* UX: Add a rake task to monitor progress for long rebakes
When doing mass rebaking, this task will print progress, speed and
expected time to completion (ETC) on a loop. It is meant for rebakes
that take several hours or days.
It will calculate a 10m moving average over the past 6 hours, and print
ETC accordingly.
It also shows Sidekiq stats in case Sidekiq jobs for rebaking were
enqueued separately, instead of using the rebake_posts tasks in this
file (which are 100% synchronous and do not touch Sidekiq at all).
NOTE: only the currently unbaked count at task start time is considered;
this is useful in live communities with lots of traffic, where new posts
might otherwise change the goal posts continuously.
* Satisfy stree
Previously only Sidekiq was allowed to generate more than one optimized image at the same time per machine. This adds an easy mechanism to allow the same in rake tasks and other tools.
The #pluck_first freedom patch, first introduced by @danielwaterworth has served us well, and is used widely throughout both core and plugins. It seems to have been a common enough use case that Rails 6 introduced it's own method #pick with the exact same implementation. This allows us to retire the freedom patch and switch over to the built-in ActiveRecord method.
There is no replacement for #pluck_first!, but a quick search shows we are using this in a very limited capacity, and in some cases incorrectly (by assuming a nil return rather than an exception), which can quite easily be replaced with #pick plus some extra handling.
This table holds associations between uploads and other models. This can be used to prevent removing uploads that are still in use.
* DEV: Create upload_references
* DEV: Use UploadReference instead of PostUpload
* DEV: Use UploadReference for SiteSetting
* DEV: Use UploadReference for Badge
* DEV: Use UploadReference for Category
* DEV: Use UploadReference for CustomEmoji
* DEV: Use UploadReference for Group
* DEV: Use UploadReference for ThemeField
* DEV: Use UploadReference for ThemeSetting
* DEV: Use UploadReference for User
* DEV: Use UploadReference for UserAvatar
* DEV: Use UploadReference for UserExport
* DEV: Use UploadReference for UserProfile
* DEV: Add method to extract uploads from raw text
* DEV: Use UploadReference for Draft
* DEV: Use UploadReference for ReviewableQueuedPost
* DEV: Use UploadReference for UserProfile's bio_raw
* DEV: Do not copy user uploads to upload references
* DEV: Copy post uploads again after deploy
* DEV: Use created_at and updated_at from uploads table
* FIX: Check if upload site setting is empty
* DEV: Copy user uploads to upload references
* DEV: Make upload extraction less strict
Running the reorder rake task was triggering the following error:
PG::UniqueViolation: ERROR: duplicate key value violates unique constraint "post_timings_unique"
I re-worked the queries and refactored to use the same couple of queries for all similar tables/columns.
Doing .pluck(:column).first is a very common pattern in Discourse and in
most cases, a limit cause isn't being added. Instead of adding a limit
clause to all these callsites, this commit adds two new methods to
ActiveRecord::Relation:
pluck_first, equivalent to limit(1).pluck(*columns).first
and pluck_first! which, like other finder methods, raises an exception
when no record is found
Running this inline makes more sense otherwise there is extreme risk in
saturating sidekiq queue.
This also reworks ordering and selection so we double check if a post needs
rebaking prior to rebaking, this unlocks the ability to run this rake task
from multiple consoles.
* REFACTOR: Rename SiteSetting.disable_edit_notifications to disable_system_edit_notifications
- The older name could cause some confusion because the setting does not disable all edit notifications, only system ones.
* FIX: Add frozen_string_literal: true in the migration
* DEV: Deprecate 'disable_edit_notifications'
`rake posts:recover_uploads_from_index`
Searches through all missing uploads in the cluster, if it finds one it
tries to find it in the "upload index file" and creates a new upload for
it.
Previously we were only catching one type of data export, the new job will
catch every csv export we have
Job is pretty safe as it filters on system user id / pm with a particular
slug
Historically we would keep the user data export posts around but delete
the uploads.
This leaves a lot of broken uploads in the system.
This rake task allows us to clean up old mess.