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
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
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 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
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
Currently we have no way to actually set one
of the following limits to 0 (meaning not usable):
- maxBuckets
- usageLimit
- bandwidthLimit
With having the field nullable,
NULL corresponds to the global default,
0 now actually 0 and
a set value determines a custom limit.
Change-Id: I92bb77529dcbd0881ae8368921be9d246eb0919e
Removes old project_bandwidth_rollups records that are no longer used.
Uses a retain months configuration to determine how many months to save. Current month cannot be removed.
Tests retainMonths=-1, 0, 2
Change-Id: Ia4be2546cdb28802427acf41ecd85ad66df3e62c
What:
Use the github.com/jackc/pgx postgresql driver in place of
github.com/lib/pq.
Why:
github.com/lib/pq has some problems with error handling and context
cancellations (i.e. it might even issue queries or DML statements more
than once! see https://github.com/lib/pq/issues/939). The
github.com/jackx/pgx library appears not to have these problems, and
also appears to be better engineered and implemented (in particular, it
doesn't use "exceptions by panic"). It should also give us some
performance improvements in some cases, and even more so if we can use
it directly instead of going through the database/sql layer.
Change-Id: Ia696d220f340a097dee9550a312d37de14ed2044
The DB query in GetAllocatedBandwidthTotal uses an exclusive range:
'WHERE interval_start > ?'
The value that is used for this condition is the first day of current the month,
00:00:00 UTC.
By using the exclusive '>', we exclude the entire first hour of the month from the
result set.
Change-Id: I3ed300f5230c7514dc9495a85e8166213cd0842e
uuid.UUID implements driver.Value so it can be directly used as a
scannable result.
Replace uses of dbutil.BytesToUUID with uuid.FromBytes.
Change-Id: I51a670185ceb3cc2199d5aa2b76bc3fc191ca8fe
In the methods we use to retrieve a user's chargeable BW, we were summing GET, GET_AUDIT,
and GET_REPAIR. We only want to charge for GET
Change-Id: Icead7695494b22c7c835482cf8b1512a980d59f1
everyone was importing it as dbx anyway. why should it be
named satellitedb? so yeah just pass the "-p dbx" flag.
Change-Id: I5efa669f4f00f196b38a9acd0d402009475a936f
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
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
* rename pkg/linksharing to linksharing
* rename pkg/httpserver to linksharing/httpserver
* rename pkg/eestream to uplink/eestream
* rename pkg/stream to uplink/stream
* rename pkg/metainfo/kvmetainfo to uplink/metainfo/kvmetainfo
* rename pkg/auth/signing to pkg/signing
* rename pkg/storage to uplink/storage
* rename pkg/accounting to satellite/accounting
* rename pkg/audit to satellite/audit
* rename pkg/certdb to satellite/certdb
* rename pkg/discovery to satellite/discovery
* rename pkg/overlay to satellite/overlay
* rename pkg/datarepair to satellite/repair
* fix orderdDB methods to take correct args
* update tally to save projectID in correct format
* update var names in splitBucket test
* changes per CR comments
What: Changes to support custom usage limit for the project. With this implementation by default project usage limit is taken from configuration flag. If project DB field usage_limit will be set to value larger than 0 it will become custom usage limit and we will be used to verify is limit was exceeded.
Whats changed:
usage_limit (bigint) field added to projects table (with migration)
things related to project usage moved from metainfo endpoint to project usage type
accounting.ProjectAccounting extended with GetProjectUsageLimits() method
Why: We need to have different usage limits per project. https://storjlabs.atlassian.net/browse/V3-1814