This time for `SocketException`s. I seem to recall looking at this and
deciding there was a reason to not catch socket exceptions, but on
revisiting it seems sane to do so.
This covers a fail case like reported:
```
2023-10-06 03:24:17 [verbose]: Request to https://lazer.ppy.sh/oauth/token failed with System.Net.Http.HttpRequestException: No such host is known. (lazer.ppy.sh:443)
2023-10-06 03:24:17 [verbose]: ---> System.Net.Sockets.SocketException (11001): No such host is known.
2023-10-06 03:24:17 [verbose]: at System.Net.Sockets.Socket.AwaitableSocketAsyncEventArgs.ThrowException(SocketError error, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
```
Closes https://github.com/ppy/osu/issues/24890 (again).
This API endpoint is intended for usage with the entire `solo_scores`
machinery and ID schema, rather than the legacy `*_scores_high` ID
schema. It also supports automagically falling back to downloading
legacy replays if a stable-imported score is requested for download
(internally this happens via `legacy_score_id` in the `data` json).
This change will allow replays to be downloaded, but it will still not
yield 100% correct behaviour, as there is further work to be done in
that respect. The download tracker is expecting score hashes to arrive
from web to verify the integrity of the incoming download, but the API
does not expose such a facility right now; we will have to decide as to
whether we want to add one web-side, or whether we want to disable the
checking client-side.
This created weird cases in logs which are very hard to understand. The
one which really got me was this:
```
[runtime] 2023-08-13 07:48:27 [verbose]: Invalidating working beatmap cache for unknown artist - unknown title (Dummy)
```
Which looks like a dummy working beatmap was invalidated, but it turns
out that's just the local user which was populated when creating a new
local beatmap.