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author | Richard van der Hoff <richard@matrix.org> | 2020-04-23 18:19:08 +0100 |
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committer | Richard van der Hoff <richard@matrix.org> | 2020-04-24 13:59:21 +0100 |
commit | ce428a1abe6aae25e236baf268f56b1811cba333 (patch) | |
tree | 17397b3c6a3bb3b6b68fbf1c4f30f971984293c9 /synapse/replication/tcp/streams/events.py | |
parent | Make it clear that the limit for an update_function is a target (diff) | |
download | synapse-ce428a1abe6aae25e236baf268f56b1811cba333.tar.xz |
Fix EventsStream raising assertions when it falls behind
Figuring out how to correctly limit updates from this stream without dropping entries is far more complicated than just counting the number of rows being returned. We need to consider each query separately and, if any one query hits the limit, truncate the results from the others. I think this also fixes some potentially long-standing bugs where events or state changes could get missed if we hit the limit on either query.
Diffstat (limited to 'synapse/replication/tcp/streams/events.py')
-rw-r--r-- | synapse/replication/tcp/streams/events.py | 113 |
1 files changed, 95 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/synapse/replication/tcp/streams/events.py b/synapse/replication/tcp/streams/events.py index 051114596b..aa50492569 100644 --- a/synapse/replication/tcp/streams/events.py +++ b/synapse/replication/tcp/streams/events.py @@ -15,11 +15,12 @@ # limitations under the License. import heapq -from typing import Iterable, Tuple, Type +from collections import Iterable +from typing import List, Tuple, Type import attr -from ._base import Stream, Token, db_query_to_update_function +from ._base import Stream, StreamUpdateResult, Token """Handling of the 'events' replication stream @@ -117,30 +118,106 @@ class EventsStream(Stream): def __init__(self, hs): self._store = hs.get_datastore() super().__init__( - self._store.get_current_events_token, - db_query_to_update_function(self._update_function), + self._store.get_current_events_token, self._update_function, ) async def _update_function( - self, from_token: Token, current_token: Token, limit: int - ) -> Iterable[tuple]: + self, from_token: Token, current_token: Token, target_row_count: int + ) -> StreamUpdateResult: + + # the events stream merges together three separate sources: + # * new events + # * current_state changes + # * events which were previously outliers, but have now been de-outliered. + # + # The merge operation is complicated by the fact that we only have a single + # "stream token" which is supposed to indicate how far we have got through + # all three streams. It's therefore no good to return rows 1-1000 from the + # "new events" table if the state_deltas are limited to rows 1-100 by the + # target_row_count. + # + # In other words: we must pick a new upper limit, and must return *all* rows + # up to that point for each of the three sources. + # + # Start by trying to split the target_row_count up. We expect to have a + # negligible number of ex-outliers, and a rough approximation based on recent + # traffic on sw1v.org shows that there are approximately the same number of + # event rows between a given pair of stream ids as there are state + # updates, so let's split our target_row_count among those two types. The target + # is only an approximation - it doesn't matter if we end up going a bit over it. + + target_row_count //= 2 + + # now we fetch up to that many rows from the events table + event_rows = await self._store.get_all_new_forward_event_rows( - from_token, current_token, limit - ) - event_updates = ( - (row[0], EventsStreamEventRow.TypeId, row[1:]) for row in event_rows - ) + from_token, current_token, target_row_count + ) # type: List[Tuple] + + # we rely on get_all_new_forward_event_rows strictly honouring the limit, so + # that we know it is safe to just take upper_limit = event_rows[-1][0]. + assert ( + len(event_rows) <= target_row_count + ), "get_all_new_forward_event_rows did not honour row limit" + + # if we hit the limit on event_updates, there's no point in going beyond the + # last stream_id in the batch for the other sources. + + if len(event_rows) == target_row_count: + limited = True + upper_limit = event_rows[-1][0] # type: int + else: + limited = False + upper_limit = current_token + + # next up is the state delta table state_rows = await self._store.get_all_updated_current_state_deltas( - from_token, current_token, limit - ) - state_updates = ( - (row[0], EventsStreamCurrentStateRow.TypeId, row[1:]) for row in state_rows - ) + from_token, upper_limit, target_row_count + ) # type: List[Tuple] + + # again, if we've hit the limit there, we'll need to limit the other sources + assert len(state_rows) < target_row_count + if len(state_rows) == target_row_count: + assert state_rows[-1][0] <= upper_limit + upper_limit = state_rows[-1][0] + limited = True + + # FIXME: is it a given that there is only one row per stream_id in the + # state_deltas table (so that we can be sure that we have got all of the + # rows for upper_limit)? + + # finally, fetch the ex-outliers rows. We assume there are few enough of these + # not to bother with the limit. - all_updates = heapq.merge(event_updates, state_updates) + ex_outliers_rows = await self._store.get_ex_outlier_stream_rows( + from_token, upper_limit + ) # type: List[Tuple] - return all_updates + # we now need to turn the raw database rows returned into tuples suitable + # for the replication protocol (basically, we add an identifier to + # distinguish the row type). At the same time, we can limit the event_rows + # to the max stream_id from state_rows. + + event_updates = ( + (stream_id, (EventsStreamEventRow.TypeId, rest)) + for (stream_id, *rest) in event_rows + if stream_id <= upper_limit + ) # type: Iterable[Tuple[int, Tuple]] + + state_updates = ( + (stream_id, (EventsStreamCurrentStateRow.TypeId, rest)) + for (stream_id, *rest) in state_rows + ) # type: Iterable[Tuple[int, Tuple]] + + ex_outliers_updates = ( + (stream_id, (EventsStreamEventRow.TypeId, rest)) + for (stream_id, *rest) in ex_outliers_rows + ) # type: Iterable[Tuple[int, Tuple]] + + # we need to return a sorted list, so merge them together. + updates = list(heapq.merge(event_updates, state_updates, ex_outliers_updates)) + return updates, upper_limit, limited @classmethod def parse_row(cls, row): |