The DBs of our production satellites have some indexes that we didn't
have in the migrations because at that time we weren't able to add them
because our migration test was not able to deal with Cockroach indexes
with the STORING clause.
We have recently modified the storj.io/private/dbutil/pgutil package to
support the CRDB STRORING clause, so we are adding the missing indexes
to our migrations for being able to have them if we have to recover a DB
from scratch or we deploy a new DB satellite.
Change-Id: I686ff84e5b4c02d9615f50fa531261363affefb8
For business accounts we need to track the sales contact.
It will be a question to business accounts during onboarding.
Change-Id: I8d101ce1b52091478dfb0ddd875e1cc717d765d3
Initially we duplicated the code to avoid large scale changes to
the packages. Now we are past metainfo refactor we can remove the
duplication.
Change-Id: I9d0b2756cc6e2a2f4d576afa408a15273a7e1cef
* Add a nullable billing_periods column in the coupons table
* Add nullable billing_periods column to the currently unused
coupon_codes table
* Drop the duration column from the coupon_codes table
* Replace duration config type so that the default promotional coupon
can be configured to never expire
Zero downtime migration plan:
* Add billing_periods column to coupons and coupon_codes tables (this change)
* After one release, remove all references to the old duration column,
replacing with references to billing_periods. At this point, we can also
change the defult promotional coupon to never expire and migrate over
values from the old duration column.
* After another release, drop the duration column.
Change-Id: I374e8dc9fab9f81b4a5bc681771955662d4c007a
instead of only generating invoices for nodes that had some
activity, we generate it for every node so that we can find
and pay terminal nodes that did not meet thresholds before
we recognized them as terminal.
Change-Id: Ibb3433e1b35f1ddcfbe292c034238c9fa1b66c44
The coupon_codes table will allow for administrators to create new promo
codes associated with coupon information (amount, duration, etc...).
A user will be able to enter a promo code (aka coupon code) in order to
apply a new coupon to their account. The coupon in the coupons table is
linked to the template defined in the coupon_codes table.
Change-Id: I50e49fa92afbc6aa9d01d8a895c069efb59e472b
Migration step 148 will cause errors because we missed some
references to the columns being dropped. Removing the step
altogether causes problems with backwards compatibility tests
because the change already exists in the latest release tag.
To circumvent, we change v148 to an empty migration.
Add methods FindTable and RemoveColumn in private/dbutil/dbschema
Change-Id: Ia527e95b88a88c5dc82800928ce6f8cfb879e334
cockroach is having problems with huge transactions and
having them complete before timeouts or whatever, so
do smaller transactions.
because we can have partial recording of payments which
are not unique, we have to do a thing where we read and
check if it already exists before writing. this is not
concurrency safe.
Change-Id: Ia7d59499a43ce6d70cb2a23754edbdd1b643ef1a
Turns out that many methods generated with dbx where not used at all.
Lets remove them.
As a next step we can think about dropping tables like:
* user_credit
* offer
Change-Id: Id6cda81a701348db2a6b8b26daa22ae9c4f87cb4
Limit bucket name lookup to date range of the calling methods since we only need distinct bucket names for that time period.
Adds new index and removes an index specific to project ID since it is no longer needed.
Change-Id: Ic07bbfb1c32280e0c0e39f8da020b284e1e5d974
Delete satellite order methods and DB tables which aren't used anymore
after we have done a refactoring on the orders to stuck bucket
information in the orders' encrypted metadata.
There are also configuration parameters and a satellite chore that
aren't needed anymore after the orders refactoring.
Change-Id: Ida3682b95921df70792284b42c96d2508bf8ca9c
using redash i manually checked that the only times the sum of
the payments does not match the paid column is for 2020-12 and
if it does not match then there are no payments.
Change-Id: I71ce0571de7e38e21548d7d6757b25abc3bfa781
The rollup archiver chore moves bucket bandwidth rollups and
storagenode rollups that are older than a given duration
to two new archive tables.
Change-Id: I1626a3742ad4271bc744fbcefa6355a29d49c6a5
This index is obsolete and duplicates a similiar (project_id, name)
index on the same table.
