summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/development/background_migrations.md
blob: 0747224db300473f16b16c4a784eadcb5f17c8e3 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
# Background Migrations

Background migrations can be used to perform data migrations that would
otherwise take a very long time (hours, days, years, etc) to complete. For
example, you can use background migrations to migrate data so that instead of
storing data in a single JSON column the data is stored in a separate table.

If the database cluster is considered to be in an unhealthy state, background
migrations automatically reschedule themselves for a later point in time.

## When To Use Background Migrations

In the vast majority of cases you will want to use a regular Rails migration
instead. Background migrations should be used when migrating _data_ in
tables that have so many rows this process would take hours when performed in a
regular Rails migration.

Background migrations _may_ also be used when executing numerous single-row queries
for every item on a large dataset. Typically, for single-record patterns, runtime is
largely dependent on the size of the dataset, hence it should be split accordingly
and put into background migrations.

Background migrations _may not_ be used to perform schema migrations, they
should only be used for data migrations.

Some examples where background migrations can be useful:

- Migrating events from one table to multiple separate tables.
- Populating one column based on JSON stored in another column.
- Migrating data that depends on the output of external services (e.g. an API).

> **Note:**
> If the background migration is part of an important upgrade, make sure it's announced
> in the release post. Discuss with your Project Manager if you're not sure the migration falls
> into this category.

## Isolation

Background migrations must be isolated and can not use application code (e.g.
models defined in `app/models`). Since these migrations can take a long time to
run it's possible for new versions to be deployed while they are still running.

It's also possible for different migrations to be executed at the same time.
This means that different background migrations should not migrate data in a
way that would cause conflicts.

## Idempotence

Background migrations are executed in a context of a Sidekiq process.
Usual Sidekiq rules apply, especially the rule that jobs should be small
and idempotent.

See [Sidekiq best practices guidelines](https://github.com/mperham/sidekiq/wiki/Best-Practices)
for more details.

Make sure that in case that your migration job is going to be retried data
integrity is guaranteed.

## Background migrations for EE-only features

All the background migration classes for EE-only features should be present in GitLab CE.
For this purpose, an empty class can be created for GitLab CE, and it can be extended for GitLab EE
as explained in the [guidelines for implementing Enterprise Edition features](ee_features.md#code-in-libgitlabbackground_migration).

## How It Works

Background migrations are simple classes that define a `perform` method. A
Sidekiq worker will then execute such a class, passing any arguments to it. All
migration classes must be defined in the namespace
`Gitlab::BackgroundMigration`, the files should be placed in the directory
`lib/gitlab/background_migration/`.

## Scheduling

Scheduling a background migration should be done in a post-deployment
migration that includes `Gitlab::Database::MigrationHelpers`
To do so, simply use the following code while
replacing the class name and arguments with whatever values are necessary for
your migration:

```ruby
migrate_async('BackgroundMigrationClassName', [arg1, arg2, ...])
```

Usually it's better to enqueue jobs in bulk, for this you can use
`bulk_migrate_async`:

```ruby
bulk_migrate_async(
  [['BackgroundMigrationClassName', [1]],
   ['BackgroundMigrationClassName', [2]]]
)
```

You'll also need to make sure that newly created data is either migrated, or
saved in both the old and new version upon creation. For complex and time
consuming migrations it's best to schedule a background job using an
`after_create` hook so this doesn't affect response timings. The same applies to
updates. Removals in turn can be handled by simply defining foreign keys with
cascading deletes.

If you would like to schedule jobs in bulk with a delay, you can use
`BackgroundMigrationWorker.bulk_perform_in`:

```ruby
jobs = [['BackgroundMigrationClassName', [1]],
        ['BackgroundMigrationClassName', [2]]]

bulk_migrate_in(5.minutes, jobs)
```

### Rescheduling background migrations

If one of the background migrations contains a bug that is fixed in a patch
release, the background migration needs to be rescheduled so the migration would
be repeated on systems that already performed the initial migration.

When you reschedule the background migration, make sure to turn the original
scheduling into a no-op by clearing up the `#up` and `#down` methods of the
migration performing the scheduling. Otherwise the background migration would be
scheduled multiple times on systems that are upgrading multiple patch releases at
once.

## Cleaning Up

>**Note:**
Cleaning up any remaining background migrations _must_ be done in either a major
or minor release, you _must not_ do this in a patch release.

Because background migrations can take a long time you can't immediately clean
things up after scheduling them. For example, you can't drop a column that's
used in the migration process as this would cause jobs to fail. This means that
you'll need to add a separate _post deployment_ migration in a future release
that finishes any remaining jobs before cleaning things up (e.g. removing a
column).

As an example, say you want to migrate the data from column `foo` (containing a
big JSON blob) to column `bar` (containing a string). The process for this would
roughly be as follows:

1. Release A:
   1. Create a migration class that perform the migration for a row with a given ID.
   1. Deploy the code for this release, this should include some code that will
      schedule jobs for newly created data (e.g. using an `after_create` hook).
   1. Schedule jobs for all existing rows in a post-deployment migration. It's
      possible some newly created rows may be scheduled twice so your migration
      should take care of this.
1. Release B:
   1. Deploy code so that the application starts using the new column and stops
      scheduling jobs for newly created data.
   1. In a post-deployment migration you'll need to ensure no jobs remain.
      1. Use `Gitlab::BackgroundMigration.steal` to process any remaining
         jobs in Sidekiq.
      1. Reschedule the migration to be run directly (i.e. not through Sidekiq)
         on any rows that weren't migrated by Sidekiq. This can happen if, for
         instance, Sidekiq received a SIGKILL, or if a particular batch failed
         enough times to be marked as dead.
   1. Remove the old column.

