209 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
209 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
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---
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stage: none
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group: unassigned
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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
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---
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# Sidekiq idempotent jobs
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It's known that a job can fail for multiple reasons. For example, network outages or bugs.
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In order to address this, Sidekiq has a built-in retry mechanism that is
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used by default by most workers within GitLab.
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It's expected that a job can run again after a failure without major side-effects for the
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application or users, which is why Sidekiq encourages
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jobs to be [idempotent and transactional](https://github.com/mperham/sidekiq/wiki/Best-Practices#2-make-your-job-idempotent-and-transactional).
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As a general rule, a worker can be considered idempotent if:
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- It can safely run multiple times with the same arguments.
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- Application side-effects are expected to happen only once
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(or side-effects of a second run do not have an effect).
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A good example of that would be a cache expiration worker.
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A job scheduled for an idempotent worker is [deduplicated](#deduplication) when
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an unstarted job with the same arguments is already in the queue.
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## Ensuring a worker is idempotent
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Make sure the worker tests pass using the following shared example:
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```ruby
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include_examples 'an idempotent worker' do
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it 'marks the MR as merged' do
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# Using subject inside this block will process the job multiple times
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subject
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expect(merge_request.state).to eq('merged')
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end
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end
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```
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Use the `perform_multiple` method directly instead of `job.perform` (this
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helper method is automatically included for workers).
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## Declaring a worker as idempotent
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```ruby
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class IdempotentWorker
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include ApplicationWorker
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# Declares a worker is idempotent and can
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# safely run multiple times.
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idempotent!
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# ...
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end
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```
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It's encouraged to only have the `idempotent!` call in the top-most worker class, even if
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the `perform` method is defined in another class or module.
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If the worker class isn't marked as idempotent, a cop fails. Consider skipping
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the cop if you're not confident your job can safely run multiple times.
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## Deduplication
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When a job for an idempotent worker is enqueued while another
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unstarted job is already in the queue, GitLab drops the second
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job. The work is skipped because the same work would be
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done by the job that was scheduled first; by the time the second
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job executed, the first job would do nothing.
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### Strategies
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GitLab supports two deduplication strategies:
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- `until_executing`
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- `until_executed`
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More [deduplication strategies have been
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suggested](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/gl-infra/scalability/-/issues/195). If
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you are implementing a worker that could benefit from a different
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strategy, please comment in the issue.
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#### Until Executing
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This strategy takes a lock when a job is added to the queue, and removes that lock before the job starts.
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For example, `AuthorizedProjectsWorker` takes a user ID. When the
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worker runs, it recalculates a user's authorizations. GitLab schedules
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this job each time an action potentially changes a user's
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authorizations. If the same user is added to two projects at the
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same time, the second job can be skipped if the first job hasn't
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begun, because when the first job runs, it creates the
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authorizations for both projects.
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```ruby
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module AuthorizedProjectUpdate
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class UserRefreshOverUserRangeWorker
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include ApplicationWorker
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deduplicate :until_executing
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idempotent!
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# ...
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end
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end
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```
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#### Until Executed
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This strategy takes a lock when a job is added to the queue, and removes that lock after the job finishes.
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It can be used to prevent jobs from running simultaneously multiple times.
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```ruby
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module Ci
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class BuildTraceChunkFlushWorker
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include ApplicationWorker
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deduplicate :until_executed
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idempotent!
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# ...
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end
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end
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```
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Also, you can pass `if_deduplicated: :reschedule_once` option to re-run a job once after
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the currently running job finished and deduplication happened at least once.
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This ensures that the latest result is always produced even if a race condition
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happened. See [this issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/342123) for more information.
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### Scheduling jobs in the future
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GitLab doesn't skip jobs scheduled in the future, as we assume that
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the state has changed by the time the job is scheduled to
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execute. Deduplication of jobs scheduled in the feature is possible
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for both `until_executed` and `until_executing` strategies.
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If you do want to deduplicate jobs scheduled in the future,
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this can be specified on the worker by passing `including_scheduled: true` argument
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when defining deduplication strategy:
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```ruby
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module AuthorizedProjectUpdate
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class UserRefreshOverUserRangeWorker
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include ApplicationWorker
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deduplicate :until_executing, including_scheduled: true
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idempotent!
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# ...
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end
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end
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```
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## Setting the deduplication time-to-live (TTL)
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Deduplication depends on an idempotency key that is stored in Redis. This is normally
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cleared by the configured deduplication strategy.
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However, the key can remain until its TTL in certain cases like:
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1. `until_executing` is used but the job was never enqueued or executed after the Sidekiq
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client middleware was run.
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1. `until_executed` is used but the job fails to finish due to retry exhaustion, gets
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interrupted the maximum number of times, or gets lost.
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The default value is 6 hours. During this time, jobs won't be enqueued even if the first
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job never executed or finished.
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The TTL can be configured with:
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```ruby
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class ProjectImportScheduleWorker
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include ApplicationWorker
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idempotent!
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deduplicate :until_executing, ttl: 5.minutes
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end
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```
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Duplicate jobs can happen when the TTL is reached, so make sure you lower this only for jobs
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that can tolerate some duplication.
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### Preserve the latest WAL location for idempotent jobs
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> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/69372) in GitLab 14.3.
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> - [Enabled on GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/338350) in GitLab 14.4.
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> - [Enabled on self-managed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/338350) in GitLab 14.6.
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The deduplication always take into account the latest binary replication pointer, not the first one.
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This happens because we drop the same job scheduled for the second time and the Write-Ahead Log (WAL) is lost.
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This could lead to comparing the old WAL location and reading from a stale replica.
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To support both deduplication and maintaining data consistency with load balancing,
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we are preserving the latest WAL location for idempotent jobs in Redis.
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This way we are always comparing the latest binary replication pointer,
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making sure that we read from the replica that is fully caught up.
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FLAG:
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On self-managed GitLab, by default this feature is available. To hide the feature, ask an administrator to
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[disable the feature flag](../../administration/feature_flags.md) named `preserve_latest_wal_locations_for_idempotent_jobs`.
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This feature flag is related to GitLab development and is not intended to be used by GitLab administrators, though.
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On GitLab.com, this feature is available.
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