Commit graph

5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
dixpac
0dacf3c169 Fix inconsistent naming for services that delete things
* Changed name of delete_user_service and worker to destroy
* Move and change delete_group_service to Groups::DestroyService
* Rename Notes::DeleteService to Notes::DestroyService
2017-02-08 09:16:43 +01:00
Yorick Peterse
6f88984b0d
Synchronize all project authorization refreshing
Previously a lease would only be obtained to update data. This could
lead to duplicate data being inserted, triggering a UNIQUE constraint
error. To work around this we now acquire a lease before performing
_any_ project authorization work, releasing it at the very end.

Fixes #25987
2017-01-16 16:37:48 -05:00
Yorick Peterse
de321fbbb5
Remove the project_authorizations.id column
This column used to be a 32 bits integer, allowing for only a maximum of
2 147 483 647 rows. Given enough users one can hit this limit pretty
quickly, as was the case for GitLab.com.

Changing this type to bigint (= 64 bits) would give us more space, but
we'd eventually hit the same limit given enough users and projects. A
much more sustainable solution is to simply drop the "id" column.

There were only 2 lines of code depending on this column being present,
and neither truly required it to be present. Instead the code now uses
the "project_id" column combined with the "user_id" column. This means
that instead of something like this:

    DELETE FROM project_authorizations
    WHERE user_id = X
    AND id = Y;

We now run the following when removing rows:

    DELETE FROM project_authorizations
    WHERE user_id = X
    AND project_id = Y;

Since both user_id and project_id are indexed this should not slow down
the DELETE query.

This commit also removes the "dependent: destroy" clause from the
"project_authorizations" relation in the User and Project models.
Keeping this prevents Rails from being able to remove data as it relies
on an "id" column being present. Since the "project_authorizations"
table has proper foreign keys set up (with cascading removals) we don't
need to depend on any Rails logic.
2017-01-08 13:56:50 +01:00
Adam Niedzielski
f0ba001877 Cache project authorizations even when user has access to zero projects 2016-12-28 14:41:30 +01:00
Yorick Peterse
f73193c328
Smarter refreshing of authorized projects
Prior to this commit the refreshing of authorized projects was done in
two steps:

1. Remove existing authorizations
2. Insert a new list of all authorizations

This can lead to a high amount of dead tuples as every time all rows are
being replaced. For example, if a user with 100 authorizations is given
access to a new project this would lead to:

* 100 rows being removed
* 101 new rows being inserted

This commit changes the way this system works so it only removes/inserts
what is necessary. Using the above example this would lead to only 1 new
row being inserted, with the initial 100 being left untouched.

Fixes https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/25257
2016-12-19 17:11:03 +01:00