279 lines
19 KiB
Markdown
279 lines
19 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Data Stores
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group: Database
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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/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Database Review Guidelines
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This page is specific to database reviews. Refer to our
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[code review guide](code_review.md) for broader advice and best
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practices for code review in general.
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## General process
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A database review is required for:
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- Changes that touch the database schema or perform data migrations,
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including files in:
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- `db/`
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- `lib/gitlab/background_migration/`
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- Changes to the database tooling. For example:
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- migration or ActiveRecord helpers in `lib/gitlab/database/`
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- load balancing
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- Changes that produce SQL queries that are beyond the obvious. It is
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generally up to the author of a merge request to decide whether or
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not complex queries are being introduced and if they require a
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database review.
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- Changes in Service Data metrics that use `count`, `distinct_count`, `estimate_batch_distinct_count` and `sum`.
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These metrics could have complex queries over large tables.
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See the [Product Intelligence Guide](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/product-intelligence-guide/)
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for implementation details.
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A database reviewer is expected to look out for overly complex
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queries in the change and review those closer. If the author does not
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point out specific queries for review and there are no overly
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complex queries, it is enough to concentrate on reviewing the
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migration only.
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### Required
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You must provide the following artifacts when you request a ~database review.
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If your merge request description does not include these items, the review is reassigned back to the author.
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#### Migrations
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If new migrations are introduced, in the MR **you are required to provide**:
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- The output of both migrating (`db:migrate`) and rolling back (`db:rollback`) for all migrations.
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We have automated tooling for
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[GitLab](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab) (provided by the
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[`db:check-migrations`](database/dbcheck-migrations-job.md) pipeline job) that provides this output for migrations on
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~database merge requests. You do not need to provide this information manually
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if the bot can do it for you. The bot also checks that migrations are correctly
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reversible.
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#### Queries
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If new queries have been introduced or existing queries have been updated, **you are required to provide**:
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- [Query plans](#query-plans) for each raw SQL query included in the merge request along with the link to the query plan following each raw SQL snippet.
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- [Raw SQL](#raw-sql) for all changed or added queries (as translated from ActiveRecord queries).
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- In case of updating an existing query, the raw SQL of both the old and the new version of the query should be provided together with their query plans.
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Refer to [Preparation when adding or modifying queries](#preparation-when-adding-or-modifying-queries) for how to provide this information.
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### Roles and process
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A merge request **author**'s role is to:
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- Decide whether a database review is needed.
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- If database review is needed, add the ~database label.
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- [Prepare the merge request for a database review](#how-to-prepare-the-merge-request-for-a-database-review).
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- Provide the [required](#required) artifacts prior to submitting the MR.
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A database **reviewer**'s role is to:
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- Ensure the [required](#required) artifacts are provided and in the proper format. If they are not, reassign the merge request back to the author.
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- Perform a first-pass review on the MR and suggest improvements to the author.
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- Once satisfied, relabel the MR with ~"database::reviewed", approve it, and
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request a review from the database **maintainer** suggested by Reviewer
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Roulette. Remove yourself as a reviewer once this has been done.
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A database **maintainer**'s role is to:
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- Perform the final database review on the MR.
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- Discuss further improvements or other relevant changes with the
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database reviewer and the MR author.
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- Finally approve the MR and relabel the MR with ~"database::approved"
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- Merge the MR if no other approvals are pending or pass it on to
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other maintainers as required (frontend, backend, documentation).
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- If not merging, remove yourself as a reviewer.
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### Distributing review workload
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Review workload is distributed using [reviewer roulette](code_review.md#reviewer-roulette)
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([example](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/merge_requests/25181#note_147551725)).
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The MR author should request a review from the suggested database
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**reviewer**. When they sign off, they hand over to
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the suggested database **maintainer**.
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If reviewer roulette didn't suggest a database reviewer & maintainer,
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make sure you have applied the ~database label and rerun the
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`danger-review` CI job, or pick someone from the
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[`@gl-database` team](https://gitlab.com/groups/gl-database/-/group_members).
