188 lines
8 KiB
Markdown
188 lines
8 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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# Sidekiq guides
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We use [Sidekiq](https://github.com/mperham/sidekiq) as our background
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job processor. These guides are for writing jobs that will work well on
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GitLab.com and be consistent with our existing worker classes. For
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information on administering GitLab, see [configuring Sidekiq](../../administration/sidekiq/index.md).
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There are pages with additional detail on the following topics:
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1. [Compatibility across updates](compatibility_across_updates.md)
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1. [Job idempotency and job deduplication](idempotent_jobs.md)
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1. [Limited capacity worker: continuously performing work with a specified concurrency](limited_capacity_worker.md)
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1. [Logging](logging.md)
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1. [Worker attributes](worker_attributes.md)
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1. **Job urgency** specifies queuing and execution SLOs
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1. **Resource boundaries** and **external dependencies** for describing the workload
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1. **Feature categorization**
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1. **Database load balancing**
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## ApplicationWorker
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All workers should include `ApplicationWorker` instead of `Sidekiq::Worker`,
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which adds some convenience methods and automatically sets the queue based on
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the [routing rules](../../administration/sidekiq/extra_sidekiq_routing.md#queue-routing-rules).
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## Retries
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Sidekiq defaults to using [25 retries](https://github.com/mperham/sidekiq/wiki/Error-Handling#automatic-job-retry),
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with back-off between each retry. 25 retries means that the last retry
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would happen around three weeks after the first attempt (assuming all 24
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prior retries failed).
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For most workers - especially [idempotent workers](idempotent_jobs.md) -
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the default of 25 retries is more than sufficient. Many of our older
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workers declare 3 retries, which used to be the default within the
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GitLab application. 3 retries happen over the course of a couple of
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minutes, so the jobs are prone to failing completely.
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A lower retry count may be applicable if any of the below apply:
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1. The worker contacts an external service and we do not provide
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guarantees on delivery. For example, webhooks.
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1. The worker is not idempotent and running it multiple times could
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leave the system in an inconsistent state. For example, a worker that
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posts a system note and then performs an action: if the second step
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fails and the worker retries, the system note will be posted again.
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1. The worker is a cronjob that runs frequently. For example, if a cron
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job runs every hour, then we don't need to retry beyond an hour
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because we don't need two of the same job running at once.
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Each retry for a worker is counted as a failure in our metrics. A worker
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which always fails 9 times and succeeds on the 10th would have a 90%
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error rate.
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## Sidekiq Queues
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Previously, each worker had its own queue, which was automatically set based on the
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worker class name. For a worker named `ProcessSomethingWorker`, the queue name
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would be `process_something`. You can now route workers to a specific queue using
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[queue routing rules](../../administration/sidekiq/extra_sidekiq_routing.md#queue-routing-rules).
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In GDK, new workers are routed to a queue named `default`.
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If you're not sure what queue a worker uses,
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you can find it using `SomeWorker.queue`. There is almost never a reason to
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manually override the queue name using `sidekiq_options queue: :some_queue`.
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After adding a new worker, run `bin/rake
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gitlab:sidekiq:all_queues_yml:generate` to regenerate
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`app/workers/all_queues.yml` or `ee/app/workers/all_queues.yml` so that
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it can be picked up by
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[`sidekiq-cluster`](../../administration/sidekiq/extra_sidekiq_processes.md)
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in installations that don't use routing rules. To learn more about potential changes,
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read [Use routing rules by default and deprecate queue selectors for self-managed](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-com/gl-infra/-/epics/596).
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Additionally, run
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`bin/rake gitlab:sidekiq:sidekiq_queues_yml:generate` to regenerate
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`config/sidekiq_queues.yml`.
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## Queue Namespaces
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While different workers cannot share a queue, they can share a queue namespace.
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Defining a queue namespace for a worker makes it possible to start a Sidekiq
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process that automatically handles jobs for all workers in that namespace,
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without needing to explicitly list all their queue names. If, for example, all
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workers that are managed by `sidekiq-cron` use the `cronjob` queue namespace, we
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can spin up a Sidekiq process specifically for these kinds of scheduled jobs.
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If a new worker using the `cronjob` namespace is added later on, the Sidekiq
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process also picks up jobs for that worker (after having been restarted),
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without the need to change any configuration.
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A queue namespace can be set using the `queue_namespace` DSL class method:
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```ruby
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class SomeScheduledTaskWorker
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include ApplicationWorker
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queue_namespace :cronjob
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# ...
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end
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```
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Behind the scenes, this sets `SomeScheduledTaskWorker.queue` to
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`cronjob:some_scheduled_task`. Commonly used namespaces have their own
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concern module that can easily be included into the worker class, and that may
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set other Sidekiq options besides the queue namespace. `CronjobQueue`, for
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example, sets the namespace, but also disables retries.
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`bundle exec sidekiq` is namespace-aware, and listens on all
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queues in a namespace (technically: all queues prefixed with the namespace name)
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when a namespace is provided instead of a simple queue name in the `--queue`
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(`-q`) option, or in the `:queues:` section in `config/sidekiq_queues.yml`.
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Note that adding a worker to an existing namespace should be done with care, as
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the extra jobs take resources away from jobs from workers that were already
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there, if the resources available to the Sidekiq process handling the namespace
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are not adjusted appropriately.
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## Versioning
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Version can be specified on each Sidekiq worker class.
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This is then sent along when the job is created.
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```ruby
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class FooWorker
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include ApplicationWorker
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version 2
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def perform(*args)
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if job_version == 2
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foo = args.first['foo']
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else
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foo = args.first
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end
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end
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end
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```
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Under this schema, any worker is expected to be able to handle any job that was
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enqueued by an older version of that worker. This means that when changing the
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arguments a worker takes, you must increment the `version` (or set `version 1`
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if this is the first time a worker's arguments are changing), but also make sure
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that the worker is still able to handle jobs that were queued with any earlier
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version of the arguments. From the worker's `perform` method, you can read
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`self.job_version` if you want to specifically branch on job version, or you
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can read the number or type of provided arguments.
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## Job size
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GitLab stores Sidekiq jobs and their arguments in Redis. To avoid
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excessive memory usage, we compress the arguments of Sidekiq jobs
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if their original size is bigger than 100KB.
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After compression, if their size still exceeds 5MB, it raises an
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[`ExceedLimitError`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/f3dd89e5e510ea04b43ffdcb58587d8f78a8d77c/lib/gitlab/sidekiq_middleware/size_limiter/exceed_limit_error.rb#L8)
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error when scheduling the job.
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If this happens, rely on other means of making the data
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available in Sidekiq. There are possible workarounds such as:
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- Rebuild the data in Sidekiq with data loaded from the database or
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elsewhere.
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- Store the data in [object storage](../file_storage.md#object-storage)
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before scheduling the job, and retrieve it inside the job.
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## Job weights
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Some jobs have a weight declared. This is only used when running Sidekiq
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in the default execution mode - using
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[`sidekiq-cluster`](../../administration/sidekiq/extra_sidekiq_processes.md)
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does not account for weights.
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As we are [moving towards using `sidekiq-cluster` in Free](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/34396), newly-added
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workers do not need to have weights specified. They can use the
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default weight, which is 1.
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## Tests
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Each Sidekiq worker must be tested using RSpec, just like any other class. These
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tests should be placed in `spec/workers`.
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