Welcome to mirror list, hosted at ThFree Co, Russian Federation.

gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss.git - Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2018-03-06Fix tests by latest proposal changesShinya Maeda
2018-03-06Integrate two workers into one ArchiveTraceWorker with pipeline_background ↵Shinya Maeda
queue. This queue takes loqer precedence than pipeline_default.
2018-03-05Revert few more broken specs related to *_with_namespace methodsDmitriy Zaporozhets
Signed-off-by: Dmitriy Zaporozhets <dmitriy.zaporozhets@gmail.com>
2018-02-26Extract WaitableWorker out of AuthorizedProjectsWorkerDouwe Maan
2017-12-20Merge branch ↵Douwe Maan
'39246-fork-and-import-jobs-should-only-be-marked-as-failed-when-the-number-of-retries-was-exhausted' into 'master' Fork and Import jobs only get marked as failed when the number of Sidekiq retries were exhausted Closes #39246 See merge request gitlab-org/gitlab-ce!15844
2017-12-15Fork and Import jobs only get marked as failed when the number of Sidekiq ↵Tiago Botelho
retries were exhausted
2017-12-12Use a dedicated queue for each workerDouwe Maan
2017-12-05Consistently schedule Sidekiq jobsDouwe Maan
2017-12-05Add ApplicationWorker and make every worker include itDouwe Maan
2017-11-08Rewrite the GitHub importer from scratchYorick Peterse
Prior to this MR there were two GitHub related importers: * Github::Import: the main importer used for GitHub projects * Gitlab::GithubImport: importer that's somewhat confusingly used for importing Gitea projects (apparently they have a compatible API) This MR renames the Gitea importer to Gitlab::LegacyGithubImport and introduces a new GitHub importer in the Gitlab::GithubImport namespace. This new GitHub importer uses Sidekiq for importing multiple resources in parallel, though it also has the ability to import data sequentially should this be necessary. The new code is spread across the following directories: * lib/gitlab/github_import: this directory contains most of the importer code such as the classes used for importing resources. * app/workers/gitlab/github_import: this directory contains the Sidekiq workers, most of which simply use the code from the directory above. * app/workers/concerns/gitlab/github_import: this directory provides a few modules that are included in every GitHub importer worker. == Stages The import work is divided into separate stages, with each stage importing a specific set of data. Stages will schedule the work that needs to be performed, followed by scheduling a job for the "AdvanceStageWorker" worker. This worker will periodically check if all work is completed and schedule the next stage if this is the case. If work is not yet completed this worker will reschedule itself. Using this approach we don't have to block threads by calling `sleep()`, as doing so for large projects could block the thread from doing any work for many hours. == Retrying Work Workers will reschedule themselves whenever necessary. For example, hitting the GitHub API's rate limit will result in jobs rescheduling themselves. These jobs are not processed until the rate limit has been reset. == User Lookups Part of the importing process involves looking up user details in the GitHub API so we can map them to GitLab users. The old importer used an in-memory cache, but this obviously doesn't work when the work is spread across different threads. The new importer uses a Redis cache and makes sure we only perform API/database calls if absolutely necessary. Frequently used keys are refreshed, and lookup misses are also cached; removing the need for performing API/database calls if we know we don't have the data we're looking for. == Performance & Models The new importer in various places uses raw INSERT statements (as generated by `Gitlab::Database.bulk_insert`) instead of using Rails models. This allows us to bypass any validations and callbacks, drastically reducing the number of SQL queries and Gitaly RPC calls necessary to import projects. To ensure the code produces valid data the corresponding tests check if the produced rows are valid according to the model validation rules.
2017-10-04create_cluster_service_spec. cluster_provision_worker_spec. cluster_queue_spec.Shinya Maeda
2017-08-21Remove sidekiq build queue and assign pipeline queueGrzegorz Bizon
2017-08-21Simplify pipeline sidekiq queues naming schemeGrzegorz Bizon
2017-08-21Extend pipelines queue mixin and add a default queueGrzegorz Bizon
2016-10-21Re-organize queues to use for SidekiqYorick Peterse
Dumping too many jobs in the same queue (e.g. the "default" queue) is a dangerous setup. Jobs that take a long time to process can effectively block any other work from being performed given there are enough of these jobs. Furthermore it becomes harder to monitor the jobs as a single queue could contain jobs for different workers. In such a setup the only reliable way of getting counts per job is to iterate over all jobs in a queue, which is a rather time consuming process. By using separate queues for various workers we have better control over throughput, we can add weight to queues, and we can monitor queues better. Some workers still use the same queue whenever their work is related. For example, the various CI pipeline workers use the same "pipeline" queue. This commit includes a Rails migration that moves Sidekiq jobs from the old queues to the new ones. This migration also takes care of doing the inverse if ever needed. This does require downtime as otherwise new jobs could be scheduled in the old queues after this migration completes. This commit also includes an RSpec test that blacklists the use of the "default" queue and ensures cron workers use the "cronjob" queue. Fixes gitlab-org/gitlab-ce#23370