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forgejo/modules/queue/workerqueue.go

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Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
// Copyright 2023 The Gitea Authors. All rights reserved.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
package queue
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/json"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/log"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/process"
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
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"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/setting"
)
// WorkerPoolQueue is a queue that uses a pool of workers to process items
// It can use different underlying (base) queue types
type WorkerPoolQueue[T any] struct {
ctxRun context.Context
ctxRunCancel context.CancelFunc
shutdownDone chan struct{}
shutdownTimeout atomic.Int64 // in case some buggy handlers (workers) would hang forever, "shutdown" should finish in predictable time
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
origHandler HandlerFuncT[T]
safeHandler HandlerFuncT[T]
baseQueueType string
baseConfig *BaseConfig
baseQueue baseQueue
batchChan chan []T
flushChan chan flushType
batchLength int
workerNum int
workerMaxNum int
workerActiveNum int
workerNumMu sync.Mutex
}
type flushType chan struct{}
var _ ManagedWorkerPoolQueue = (*WorkerPoolQueue[any])(nil)
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) GetName() string {
return q.baseConfig.ManagedName
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) GetType() string {
return q.baseQueueType
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) GetItemTypeName() string {
var t T
return fmt.Sprintf("%T", t)
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) GetWorkerNumber() int {
q.workerNumMu.Lock()
defer q.workerNumMu.Unlock()
return q.workerNum
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) GetWorkerActiveNumber() int {
q.workerNumMu.Lock()
defer q.workerNumMu.Unlock()
return q.workerActiveNum
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) GetWorkerMaxNumber() int {
q.workerNumMu.Lock()
defer q.workerNumMu.Unlock()
return q.workerMaxNum
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) SetWorkerMaxNumber(num int) {
q.workerNumMu.Lock()
defer q.workerNumMu.Unlock()
q.workerMaxNum = num
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) GetQueueItemNumber() int {
cnt, err := q.baseQueue.Len(q.ctxRun)
if err != nil {
log.Error("Failed to get number of items in queue %q: %v", q.GetName(), err)
}
return cnt
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) FlushWithContext(ctx context.Context, timeout time.Duration) (err error) {
if q.isBaseQueueDummy() {
return nil
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
}
log.Debug("Try to flush queue %q with timeout %v", q.GetName(), timeout)
defer log.Debug("Finish flushing queue %q, err: %v", q.GetName(), err)
var after <-chan time.Time
after = infiniteTimerC
if timeout > 0 {
after = time.After(timeout)
}
c := make(flushType)
// send flush request
// if it blocks, it means that there is a flush in progress or the queue hasn't been started yet
select {
case q.flushChan <- c:
case <-ctx.Done():
return ctx.Err()
case <-q.ctxRun.Done():
return q.ctxRun.Err()
case <-after:
return context.DeadlineExceeded
}
// wait for flush to finish
select {
case <-c:
return nil
case <-ctx.Done():
return ctx.Err()
case <-q.ctxRun.Done():
return q.ctxRun.Err()
case <-after:
return context.DeadlineExceeded
}
}
Improve queue & process & stacktrace (#24636) Although some features are mixed together in this PR, this PR is not that large, and these features are all related. Actually there are more than 70 lines are for a toy "test queue", so this PR is quite simple. Major features: 1. Allow site admin to clear a queue (remove all items in a queue) * Because there is no transaction, the "unique queue" could be corrupted in rare cases, that's unfixable. * eg: the item is in the "set" but not in the "list", so the item would never be able to be pushed into the queue. * Now site admin could simply clear the queue, then everything becomes correct, the lost items could be re-pushed into queue by future operations. 3. Split the "admin/monitor" to separate pages 4. Allow to download diagnosis report * In history, there were many users reporting that Gitea queue gets stuck, or Gitea's CPU is 100% * With diagnosis report, maintainers could know what happens clearly The diagnosis report sample: [gitea-diagnosis-20230510-192913.zip](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/files/11441346/gitea-diagnosis-20230510-192913.zip) , use "go tool pprof profile.dat" to view the report. Screenshots: ![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/320659b4-2eda-4def-8dc0-5ea08d578063) ![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/c5c46fae-9dc0-44ca-8cd3-57beedc5035e) ![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/6168a811-42a1-4e64-a263-0617a6c8c4fe) --------- Co-authored-by: Jason Song <i@wolfogre.com> Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
2023-05-11 09:45:47 +02:00
// RemoveAllItems removes all items in the baes queue
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) RemoveAllItems(ctx context.Context) error {
return q.baseQueue.RemoveAll(ctx)
}
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) marshal(data T) []byte {
bs, err := json.Marshal(data)
if err != nil {
log.Error("Failed to marshal item for queue %q: %v", q.GetName(), err)
return nil
}
return bs
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) unmarshal(data []byte) (t T, ok bool) {
if err := json.Unmarshal(data, &t); err != nil {
log.Error("Failed to unmarshal item from queue %q: %v", q.GetName(), err)
return t, false
}
return t, true
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) isBaseQueueDummy() bool {
_, isDummy := q.baseQueue.(*baseDummy)
return isDummy
}
// Push adds an item to the queue, it may block for a while and then returns an error if the queue is full
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) Push(data T) error {
if q.isBaseQueueDummy() && q.safeHandler != nil {
// FIXME: the "immediate" queue is only for testing, but it really causes problems because its behavior is different from a real queue.