This may also require a bump to the [import/export version](../user/project/settings/import_export.md), if
importing a project from a prior version of GitLab requires the data to be in
the new format.

## Example

To explain all this, let's use the following example: the table `services` has a
field called `properties` which is stored in JSON. For all rows you want to
extract the `url` key from this JSON object and store it in the `services.url`
column. There are millions of services and parsing JSON is slow, thus you can't
do this in a regular migration.

To do this using a background migration we'll start with defining our migration
class:

```ruby
class Gitlab::BackgroundMigration::ExtractServicesUrl
  class Service < ActiveRecord::Base
    self.table_name = 'services'
  end

  def perform(service_id)
    # A row may be removed between scheduling and starting of a job, thus we
    # need to make sure the data is still present before doing any work.
    service = Service.select(:properties).find_by(id: service_id)

    return unless service

    begin
      json = JSON.load(service.properties)
    rescue JSON::ParserError
      # If the JSON is invalid we don't want to keep the job around forever,
      # instead we'll just leave the "url" field to whatever the default value
      # is.
      return
    end

    service.update(url: json['url']) if json['url']
  end
end
```

Next we'll need to adjust our code so we schedule the above migration for newly
created and updated services. We can do this using something along the lines of
the following:

```ruby
class Service < ActiveRecord::Base
  after_commit :schedule_service_migration, on: :update
  after_commit :schedule_service_migration, on: :create

  def schedule_service_migration
    BackgroundMigrationWorker.perform_async('ExtractServicesUrl', [id])
  end
end
```

We're using `after_commit` here to ensure the Sidekiq job is not scheduled
before the transaction completes as doing so can lead to race conditions where
the changes are not yet visible to the worker.

Next we'll need a post-deployment migration that schedules the migration for
existing data. Since we're dealing with a lot of rows we'll schedule jobs in
batches instead of doing this one by one:

```ruby
class ScheduleExtractServicesUrl < ActiveRecord::Migration[4.2]
  disable_ddl_transaction!

  class Service < ActiveRecord::Base
    self.table_name = 'services'
  end

  def up
    Service.select(:id).in_batches do |relation|
      jobs = relation.pluck(:id).map do |id|
        ['ExtractServicesUrl', [id]]
      end

      BackgroundMigrationWorker.bulk_perform_async(jobs)
    end
  end

  def down
  end
end
```

Once deployed our application will continue using the data as before but at the
same time will ensure that both existing and new data is migrated.

In the next release we can remove the `after_commit` hooks and related code. We
will also need to add a post-deployment migration that consumes any remaining
jobs and manually run on any un-migrated rows. Such a migration would look like
this:

```ruby
class ConsumeRemainingExtractServicesUrlJobs < ActiveRecord::Migration[4.2]
  disable_ddl_transaction!

  class Service < ActiveRecord::Base
    include ::EachBatch

    self.table_name = 'services'
  end

  def up
    # This must be included
    Gitlab::BackgroundMigration.steal('ExtractServicesUrl')

    # This should be included, but can be skipped - see below
    Service.where(url: nil).each_batch(of: 50) do |batch|
      range = batch.pluck('MIN(id)', 'MAX(id)').first

      Gitlab::BackgroundMigration::ExtractServicesUrl.new.perform(*range)
    end
  end

  def down
  end
end
```

The final step runs for any un-migrated rows after all of the jobs have been
processed. This is in case a Sidekiq process running the background migrations
received SIGKILL, leading to the jobs being lost. (See
[more reliable Sidekiq queue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/36791) for more information.)

If the application does not depend on the data being 100% migrated (for
instance, the data is advisory, and not mission-critical), then this final step
can be skipped.

This migration will then process any jobs for the ExtractServicesUrl migration
and continue once all jobs have been processed. Once done you can safely remove
the `services.properties` column.

## Testing

It is required to write tests for:

- The background migrations' scheduling migration.
- The background migration itself.
- A cleanup migration.

The `:migration` and `schema: :latest` RSpec tags are automatically set for
background migration specs.
See the
[Testing Rails migrations](testing_guide/testing_migrations_guide.md#testing-a-non-activerecordmigration-class)
style guide.

Keep in mind that `before` and `after` RSpec hooks are going
to migrate you database down and up, which can result in other background
migrations being called. That means that using `spy` test doubles with
`have_received` is encouraged, instead of using regular test doubles, because
your expectations defined in a `it` block can conflict with what is being
called in RSpec hooks. See [issue #35351](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/18839)
for more details.

## Best practices

1. Make sure to know how much data you're dealing with.
1. Make sure that background migration jobs are idempotent.
1. Make sure that tests you write are not false positives.
1. Make sure that if the data being migrated is critical and cannot be lost, the
   clean-up migration also checks the final state of the data before completing.
1. Make sure to know how much time it'll take to run all scheduled migrations.
1. When migrating many columns, make sure it won't generate too many
   dead tuples in the process (you may need to directly query the number of dead tuples
   and adjust the scheduling according to this piece of data).
1. Make sure to discuss the numbers with a database specialist, the migration may add
   more pressure on DB than you expect (measure on staging,
   or ask someone to measure on production).