- 18 Nov, 2015 20 commits
-
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This won't work efficiently if you happen to have a lot of projects.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
These changes are based on those from commit 03f5ff75, except they use a UNION instead of plucking IDs into memory.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
Previously this controller would in multiple places load tons (read: around 65000) project and/or group IDs into memory. These changes in combination with the previous commits significantly cut down loading times of user profile pages and the Atom feeds of users.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
These methods no longer include public groups/projects (that don't belong to the actual user) as this is handled by the various finder classes now. This also removes the need for passing extra arguments. Note that memoizing was removed _explicitly_. For whatever reason doing so messes up the users controller to a point where it claims a certain user does _not_ have access to certain groups/projects when it does have access. Existing code shouldn't be affected as these methods are only called in ways that they'd run queries anyway (e.g. a combination of "any?" and "each" which would run 2 queries regardless of memoizing).
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This method can be used to filter projects to those visible to a given user.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
These methods will be used to get a list of groups, optionally restricted to only those visible to a given user.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This will be used to move some querying logic from the users controller to the Event model (where it belongs).
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This class now uses a UNION (when needed) instead of plucking tens of thousands of project IDs into memory. The tests have also been re-written to ensure all different use cases are tested properly (assuming I didn't forget any cases). The finder has also been broken up into 3 different finder classes: * ContributedProjectsFinder: class for getting the projects a user contributed to. * PersonalProjectsFinder: class for getting the personal projects of a user. * ProjectsFinder: class for getting generic projects visible to a given user. Previously a lot of the logic of these finders was handled directly in the users controller.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
In the previous setup the GroupsFinder class had two distinct tasks: 1. Finding the projects user A could see 2. Finding the projects of user A that user B could see Task two was actually handled outside of the GroupsFinder (in the UsersController) by restricting the returned list of groups to those the viewed user was a member of. Moving all this logic into a single finder proved to be far too complex and confusing, hence there are now two finders: * GroupsFinder: for finding groups a user can see * JoinedGroupsFinder: for finding groups that user A is a member of, restricted to either public groups or groups user B can also see.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This new setup no longer loads any IDs into memory using "pluck", instead using SQL UNIONs to merge the various datasets together. This results in greatly improved query performance as well as a reduction of memory usage. The old setup was in particular problematic when requesting the authorized projects _including_ public/internal projects as this would result in roughly 65000 project IDs being loaded into memory. These IDs would in turn be passed to other queries.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This removes the need for plucking any IDs into Ruby.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
By moving the default sort order into a separate scope (and calling this from the default scope) we can more easily re-apply a default order without having to specify the exact column/ordering all over the place.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This allows retrieving of the list of authorized projects using a single query, without having to load any IDs into Ruby. This in turn also means we can remove the method User#authorized_projects_id.
-
Yorick Peterse authored
This class can be used to join multiple AcitveRecord::Relation objects together using a SQL UNION statement. ActiveRecord < 5.0 sadly doesn't support UNION and existing Gems out there don't handle prepared statements (e.g. they never incremented the variable bindings).
-
Yorick Peterse authored
Instead of using MAX(events.updated_at) we can simply sort the events in descending order by the "id" column and grab the first row. In other words, instead of this: SELECT max(events.updated_at) AS max_id FROM events LEFT OUTER JOIN projects ON projects.id = events.project_id LEFT OUTER JOIN namespaces ON namespaces.id = projects.namespace_id WHERE events.author_id IS NOT NULL AND events.project_id IN (13083); we can use this: SELECT events.updated_at AS max_id FROM events LEFT OUTER JOIN projects ON projects.id = events.project_id LEFT OUTER JOIN namespaces ON namespaces.id = projects.namespace_id WHERE events.author_id IS NOT NULL AND events.project_id IN (13083) ORDER BY events.id DESC LIMIT 1; This has the benefit that on PostgreSQL a backwards index scan can be used, which due to the "LIMIT 1" will at most process only a single row. This in turn greatly speeds up the process of grabbing the latest update time. This can be confirmed by looking at the query plans. The first query produces the following plan: Aggregate (cost=43779.84..43779.85 rows=1 width=12) (actual time=2142.462..2142.462 rows=1 loops=1) -> Index Scan using index_events_on_project_id on events (cost=0.43..43704.69 rows=30060 width=12) (actual time=0.033..2138.086 rows=32769 loops=1) Index Cond: (project_id = 13083) Filter: (author_id IS NOT NULL) Planning time: 1.248 ms Execution time: 2142.548 ms The second query in turn produces the following plan: Limit (cost=0.43..41.65 rows=1 width=16) (actual time=1.394..1.394 rows=1 loops=1) -> Index Scan Backward using events_pkey on events (cost=0.43..1238907.96 rows=30060 width=16) (actual time=1.394..1.394 rows=1 loops=1) Filter: ((author_id IS NOT NULL) AND (project_id = 13083)) Rows Removed by Filter: 2104 Planning time: 0.166 ms Execution time: 1.408 ms According to the above plans the 2nd query is around 1500 times faster. However, re-running the first query produces timings of around 80 ms, making the 2nd query "only" around 55 times faster.
-
Job van der Voort authored
Documentation for Git LFS Doc explaining how to use Git LFS, how to use Git LFS with GitLab, known issues and troubleshooting tips. See merge request !1813
-
Job van der Voort authored
-
Marin Jankovski authored
-
- 17 Nov, 2015 20 commits
-
-
Sytse Sijbrandij authored
More labels since we get more specializations. /cc @creamzy @ernstvn @dzaporozhets See merge request !1821
-
Sytse Sijbrandij authored
-
Sytse Sijbrandij authored
-
Robert Speicher authored
Correctly set comparison first commit when range includes a merge commit Fixes #3207. See merge request !1814
-
Robert Speicher authored
[ci skip]
-
Robert Speicher authored
See merge request !1705
-
Robert Speicher authored
Add notification to the former assignee upon unassignment Replaces !1769 Fixes #3395 See merge request !1818
-
Robert Speicher authored
Prevent the last owner of a group from being able to delete themselves by 'adding' themselves as a master Replaces !1708. Fixes #1111. See merge request !1815
-
Dmitriy Zaporozhets authored
Signed-off-by: Dmitriy Zaporozhets <dmitriy.zaporozhets@gmail.com>
-
Robert Speicher authored
[ci skip]
-
Robert Speicher authored
See merge request !1816
-
Douwe Maan authored
-
Robert Speicher authored
[ci skip]
-
Robert Speicher authored
[ci skip]
-
Robert Speicher authored
Don't render note edit forms for visitors
-
Douwe Maan authored
-
Douwe Maan authored
-
Douwe Maan authored
-
Douwe Maan authored
-
Douwe Maan authored
-