after the request. This way, we could release the
project referred from the controller, which potentially
referred a repository which potentially allocated a lot of
memories.
Before this change, we could hold the last request data
and cannot release the memory. After this change, the
largest request data should be able to be collected from GC.
This might not impact the instances having heavy load,
as the last request should be changing all the time,
and GC won't kick in for each request anyway.
However it could still potentially allow us to free more
memories for each GC runs, because now we could free one
more request anyway.
This would make the application considered ready much slower,
but when it's ready, then it's really ready. Before this change,
it claims to be ready, but it's annoyingly slow for the first
request with GDK. It's 100% 502 for me, for the first request.
This shouldn't really affect production or so, because if it's
really ready, it should be blazingly fast, and it should not
slow things down too much.
The culprit here is probably `ActionController::Base.helpers.asset_path`
but this could make sure that anything else would load first, too.
+ Use NullMetrics to mock metrics when unused
+ Use method_missing in NullMetrics mocking
+ Update prometheus gem to version that correctly uses transitive dependencies
+ Ensure correct folders are used in Multiprocess prometheus client tests.
+ rename Sessions controller's metric
This is a step for #29118.
Add a single metric to count successful logins.
Summary types are not supported so remove Collector. Either
we need to support the summary type or we need to create a
multiprocess-friendly Collector.
Add config to load prometheus and set up the Collector and the
Exporter.
Fix `Gemfile` as current prometheus-client gemspec is missing the
`mmap2` dependency.
Using this limit on GitLab.com it appears we're able to reduce response
timings by about 620 milliseconds compared to the previous limit.
See gitlab-org/gitlab-ce!2421 for more information.
Don't assume that if the Rack server is not Passenger then it must be Unicorn. There are many other Rack servers in the world (uwsgi being one example that people use a lot).
The reverse check is much more logical, i.e. check explicitly for Unicorn