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### How to prepare the merge request for a database review
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To make reviewing easier and therefore faster, take
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the following preparations into account.
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#### Preparation when adding migrations
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- Ensure `db/structure.sql` is updated as [documented](migration_style_guide.md#schema-changes), and additionally ensure that the relevant version files under
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`db/schema_migrations` were added or removed.
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- Ensure that the Database Dictionary is updated as [documented](database/database_dictionary.md).
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- Make migrations reversible by using the `change` method or include a `down` method when using `up`.
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- Include either a rollback procedure or describe how to rollback changes.
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- Check that the [`db:check-migrations`](database/dbcheck-migrations-job.md) pipeline job has run successfully and the migration rollback behaves as expected.
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- Ensure the `db:check-schema` job has run successfully and no unexpected schema changes are introduced in a rollback. This job may only trigger a warning if the schema was changed.
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- Verify that the previously mentioned jobs continue to succeed whenever you modify the migrations during the review process.
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- Add tests for the migration in `spec/migrations` if necessary. See [Testing Rails migrations at GitLab](testing_guide/testing_migrations_guide.md) for more details.
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- When [high-traffic](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/rubocop/rubocop-migrations.yml#L3) tables are involved in the migration, use the [`enable_lock_retries`](migration_style_guide.md#retry-mechanism-when-acquiring-database-locks) method to enable lock-retries. Review the relevant [examples in our documentation](migration_style_guide.md#usage-with-transactional-migrations) for use cases and solutions.
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- Ensure RuboCop checks are not disabled unless there's a valid reason to.
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- When adding an index to a [large table](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/rubocop/rubocop-migrations.yml#L3),
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test its execution using `CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY` in the `#database-lab` Slack channel and add the execution time to the MR description:
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- Execution time largely varies between `#database-lab` and GitLab.com, but an elevated execution time from `#database-lab`
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can give a hint that the execution on GitLab.com is also considerably high.
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- If the execution from `#database-lab` is longer than `1h`, the index should be moved to a [post-migration](database/post_deployment_migrations.md).
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Keep in mind that in this case you may need to split the migration and the application changes in separate releases to ensure the index
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is in place when the code that needs it is deployed.
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- Manually trigger the [database testing](database/database_migration_pipeline.md) job (`db:gitlabcom-database-testing`) in the `test` stage.
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- This job runs migrations in a production-like environment (similar to `#database_lab`) and posts to the MR its findings (queries, runtime, size change).
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- Review migration runtimes and any warnings.
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#### Preparation when adding data migrations
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Data migrations are inherently risky. Additional actions are required to reduce the possibility
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of error that would result in corruption or loss of production data.
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Include in the MR description:
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- If the migration itself is not reversible, details of how data changes could be reverted in the event of an incident. For example, in the case of a migration that deletes records (an operation that most of the times is not automatically reversible), how _could_ the deleted records be recovered.
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- If the migration deletes data, apply the label `~data-deletion`.
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- Concise descriptions of possible user experience impact of an error; for example, "Issues would unexpectedly go missing from Epics".
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- Relevant data from the [query plans](#query-plans) that indicate the query works as expected; such as the approximate number of records that are modified or deleted.
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#### Preparation when adding or modifying queries
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##### Raw SQL
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- Write the raw SQL in the MR description. Preferably formatted
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nicely with [pgFormatter](https://sqlformat.darold.net) or
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[paste.depesz.com](https://paste.depesz.com) and using regular quotes
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<!-- vale gitlab.NonStandardQuotes = NO -->
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(for example, `"projects"."id"`) and avoiding smart quotes (for example, `“projects”.“id”`).
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<!-- vale gitlab.NonStandardQuotes = YES -->
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- In case of queries generated dynamically by using parameters, there should be one raw SQL query for each variation.
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For example, a finder for issues that may take as a parameter an optional filter on projects,
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should include both the version of the query over issues and the one that joins issues
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and projects and applies the filter.
