debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/development/scalability.md
2022-07-23 20:15:48 +02:00

13 KiB

stage group info
none unassigned 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

GitLab scalability

This section describes the current architecture of GitLab as it relates to scalability and reliability.

Reference Architecture Overview

Reference Architecture Diagram

diagram source - GitLab employees only

The diagram above shows a GitLab reference architecture scaled up for 50,000 users. We discuss each component below.

Components

PostgreSQL

The PostgreSQL database holds all metadata for projects, issues, merge requests, users, and so on. The schema is managed by the Rails application db/structure.sql.

GitLab Web/API servers and Sidekiq nodes talk directly to the database by using a Rails object relational model (ORM). Most SQL queries are accessed by using this ORM, although some custom SQL is also written for performance or for exploiting advanced PostgreSQL features (like recursive CTEs or LATERAL JOINs).

The application has a tight coupling to the database schema. When the application starts, Rails queries the database schema, caching the tables and column types for the data requested. Because of this schema cache, dropping a column or table while the application is running can produce 500 errors to the user. This is why we have a process for dropping columns and other no-downtime changes.

Multi-tenancy

A single database is used to store all customer data. Each user can belong to many groups or projects, and the access level (including guest, developer, or maintainer) to groups and projects determines what users can see and what they can access.

Users with administrator access can access all projects and even impersonate users.

Sharding and partitioning

The database is not divided up in any way; currently all data lives in one database in many different tables. This works for simple applications, but as the data set grows, it becomes more challenging to maintain and support one database with tables with many rows.

There are two ways to deal with this:

  • Partitioning. Locally split up tables data.
  • Sharding. Distribute data across multiple databases.

Partitioning is a built-in PostgreSQL feature and requires minimal changes in the application. However, it requires PostgreSQL 11.

For example, a natural way to partition is to partition tables by dates. For example, the events and audit_events table are natural candidates for this kind of partitioning.

Sharding is likely more difficult and requires significant changes to the schema and application. For example, if we have to store projects in many different databases, we immediately run into the question, "How can we retrieve data across different projects?" One answer to this is to abstract data access into API calls that abstract the database from the application, but this is a significant amount of work.

There are solutions that may help abstract the sharding to some extent from the application. For example, we want to look at Citus Data closely. Citus Data provides a Rails plugin that adds a tenant ID to ActiveRecord models.

Sharding can also be done based on feature verticals. This is the microservice approach to sharding, where each service represents a bounded context and operates on its own service-specific database cluster. In that model data wouldn't be distributed according to some internal key (such as tenant IDs) but based on team and product ownership. It shares a lot of challenges with traditional, data-oriented sharding, however. For instance, joining data has to happen in the application itself rather than on the query layer (although additional layers like GraphQL might mitigate that) and it requires true parallelism to run efficiently (that is, a scatter-gather model to collect, then zip up data records), which is a challenge in itself in Ruby based systems.

Database size

A recent database checkup shows a breakdown of the table sizes on GitLab.com. Since merge_request_diff_files contains over 1 TB of data, we want to reduce/eliminate this table first. GitLab has support for storing diffs in object storage, which we want to do on GitLab.com.

High availability

There are several strategies to provide high-availability and redundancy:

  • Write-ahead logs (WAL) streamed to object storage (for example, S3, or Google Cloud Storage).
  • Read-replicas (hot backups).
  • Delayed replicas.

To restore a database from a point in time, a base backup needs to have been taken prior to that incident. Once a database has restored from that backup, the database can apply the WAL logs in order until the database has reached the target time.

On GitLab.com, Consul and Patroni work together to coordinate failovers with the read replicas. Omnibus ships with Patroni.

Load-balancing

GitLab EE has application support for load balancing using read replicas. This load balancer does some actions that aren't traditionally available in standard load balancers. For example, the application considers a replica only if its replication lag is low (for example, WAL data behind by less than 100 MB).

More details are in a blog post.

PgBouncer

As PostgreSQL forks a backend process for each request, PostgreSQL has a finite limit of connections that it can support, typically around 300 by default. Without a connection pooler like PgBouncer, it's quite possible to hit connection limits. Once the limits are reached, then GitLab generates errors or slow down as it waits for a connection to be available.

High availability

PgBouncer is a single-threaded process. Under heavy traffic, PgBouncer can saturate a single core, which can result in slower response times for background job and/or Web requests. There are two ways to address this limitation:

  • Run multiple PgBouncer instances.
  • Use a multi-threaded connection pooler (for example, Odyssey.

On some Linux systems, it's possible to run multiple PgBouncer instances on the same port.

