My understanding is that the nodes table has the following fields:
- `address` field which can be a hostname or an IP
- `last_net` field that is the /24 subnet of the IP resolved from the address
This PR does the following:
1) add back the `last_ip` field to the nodes table
2) for uplink operations remove the calls that the satellite makes to `lookupNodeAddress` (which makes the DNS calls to resolve the IP from the hostname) and instead use the data stored in the nodes table `last_ip` field. This means that the IP that the satellite sends to the uplink for the storage nodes could be approx 1 hr stale. In the short term this is fine, next we will be adding changes so that the storage node pushes any IP changes to the satellite in real time.
3) use the address field for repair and audit since we want them to still make DNS calls to confirm the IP is up to date
4) try to reduce confusion about hostname, ip, subnet, and address in the code base
Change-Id: I96ce0d8bb78303f82483d0701bc79544b74057ac
We missed this in the migration that added the num_healthy_pieces
column. It exists in dbx, but not on the actual satellite table.
Change-Id: If16b5ec2325d56406250298531b3285215188bf3
The migration was broken into one migration per table to reduce table locking and reduce the
chances of failure due to SQL timeouts.
Of the 14 fields that lacked time zones, only the 3 named 'interval_start` seemed to have non-UTC data in them.
These fields are fixed in the migration by removing the +00 and adding AT TIME ZONE current_setting('TIMEZONE')
Field with good data are migrated by adding AT TIME ZONE 'UTC'
Note that postgres's timezone() is different than cockroach's timezone() so AT TIME ZONE is used.
https://storjlabs.atlassian.net/browse/SM-104
Change-Id: I410f2f1d7c11b143f17844347f37e6f4b1e70fce
these tables are used in future commits with respect to the new
storagenode payments code. if we create them now, it will make
backfilling them with historical data easier.
Change-Id: I3c08c9770ec5b2baa38b4f2fd18c2f07746a61c2
Add a column to the repair queue table in the satellite db for healthy
piece count. When an item is selected from the repair queue, the least
durable segment that has not been attempted in the past hour should be
selected first. This prevents our repairer from getting stuck doing work
on segments that are close to the repair threshold while allowing
segments that are more unhealthy to degrade further.
The migration also clears the repair queue so that the migration runs
quickly and we can properly account for segment health in future repair
work.
We do not select items off the repair queue that have been attempted in
the past six hours. This was changed from on hour to allow us time to
try a wider variety of segments when the repair queue is very large.
Change-Id: Iaf183f1e5fd45cd792a52e3563a3e43a2b9f410b
This change adds two new tables to process orders as fast as we used
to but in an asynchronous manner and with hopefully less storage
usage. This should help scale on cockroach, but limits us to one
worker. It lays the groundwork for the order processing pipeline to
be queue rather than database driven.
For more details, see the added fast billing changes blueprint.
It also fixes the orders db so that all the timestamps that are
passed to columns that do not contain a time zone are converted to
UTC at the last possible opportunity, making it less likely to use
the APIs incorrectly. We really should migrate to include timezones
on all of our timestamp columns.
Change-Id: Ibfda8e7a3d5972b7798fb61b31ff56419c64ea35
it was noticed that if you had a long lived transaction A that
was blocking some other transaction B and A was being aborted
due to retriable errors, then transaction B was never given
priority. this was due to using savepoints to do lightweight
retries.
this behavior was problematic becaue we had some queries blocked
for over 16 hours, so this commit addresses the issue with two
prongs:
1. bound the amount of time we will retry a transaction
2. create new transactions when a retry is needed
the first ensures that we never wait for 16 hours, and the value
chosen is 10 minutes. that should be long enough for an ample
amount of retries for small queries, and huge queries probably
shouldn't be retried, even if possible: it's more preferrable to
find a way to make them smaller.
the second ensures that even in the case of retries, queries that
are blocked on the aborted transaction gain priority to run.
between those two changes, the maximum stall time due to retries
should be bounded to around 10 minutes.
Change-Id: Icf898501ef505a89738820a3fae2580988f9f5f4
The old migration was not working. It was updateding pending (status 0)
and failed (status -1) to completed (status 100).
Change-Id: I808ff3cc692fe6c698ce26a8b411b134e67b752b
Currently Cockroach DB setup takes a significant amount of time.
This flattens the database setup into a single query,
which improves the test time significantly.
The migration tests still test each migration separately.
Change-Id: Iaca16f34a6af3926fa2b5ebf618f939fd59460b3
Limits how many times metainfo APIs can be called per second by project ID. If limit is exceeded, the API will return Unauthorized/Too Many requests.
Limit per second and the size of the limiter cache per project are configurable, as well as whether the limiter is enabled.
Tests added/updated for the new rate_limit field in projects table.
Tests added for exceeding limits and disableing limiter.
Change-Id: Ic8ad102de3b690a475809d4f684156d5715f20fa
Also added temporary types withRebind and withTagTx,
which will be later removed. Currently they help to avoid
changing the whole codebase at the same time.
Change-Id: I7f07ba8f4709a23a463bfa67464628665a05808f
warning: databases migrated to version 77 before this commit
is merged must be manually re-migrated. this should not be a
problem for anything but staging databases.
