This will be used in a followup PR to order search results instead of the RAC join. Currently, the join with the RAC table in search results in a lookup of ~600K rows, which causes searching to take ~6s. This PR denormalizes the data we need, as well as allowing us to score based on a wider band (6 months vs the current 1 week).
Unique indexes must have less than 767 bytes and UTF-8 encoding with 255
chars is beyond this maximum. Since this is an internal identifier, we
can be confident that we will not require UTF-8 for it in the future.
Before this change, the queue code would check that none of the fields on the item to be claimed had changed between the time when the item was selected and the item is claimed. While this is a safe approach, it also causes quite a bit of lock contention in MySQL, because InnoDB will take a lock on *any* rows examined by the `where` clause of the `update`, even if they will ultimately thrown out due to other clauses (See: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/innodb-locks-set.html: "A ..., an UPDATE, ... generally set record locks on every index record that is scanned in the processing of the SQL statement. It does not matter whether there are WHERE conditions in the statement that would exclude the row. InnoDB does not remember the exact WHERE condition, but only knows which index ranges were scanned").
As a result, we want to minimize the number of fields accessed in the `where` clause on an update to the QueueItem row. To do so, we introduce a new `state_id` column, which is updated on *every change* to the QueueItem rows with a unique, random value. We can then have the queue item claiming code simply check that the `state_id` column has not changed between the retrieval and claiming steps. This minimizes the number of columns being checked to two (`id` and `state_id`), and thus, should significantly reduce lock contention. Note that we can not (yet) reduce to just a single `state_id` column (which should work in theory), because we need to maintain backwards compatibility with existing items in the QueueItem table, which will be given empty `state_id` values when the migration in this change runs.
Also adds a number of tests for other queue operations that we want to make sure operate correctly following this change.
[Delivers #133632501]
When a user now logs in for the first time for any external auth (LDAP, JWT, Keystone, Github, Google, Dex), they will be presented with a confirmation screen that affords them the opportunity to change their Quay-assigned username.
Addresses most of the user issues around #74
This migration generates the following for MySQL:
BEGIN;
-- Running upgrade 1093d8b212bb -> 6243159408b5
ALTER TABLE logentry DROP FOREIGN KEY fk_logentry_account_id_user;
ALTER TABLE logentry DROP FOREIGN KEY
fk_logentry_repository_id_repository;
ALTER TABLE logentry DROP FOREIGN KEY fk_logentry_performer_id_user;
UPDATE alembic_version SET version_num='6243159408b5' WHERE
alembic_version.version_num = '1093d8b212bb';
COMMIT;