gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/lib/gitlab/sidekiq_config/worker_router.rb

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# frozen_string_literal: true
module Gitlab
module SidekiqConfig
class WorkerRouter
InvalidRoutingRuleError = Class.new(StandardError)
RuleEvaluator = Struct.new(:matcher, :queue_name)
def self.queue_name_from_worker_name(worker_klass)
base_queue_name =
worker_klass.name
.delete_prefix('Gitlab::')
.delete_suffix('Worker')
.underscore
.tr('/', '_')
[worker_klass.queue_namespace, base_queue_name].compact.join(':')
end
def self.global
@global_worker_router ||= new(::Gitlab.config.sidekiq.routing_rules)
rescue InvalidRoutingRuleError, ::Gitlab::SidekiqConfig::WorkerMatcher::UnknownPredicate => e
::Gitlab::ErrorTracking.track_and_raise_for_dev_exception(e)
@global_worker_router = new([])
end
# call-seq:
# router = WorkerRouter.new([
# ["resource_boundary=cpu", 'cpu_boundary'],
# ["feature_category=pages", nil],
# ["feature_category=source_code_management", ''],
# ["*", "default"]
# ])
# router.route(ACpuBoundaryWorker) # Return "cpu_boundary"
# router.route(JustAPagesWorker) # Return "just_a_pages_worker"
# router.route(PostReceive) # Return "post_receive"
# router.route(RandomWorker) # Return "default"
#
# This class is responsible for routing a Sidekiq worker to a certain
# queue defined in the input routing rules. The input routing rules, as
# described above, is an order-matter array of tuples [query, queue_name].
#
# - The query syntax follows "worker matching query" detailedly
# denoted in doc/administration/operations/extra_sidekiq_processes.md.
#
# - The queue_name must be a valid Sidekiq queue name. If the queue name
# is nil, or an empty string, the worker is routed to the queue generated
# by the name of the worker instead.
#
# Rules are evaluated from first to last, and as soon as we find a match
# for a given worker we stop processing for that worker (first match
# wins). If the worker doesn't match any rule, it falls back the queue
# name generated from the worker name
#
# For further information, please visit:
# https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/gl-infra/scalability/-/issues/1016
#
def initialize(routing_rules)
@rule_evaluators = parse_routing_rules(routing_rules)
end
def route(worker_klass)
# A medium representation to ensure the backward-compatibility of
# WorkerMatcher
worker_metadata = generate_worker_metadata(worker_klass)
@rule_evaluators.each do |evaluator|
if evaluator.matcher.match?(worker_metadata)
return evaluator.queue_name.presence || queue_name_from_worker_name(worker_klass)
end
end
queue_name_from_worker_name(worker_klass)
end
private
def parse_routing_rules(routing_rules)
raise InvalidRoutingRuleError, 'The set of routing rule must be an array' unless routing_rules.is_a?(Array)
routing_rules.map do |rule_tuple|
raise InvalidRoutingRuleError, "Routing rule `#{rule_tuple.inspect}` is invalid" unless valid_routing_rule?(rule_tuple)
selector, destination_queue = rule_tuple
RuleEvaluator.new(
::Gitlab::SidekiqConfig::WorkerMatcher.new(selector),
destination_queue
)
end
end
def valid_routing_rule?(rule_tuple)
rule_tuple.is_a?(Array) && rule_tuple.length == 2
end
def generate_worker_metadata(worker_klass)
# The ee indicator here is insignificant and irrelevant to the matcher.
# Plus, it's not easy to determine whether a worker is **only**
# available in EE.
::Gitlab::SidekiqConfig::Worker.new(worker_klass, ee: false).to_yaml
end
def queue_name_from_worker_name(worker_klass)
self.class.queue_name_from_worker_name(worker_klass)
end
end
end
end