A project can have the same `LfsObject` linked with up to three `LfsObjectsProject` records. Each of these records would be for a different repository, recorded in the `repository_type` property. The different repositories at time of writing are "project", "wiki", and "design". See https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/merge_requests/13894 This change exports the list of `repository_type`s as a JSON mapping of oid => repository_types, which are imported to recreate the correct `LfsObjectsProject` records. https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/issues/11090
10 KiB
Import/Export development documentation
Troubleshooing and general development guidelines and tips for the Import/Export feature.
This document is originally based on the Import/Export 201 presentation available on YouTube.
Troubleshooting commands
Finds information about the status of the import and further logs using the JID:
# Rails console
Project.find_by_full_path('group/project').import_state.slice(:jid, :status, :last_error)
> {"jid"=>"414dec93f941a593ea1a6894", "status"=>"finished", "last_error"=>nil}
# Logs
grep JID /var/log/gitlab/sidekiq/current
grep "Import/Export error" /var/log/gitlab/sidekiq/current
grep "Import/Export backtrace" /var/log/gitlab/sidekiq/current
tail /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/importer.log
Troubleshooting performance issues
Read through the current performance problems using the Import/Export below.
OOM errors
Out of memory (OOM) errors are normally caused by the Sidekiq Memory Killer:
SIDEKIQ_MEMORY_KILLER_MAX_RSS = 2GB in GitLab.com
An import status started
, and the following sidekiq logs will signal a memory issue:
WARN: Work still in progress <struct with JID>
Timeouts
Timeout errors occur due to the StuckImportJobsWorker
marking the process as failed:
class StuckImportJobsWorker
include ApplicationWorker
include CronjobQueue
IMPORT_JOBS_EXPIRATION = 15.hours.to_i
def perform
import_state_without_jid_count = mark_import_states_without_jid_as_failed!
import_state_with_jid_count = mark_import_states_with_jid_as_failed!
...
Marked stuck import jobs as failed. JIDs: xyz
+-----------+ +-----------------------------------+
|Export Job |--->| Calls ActiveRecord `as_json` and |
+-----------+ | `to_json` on all project models |
+-----------------------------------+
+-----------+ +-----------------------------------+
|Import Job |--->| Loads all JSON in memory, then |
+-----------+ | inserts into the DB in batches |
+-----------------------------------+
Problems and solutions
Problem | Possible solutions |
---|---|
Slow JSON loading/dumping models from the database | split the worker |
Batch export | |
Optimize SQL | |
Move away from ActiveRecord callbacks (difficult) |
|
High memory usage (see also some analysis | DB Commit sweet spot that uses less memory |
Netflix Fast JSON API may help | |
Batch reading/writing to disk and any SQL |
Temporary solutions
While the performance problems are not tackled, there is a process to workaround importing big projects, using a foreground import:
Foreground import of big projects for customers. (Using the import template in the infrastructure tracker)
Security
The Import/Export feature is constantly updated (adding new things to export), however the code hasn't been refactored in a long time. We should perform a code audit to make sure its dynamic nature does not increase the number of security concerns.
Security in the code
Some of these classes provide a layer of security to the Import/Export.
The AttributeCleaner
removes any prohibited keys:
# AttributeCleaner
# Removes all `_ids` and other prohibited keys
class AttributeCleaner
ALLOWED_REFERENCES = RelationFactory::PROJECT_REFERENCES + RelationFactory::USER_REFERENCES + ['group_id']
def clean
@relation_hash.reject do |key, _value|
prohibited_key?(key) || !@relation_class.attribute_method?(key) || excluded_key?(key)
end.except('id')
end
...
The AttributeConfigurationSpec
checks and confirms the addition of new columns:
# AttributeConfigurationSpec
<<-MSG
It looks like #{relation_class}, which is exported using the project Import/Export, has new attributes:
Please add the attribute(s) to SAFE_MODEL_ATTRIBUTES if you consider this can be exported.
Otherwise, please blacklist the attribute(s) in IMPORT_EXPORT_CONFIG by adding it to its correspondent
model in the +excluded_attributes+ section.
SAFE_MODEL_ATTRIBUTES: #{File.expand_path(safe_attributes_file)}
IMPORT_EXPORT_CONFIG: #{Gitlab::ImportExport.config_file}
MSG
The ModelConfigurationSpec
checks and confirms the addition of new models:
# ModelConfigurationSpec
<<-MSG
New model(s) <#{new_models.join(',')}> have been added, related to #{parent_model_name}, which is exported by
the Import/Export feature.
