331 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
331 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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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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# GitLab EventStore
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## Background
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The monolithic GitLab project is becoming larger and more domains are being defined.
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As a result, these domains are becoming entangled with each others due to temporal coupling.
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An emblematic example is the [`PostReceive`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/blob/master/app/workers/post_receive.rb)
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worker where a lot happens across multiple domains. If a new behavior reacts to
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a new commit being pushed, then we add code somewhere in `PostReceive` or its sub-components
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(`Git::ProcessRefChangesService`, for example).
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This type of architecture:
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- Is a violation of the Single Responsibility Principle.
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- Increases the risk of adding code to a codebase you are not familiar with.
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There may be nuances you don't know about which may introduce bugs or a performance degradation.
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- Violates domain boundaries. Inside a specific namespace (for example `Git::`) we suddenly see
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classes from other domains chiming in (like `Ci::` or `MergeRequests::`).
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## What is EventStore?
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`Gitlab:EventStore` is a basic pub-sub system built on top of the existing Sidekiq workers and observability we have today.
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We use this system to apply an event-driven approach when modeling a domain while keeping coupling
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to a minimum.
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This essentially leaves the existing Sidekiq workers as-is to perform asynchronous work but inverts
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the dependency.
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### EventStore example
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When a CI pipeline is created we update the head pipeline for any merge request matching the
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pipeline's `ref`. The merge request can then display the status of the latest pipeline.
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#### Without the EventStore
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We change `Ci::CreatePipelineService` and add logic (like an `if` statement) to check if the
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pipeline is created. Then we schedule a worker to run some side-effects for the `MergeRequests::` domain.
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This style violates the [Open-Closed Principle](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open%E2%80%93closed_principle)
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and unnecessarily add side-effects logic from other domains, increasing coupling:
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```mermaid
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graph LR
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subgraph ci[CI]
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cp[CreatePipelineService]
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end
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subgraph mr[MergeRequests]
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upw[UpdateHeadPipelineWorker]
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end
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subgraph no[Namespaces::Onboarding]
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pow[PipelinesOnboardedWorker]
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end
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cp -- perform_async --> upw
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cp -- perform_async --> pow
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```
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#### With the EventStore
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`Ci::CreatePipelineService` publishes an event `Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent` and its responsibility stops here.
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The `MergeRequests::` domain can subscribe to this event with a worker `MergeRequests::UpdateHeadPipelineWorker`, so:
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- Side-effects are scheduled asynchronously and don't impact the main business transaction that
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emits the domain event.
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- More side-effects can be added without modifying the main business transaction.
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- We can clearly see what domains are involved and their ownership.
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- We can identify what events occur in the system because they are explicitly declared.
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With `Gitlab::EventStore` there is still coupling between the subscriber (Sidekiq worker) and the schema of the domain event.
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This level of coupling is much smaller than having the main transaction (`Ci::CreatePipelineService`) coupled to:
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- multiple subscribers.
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- multiple ways of invoking subscribers (including conditional invocations).
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- multiple ways of passing parameters.
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```mermaid
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graph LR
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subgraph ci[CI]
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cp[CreatePipelineService]
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cp -- publish --> e[PipelineCreateEvent]
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end
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subgraph mr[MergeRequests]
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upw[UpdateHeadPipelineWorker]
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end
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subgraph no[Namespaces::Onboarding]
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pow[PipelinesOnboardedWorker]
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end
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upw -. subscribe .-> e
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pow -. subscribe .-> e
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```
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Each subscriber, being itself a Sidekiq worker, can specify any attributes that are related
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to the type of work they are responsible for. For example, one subscriber could define
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`urgency: high` while another one less critical could set `urgency: low`.
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The EventStore is only an abstraction that allows us to have Dependency Inversion. This helps
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separating a business transaction from side-effects (often executed in other domains).
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When an event is published, the EventStore calls `perform_async` on each subscribed worker,
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passing in the event information as arguments. This essentially schedules a Sidekiq job on each
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subscriber's queue.
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This means that nothing else changes with regards to how subscribers work, as they are just
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Sidekiq workers. For example: if a worker (subscriber) fails to execute a job, the job is put
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back into Sidekiq to be retried.
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## EventStore advantages
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- Subscribers (Sidekiq workers) can be set to run quicker by changing the worker weight
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if the side-effect is critical.
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- Automatically enforce the fact that side-effects run asynchronously.
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This makes it safe for other domains to subscribe to events without affecting the performance of the
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main business transaction.
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## Define an event
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An `Event` object represents a domain event that occurred in a bounded context.
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Notify other bounded contexts about something
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that happened by publishing events, so that they can react to it.
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Define new event classes under `app/events/<namespace>/` with a name representing something that happened in the past:
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```ruby
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class Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent < Gitlab::EventStore::Event
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def schema
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{
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'type' => 'object',
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'required' => ['pipeline_id'],
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'properties' => {
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'pipeline_id' => { 'type' => 'integer' },
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'ref' => { 'type' => 'string' }
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}
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}
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end
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end
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```
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The schema is validated immediately when we initialize the event object so we can ensure that
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publishers follow the contract with the subscribers.
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We recommend using optional properties as much as possible, which require fewer rollouts for schema changes.
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However, `required` properties could be used for unique identifiers of the event's subject. For example:
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- `pipeline_id` can be a required property for a `Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent`.
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- `project_id` can be a required property for a `Projects::ProjectDeletedEvent`.
