same amount of retries
now allows a remote downtime of at least 40 minutes. Customising
the retry count to 5 allows for whole-day downtimes.
This was accidentally broken in c8e0f7848b
due to a one-letter mistake in the plug option name and an absence of
tests. Therefore it was once again possible to serve e.g. Javascript or
CSS payloads via uploads and emoji.
However due to other protections it was still NOT possible for anyone to
serve any payload with an ActivityPub Content-Type. With the CSP policy
hardening from previous JS payload exloits predating the Content-Type
sanitisation, there is currently no known way of abusing this weakened
Content-Type sanitisation, but should be fixed regardless.
This commit fixes the option name and adds tests to ensure
such a regression doesn't occur again in the future.
Reported-by: Lain Soykaf <lain@lain.com>