Merge branch '28492-add-dev-documentation-for-using-the-queryrecorder-in-specs' into 'master'

Adds docs for QueryRecorder tests

Closes #28492

See merge request !9838
This commit is contained in:
Robert Speicher 2017-03-13 20:43:41 +00:00
commit db3c2c2331
4 changed files with 35 additions and 1 deletions

View file

@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ end
This will end up running one query for every object to update. This code can
easily overload a database given enough rows to update or many instances of this
code running in parallel. This particular problem is known as the
["N+1 query problem"](http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_querying.html#eager-loading-associations).
["N+1 query problem"](http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_querying.html#eager-loading-associations). You can write a test with [QueryRecoder](query_recorder.md) to detect this and prevent regressions.
In this particular case the workaround is fairly easy:
@ -117,6 +117,8 @@ Post.all.includes(:author).each do |post|
end
```
Also consider using [QueryRecoder tests](query_recorder.md) to prevent a regression when eager loading.
## Memory Usage
**Summary:** merge requests **must not** increase memory usage unless absolutely

View file

@ -39,6 +39,7 @@ GitLab provides built-in tools to aid the process of improving performance:
* [Sherlock](profiling.md#sherlock)
* [GitLab Performance Monitoring](../administration/monitoring/performance/introduction.md)
* [Request Profiling](../administration/monitoring/performance/request_profiling.md)
* [QueryRecoder](query_recorder.md) for preventing `N+1` regressions
GitLab employees can use GitLab.com's performance monitoring systems located at
<http://performance.gitlab.net>, this requires you to log in using your

View file

@ -25,3 +25,5 @@ starting GitLab. For example:
Bullet will log query problems to both the Rails log as well as the Chrome
console.
As a follow up to finding `N+1` queries with Bullet, consider writing a [QueryRecoder test](query_recorder.md) to prevent a regression.

View file

@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
# QueryRecorder
QueryRecorder is a tool for detecting the [N+1 queries problem](http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_querying.html#eager-loading-associations) from tests.
> Implemented in [spec/support/query_recorder.rb](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/spec/support/query_recorder.rb) via [9c623e3e](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/commit/9c623e3e5d7434f2e30f7c389d13e5af4ede770a)
As a rule, merge requests [should not increase query counts](merge_request_performance_guidelines.md#query-counts). If you find yourself adding something like `.includes(:author, :assignee)` to avoid having `N+1` queries, consider using QueryRecorder to enforce this with a test. Without this, a new feature which causes an additional model to be accessed will silently reintroduce the problem.
## How it works
This style of test works by counting the number of SQL queries executed by ActiveRecord. First a control count is taken, then you add new records to the database and rerun the count. If the number of queries has significantly increased then an `N+1` queries problem exists.
```ruby
it "avoids N+1 database queries" do
control_count = ActiveRecord::QueryRecorder.new { visit_some_page }.count
create_list(:issue, 5)
expect { visit_some_page }.not_to exceed_query_limit(control_count)
end
```
As an example you might create 5 issues in between counts, which would cause the query count to increase by 5 if an N+1 problem exists.
> **Note:** In some cases the query count might change slightly between runs for unrelated reasons. In this case you might need to test `exceed_query_limit(control_count + acceptable_change)`, but this should be avoided if possible.
## See also
- [Bullet](profiling.md#Bullet) For finding `N+1` query problems
- [Performance guidelines](performance.md)
- [Merge request performance guidelines](merge_request_performance_guidelines.md#query-counts)