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Publish only properties that are needed by the subscribers without tailoring the payload to specific subscribers.
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The payload should fully represent the event and not contain loosely related properties. For example:
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```ruby
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Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent.new(data: {
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pipeline_id: pipeline.id,
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# unless all subscribers need merge request IDs,
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# this is data that can be fetched by the subscriber.
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merge_request_ids: pipeline.all_merge_requests.pluck(:id)
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})
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```
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Publishing events with more properties provides the subscribers with the data
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they need in the first place. Otherwise subscribers have to fetch the additional data from the database.
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However, this can lead to continuous changes to the schema and possibly adding properties that may not
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represent the single source of truth.
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It's best to use this technique as a performance optimization. For example: when an event has many
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subscribers that all fetch the same data again from the database.
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### Update the schema
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Changes to the schema require multiple rollouts. While the new version is being deployed:
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- Existing publishers can publish events using the old version.
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- Existing subscribers can consume events using the old version.
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- Events get persisted in the Sidekiq queue as job arguments, so we could have 2 versions of the schema during deployments.
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As changing the schema ultimately impacts the Sidekiq arguments, please refer to our
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[Sidekiq style guide](sidekiq/compatibility_across_updates.md#changing-the-arguments-for-a-worker) with regards to multiple rollouts.
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#### Add properties
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1. Rollout 1:
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- Add new properties as optional (not `required`).
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- Update the subscriber so it can consume events with and without the new properties.
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1. Rollout 2:
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- Change the publisher to provide the new property
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1. Rollout 3: (if the property should be `required`):
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- Change the schema and the subscriber code to always expect it.
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#### Remove properties
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1. Rollout 1:
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- If the property is `required`, make it optional.
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- Update the subscriber so it does not always expect the property.
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1. Rollout 2:
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- Remove the property from the event publishing.
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- Remove the code from the subscriber that processes the property.
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#### Other changes
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For other changes, like renaming a property, use the same steps:
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1. Remove the old property
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1. Add the new property
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## Publish an event
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To publish the event from the [previous example](#define-an-event):
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```ruby
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Gitlab::EventStore.publish(
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Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent.new(data: { pipeline_id: pipeline.id })
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)
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```
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## Create a subscriber
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A subscriber is a Sidekiq worker that includes the `Gitlab::EventStore::Subscriber` module.
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This module takes care of the `perform` method and provides a better abstraction to handle
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the event safely via the `handle_event` method. For example:
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```ruby
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module MergeRequests
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class UpdateHeadPipelineWorker
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include Gitlab::EventStore::Subscriber
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def handle_event(event)
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Ci::Pipeline.find_by_id(event.data[:pipeline_id]).try do |pipeline|
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# ...
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end
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end
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end
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end
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```
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## Register the subscriber to the event
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To subscribe the worker to a specific event in `lib/gitlab/event_store.rb`,
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add a line like this to the `Gitlab::EventStore.configure!` method:
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```ruby
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module Gitlab
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module EventStore
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def self.configure!(store)
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# ...
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store.subscribe ::MergeRequests::UpdateHeadPipelineWorker, to: ::Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent
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# ...
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end
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end
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end
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```
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A worker that is only defined in the EE codebase can subscribe to an event in the same way by
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declaring the subscription in `ee/lib/ee/gitlab/event_store.rb`.
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Subscriptions are stored in memory when the Rails app is loaded and they are immediately frozen.
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It's not possible to modify subscriptions at runtime.
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### Conditional dispatch of events
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A subscription can specify a condition when to accept an event:
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```ruby
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store.subscribe ::MergeRequests::UpdateHeadPipelineWorker,
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to: ::Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent,
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if: -> (event) { event.data[:merge_request_id].present? }
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```
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This tells the event store to dispatch `Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent`s to the subscriber if
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the condition is met.
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This technique can avoid scheduling Sidekiq jobs if the subscriber is interested in a
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small subset of events.
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WARNING:
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When using conditional dispatch it must contain only cheap conditions because they are
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executed synchronously every time the given event is published.
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For complex conditions it's best to subscribe to all the events and then handle the logic
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in the `handle_event` method of the subscriber worker.
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## Testing
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The publisher's responsibility is to ensure that the event is published correctly.
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To test that an event has been published correctly, we can use the RSpec matcher `:publish_event`:
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```ruby
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it 'publishes a ProjectDeleted event with project id and namespace id' do
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expected_data = { project_id: project.id, namespace_id: project.namespace_id }
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# The matcher verifies that when the block is called, the block publishes the expected event and data.
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expect { destroy_project(project, user, {}) }
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.to publish_event(Projects::ProjectDeletedEvent)
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.with(expected_data)
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end
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```
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The subscriber must ensure that a published event can be consumed correctly. For this purpose
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we have added helpers and shared examples to standardize the way we test subscribers:
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```ruby
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RSpec.describe MergeRequests::UpdateHeadPipelineWorker do
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let(:pipeline_created_event) { Ci::PipelineCreatedEvent.new(data: ({ pipeline_id: pipeline.id })) }
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# This shared example ensures that an event is published and correctly processed by
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# the current subscriber (`described_class`).
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it_behaves_like 'subscribes to event' do
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let(:event) { pipeline_created_event }
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end
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it 'does something' do
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# This helper directly executes `perform` ensuring that `handle_event` is called correctly.
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consume_event(subscriber: described_class, event: pipeline_created_event)
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# run expectations
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end
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end
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```
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