Commit Graph

15 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
GitLab Bot 170926ba28 Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master 2021-05-17 09:10:26 +00:00
GitLab Bot 5eb11b697d Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master 2020-01-06 18:08:01 +00:00
GitLab Bot d10a462fed Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master 2019-12-16 12:07:43 +00:00
GitLab Bot 8cc5f27909 Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master 2019-12-13 12:07:41 +00:00
GitLab Bot b570d73ecd Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master 2019-11-19 12:06:00 +00:00
Felipe Artur c40bad741f Fix issuables state_id nil when importing projects from GitHub
Issues and merge requests imported from GitHub are having state_id
set to null. This fixes the GitHub project importer and schedule
migrations to fix state_id.
2019-05-06 19:45:17 +00:00
Stan Hu d0336ae88f GitHub importer: Use the project creator to create branches from forks
The project owner may actually be a group, in which case the branch
creation would fail due to a lack of username.

Closes https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/59396
2019-03-23 07:29:35 -07:00
Stan Hu 1e6ea914a1 GitHub import: Create new branches as project owner
This avoids permission errors when importing merge requests whose
authors don't have direct access to push to the main repository.
2019-03-19 11:23:00 -07:00
Stan Hu e34a321327 Create the source branch for a GitHub import
When the GitHub importer creates a merge request, it retrieves the SHA
but does not actually create the source branch. This makes it impossible
to merge an open merge request, particularly if the source branch were
from a forked project. In that case, the branch will never exist because
the original `project-name:source-branch` name is never created, nor
is it a valid branch name.

To prevent possible branch name conflicts, forked source branches
are now renamed `github/fork/project-name/source-branch` and created
when necessary.

Note that we only create the source branch if the merge request
is open. For projects that have many merge requests, the project
would end up with a lot of possibly dead branches.

Closes https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/57370
2019-02-11 22:00:05 -08:00
Stan Hu 0377c015cf Refactor GitHub Importer database helpers into helper methods
This in preparation for addressing idle-in-transaction timeouts for other importers.

Part of #50021
2018-08-24 05:34:38 -07:00
Yorick Peterse 6f3c490107
Refactor AutocompleteController
This refactors the AutocompleteController according to the guidelines
and boundaries discussed in
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/49653. Specifically,
ActiveRecord logic is moved to different finders, which are then used in
the controller. View logic in turn is moved to presenters, instead of
directly using ActiveRecord's "to_json" method.

The finder MoveToProjectFinder is also adjusted according to the
abstraction guidelines and boundaries, resulting in a much more simple
finder.

By using finders (and other abstractions) more actively, we can push a
lot of logic out of the controller. We also remove the need for various
"before_action" hooks, though this could be achieved without using
finders as well.

The various finders related to AutcompleteController have also been
moved into a namespace. This removes the need for calling everything
"AutocompleteSmurfFinder", instead you can use
"Autocomplete::SmurfFinder".
2018-08-20 13:53:00 +02:00
Andreas Brandl fb98496f49
Trigger iid logic from GitHub importer for merge requests. 2018-08-16 10:01:02 +02:00
Yorick Peterse e4612df0e2
Ensure MR diffs always exist in the PR importer
In rare cases it could happen that an MR was created, but creating the
MR diffs somehow failed (e.g. due to an error). This commit adds an
additional check to make sure MR diffs are always present when importing
GitHub pull requests.
2018-06-12 13:30:41 +02:00
Yorick Peterse 71ed7987d3
Perform pull request IO work outside a transaction
When importing a GitHub pull request we would perform all work in a
single database transaction. This is less than ideal, because we perform
various slow Git operations when creating a merge request. This in turn
can lead to many DB connections being used, while just waiting for an IO
operation to complete.

To work around this, we now move most of the heavy lifting out of the
database transaction. Some extra error handling is added to ensure we
can resume importing a partially imported pull request, instead of just
throwing an error.

This commit also changes the specs for IssueImporter so they don't rely
on deprecated RSpec methods.
2018-06-04 18:33:56 +02:00
Yorick Peterse 4dfe26cd8b
Rewrite the GitHub importer from scratch
Prior to this MR there were two GitHub related importers:

* Github::Import: the main importer used for GitHub projects
* Gitlab::GithubImport: importer that's somewhat confusingly used for
  importing Gitea projects (apparently they have a compatible API)

This MR renames the Gitea importer to Gitlab::LegacyGithubImport and
introduces a new GitHub importer in the Gitlab::GithubImport namespace.
This new GitHub importer uses Sidekiq for importing multiple resources
in parallel, though it also has the ability to import data sequentially
should this be necessary.

The new code is spread across the following directories:

* lib/gitlab/github_import: this directory contains most of the importer
  code such as the classes used for importing resources.
* app/workers/gitlab/github_import: this directory contains the Sidekiq
  workers, most of which simply use the code from the directory above.
* app/workers/concerns/gitlab/github_import: this directory provides a
  few modules that are included in every GitHub importer worker.

== Stages

The import work is divided into separate stages, with each stage
importing a specific set of data. Stages will schedule the work that
needs to be performed, followed by scheduling a job for the
"AdvanceStageWorker" worker. This worker will periodically check if all
work is completed and schedule the next stage if this is the case. If
work is not yet completed this worker will reschedule itself.

Using this approach we don't have to block threads by calling `sleep()`,
as doing so for large projects could block the thread from doing any
work for many hours.

== Retrying Work

Workers will reschedule themselves whenever necessary. For example,
hitting the GitHub API's rate limit will result in jobs rescheduling
themselves. These jobs are not processed until the rate limit has been
reset.

== User Lookups

Part of the importing process involves looking up user details in the
GitHub API so we can map them to GitLab users. The old importer used
an in-memory cache, but this obviously doesn't work when the work is
spread across different threads.

The new importer uses a Redis cache and makes sure we only perform
API/database calls if absolutely necessary.  Frequently used keys are
refreshed, and lookup misses are also cached; removing the need for
performing API/database calls if we know we don't have the data we're
looking for.

== Performance & Models

The new importer in various places uses raw INSERT statements (as
generated by `Gitlab::Database.bulk_insert`) instead of using Rails
models. This allows us to bypass any validations and callbacks,
drastically reducing the number of SQL queries and Gitaly RPC calls
necessary to import projects.

To ensure the code produces valid data the corresponding tests check if
the produced rows are valid according to the model validation rules.
2017-11-07 23:24:59 +01:00