Commit 19428e80 authored by Yorick Peterse's avatar Yorick Peterse

Preload pipeline data for project pipelines

When displaying the pipelines of a project we now preload the following
data:

1. Authors of the commits that belong to these pipelines
2. The number of warnings per pipeline, which is used by
   Ci::Pipeline#has_warnings?

== Commit Authors

Previously this data was queried for every Commit separately, leading to
20 SQL queries being executed in the worst case. With an average of 3 to
5 milliseconds per SQL query this could result in 100 milliseconds being
spent in _just_ getting Commit authors.

To preload this data Commit#author now uses BatchLoader (through
Commit#lazy_author), and a separate module
Gitlab::Ci::Pipeline::Preloader is used to ensure all authors are loaded
before they are used.

== Number of warnings

This changes Ci::Pipeline#has_warnings? so it supports preloading of the
number of warnings per pipeline. This removes the need for executing a
COUNT(*) query for every pipeline just to see if it has any warnings or
not.
parent 70985aa1
......@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ class Projects::PipelinesController < Projects::ApplicationController
@finished_count = limited_pipelines_count(project, 'finished')
@pipelines_count = limited_pipelines_count(project)
@pipelines.map(&:commit) # List commits for batch loading
Gitlab::Ci::Pipeline::Preloader.preload(@pipelines)
respond_to do |format|
format.html
......
......@@ -406,7 +406,18 @@ module Ci
end
def has_warnings?
builds.latest.failed_but_allowed.any?
number_of_warnings.positive?
end
def number_of_warnings
BatchLoader.for(id).batch(default_value: 0) do |pipeline_ids, loader|
Build.where(commit_id: pipeline_ids)
.latest
.failed_but_allowed
.group(:commit_id)
.count
.each { |id, amount| loader.call(id, amount) }
end
end
def set_config_source
......
......@@ -224,8 +224,34 @@ class Commit
Gitlab::ClosingIssueExtractor.new(project, current_user).closed_by_message(safe_message)
end
def lazy_author
BatchLoader.for(author_email.downcase).batch do |emails, loader|
# A Hash that maps user Emails to the corresponding User objects. The
# Emails at this point are the _primary_ Emails of the Users.
users_for_emails = User
.by_any_email(emails)
.each_with_object({}) { |user, hash| hash[user.email] = user }
users_for_ids = users_for_emails
.values
.each_with_object({}) { |user, hash| hash[user.id] = user }
# Some commits may have used an alternative Email address. In this case we
# need to query the "emails" table to map those addresses to User objects.
Email
.where(email: emails - users_for_emails.keys)
.pluck(:email, :user_id)
.each { |(email, id)| users_for_emails[email] = users_for_ids[id] }
users_for_emails.each { |email, user| loader.call(email, user) }
end
end
def author
User.find_by_any_email(author_email.downcase)
# We use __sync so that we get the actual objects back (including an actual
# nil), instead of a wrapper, as returning a wrapped nil breaks a lot of
# code.
lazy_author.__sync
end
request_cache(:author) { author_email.downcase }
......
# frozen_string_literal: true
module Gitlab
module Ci
module Pipeline
# Class for preloading data associated with pipelines such as commit
# authors.
module Preloader
def self.preload(pipelines)
# This ensures that all the pipeline commits are eager loaded before we
# start using them.
pipelines.each(&:commit)
pipelines.each do |pipeline|
# This preloads the author of every commit. We're using "lazy_author"
# here since "author" immediately loads the data on the first call.
pipeline.commit.try(:lazy_author)
# This preloads the number of warnings for every pipeline, ensuring
# that Ci::Pipeline#has_warnings? doesn't execute any additional
# queries.
pipeline.number_of_warnings
end
end
end
end
end
end
# frozen_string_literal: true
require 'spec_helper'