Change-Id: Ie1631c48379472352014183ee43f1465e22200f7
this commit introduces the reported_serials table. its purpose is
to allow for blind writes into it as nodes report in so that we have
minimal contention. in order to continue to accurately account for
used bandwidth, though, we cannot immediately add the settled amount.
if we did, we would have to give up on blind writes.
the table's primary key is structured precisely so that we can quickly
find expired orders and so that we maximally benefit from rocksdb
path prefix compression. we do this by rounding the expires at time
forward to the next day, effectively giving us storagenode petnames
for free. and since there's no secondary index or foreign key
constraints, this design should use significantly less space than
the current used_serials table while also reducing contention.
after inserting the orders into the table, we have a chore that
periodically consumes all of the expired orders in it and inserts
them into the existing rollups tables. this is as if we changed
the nodes to report as the order expired rather than as soon as
possible, so the belief in correctness of the refactor is higher.
since we are able to process large batches of orders (typically
a day's worth), we can use the code to maximally batch inserts into
the rollup tables to make inserts as friendly as possible to
cockroach.
Change-Id: I25d609ca2679b8331979184f16c6d46d4f74c1a6
This reverts commit 8e242cd012.
Revert because lib/pq has known issues with context cancellation.
These issues need to be resolved before these changes can be merged.
Change-Id: I160af51dbc2d67c5449aafa406a403e5367bb555
this will allow for some nice runtime analysis down the road.
also, this allows for wrapping database handles in a way that
can interact with these contexts
requires https://review.dev.storj.io/c/storj/dbx/+/514
Change-Id: Ib087b7cd73296dd2c1e0331314da34d861f61d2b
When an uplink requests an upload or download from the satellite we are trackig the
allocated bandwidth twice. The value in bucket_bandwidth_rollups is used
for project limits but the value in storagenode_bandwidth_rollups is not
used at all. We can increase the performance by removing it. Uplinks
will get a faster response from the satellite.
Change-Id: Icccd41f94107ef34668f30f99bf5f728c384b07e
Backstory: I needed a better way to pass around information about the
underlying driver and implementation to all the various db-using things
in satellitedb (at least until some new "cockroach driver" support makes
it to DBX). After hitting a few dead ends, I decided I wanted to have a
type that could act like a *dbx.DB but which would also carry
information about the implementation, etc. Then I could pass around that
type to all the things in satellitedb that previously wanted *dbx.DB.
But then I realized that *satellitedb.DB was, essentially, exactly that
already.
One thing that might have kept *satellitedb.DB from being directly
usable was that embedding a *dbx.DB inside it would make a lot of dbx
methods publicly available on a *satellitedb.DB instance that previously
were nicely encapsulated and hidden. But after a quick look, I realized
that _nothing_ outside of satellite/satellitedb even needs to use
satellitedb.DB at all. It didn't even need to be exported, except for
some trivially-replaceable code in migrate_postgres_test.go. And once
I made it unexported, any concerns about exposing new methods on it were
entirely moot.
So I have here changed the exported *satellitedb.DB type into the
unexported *satellitedb.satelliteDB type, and I have changed all the
places here that wanted raw dbx.DB handles to use this new type instead.
Now they can just take a gander at the implementation member on it and
know all they need to know about the underlying database.
This will make it possible for some other pending code here to
differentiate between postgres and cockroach backends.
Change-Id: I27af99f8ae23b50782333da5277b553b34634edc
for storj-sim to work, we need to avoid schemas in cockroach urls
so we have storj-sim create namespaced databases instead of schemas
and we have the migrate command create the database in the same way
that it would create a schema for postgres. then it works!
a follow up commit will move the creation of the database/schemas
into storj-sim's setup step so that we can avoid doing these icky
creations during normal migration calls. it will also make the
pointerdb have an explicit call to migrate instead of just doing
it every time it's opened.
Change-Id: If69ef5cb96b6866b0438c761bd445afb3597ae5f
satellitedb migration tests ran against multiple base versions, however after the merging all the steps the base versions didn't exists anymore - which meant none of the migration tests were actually running.
first, so that they all work the same way, because it's getting
complicated, and second, so that we can do the appropriate thing
instead of CREATE SCHEMA for cockroachdb.
Change-Id: I27fbaeeb6223a3e06d97bcf692a2d014b31465f7
* update migration steps, add crdb support to testplanet
* add crdb support
* have jenkins run a bares bones crdb compat test
* skip crdb tests
* skip crdb tests
* fix root_piece_id column
* write crdb store to tmp dir
* escape
* merge migration
* rm migration versions
* rm unneeded migration test data
* create index w/postgres + crdb compatible syntax
* add default to offers.invitee_credit_duration_days
* changes so that schema matches from master to branch
* change to be crdb compatible
* add check to confirm db version
* mv version check to migration
* update tests
* add minversion to sadb migration, update tests
* confirm min version for all dbs in a migration
* add validate migration to sadb
* fix lint err
* rm min version check from migrate
* change sadb check
* hard code min db version
* fix comment
* separate sadb migration, add version check
* update checkversion to do same validation as migration
* changes per CR
* add sa migration to storj-sim
* add different debug port in storj-sim for migration
* add wait for exit for storj-sim migration
* update sa docker entrypoint to support migration
* storj-sim satellite parts all wait for migration
* upgrade golang-migrate/migrate to v4 because bug
* fix go mod tidy