164 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
164 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
stage: Enablement
|
|
group: Distribution
|
|
info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
# Queue routing rules **(FREE SELF)**
|
|
|
|
When the number of Sidekiq jobs increases to a certain scale, the system faces
|
|
some scalability issues. One of them is that the length of the queue tends to get
|
|
longer. High-urgency jobs have to wait longer until other less urgent jobs
|
|
finish. This head-of-line blocking situation may eventually affect the
|
|
responsiveness of the system, especially critical actions. In another scenario,
|
|
the performance of some jobs is degraded due to other long running or CPU-intensive jobs
|
|
(computing or rendering ones) in the same machine.
|
|
|
|
To counter the aforementioned issues, one effective solution is to split
|
|
Sidekiq jobs into different queues and assign machines handling each queue
|
|
exclusively. For example, all CPU-intensive jobs could be routed to the
|
|
`cpu-bound` queue and handled by a fleet of CPU optimized instances. The queue
|
|
topology differs between companies depending on the workloads and usage
|
|
patterns. Therefore, GitLab supports a flexible mechanism for the
|
|
administrator to route the jobs based on their characteristics.
|
|
|
|
As an alternative to [Queue selector](extra_sidekiq_processes.md#queue-selector), which
|
|
configures Sidekiq cluster to listen to a specific set of workers or queues,
|
|
GitLab also supports routing a job from a worker to the desired queue when it
|
|
is scheduled. Sidekiq clients try to match a job against a configured list of
|
|
routing rules. 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 to the queue name generated
|
|
from the worker name.
|
|
|
|
By default, if the routing rules are not configured (or denoted with an empty
|
|
array), all the jobs are routed to the queue generated from the worker name.
|
|
|
|
## Example configuration
|
|
|
|
In `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
|
|
|
|
```ruby
|
|
sidekiq['routing_rules'] = [
|
|
# Route all non-CPU-bound workers that are high urgency to `high-urgency` queue
|
|
['resource_boundary!=cpu&urgency=high', 'high-urgency'],
|
|
# Route all database, gitaly and global search workers that are throttled to `throttled` queue
|
|
['feature_category=database,gitaly,global_search&urgency=throttled', 'throttled'],
|
|
# Route all workers having contact with outside work to a `network-intenstive` queue
|
|
['has_external_dependencies=true|feature_category=hooks|tags=network', 'network-intensive'],
|
|
# Route all import workers to the queues generated by the worker name, for
|
|
# example, JiraImportWorker to `jira_import`, SVNWorker to `svn_worker`
|
|
['feature_category=import', nil],
|
|
# Wildcard matching, route the rest to `default` queue
|
|
['*', 'default']
|
|
]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The routing rules list is an order-matter array of tuples of query and
|
|
corresponding queue:
|
|
|
|
- The query is following a [worker matching query](#worker-matching-query) syntax.
|
|
- 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.
|
|
|
|
The query supports wildcard matching `*`, which matches all workers. As a
|
|
result, the wildcard query must stay at the end of the list or the rules after it
|
|
are ignored.
|
|
|
|
NOTE:
|
|
Mixing queue routing rules and queue selectors requires care to
|
|
ensure all jobs that are scheduled and picked up by appropriate Sidekiq
|
|
workers.
|
|
|
|
## Worker matching query
|
|
|
|
GitLab provides a simple query syntax to match a worker based on its
|
|
attributes. This query syntax is employed by both [Queue routing
|
|
rules](#queue-routing-rules) and [Queue
|
|
selector](extra_sidekiq_processes.md#queue-selector). A query includes two
|
|
components:
|
|
|
|
- Attributes that can be selected.
|
|
- Operators used to construct a query.
|
|
|
|
### Available attributes
|
|
|
|
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/gl-infra/scalability/-/issues/261) in GitLab 13.1 (`tags`).