// Even if tests pass, it doesn't mean that there is no bug in code.
if data, ok := q.unmarshal(q.marshal(data)); ok {
q.safeHandler(data)
}
}
return q.baseQueue.PushItem(q.ctxRun, q.marshal(data))
}
// Has only works for unique queues. Keep in mind that this check may not be reliable (due to lacking of proper transaction support)
// There could be a small chance that duplicate items appear in the queue
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) Has(data T) (bool, error) {
return q.baseQueue.HasItem(q.ctxRun, q.marshal(data))
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) Run() {
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
q.doRun()
}
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) Cancel() {
q.ctxRunCancel()
}
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
// ShutdownWait shuts down the queue, waits for all workers to finish their jobs, and pushes the unhandled items back to the base queue
// It waits for all workers (handlers) to finish their jobs, in case some buggy handlers would hang forever, a reasonable timeout is needed
func (q *WorkerPoolQueue[T]) ShutdownWait(timeout time.Duration) {
q.shutdownTimeout.Store(int64(timeout))
q.ctxRunCancel()
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
<-q.shutdownDone
}
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
func getNewQueue(t string, cfg *BaseConfig, unique bool) (string, baseQueue, error) {
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
switch t {
case "dummy", "immediate":
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
queue, err := newBaseDummy(cfg, unique)
return t, queue, err
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
case "channel":
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
queue, err := newBaseChannelGeneric(cfg, unique)
return t, queue, err
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
case "redis":
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
queue, err := newBaseRedisGeneric(cfg, unique, nil)
return t, queue, err
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
default: // level(leveldb,levelqueue,persistable-channel)
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
queue, err := newBaseLevelQueueGeneric(cfg, unique)
return "level", queue, err
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
}
}
func newWorkerPoolQueueForTest[T any](name string, queueSetting setting.QueueSettings, handler HandlerFuncT[T], unique bool) (*WorkerPoolQueue[T], error) {
return NewWorkerPoolQueueWithContext(context.Background(), name, queueSetting, handler, unique)
}
func NewWorkerPoolQueueWithContext[T any](ctx context.Context, name string, queueSetting setting.QueueSettings, handler HandlerFuncT[T], unique bool) (*WorkerPoolQueue[T], error) {
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
if handler == nil {
log.Debug("Use dummy queue for %q because handler is nil and caller doesn't want to process the queue items", name)
queueSetting.Type = "dummy"
}
var w WorkerPoolQueue[T]
var err error
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
w.baseConfig = toBaseConfig(name, queueSetting)
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
w.baseQueueType, w.baseQueue, err = getNewQueue(queueSetting.Type, w.baseConfig, unique)
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
refactor: redis queue backend test cleanup Summary: - Move existing test under a `testify` Suite as `baseRedisWithServerTestSuite` - Those tests require real redis server. - Add `go.uber.org/mock/mockgen@latest` as dependency - as a tool (Makefile). - in the `go.mod` file. - Mock redis client lives under a `mock` directory under the queue module. - That mock module has an extra hand-written mock in-memory redis-like struct. - Add tests using the mock redis client. - Changed the logic around queue provider creation. - Now the `getNewQueue` returns a Queue provider directly, not an init function to create it. The whole Queue module is close to impossible to test properly because everything is private, everything goes through a struct route. Because of that, we can't test for example what keys are used for given queue. To overcome this, as a first step I removed one step from that hard route by allowing custom calls to create new queue provider. To achieve this, I moved the creation logic into the `getNewQueue` (previously it was `getNewQueueFn`). That changes nothing on that side, everything goes as before, except the `newXXX` call happens directly in that function and not outside that. That made it possible to add extra provider specific parameters to those function (`newXXX`). For example a client on redis. Calling it through the `getNewQueue` function, it gets `nil`. - If the provided client is not `nil`, it will use that instead of the connection string. - If it's `nil` (default behaviour), it creates a new redis client as it did before, no changes to that. The rest of the provider code is unchanged. All these changes were required to make it possible to generate mock clients for providers and use them. For the tests, the existing two test cases are good with redis server, and they need some extra helpers, for example to start a new redis server if required, or waiting on a redis server to be ready to use. These helpers are only required for test cases using real redis server. For better isolation, moved existing test under a testify Suite, and moved them into a new test file called `base_redis_with_server_test.go` because, well they test the code with server. These tests do exactly the same as before, calling the same sub-tests the same way as before, the only change is the structure of the test (remove repetition, scope server related helper functions). Finally, we can create unit tests without redis server. The main focus of this group