Bulk refactor `Counter` metrics to be homeserver-scoped. We also add
lints to make sure that new `Counter` metrics don't sneak in without
using the `server_name` label (`SERVER_NAME_LABEL`).
All of the "Fill in" commits are just bulk refactor.
Part of https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/issues/18592
### Testing strategy
1. Add the `metrics` listener in your `homeserver.yaml`
```yaml
listeners:
# This is just showing how to configure metrics either way
#
# `http` `metrics` resource
- port: 9322
type: http
bind_addresses: ['127.0.0.1']
resources:
- names: [metrics]
compress: false
# `metrics` listener
- port: 9323
type: metrics
bind_addresses: ['127.0.0.1']
```
1. Start the homeserver: `poetry run synapse_homeserver --config-path
homeserver.yaml`
1. Fetch `http://localhost:9322/_synapse/metrics` and/or
`http://localhost:9323/metrics`
1. Observe response includes the `synapse_user_registrations_total`,
`synapse_http_server_response_count_total`, etc metrics with the
`server_name` label
During the migration the automated script to update the copyright
headers accidentally got rid of some of the existing copyright lines.
Reinstate them.
As far as I can tell our logging contexts are meant to log the request ID, or sometimes the request ID followed by a suffix (this is generally stored in the name field of LoggingContext). There's also code to log the name@memory location, but I'm not sure this is ever used.
This simplifies the code paths to require every logging context to have a name and use that in logging. For sub-contexts (created via nested_logging_contexts, defer_to_threadpool, Measure) we use the current context's str (which becomes their name or the string "sentinel") and then potentially modify that (e.g. add a suffix).
Part of #9744
Removes all redundant `# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-` lines from files, as python 3 automatically reads source code as utf-8 now.
`Signed-off-by: Jonathan de Jong <jonathan@automatia.nl>`
This modifies the configuration of structured logging to be usable from
the standard Python logging configuration.
This also separates the formatting of logs from the transport allowing
JSON logs to files or standard logs to sockets.