Moreover, it might confuse CockroachDB which of the two index to use,
which may might affect DB performance.
Change-Id: If8d1df8347714942cea9dca82864ba5f4973bed3
This is the first step in the removal of uptime columns on the
nodes table. These columns are no longer used:
uptime_success_count
total_uptime_count
uptime_reputation_alpha
uptime_reputation_beta
In order to avoid breaking backwards compatibility, we need to
remove all references to these columns before removing the columns
themselves from the database. However, since uptime_success_count
and total_uptime_count are NOT NULLABLE, we can't remove them from
the insert statements in the overlay. So we can't remove the columns
because of the references, and we can't remove the references because
the columns can't be null. What a pickle. To remedy this, we will set a
default on the columns. Then we should be able to remove them from the
insert statements
Change-Id: I75f6c56fb7897835bbf29869f86f39de1d9dd345
Now that the deprecated downtime tracking service is removed
(3fc76f4ffe), we can safely remove
the nodes_offline_times table.
Change-Id: Ia7c6efe32ba104dff5a830af5f2beee3337eefe5
We need to be able to list all buckets in DB without knowing project ID.
This method will be used to list buckets for metainfo loop
implementation based on metabase.
Change-Id: Iac75af0eee4f31e80a15577575a8249cbca787b2
these are unchanged from storj.io/dbx.
we're importing them because in a later commit we
will change them, and it'd be nice to see that
diff as a separate commit.
Change-Id: I8315130ed6bab397bd65b9a1a90c29d130b8c02d
this change tries really hard to never have all of the storage node
rollups in memory at the same time, up until the rollups are actually
getting summed together.
Change-Id: If67f49e7d71106798d996a6850b3e48671bd9e18
With the new phase 3 order submission, orders can be added to the
storage and bandwidth rollup tables at timestamps before the most recent
rollup was run. This change shifts the start time of each new rollup
window to account for any unexpired orders that might have been added
since the previous rollup.
A satellitedb migration is necessary to allow upserts in the
accounting_rollups table when entries with identical node_ids and
start_times are inserted.
Change-Id: Ib3022081f4d6be60cfec8430b45867ad3c01da63
We plan to add support for a new Reed-Solomon scheme soon, but our
repair queue orders segments by least number of healthy pieces first.
With a second RS scheme, fewer healthy pieces will not necessarily
correlate to lower health.
This change just adds the new column in a migration. A separate change
will add the new health function.
Right now, since we only support one RS scheme, behavior will not
change. Number of healthy pieces is being inserted as "segment health"
until the new health function is merged.
Segment health is calculated with a new priority function created in
commit 3e5640359. In order to use the function, a new config value is
added, called NodeFailureRate, representing the approximate probability
of any individual node going down in the duration of one checker run.
Change-Id: I51c4202203faf52528d923befbe886dbf86d02f2
It turns out we need to make 2 more changes in order for the new order submission phase 3 to get deployed.
This PR makes 2 changes:
1) when the rollup service deletes tallies, we now keep tallies around until orders expire (vs 1 day like before).
2) the reported rollup chore will now write the storagenode_bandwidth_rollups to a new table _phase2 as an intermediary step so it doesn't conflict with phase 3 order settlement.
These changes need to be deployed for 2 days before we can turn on phase 3 of the new orders settlement workflow.
Change-Id: Iafbff577ba7d55f8f17b7db857311b2ce799de60
This fixes a slow query that was taking up to 4 seconds in production
SELECT node_id, path, piece_num, root_piece_id, durability_ratio, queued_at, requested_at, last_failed_at, last_failed_code, failed_count, finished_at, order_limit_send_count
FROM graceful_exit_transfer_queue
WHERE node_id = '[redacted]'
AND finished_at is NULL
AND last_failed_at is NULL
ORDER BY durability_ratio asc, queued_at asc LIMIT 300 OFFSET 0;
Change-Id: Ib89743ca35f1d8d0a1456b20fa08c683ebdc1549
This change completes the column migration of
5f6fccc6e8 and
2f648fd981.
It resets every users project limits who are below or equal to our
current production defaults.
Change-Id: Ie041d08bb67b62844f6023190fc00bc2dad5b1cb