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There are finders or other methods that can generate a very large amount of permutations.
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There is no need to exhaustively add all the possible generated queries, just the one with
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all the parameters included and one for each type of queries generated.
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For example, if joins or a group by clause are optional, the versions without the group by clause
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and with less joins should be also included, while keeping the appropriate filters for the remaining tables.
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- If a query is always used with a limit and an offset, those should always be
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included with the maximum allowed limit used and a non 0 offset.
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##### Query Plans
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- The query plan for each raw SQL query included in the merge request along with the link to the query plan following each raw SQL snippet.
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- Provide a public link to the plan from either:
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- [postgres.ai](https://postgres.ai/): Follow the link in `#database-lab` and generate a shareable, public link
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by clicking **Share** in the upper right corner.
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- [explain.depesz.com](https://explain.depesz.com) or [explain.dalibo.com](https://explain.dalibo.com): Paste both the plan and the query used in the form.
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- When providing query plans, make sure it hits enough data:
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- You can use a GitLab production replica to test your queries on a large scale,
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through the `#database-lab` Slack channel or through [ChatOps](database/understanding_explain_plans.md#chatops).
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- To produce a query plan with enough data, you can use the IDs of:
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- The `gitlab-org` namespace (`namespace_id = 9970`), for queries involving a group.
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- The `gitlab-org/gitlab-foss` (`project_id = 13083`) or the `gitlab-org/gitlab` (`project_id = 278964`) projects, for queries involving a project.
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- The `gitlab-qa` user (`user_id = 1614863`), for queries involving a user.
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- Optionally, you can also use your own `user_id`, or the `user_id` of a user with a long history within the project or group being used to generate the query plan.
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- That means that no query plan should return 0 records or less records than the provided limit (if a limit is included). If a query is used in batching, a proper example batch with adequate included results should be identified and provided.
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- If your queries belong to a new feature in GitLab.com and thus they don't return data in production:
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- You may analyze the query and to provide the plan from a local environment.
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- `#database-lab` and [postgres.ai](https://postgres.ai/) both allow updates to data (`exec UPDATE issues SET ...`) and creation of new tables and columns (`exec ALTER TABLE issues ADD COLUMN ...`).
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- More information on how to find the number of actual returned records in [Understanding EXPLAIN plans](database/understanding_explain_plans.md)
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- For query changes, it is best to provide both the SQL queries along with the
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plan _before_ and _after_ the change. This helps spot differences quickly.
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- Include data that shows the performance improvement, preferably in
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the form of a benchmark.
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#### Preparation when adding foreign keys to existing tables
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- Include a migration to remove orphaned rows in the source table **before** adding the foreign key.
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- Remove any instances of `dependent: ...` that may no longer be necessary.
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#### Preparation when adding tables
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- Order columns based on the [Ordering Table Columns](database/ordering_table_columns.md) guidelines.
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- Add foreign keys to any columns pointing to data in other tables, including [an index](migration_style_guide.md#adding-foreign-key-constraints).
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- Add indexes for fields that are used in statements such as `WHERE`, `ORDER BY`, `GROUP BY`, and `JOIN`s.
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- New tables and columns are not necessarily risky, but over time some access patterns are inherently
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difficult to scale. To identify these risky patterns in advance, we must document expectations for
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access and size. Include in the MR description answers to these questions:
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- What is the anticipated growth for the new table over the next 3 months, 6 months, 1 year? What assumptions are these based on?
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- How many reads and writes per hour would you expect this table to have in 3 months, 6 months, 1 year? Under what circumstances are rows updated? What assumptions are these based on?
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- Based on the anticipated data volume and access patterns, does the new table pose an availability risk to GitLab.com or self-managed instances? Does the proposed design scale to support the needs of GitLab.com and self-managed customers?
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#### Preparation when removing columns, tables, indexes, or other structures
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- Follow the [guidelines on dropping columns](database/avoiding_downtime_in_migrations.md#dropping-columns).
