- 23 Feb, 2017 3 commits
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Douwe Maan authored
This reverts commit cb10b725c8929b8b4460f89c9d96c773af39ba6b.
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Douwe Maan authored
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Douwe Maan authored
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- 21 Oct, 2016 1 commit
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Yorick Peterse authored
Dumping too many jobs in the same queue (e.g. the "default" queue) is a dangerous setup. Jobs that take a long time to process can effectively block any other work from being performed given there are enough of these jobs. Furthermore it becomes harder to monitor the jobs as a single queue could contain jobs for different workers. In such a setup the only reliable way of getting counts per job is to iterate over all jobs in a queue, which is a rather time consuming process. By using separate queues for various workers we have better control over throughput, we can add weight to queues, and we can monitor queues better. Some workers still use the same queue whenever their work is related. For example, the various CI pipeline workers use the same "pipeline" queue. This commit includes a Rails migration that moves Sidekiq jobs from the old queues to the new ones. This migration also takes care of doing the inverse if ever needed. This does require downtime as otherwise new jobs could be scheduled in the old queues after this migration completes. This commit also includes an RSpec test that blacklists the use of the "default" queue and ensures cron workers use the "cronjob" queue. Fixes gitlab-org/gitlab-ce#23370
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- 07 Sep, 2016 3 commits
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Olaf Tomalka authored
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Olaf Tomalka authored
Old deployments of Gitlab might have a big number of old events to be deleted. Such numbers cause the worker to timeout. I've limited the amount of rows that should be destroyed at once to 10000, and increased how often pruning shall take place to 4 times a day.
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Olaf Tomalka authored
Since contribution calendar shows only 12 months of activity, events older than that time are not visible anywhere and can be safely pruned saving big amount of database storage. Fixes #21164
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