# frozen_string_literal: true namespace :gitlab do desc "GitLab | Setup production application" task setup: :gitlab_environment do check_gitaly_connection setup_db end def check_gitaly_connection Gitlab.config.repositories.storages.each do |name, _details| Gitlab::GitalyClient::ServerService.new(name).info end rescue GRPC::Unavailable => ex puts "Failed to connect to Gitaly...".color(:red) puts "Error: #{ex}" exit 1 end def setup_db warn_user_is_not_gitlab unless ENV['force'] == 'yes' puts "This will create the necessary database tables and seed the database." puts "You will lose any previous data stored in the database." ask_to_continue puts "" end # In production, we might want to prevent ourselves from shooting # ourselves in the foot, so let's only do this in a test or # development environment. terminate_all_connections unless Rails.env.production? Rake::Task["db:reset"].invoke Rake::Task["db:seed_fu"].invoke rescue Gitlab::TaskAbortedByUserError puts "Quitting...".color(:red) exit 1 end # If there are any clients connected to the DB, PostgreSQL won't let # you drop the database. It's possible that Sidekiq, Puma, or # some other client will be hanging onto a connection, preventing # the DROP DATABASE from working. To workaround this problem, this # method terminates all the connections so that a subsequent DROP # will work. def self.terminate_all_connections cmd = <<~SQL SELECT pg_terminate_backend(pg_stat_activity.pid) FROM pg_stat_activity WHERE datname = current_database() AND pid <> pg_backend_pid(); SQL ActiveRecord::Base.connection.execute(cmd)&.result_status == PG::PGRES_TUPLES_OK rescue ActiveRecord::NoDatabaseError end end