Presence router callbacks allow module developers to specify additional users (local or remote)
to receive certain presence updates from local users. Presence router callbacks can be
registered using the module API's register_presence_router_callbacks
method.
The available presence router callbacks are:
First introduced in Synapse v1.42.0
async def get_users_for_states(
state_updates: Iterable["synapse.api.UserPresenceState"],
) -> Dict[str, Set["synapse.api.UserPresenceState"]]
Requires get_interested_users
to also be registered
Called when processing updates to the presence state of one or more users. This callback can
be used to instruct the server to forward that presence state to specific users. The module
must return a dictionary that maps from Matrix user IDs (which can be local or remote) to the
UserPresenceState
changes that they should be forwarded.
Synapse will then attempt to send the specified presence updates to each user when possible.
If multiple modules implement this callback, Synapse merges all the dictionaries returned by the callbacks. If multiple callbacks return a dictionary containing the same key, Synapse concatenates the sets associated with this key from each dictionary.
First introduced in Synapse v1.42.0
async def get_interested_users(
user_id: str
) -> Union[Set[str], "synapse.module_api.PRESENCE_ALL_USERS"]
Requires get_users_for_states
to also be registered
Called when determining which users someone should be able to see the presence state of. This
callback should return complementary results to get_users_for_state
or the presence information
may not be properly forwarded.
The callback is given the Matrix user ID for a local user that is requesting presence data and should return the Matrix user IDs of the users whose presence state they are allowed to query. The returned users can be local or remote.
Alternatively the callback can return synapse.module_api.PRESENCE_ALL_USERS
to indicate that the user should receive updates from all known users.
If multiple modules implement this callback, they will be considered in order. Synapse
calls each callback one by one, and use a concatenation of all the set
s returned by the
callbacks. If one callback returns synapse.module_api.PRESENCE_ALL_USERS
, Synapse uses
this value instead. If this happens, Synapse does not call any of the subsequent
implementations of this callback.
The example below is a module that implements both presence router callbacks, and ensures
that @alice:example.org
receives all presence updates from @bob:example.com
and
@charlie:somewhere.org
, regardless of whether Alice shares a room with any of them.
from typing import Dict, Iterable, Set, Union
from synapse.module_api import ModuleApi
class CustomPresenceRouter:
def __init__(self, config: dict, api: ModuleApi):
self.api = api
self.api.register_presence_router_callbacks(
get_users_for_states=self.get_users_for_states,
get_interested_users=self.get_interested_users,
)
async def get_users_for_states(
self,
state_updates: Iterable["synapse.api.UserPresenceState"],
) -> Dict[str, Set["synapse.api.UserPresenceState"]]:
res = {}
for update in state_updates:
if (
update.user_id == "@bob:example.com"
or update.user_id == "@charlie:somewhere.org"
):
res.setdefault("@alice:example.com", set()).add(update)
return res
async def get_interested_users(
self,
user_id: str,
) -> Union[Set[str], "synapse.module_api.PRESENCE_ALL_USERS"]:
if user_id == "@alice:example.com":
return {"@bob:example.com", "@charlie:somewhere.org"}
return set()