mirror of
https://git.anonymousland.org/anonymousland/synapse-product.git
synced 2024-12-21 21:35:14 -05:00
Merge pull request #4626 from matrix-org/erikj/fixup_user_ips_dedupe
Reduce user_ips bloat during dedupe background update
This commit is contained in:
commit
3df8fcca25
1
changelog.d/4626.misc
Normal file
1
changelog.d/4626.misc
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1 @@
|
||||
Improve 'user_ips' table deduplication background update
|
@ -167,12 +167,16 @@ class ClientIpStore(background_updates.BackgroundUpdateStore):
|
||||
clause = "? <= last_seen AND last_seen < ?"
|
||||
args = (begin_last_seen, end_last_seen)
|
||||
|
||||
# (Note: The DISTINCT in the inner query is important to ensure that
|
||||
# the COUNT(*) is accurate, otherwise double counting may happen due
|
||||
# to the join effectively being a cross product)
|
||||
txn.execute(
|
||||
"""
|
||||
SELECT user_id, access_token, ip,
|
||||
MAX(device_id), MAX(user_agent), MAX(last_seen)
|
||||
MAX(device_id), MAX(user_agent), MAX(last_seen),
|
||||
COUNT(*)
|
||||
FROM (
|
||||
SELECT user_id, access_token, ip
|
||||
SELECT DISTINCT user_id, access_token, ip
|
||||
FROM user_ips
|
||||
WHERE {}
|
||||
) c
|
||||
@ -186,7 +190,60 @@ class ClientIpStore(background_updates.BackgroundUpdateStore):
|
||||
|
||||
# We've got some duplicates
|
||||
for i in res:
|
||||
user_id, access_token, ip, device_id, user_agent, last_seen = i
|
||||
user_id, access_token, ip, device_id, user_agent, last_seen, count = i
|
||||
|
||||
# We want to delete the duplicates so we end up with only a
|
||||
# single row.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# The naive way of doing this would be just to delete all rows
|
||||
# and reinsert a constructed row. However, if there are a lot of
|
||||
# duplicate rows this can cause the table to grow a lot, which
|
||||
# can be problematic in two ways:
|
||||
# 1. If user_ips is already large then this can cause the
|
||||
# table to rapidly grow, potentially filling the disk.
|
||||
# 2. Reinserting a lot of rows can confuse the table
|
||||
# statistics for postgres, causing it to not use the
|
||||
# correct indices for the query above, resulting in a full
|
||||
# table scan. This is incredibly slow for large tables and
|
||||
# can kill database performance. (This seems to mainly
|
||||
# happen for the last query where the clause is simply `? <
|
||||
# last_seen`)
|
||||
#
|
||||
# So instead we want to delete all but *one* of the duplicate
|
||||
# rows. That is hard to do reliably, so we cheat and do a two
|
||||
# step process:
|
||||
# 1. Delete all rows with a last_seen strictly less than the
|
||||
# max last_seen. This hopefully results in deleting all but
|
||||
# one row the majority of the time, but there may be
|
||||
# duplicate last_seen
|
||||
# 2. If multiple rows remain, we fall back to the naive method
|
||||
# and simply delete all rows and reinsert.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Note that this relies on no new duplicate rows being inserted,
|
||||
# but if that is happening then this entire process is futile
|
||||
# anyway.
|
||||
|
||||
# Do step 1:
|
||||
|
||||
txn.execute(
|
||||
"""
|
||||
DELETE FROM user_ips
|
||||
WHERE user_id = ? AND access_token = ? AND ip = ? AND last_seen < ?
|
||||
""",
|
||||
(user_id, access_token, ip, last_seen)
|
||||
)
|
||||
if txn.rowcount == count - 1:
|
||||
# We deleted all but one of the duplicate rows, i.e. there
|
||||
# is exactly one remaining and so there is nothing left to
|
||||
# do.
|
||||
continue
|
||||
elif txn.rowcount >= count:
|
||||
raise Exception(
|
||||
"We deleted more duplicate rows from 'user_ips' than expected",
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# The previous step didn't delete enough rows, so we fallback to
|
||||
# step 2:
|
||||
|
||||
# Drop all the duplicates
|
||||
txn.execute(
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user