135 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
135 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
# Profiling
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To make it easier to track down performance problems GitLab comes with a set of
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profiling tools, some of these are available by default while others need to be
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explicitly enabled.
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## Profiling a URL
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There is a `Gitlab::Profiler.profile` method, and corresponding
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`bin/profile-url` script, that enable profiling a GET or POST request to a
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specific URL, either as an anonymous user (the default) or as a specific user.
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NOTE: **Note:** The first argument to the profiler is either a full URL
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(including the instance hostname) or an absolute path, including the
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leading slash.
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When using the script, command-line documentation is available by passing no
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arguments.
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When using the method in an interactive console session, any changes to the
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application code within that console session will be reflected in the profiler
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output.
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For example:
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```ruby
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Gitlab::Profiler.profile('/my-user')
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# Returns a RubyProf::Profile for the regular operation of this request
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class UsersController; def show; sleep 100; end; end
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Gitlab::Profiler.profile('/my-user')
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# Returns a RubyProf::Profile where 100 seconds is spent in UsersController#show
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```
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For routes that require authorization you will need to provide a user to
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`Gitlab::Profiler`. You can do this like so:
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```ruby
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Gitlab::Profiler.profile('/gitlab-org/gitlab-test', user: User.first)
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```
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Passing a `logger:` keyword argument to `Gitlab::Profiler.profile` will send
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ActiveRecord and ActionController log output to that logger. Further options are
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documented with the method source.
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```ruby
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Gitlab::Profiler.profile('/gitlab-org/gitlab-test', user: User.first, logger: Logger.new(STDOUT))
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```
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There is also a RubyProf printer available:
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`Gitlab::Profiler::TotalTimeFlatPrinter`. This acts like
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`RubyProf::FlatPrinter`, but its `min_percent` option works on the method's
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total time, not its self time. (This is because we often spend most of our time
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in library code, but this comes from calls in our application.) It also offers a
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`max_percent` option to help filter out outer calls that aren't useful (like
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`ActionDispatch::Integration::Session#process`).
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There is a convenience method for using this,
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`Gitlab::Profiler.print_by_total_time`:
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```ruby
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result = Gitlab::Profiler.profile('/my-user')
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Gitlab::Profiler.print_by_total_time(result, max_percent: 60, min_percent: 2)
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# Measure Mode: wall_time
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# Thread ID: 70005223698240
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# Fiber ID: 70004894952580
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# Total: 1.768912
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# Sort by: total_time
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#
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# %self total self wait child calls name
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# 0.00 1.017 0.000 0.000 1.017 14 *ActionView::Helpers::RenderingHelper#render
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# 0.00 1.017 0.000 0.000 1.017 14 *ActionView::Renderer#render_partial
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# 0.00 1.017 0.000 0.000 1.017 14 *ActionView::PartialRenderer#render
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# 0.00 1.007 0.000 0.000 1.007 14 *ActionView::PartialRenderer#render_partial
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# 0.00 0.930 0.000 0.000 0.930 14 Hamlit::TemplateHandler#call
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# 0.00 0.928 0.000 0.000 0.928 14 Temple::Engine#call
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# 0.02 0.865 0.000 0.000 0.864 638 *Enumerable#inject
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```
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To print the profile in HTML format, use the following example:
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```ruby
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result = Gitlab::Profiler.profile('/my-user')
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printer = RubyProf::CallStackPrinter.new(result)
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printer.print(File.open('/tmp/profile.html', 'w'))
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```
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[GitLab-Profiler](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/gitlab-profiler) is a project
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that builds on this to add some additional niceties, such as allowing
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configuration with a single Yaml file for multiple URLs, and uploading of the
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profile and log output to S3.
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For GitLab.com, you can find the latest results here (restricted to GitLab Team members only):
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`https://redash.gitlab.com/dashboard/gitlab-profiler-statistics`
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## Sherlock
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Sherlock is a custom profiling tool built into GitLab. Sherlock is _only_
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available when running GitLab in development mode _and_ when setting the
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environment variable `ENABLE_SHERLOCK` to a non empty value. For example:
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```shell
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ENABLE_SHERLOCK=1 bundle exec rails s
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```
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Recorded transactions can be found by navigating to `/sherlock/transactions`.
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## Bullet
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Bullet is a Gem that can be used to track down N+1 query problems. Because
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Bullet adds quite a bit of logging noise it's disabled by default. To enable
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Bullet, set the environment variable `ENABLE_BULLET` to a non-empty value before
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starting GitLab. For example:
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```shell
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ENABLE_BULLET=true bundle exec rails s
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```
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Bullet will log query problems to both the Rails log as well as the Chrome
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console.
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As a follow up to finding `N+1` queries with Bullet, consider writing a [QueryRecoder test](query_recorder.md) to prevent a regression.
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## Settings that impact performance
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1. `development` environment by default works with hot-reloading enabled, this makes Rails to check file changes every request, and create a potential contention lock, as hot reload is single threaded.
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1. `development` environment can load code lazily once the request is fired which results in first request to always be slow.
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To disable those features for profiling/benchmarking set the `RAILS_PROFILE` environment variable to `true` before starting GitLab. For example when using GDK:
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- create a file [`env.runit`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit/-/blob/master/doc/runit.md#modifying-environment-configuration-for-services) in the root GDK directory
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- add `export RAILS_PROFILE=true` to your `env.runit` file
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- restart GDK with `gdk restart`
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*This environment variable is only applicable for the development mode.*
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