Continues on from #19202.
Following the addition of pprof labels we can now more easily understand the relationship between a goroutine and the requests that spawn them.
This PR takes advantage of the labels and adds a few others, then provides a mechanism for the monitoring page to query the pprof goroutine profile.
The binary profile that results from this profile is immediately piped in to the google library for parsing this and then stack traces are formed for the goroutines.
If the goroutine is within a context or has been created from a goroutine within a process context it will acquire the process description labels for that process.
The goroutines are mapped with there associate pids and any that do not have an associated pid are placed in a group at the bottom as unbound.
In this way we should be able to more easily examine goroutines that have been stuck.
A manager command `gitea manager processes` is also provided that can export the processes (with or without stacktraces) to the command line.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
As discussed on #19221 we should store the results of the last task message on the
crontask and show them on the monitor page.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: wxiaoguang <wxiaoguang@gmail.com>
Change all cron tasks to make them no notice on success default. Instead if a user
wants notices on success they need to add NOTICE_ON_SUCCESS=true instead.
## ⚠️ BREAKING ⚠️
This changes the cron config so that notices on success are no longer set by default
and breaks NO_SUCCESS_NOTICE settings. Instead users who want notices on success
must set NOTICE_ON_SUCCESS=true instead.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
* Update custom/conf/app.example.ini
Co-authored-by: Norwin <noerw@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Norwin <noerw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Move keys to models/keys
* Rename models/keys -> models/asymkey
* change the missed package name
* Fix package alias
* Fix test
* Fix docs
* Fix test
* Fix test
* merge
This PR registers requests with the process manager and manages hierarchy within the processes.
Git repos are then associated with a context, (usually the request's context) - with sub commands using this context as their base context.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>