debian-mirror-gitlab/app/models/merge_request/diff_commit_user.rb
2021-09-30 23:02:18 +05:30

95 lines
3.2 KiB
Ruby

# frozen_string_literal: true
class MergeRequest::DiffCommitUser < ApplicationRecord
validates :name, length: { maximum: 512 }
validates :email, length: { maximum: 512 }
validates :name, presence: true, unless: :email
validates :email, presence: true, unless: :name
# Prepares a value to be inserted into a column in the table
# `merge_request_diff_commit_users`. Values in this table are limited to
# 512 characters.
#
# We treat empty strings as NULL values, as there's no point in (for
# example) storing a row where both the name and Email are an empty
# string. In addition, if we treated them differently we could end up with
# two rows: one where field X is NULL, and one where field X is an empty
# string. This is redundant, so we avoid storing such data.
def self.prepare(value)
value.present? ? value[0..511] : nil
end
# Creates a new row, or returns an existing one if a row already exists.
def self.find_or_create(name, email)
find_or_create_by!(name: name, email: email)
rescue ActiveRecord::RecordNotUnique
retry
end
# Finds many (name, email) pairs in bulk.
def self.bulk_find(pairs)
queries = {}
rows = []
pairs.each do |(name, email)|
queries[[name, email]] = where(name: name, email: email).to_sql
end
# We may end up having to query many users. To ensure we don't hit any
# query size limits, we get a fixed number of users at a time.
queries.values.each_slice(1_000).map do |slice|
rows.concat(from("(#{slice.join("\nUNION ALL\n")}) #{table_name}").to_a)
end
rows
end
# Finds or creates rows for the given pairs of names and Emails.
#
# The `names_and_emails` argument must be an Array/Set of tuples like so:
#
# [
# [name, email],
# [name, email],
# ...
# ]
#
# This method expects that the names and Emails have already been trimmed to
# at most 512 characters.
#
# The return value is a Hash that maps these tuples to instances of this
# model.
def self.bulk_find_or_create(pairs)
mapping = {}
create = []
# Over time, fewer new rows need to be created. We take advantage of that
# here by first finding all rows that already exist, using a limited number
# of queries (in most cases only one query will be needed).
bulk_find(pairs).each do |row|
mapping[[row.name, row.email]] = row
end
pairs.each do |(name, email)|
create << { name: name, email: email } unless mapping[[name, email]]
end
return mapping if create.empty?
# Sometimes we may need to insert new users into the table. We do this in
# bulk, so we only need one INSERT for all missing users.
insert_all(create, returning: %w[id name email]).each do |row|
mapping[[row['name'], row['email']]] =
new(id: row['id'], name: row['name'], email: row['email'])
end
# It's possible for (name, email) pairs to be inserted concurrently,
# resulting in the above insert not returning anything. Here we get any
# remaining users that were created concurrently.
bulk_find(pairs.reject { |pair| mapping.key?(pair) }).each do |row|
mapping[[row.name, row.email]] = row
end
mapping
end
end