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2017-06-21Enable Style/DotPosition Rubocop :cop:Grzegorz Bizon
2017-05-17Use CTEs for nested groups and authorizationsYorick Peterse
This commit introduces the usage of Common Table Expressions (CTEs) to efficiently retrieve nested group hierarchies, without having to rely on the "routes" table (which is an _incredibly_ inefficient way of getting the data). This requires a patch to ActiveRecord (found in the added initializer) to work properly as ActiveRecord doesn't support WITH statements properly out of the box. Unfortunately MySQL provides no efficient way of getting nested groups. For example, the old routes setup could easily take 5-10 seconds depending on the amount of "routes" in a database. Providing vastly different logic for both MySQL and PostgreSQL will negatively impact the development process. Because of this the various nested groups related methods return empty relations when used in combination with MySQL. For project authorizations the logic is split up into two classes: * Gitlab::ProjectAuthorizations::WithNestedGroups * Gitlab::ProjectAuthorizations::WithoutNestedGroups Both classes get the fresh project authorizations (= as they should be in the "project_authorizations" table), including nested groups if PostgreSQL is used. The logic of these two classes is quite different apart from their public interface. This complicates development a bit, but unfortunately there is no way around this. This commit also introduces Gitlab::GroupHierarchy. This class can be used to get the ancestors and descendants of a base relation, or both by using a UNION. This in turn is used by methods such as: * Namespace#ancestors * Namespace#descendants * User#all_expanded_groups Again this class relies on CTEs and thus only works on PostgreSQL. The Namespace methods will return an empty relation when MySQL is used, while User#all_expanded_groups will return only the groups a user is a direct member of. Performance wise the impact is quite large. For example, on GitLab.com Namespace#descendants used to take around 580 ms to retrieve data for a particular user. Using CTEs we are able to reduce this down to roughly 1 millisecond, returning the exact same data. == On The Fly Refreshing Refreshing of authorizations on the fly (= when users.authorized_projects_populated was not set) is removed with this commit. This simplifies the code, and ensures any queries used for authorizations are not mutated because they are executed in a Rails scope (e.g. Project.visible_to_user). This commit includes a migration to schedule refreshing authorizations for all users, ensuring all of them have their authorizations in place. Said migration schedules users in batches of 5000, with 5 minutes between every batch to smear the load around a bit. == Spec Changes This commit also introduces some changes to various specs. For example, some specs for ProjectTeam assumed that creating a personal project would _not_ lead to the owner having access, which is incorrect. Because we also no longer refresh authorizations on the fly for new users some code had to be added to the "empty_project" factory. This chunk of code ensures that the owner's permissions are refreshed after creating the project, something that is normally done in Projects::CreateService.
2017-03-28Use `:empty_project` where possible in service specsRobert Speicher
2017-02-28Fix access to projects shared with a nested groupDouwe Maan
Signed-off-by: Dmitriy Zaporozhets <dmitriy.zaporozhets@gmail.com>
2017-01-17Synchronize all project authorization refreshingYorick Peterse
Previously a lease would only be obtained to update data. This could lead to duplicate data being inserted, triggering a UNIQUE constraint error. To work around this we now acquire a lease before performing _any_ project authorization work, releasing it at the very end. Fixes #25987
2017-01-08Remove the project_authorizations.id columnYorick Peterse
This column used to be a 32 bits integer, allowing for only a maximum of 2 147 483 647 rows. Given enough users one can hit this limit pretty quickly, as was the case for GitLab.com. Changing this type to bigint (= 64 bits) would give us more space, but we'd eventually hit the same limit given enough users and projects. A much more sustainable solution is to simply drop the "id" column. There were only 2 lines of code depending on this column being present, and neither truly required it to be present. Instead the code now uses the "project_id" column combined with the "user_id" column. This means that instead of something like this: DELETE FROM project_authorizations WHERE user_id = X AND id = Y; We now run the following when removing rows: DELETE FROM project_authorizations WHERE user_id = X AND project_id = Y; Since both user_id and project_id are indexed this should not slow down the DELETE query. This commit also removes the "dependent: destroy" clause from the "project_authorizations" relation in the User and Project models. Keeping this prevents Rails from being able to remove data as it relies on an "id" column being present. Since the "project_authorizations" table has proper foreign keys set up (with cascading removals) we don't need to depend on any Rails logic.
2016-12-28Cache project authorizations even when user has access to zero projectsAdam Niedzielski
2016-12-19Smarter refreshing of authorized projectsYorick Peterse
Prior to this commit the refreshing of authorized projects was done in two steps: 1. Remove existing authorizations 2. Insert a new list of all authorizations This can lead to a high amount of dead tuples as every time all rows are being replaced. For example, if a user with 100 authorizations is given access to a new project this would lead to: * 100 rows being removed * 101 new rows being inserted This commit changes the way this system works so it only removes/inserts what is necessary. Using the above example this would lead to only 1 new row being inserted, with the initial 100 being left untouched. Fixes https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/25257