of tests are higher level overview of operations. With the mock redis client we can set up expectations about used queue names, received values, return value to simulate faulty state. These new unit test functions don't test all functionality, at least it's not aimed for it now. It's more about the possibility of doing that and add extra tests around parts we couldn't test before, for example key. What extra features can test the new unit test group: - What is the received key for given queue? For example using `prefix`, or if all the `SXxx` calls are expected to use `queue_unique` if it's a unique queue. - If it's not a unique queue, no `SXxx` functions are called, because those sets are used only to check if a value is unique or not. - `HasItem` return `false` always if it's a non-unique queue. - All functions are called exactly `N` times, and we don't have any unexpected calls to redis from the code. Signed-off-by: Victoria Nadasdi <victoria@efertone.me>
2024-05-20 19:13:42 +02:00
log.Trace("Created queue %q of type %q", name, w.baseQueueType)
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
w.ctxRun, _, w.ctxRunCancel = process.GetManager().AddTypedContext(ctx, "Queue: "+w.GetName(), process.SystemProcessType, false)
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
w.batchChan = make(chan []T)
w.flushChan = make(chan flushType)
w.shutdownDone = make(chan struct{})
w.shutdownTimeout.Store(int64(shutdownDefaultTimeout))
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
w.workerMaxNum = queueSetting.MaxWorkers
w.batchLength = queueSetting.BatchLength
w.origHandler = handler
w.safeHandler = func(t ...T) (unhandled []T) {
defer func() {
err := recover()
if err != nil {
log.Error("Recovered from panic in queue %q handler: %v\n%s", name, err, log.Stack(2))
}
}()
if w.origHandler != nil {
return w.origHandler(t...)
}
return nil
Rewrite queue (#24505) # ⚠️ Breaking Many deprecated queue config options are removed (actually, they should have been removed in 1.18/1.19). If you see the fatal message when starting Gitea: "Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options", please follow the error messages to remove these options from your app.ini. Example: ``` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].ISSUE_INDEXER_QUEUE_TYPE`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [E] Removed queue option: `[indexer].UPDATE_BUFFER_LEN`. Use new options in `[queue.issue_indexer]` 2023/05/06 19:39:22 [F] Please update your app.ini to remove deprecated config options ``` Many options in `[queue]` are are dropped, including: `WRAP_IF_NECESSARY`, `MAX_ATTEMPTS`, `TIMEOUT`, `WORKERS`, `BLOCK_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_TIMEOUT`, `BOOST_WORKERS`, they can be removed from app.ini. # The problem The old queue package has some legacy problems: * complexity: I doubt few people could tell how it works. * maintainability: Too many channels and mutex/cond are mixed together, too many different structs/interfaces depends each other. * stability: due to the complexity & maintainability, sometimes there are strange bugs and difficult to debug, and some code doesn't have test (indeed some code is difficult to test because a lot of things are mixed together). * general applicability: although it is called "queue", its behavior is not a well-known queue. * scalability: it doesn't seem easy to make it work with a cluster without breaking its behaviors. It came from some very old code to "avoid breaking", however, its technical debt is too heavy now. It's a good time to introduce a better "queue" package. # The new queue package It keeps using old config and concept as much as possible. * It only contains two major kinds of concepts: * The "base queue": channel, levelqueue, redis * They have the same abstraction, the same interface, and they are tested by the same testing code. * The "WokerPoolQueue", it uses the "base queue" to provide "worker pool" function, calls the "handler" to process the data in the base queue. * The new code doesn't do "PushBack" * Think about a queue with many workers, the "PushBack" can't guarantee the order for re-queued unhandled items, so in new code it just does "normal push" * The new code doesn't do "pause/resume" * The "pause/resume" was designed to handle some handler's failure: eg: document indexer (elasticsearch) is down * If a queue is paused for long time, either the producers blocks or the new items are dropped. * The new code doesn't do such "pause/resume" trick, it's not a common queue's behavior and it doesn't help much. * If there are unhandled items, the "push" function just blocks for a few seconds and then re-queue them and retry. * The new code doesn't do "worker booster" * Gitea's queue's handlers are light functions, the cost is only the go-routine, so it doesn't make sense to "boost" them. * The new code only use "max worker number" to limit the concurrent workers. * The new "Push" never blocks forever * Instead of creating more and more blocking goroutines, return an error is more friendly to the server and to the end user. There are more details in code comments: eg: the "Flush" problem, the strange "code.index" hanging problem, the "immediate" queue problem. Almost ready for review. TODO: * [x] add some necessary comments during review * [x] add some more tests if necessary * [x] update documents and config options * [x] test max worker / active worker * [x] re-run the CI tasks to see whether any test is flaky * [x] improve the `handleOldLengthConfiguration` to provide more friendly messages * [x] fine tune default config values (eg: length?) ## Code coverage: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/236620635-55576955-f95d-4810-b12f-879026a3afdf.png)
2023-05-08 13:49:59 +02:00
}
return &w, nil
}