|
|
|
|
Queue matching query works upon the worker attributes, described in [Sidekiq
|
|
style guide](../../development/sidekiq_style_guide.md). We support querying
|
|
based on a subset of worker attributes:
|
|
|
|
- `feature_category` - the [GitLab feature
|
|
category](https://about.gitlab.com/direction/maturity/#category-maturity) the
|
|
queue belongs to. For example, the `merge` queue belongs to the
|
|
`source_code_management` category.
|
|
- `has_external_dependencies` - whether or not the queue connects to external
|
|
services. For example, all importers have this set to `true`.
|
|
- `urgency` - how important it is that this queue's jobs run
|
|
quickly. Can be `high`, `low`, or `throttled`. For example, the
|
|
`authorized_projects` queue is used to refresh user permissions, and
|
|
is `high` urgency.
|
|
- `worker_name` - the worker name. The other attributes are typically more useful as
|
|
they are more general, but this is available in case a particular worker needs
|
|
to be selected.
|
|
- `name` - the queue name. The other attributes are typically more useful as
|
|
they are more general, but this is available in case a particular queue needs
|
|
to be selected.
|
|
- `resource_boundary` - if the queue is bound by `cpu`, `memory`, or
|
|
`unknown`. For example, the `ProjectExportWorker` is memory bound as it has
|
|
to load data in memory before saving it for export.
|
|
- `tags` - short-lived annotations for queues. These are expected to frequently
|
|
change from release to release, and may be removed entirely.
|
|
|
|
`has_external_dependencies` is a boolean attribute: only the exact
|
|
string `true` is considered true, and everything else is considered
|
|
false.
|
|
|
|
`tags` is a set, which means that `=` checks for intersecting sets, and
|
|
`!=` checks for disjoint sets. For example, `tags=a,b` selects queues
|
|
that have tags `a`, `b`, or both. `tags!=a,b` selects queues that have
|
|
neither of those tags.
|
|
|
|
The attributes of each worker are hard-coded in the source code. For
|
|
convenience, we generate a [list of all available attributes in
|
|
GitLab Community Edition](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/workers/all_queues.yml)
|
|
and a [list of all available attributes in
|
|
GitLab Enterprise Edition](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/ee/app/workers/all_queues.yml).
|
|
|
|
### Available operators
|
|
|
|
`queue_selector` supports the following operators, listed from highest
|
|
to lowest precedence:
|
|
|
|
- `|` - the logical OR operator. For example, `query_a|query_b` (where `query_a`
|
|
and `query_b` are queries made up of the other operators here) will include
|
|
queues that match either query.
|
|
- `&` - the logical AND operator. For example, `query_a&query_b` (where
|
|
`query_a` and `query_b` are queries made up of the other operators here) will
|
|
only include queues that match both queries.
|
|
- `!=` - the NOT IN operator. For example, `feature_category!=issue_tracking`
|
|
excludes all queues from the `issue_tracking` feature category.
|
|
- `=` - the IN operator. For example, `resource_boundary=cpu` includes all
|
|
queues that are CPU bound.
|
|
- `,` - the concatenate set operator. For example,
|
|
`feature_category=continuous_integration,pages` includes all queues from
|
|
either the `continuous_integration` category or the `pages` category. This
|
|
example is also possible using the OR operator, but allows greater brevity, as
|
|
well as being lower precedence.
|
|
|
|
The operator precedence for this syntax is fixed: it's not possible to make AND
|
|
have higher precedence than OR.
|
|
|
|
[In GitLab 12.9](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/26594) and
|
|
later, as with the standard queue group syntax above, a single `*` as the
|
|
entire queue group selects all queues.
|
|
|
|
### Migration
|
|
|
|
After the Sidekiq routing rules are changed, administrators need to take care
|
|
with the migration to avoid losing jobs entirely, especially in a system with
|
|
long queues of jobs. The migration can be done by following the migration steps
|
|
mentioned in [Sidekiq job
|
|
migration](../../raketasks/sidekiq_job_migration.md)
|