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- Generally it's best practice (but not a hard rule) to remove indexes and foreign keys in a post-deployment migration.
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- Exceptions include removing indexes and foreign keys for small tables.
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- If you're adding a composite index, another index might become redundant, so remove that in the same migration.
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For example adding `index(column_A, column_B, column_C)` makes the indexes `index(column_A, column_B)` and `index(column_A)` redundant.
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### How to review for database
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- Check migrations
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- Review relational modeling and design choices
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- Consider [access patterns and data layout](database/layout_and_access_patterns.md) if new tables or columns are added.
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- Review migrations follow [database migration style guide](migration_style_guide.md),
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for example
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- [Check ordering of columns](database/ordering_table_columns.md)
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- [Check indexes are present for foreign keys](migration_style_guide.md#adding-foreign-key-constraints)
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- Ensure that migrations execute in a transaction or only contain
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concurrent index/foreign key helpers (with transactions disabled)
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- If an index to a large table is added and its execution time was elevated (more than 1h) on `#database-lab`:
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- Ensure it was added in a post-migration.
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- Maintainer: After the merge request is merged, notify Release Managers about it on `#f_upcoming_release` Slack channel.
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- Check consistency with `db/structure.sql` and that migrations are [reversible](migration_style_guide.md#reversibility)
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- Check that the relevant version files under `db/schema_migrations` were added or removed.
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- Check queries timing (If any): In a single transaction, cumulative query time executed in a migration
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needs to fit comfortably in `15s` - preferably much less than that - on GitLab.com.
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- For column removals, make sure the column has been [ignored in a previous release](database/avoiding_downtime_in_migrations.md#dropping-columns)
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- Check [batched background migrations](database/batched_background_migrations.md):
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- Establish a time estimate for execution on GitLab.com. For historical purposes,
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it's highly recommended to include this estimation on the merge request description.
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This can be the number of expected batches times the delay interval.
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- Manually trigger the [database testing](database/database_migration_pipeline.md) job (`db:gitlabcom-database-testing`) in the `test` stage.
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- If a single `update` is below than `1s` the query can be placed
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directly in a regular migration (inside `db/migrate`).
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- Background migrations are normally used, but not limited to:
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- Migrating data in larger tables.
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- Making numerous SQL queries per record in a dataset.
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- Review queries (for example, make sure batch sizes are fine)
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- Because execution time can be longer than for a regular migration,
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it's suggested to treat background migrations as
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[post migrations](migration_style_guide.md#choose-an-appropriate-migration-type):
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place them in `db/post_migrate` instead of `db/migrate`.
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- Check [timing guidelines for migrations](migration_style_guide.md#how-long-a-migration-should-take)
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- Check migrations are reversible and implement a `#down` method
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- Check new table migrations:
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- Are the stated access patterns and volume reasonable? Do the assumptions they're based on seem sound? Do these patterns pose risks to stability?
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- Are the columns [ordered to conserve space](database/ordering_table_columns.md)?
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- Are there foreign keys for references to other tables?
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- Check data migrations:
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- Establish a time estimate for execution on GitLab.com.
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- Depending on timing, data migrations can be placed on regular, post-deploy, or background migrations.
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- Data migrations should be reversible too or come with a description of how to reverse, when possible.
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This applies to all types of migrations (regular, post-deploy, background).
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- Query performance
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- Check for any overly complex queries and queries the author specifically
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points out for review (if any)
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- If not present, ask the author to provide SQL queries and query plans
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(for example, by using [ChatOps](database/understanding_explain_plans.md#chatops) or direct
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database access)
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- For given queries, review parameters regarding data distribution
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- [Check query plans](database/understanding_explain_plans.md) and suggest improvements
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to queries (changing the query, schema or adding indexes and similar)
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- General guideline is for queries to come in below [100ms execution time](database/query_performance.md#timing-guidelines-for-queries)
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- Avoid N+1 problems and minimize the [query count](merge_request_performance_guidelines.md#query-counts).
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