errs.Class should not contain "error" in the name, since that causes a
lot of stutter in the error logs. As an example a log line could end up
looking like:
ERROR node stats service error: satellitedbs error: node stats database error: no rows
Whereas something like:
ERROR nodestats service: satellitedbs: nodestatsdb: no rows
Would contain all the necessary information without the stutter.
Change-Id: I7b7cb7e592ebab4bcfadc1eef11122584d2b20e0
Initially there were pkg and private packages, however for all practical
purposes there's no significant difference between them. It's clearer to
have a single private package - and when we do get a specific
abstraction that needs to be reused, we can move it to storj.io/common
or storj.io/private.
Change-Id: Ibc2036e67f312f5d63cb4a97f5a92e38ae413aa5
cache is really common variable and type name and we have already used
the package name alias in multiple places.
Change-Id: I6435785b7549b541d533de59ec94557b9bd11e04
This PR adds the following items:
1) an in-memory read-only cache thats stores project limit info for projectIDs
This cache is stored in-memory since this is expected to be a small amount of data. In this implementation we are only storing in the cache projects that have been accessed. Currently for the largest Satellite (eu-west) there is about 4500 total projects. So storing the storage limit (int64) and the bandwidth limit (int64), this would end up being about 200kb (including the 32 byte project ID) if all 4500 projectIDs were in the cache. So this all fits in memory for the time being. At some point it may not as usage grows, but that seems years out.
The cache is a read only cache. When requests come in to upload/download a file, we will read from the cache what the current limits are for that project. If the cache does not contain the projectID, it will get the info from the database (satellitedb project table), then add it to the cache.
The only time the values in the cache are modified is when either a) the project ID is not in the cache, or b) the item in the cache has expired (default 10mins), then the data gets refreshed out of the database. This occurs by default every 10 mins. This means that if we update the usage limits in the database, that change might not show up in the cache for 10 mins which mean it will not be reflected to limit end users uploading/downloading files for that time period..
Change-Id: I3fd7056cf963676009834fcbcf9c4a0922ca4a8f