Synapse's database schema is stored in the synapse.storage.schema
module.
Synapse supports splitting its datastore across multiple physical databases (which can be useful for large installations), and the schema files are therefore split according to the logical database they apply to.
At the time of writing, the following "logical" databases are supported:
state
- used to store Matrix room state (more specifically, state_groups
,
their relationships and contents).main
- stores everything else.Additionally, the common
directory contains schema files for tables which must be
present on all physical databases.
Synapse manages its database schema via "schema versions". These are mainly used to help avoid confusion if the Synapse codebase is rolled back after the database is updated. They work as follows:
The Synapse codebase defines a constant synapse.storage.schema.SCHEMA_VERSION
which represents the expectations made about the database by that version. For
example, as of Synapse v1.36, this is 59
.
The database stores a "compatibility version" in
schema_compat_version.compat_version
which defines the SCHEMA_VERSION
of the
oldest version of Synapse which will work with the database. On startup, if
compat_version
is found to be newer than SCHEMA_VERSION
, Synapse will refuse to
start.
Synapse automatically updates this field from
synapse.storage.schema.SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION
.
delta
file), synapse.storage.schema.SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION
is also updated
so that administrators can not accidentally roll back to a too-old version of Synapse.Generally, the goal is to maintain compatibility with at least one or two previous releases of Synapse, so any substantial change tends to require multiple releases and a bit of forward-planning to get right.
As a worked example: we want to remove the room_stats_historical
table. Here is how it
might pan out.
Replace any code that reads from room_stats_historical
with alternative
implementations, but keep writing to it in case of rollback to an earlier version.
Also, increase synapse.storage.schema.SCHEMA_VERSION
. In this
instance, there is no existing code which reads from room_stats_historical
, so
our starting point is:
v1.36.0: SCHEMA_VERSION=59
, SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION=59
Next (say in Synapse v1.37.0): remove the code that writes to
room_stats_historical
, but don’t yet remove the table in case of rollback to
v1.36.0. Again, we increase synapse.storage.schema.SCHEMA_VERSION
, but
because we have not broken compatibility with v1.36, we do not yet update
SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION
. We now have:
v1.37.0: SCHEMA_VERSION=60
, SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION=59
.
Later (say in Synapse v1.38.0): we can remove the table altogether. This will
break compatibility with v1.36.0, so we must update SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION
accordingly.
There is no need to update synapse.storage.schema.SCHEMA_VERSION
, since there is no
change to the Synapse codebase here. So we end up with:
v1.38.0: SCHEMA_VERSION=60
, SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION=60
.
If in doubt about whether to update SCHEMA_VERSION
or not, it is generally best to
lean towards doing so.
In the full_schemas
directories, only the most recently-numbered snapshot is used
(54
at the time of writing). Older snapshots (eg, 16
) are present for historical
reference only.
If you want to recreate these schemas, they need to be made from a database that has had all background updates run.
To do so, use scripts-dev/make_full_schema.sh
. This will produce new
full.sql.postgres
and full.sql.sqlite
files.
Ensure postgres is installed, then run:
./scripts-dev/make_full_schema.sh -p postgres_username -o output_dir/
NB at the time of writing, this script predates the split into separate state
/main
databases so will require updates to handle that correctly.
Boolean columns require special treatment, since SQLite treats booleans the same as integers.
There are three separate aspects to this:
Any new boolean column must be added to the BOOLEAN_COLUMNS
list in
scripts/synapse_port_db
. This tells the port script to cast the integer
value from SQLite to a boolean before writing the value to the postgres
database.
Before SQLite 3.23, TRUE
and FALSE
were not recognised as constants by
SQLite, and the IS [NOT] TRUE
/IS [NOT] FALSE
operators were not
supported. This makes it necessary to avoid using TRUE
and FALSE
constants in SQL commands.
For example, to insert a TRUE
value into the database, write:
txn.execute("INSERT INTO tbl(col) VALUES (?)", (True, ))
Default values for new boolean columns present a particular difficulty. Generally it is best to create separate schema files for Postgres and SQLite. For example:
# in 00delta.sql.postgres:
ALTER TABLE tbl ADD COLUMN col BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE;
# in 00delta.sql.sqlite:
ALTER TABLE tbl ADD COLUMN col BOOLEAN DEFAULT 0;
Note that there is a particularly insidious failure mode here: the Postgres
flavour will be accepted by SQLite 3.22, but will give a column whose
default value is the string "FALSE"
- which, when cast back to a boolean
in Python, evaluates to True
.