gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/administration/operations/extra_sidekiq_routing.md

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# 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)