If you think this model should be included in the export, please add it to `#{Gitlab::ImportExport.config_file}`.
Definitely add it to `#{File.expand_path(ce_models_yml)}`
to signal that you've handled this error and to prevent it from showing up in the future.
MSG
The ExportFileSpec
detects encrypted or sensitive columns:
# ExportFileSpec
<<-MSG
Found a new sensitive word <#{key_found}>, which is part of the hash #{parent.inspect}
If you think this information shouldn't get exported, please exclude the model or attribute in
IMPORT_EXPORT_CONFIG.
Otherwise, please add the exception to +safe_list+ in CURRENT_SPEC using #{sensitive_word} as the
key and the correspondent hash or model as the value.
Also, if the attribute is a generated unique token, please add it to RelationFactory::TOKEN_RESET_MODELS
if it needs to be reset (to prevent duplicate column problems while importing to the same instance).
IMPORT_EXPORT_CONFIG: #{Gitlab::ImportExport.config_file}
CURRENT_SPEC: #{__FILE__}
MSG
Versioning
Import/Export does not use strict SemVer, since it has frequent constant changes during a single GitLab release. It does require an update when there is a breaking change.
# ImportExport
module Gitlab
module ImportExport
extend self
# For every version update, the version history in import_export.md has to be kept up to date.
VERSION = '0.2.4'
Version history
The current version history also displays the equivalent GitLab version and it is useful for knowing which versions won't be compatible between them.
GitLab version | Import/Export version |
---|---|
11.1 to current | 0.2.4 |
10.8 | 0.2.3 |
10.4 | 0.2.2 |
... | ... |
8.10.3 | 0.1.3 |
8.10.0 | 0.1.2 |
8.9.5 | 0.1.1 |
8.9.0 | 0.1.0 |
When to bump the version up
We will have to bump the verision if we rename model/columns or perform any format modifications in the JSON structure or the file structure of the archive file.
We do not need to bump the version up in any of the following cases:
- Add a new column or a model
- Remove a column or model (unless there is a DB constraint)
- Export new things (such as a new type of upload)
Every time we bump the version, the integration specs will fail and can be fixed with:
bundle exec rake gitlab:import_export:bump_version
Renaming columns or models
This is a relatively common occurrence that will require a version bump.
There is also the RC problem - GitLab.com runs an RC, prior to any customers, meaning that we want to bump the version up in the next version (or patch release).
For example:
- Add rename to
RelationRenameService
in X.Y - Remove it from
RelationRenameService
in X.Y + 1 - Bump Import/Export version in X.Y + 1
module Gitlab
module ImportExport
class RelationRenameService
RENAMES = {
'pipelines' => 'ci_pipelines' # Added in 11.6, remove in 11.7
}.freeze
A quick dive into the code
Import/Export configuration (import_export.yml
)
The main configuration import_export.yml
defines what models can be exported/imported.
Model relationships to be included in the project import/export:
project_tree:
- labels:
- :priorities
- milestones:
- events:
- :push_event_payload
- issues:
- events:
- ...
Only include the following attributes for the models specified:
included_attributes:
user:
- :id
- :email
...
Do not include the following attributes for the models specified:
excluded_attributes:
project:
- :name
- :path
- ...
Extra methods to be called by the export:
# Methods
methods:
labels:
- :type
label:
- :type
Import
The import job status moves from none
to finished
or failed
into different states:
import_status: none -> scheduled -> started -> finished/failed
While the status is started
the Importer
code processes each step required for the import.
# ImportExport::Importer
module Gitlab
module ImportExport
class Importer
def execute
if import_file && check_version! && restorers.all?(&:restore) && overwrite_project
project_tree.restored_project
else
raise Projects::ImportService::Error.new(@shared.errors.join(', '))
end
rescue => e
raise Projects::ImportService::Error.new(e.message)
ensure
remove_import_file
end
def restorers
[repo_restorer, wiki_restorer, project_tree, avatar_restorer,
uploads_restorer, lfs_restorer, statistics_restorer]
end
The export service, is similar to the Importer
, restoring data instead of saving it.
Export
# ImportExport::ExportService
module Projects
module ImportExport
class ExportService < BaseService
def save_all!
if save_services
Gitlab::ImportExport::Saver.save(project: project, shared: @shared)
notify_success
else
cleanup_and_notify_error!
end
end
def save_services
[version_saver, avatar_saver, project_tree_saver, uploads_saver, repo_saver,
wiki_repo_saver, lfs_saver].all?(&:save)
end