This refactors repository caching so it's possible to selectively refresh certain caches, instead of just expiring and refreshing everything. To allow this the various methods that were cached (e.g. "tag_count" and "readme") use a similar pattern that makes expiring and refreshing their data much easier. In this new setup caches are refreshed as follows: 1. After a commit (but before running ProjectCacheWorker) we expire some basic caches such as the commit count and repository size. 2. ProjectCacheWorker will recalculate the commit count, repository size, then refresh a specific set of caches based on the list of files changed in a push payload. This requires a bunch of changes to the various methods that may be cached. For one, data should not be cached if a branch used or the entire repository does not exist. To prevent all these methods from handling this manually this is taken care of in Repository#cache_method_output. Some methods still manually check for the existence of a repository but this result is also cached. With selective flushing implemented ProjectCacheWorker no longer uses an exclusive lease for all of its work. Instead this worker only uses a lease to limit the number of times the repository size is updated as this is a fairly expensive operation.