describe Gitlab::Ci::Pipeline::Preloader do
describe '.preload' do
it 'preloads the author of every pipeline commit' do
commit = double(:commit)
pipeline = double(:pipeline, commit: commit)
expect(commit)
.to receive(:lazy_author)
expect(pipeline)
.to receive(:number_of_warnings)
described_class.preload([pipeline])
end
end
end
......@@ -774,6 +774,33 @@ describe Ci::Pipeline, :mailer do
end
end
describe '#number_of_warnings' do
it 'returns the number of warnings' do
create(:ci_build, :allowed_to_fail, :failed, pipeline: pipeline, name: 'rubocop')
expect(pipeline.number_of_warnings).to eq(1)
end
it 'supports eager loading of the number of warnings' do
pipeline2 = create(:ci_empty_pipeline, status: :created, project: project)
create(:ci_build, :allowed_to_fail, :failed, pipeline: pipeline, name: 'rubocop')
create(:ci_build, :allowed_to_fail, :failed, pipeline: pipeline2, name: 'rubocop')
pipelines = project.pipelines.to_a
pipelines.each(&:number_of_warnings)
# To run the queries we need to actually use the lazy objects, which we do
# by just sending "to_i" to them.
amount = ActiveRecord::QueryRecorder
.new { pipelines.each { |p| p.number_of_warnings.to_i } }
.count
expect(amount).to eq(1)
end
end
shared_context 'with some outdated pipelines' do
before do
create_pipeline(:canceled, 'ref', 'A', project)
......
......@@ -52,22 +52,98 @@ describe Commit do
end
end
describe '#author' do
describe '#author', :request_store do
it 'looks up the author in a case-insensitive way' do
user = create(:user, email: commit.author_email.upcase)
expect(commit.author).to eq(user)
end
it 'caches the author', :request_store do
it 'caches the author' do
user = create(:user, email: commit.author_email)
expect(User).to receive(:find_by_any_email).and_call_original
expect(commit.author).to eq(user)
key = "Commit:author:#{commit.author_email.downcase}"
expect(RequestStore.store[key]).to eq(user)
expect(RequestStore.store[key]).to eq(user)
expect(commit.author).to eq(user)
end
context 'using eager loading' do
let!(:alice) { create(:user, email: 'alice@example.com') }
let!(:bob) { create(:user, email: 'hunter2@example.com') }
let(:alice_commit) do
described_class.new(RepoHelpers.sample_commit, project).tap do |c|
c.author_email = 'alice@example.com'
end
end
let(:bob_commit) do
# The commit for Bob uses one of his alternative Emails, instead of the
# primary one.
described_class.new(RepoHelpers.sample_commit, project).tap do |c|
c.author_email = 'bob@example.com'
end
end
let(:eve_commit) do
described_class.new(RepoHelpers.sample_commit, project).tap do |c|
c.author_email = 'eve@example.com'
end
end
let!(:commits) { [alice_commit, bob_commit, eve_commit] }
before do
create(:email, user: bob, email: 'bob@example.com')
end
it 'executes only two SQL queries' do
recorder = ActiveRecord::QueryRecorder.new do
# Running this first ensures we don't run one query for every
# commit.
commits.each(&:lazy_author)
# This forces the execution of the SQL queries necessary to load the
# data.
commits.each { |c| c.author.try(:id) }
end
expect(recorder.count).to eq(2)
end
it "preloads the authors for Commits matching a user's primary Email" do
commits.each(&:lazy_author)
expect(alice_commit.author).to eq(alice)
end
it "preloads the authors for Commits using a User's alternative Email" do
commits.each(&:lazy_author)
expect(bob_commit.author).to eq(bob)
end
it 'sets the author to Nil if an author could not be found for a Commit' do
commits.each(&:lazy_author)
expect(eve_commit.author).to be_nil
end
it 'does not execute SQL queries once the authors are preloaded' do
commits.each(&:lazy_author)
commits.each { |c| c.author.try(:id) }
recorder = ActiveRecord::QueryRecorder.new do
alice_commit.author
bob_commit.author
eve_commit.author
end
expect(recorder.count).to be_zero
end
end
end
describe '#to_reference' do
......
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