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This commit introduces our own handling and warning for Sidekiq's new 'non-json-serializable' warning. This decouples us from Sidekiq's own deprecation cycle, and allows us to use our own deprecation system. It also means that the dump/parse happens in test mode, which will help us to catch occurrences before they reach production.
The latest version of Sidekiq introduced a warning when jobs are queued with arguments which 'do not stringify to JSON safely'. In the vast majority of cases, this is because a hash is passed with symbols as keys. When those args are passed to the job, the keys will be stringified.
Our job wrapper already takes care of this issue by calling '.with_indifferent_access' on the args before passing them to `#execute`, so we don't need to change anything about our use. All we need to do is satisfy Sidekiq's warning system by 'stringifying' all the keys before enqueuing the job.
This reverts commit f5cf647e57.
The gem breaks usage of Rails URL helpers when used outside views and
controllers, for example in
88ecb83382/app/models/upload.rb (L239-L242)
the `upload_short_path` method call fails with an undefined method
exception when this gem is enabled.
The lazy route initialization cuts down boot time of rails.
On my local system it cuts out 200ms of boot time taking me from 3.2 to 3 seconds.
This is not a radically enormous amount of time, but paper cuts add up, and a faster boot in dev will make everyone happy.
TBD if we want to also include this in production.
Gem is heavily maintained by @amatsuda, last commit 3 days ago.
When jobs are enqueued inside a transaction, it's possible that they will be executed before the necessary data is available in the database. This commit ensures all jobs are enqueued in an ActiveRecord after_commit hook.
One potential downside here is if the job fails to enqueue, the transaction will no longer be aborted. However, the chance of that happening is reasonably low, and the impact is significantly lower than the current issue where jobs are scheduled before their data is ready.
When running jobs in tests, we use `Jobs.run_immediately!`. This means that jobs are run synchronously when they are enqueued. Jobs sometimes enqueue other jobs, which are also executed synchronously. This means that the outermost job will block until the inner jobs have finished executing. In some cases (e.g. process_post with hotlinked images) this can lead to a deadlock.
This commit changes the behavior slightly. Now we will never run jobs inside other jobs. Instead, we will queue them up and run them sequentially in the order they were enqueued. As a whole, they are still executed synchronously. Consider the example
```ruby
class Jobs::InnerJob < Jobs::Base
def execute(args)
puts "Running inner job"
end
end
class Jobs::OuterJob < Jobs::Base
def execute(args)
puts "Starting outer job"
Jobs.enqueue(:inner_job)
puts "Finished outer job"
end
end
Jobs.enqueue(:outer_job)
puts "All jobs complete"
```
The old behavior would result in:
```
Starting outer job
Running inner job
Finished outer job
All jobs complete
```
The new behavior will result in:
```
Starting outer job
Finished outer job
Running inner job
All jobs complete
```
Previously we had many places in the app that called `hostname` to get
hostname of a server. This commit replaces the pattern in 2 ways
1. We cache the result in `Discourse.os_hostname` so it is only ever called once
2. We prefer to use Socket.gethostname which avoids making a shell command
This improves performance as we are not spawning hostname processes throughout
the app lifetime
Zeitwerk simplifies working with dependencies in dev and makes it easier reloading class chains.
We no longer need to use Rails "require_dependency" anywhere and instead can just use standard
Ruby patterns to require files.
This is a far reaching change and we expect some followups here.
This reduces chances of errors where consumers of strings mutate inputs
and reduces memory usage of the app.
Test suite passes now, but there may be some stuff left, so we will run
a few sites on a branch prior to merging
Includes support for flags, reviewable users and queued posts, with REST API
backwards compatibility.
Co-Authored-By: romanrizzi <romanalejandro@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: jjaffeux <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
It is not a setting, and only relevant in specs. The new API is:
```
Jobs.run_later! # jobs will be thrown on the queue
Jobs.run_immediately! # jobs will run right away, avoid the queue
```
- Open the log file in "append" mode. This avoids issues if the file does not exist (and matches standard rails log behavior)
- Correctly parse the interval logging environment variable
By default, this does nothing. Two environment variables are available:
- `DISCOURSE_LOG_SIDEKIQ`
Set to `"1"` to enable logging. This will log all completed jobs to `log/rails/sidekiq.log`, along with various db/redis/network statistics. This is useful to track down poorly performing jobs.
- `DISCOURSE_LOG_SIDEKIQ_INTERVAL`
(seconds) Check running jobs periodically, and log their current duration. They will appear in the logs with `status:pending`. This is useful to track down jobs which take a long time, then crash sidekiq before completing.
This allows us to run regular rebakes without starving the normal queue.
It additionally adds the ability to specify queue with `Jobs.enqueue` so
we can specifically queue a job with lower priority using the `queue` arg.
If sidekiq is paused or Discourse is in readonly continue to queue
heartbeats
If we do not do that then a master process can end up reaping sidekiq
workers and causing various badness
This also impacts restore which can do weird stuff TM in cases like this
This commit introduces 3 queues for sidekiq
"critical" for urgent jobs (weighted at 4x weight)
"default" for standard jobs(weighted at 2x weight)
"low" for less important jobs
"critical jobs"
Reset Password emails has been seperated to its own job
Heartbeat which is required to keep sidekiq running
Test email which needs to return real quick
"low priority jobs"
Notify mailing list
Pull hotlinked images
Update gravatar
"default"
All the rest
Note: for people running sidekiq from command line use
bin/sidekiq -q critical,4 -q default,2 -q low