On GitLab.com, we run multiple PgBouncer instances on different ports to avoid saturating a single core.

In addition, the PgBouncer instances that communicate with the primary and secondaries are set up a bit differently:

  • Multiple PgBouncer instances in different availability zones talk to the PostgreSQL primary.
  • Multiple PgBouncer processes are colocated with PostgreSQL read replicas.

For replicas, colocating is advantageous because it reduces network hops and hence latency. However, for the primary, colocating is disadvantageous because PgBouncer would become a single point of failure and cause errors. When a failover occurs, one of two things could happen:

  • The primary disappears from the network.
  • The primary becomes a replica.

In the first case, if PgBouncer is colocated with the primary, database connections would time out or fail to connect, and downtime would occur. Having multiple PgBouncer instances in front of a load balancer talking to the primary can mitigate this.

In the second case, existing connections to the newly-demoted replica may execute a write query, which would fail. During a failover, it may be advantageous to shut down the PgBouncer talking to the primary to ensure no more traffic arrives for it. The alternative would be to make the application aware of the failover event and terminate its connections gracefully.

Redis

There are three ways Redis is used in GitLab:

  • Queues: Sidekiq jobs marshal jobs into JSON payloads.
  • Persistent state: Session data and exclusive leases.
  • Cache: Repository data (like Branch and tag names) and view partials.

For GitLab instances running at scale, splitting Redis usage into separate Redis clusters helps for two reasons:

  • Each has different persistence requirements.
  • Load isolation.

For example, the cache instance can behave like an least-recently used (LRU) cache by setting the maxmemory configuration option. That option should not be set for the queues or persistent clusters because data would be evicted from memory at random times. This would cause jobs to be dropped on the floor, which would cause many problems (like merges not running or builds not updating).

Sidekiq also polls its queues quite frequently, and this activity can slow down other queries. For this reason, having a dedicated Redis cluster for Sidekiq can help improve performance and reduce load on the Redis process.

High availability/Risks

Single-core: Like PgBouncer, a single Redis process can only use one core. It does not support multi-threading.

Dumb secondaries: Redis secondaries (also known as replicas) don't actually handle any load. Unlike PostgreSQL secondaries, they don't even serve read queries. They simply replicate data from the primary and take over only when the primary fails.

Redis Sentinels

Redis Sentinel provides high availability for Redis by watching the primary. If multiple Sentinels detect that the primary has gone away, the Sentinels performs an election to determine a new leader.

Failure Modes

No leader: A Redis cluster can get into a mode where there are no primaries. For example, this can happen if Redis nodes are misconfigured to follow the wrong node. Sometimes this requires forcing one node to become a primary by using the REPLICAOF NO ONE command.

Sidekiq

Sidekiq is a multi-threaded, background job processing system used in Ruby on Rails applications. In GitLab, Sidekiq performs the heavy lifting of many activities, including:

  • Updating merge requests after a push.
  • Sending email messages.
  • Updating user authorizations.
  • Processing CI builds and pipelines.

The full list of jobs can be found in the app/workers and ee/app/workers directories in the GitLab codebase.

Runaway Queues

As jobs are added to the Sidekiq queue, Sidekiq worker threads need to pull these jobs from the queue and finish them at a rate faster than they are added. When an imbalance occurs (for example, delays in the database or slow jobs), Sidekiq queues can balloon and lead to runaway queues.

In recent months, many of these queues have ballooned due to delays in PostgreSQL, PgBouncer, and Redis. For example, PgBouncer saturation can cause jobs to wait a few seconds before obtaining a database connection, which can cascade into a large slowdown. Optimizing these basic interconnections comes first.

However, there are a number of strategies to ensure queues get drained in a timely manner:

  • Add more processing capacity. This can be done by spinning up more instances of Sidekiq or Sidekiq Cluster.
  • Split jobs into smaller units of work. For example, PostReceive used to process each commit message in the push, but now it farms out this to ProcessCommitWorker.
  • Redistribute/gerrymander Sidekiq processes by queue types. Long-running jobs (for example, relating to project import) can often squeeze out jobs that run fast (for example, delivering email). We used this technique to optimize our existing Sidekiq deployment.
  • Optimize jobs. Eliminating unnecessary work, reducing network calls (including SQL and Gitaly), and optimizing processor time can yield significant benefits.

From the Sidekiq logs, it's possible to see which jobs run the most frequently and/or take the longest. For example, these Kibana visualizations show the jobs that consume the most total time:

Most time-consuming Sidekiq jobs

visualization source - GitLab employees only

This shows the jobs that had the longest durations:

Longest running Sidekiq jobs

visualization source - GitLab employees only