Without this, uwsgi does not release the GIL before going back into
`epoll_wait` to wait for the next request. This results in any
background threads languishing, unserviced.[1]
Practically, this results in Sentry background reporter threads timing
out when attempting to post results -- but only in situations with low
traffic, as in those significant time is spent in `epoll_wait`. This
is seen in logs as:
WARN [urllib3.connectionpool] Retrying (Retry(total=1, connect=None, read=None, redirect=None, status=None)) after connection broken by 'SSLError(SSLEOFError(8, 'EOF occurred in violation of protocol (_ssl.c:1131)'))': /api/123456789/envelope/
Or:
WARN [urllib3.connectionpool] Retrying (Retry(total=0, connect=None, read=None, redirect=None, status=None)) after connection broken by 'ProxyError('Cannot connect to proxy.', RemoteDisconnected('Remote end closed connection without response'))': /api/123456789/envelope/
Sentry attempts to detect this and warn, but due to startup ordering,
the warning is not printed without lazy-loading.
Enable threads, at a miniscule performance cost, in order to support
background workers like Sentry[2].
[1] https://github.com/unbit/uwsgi/issues/1141#issuecomment-169042767
[2] https://docs.sentry.io/clients/python/advanced/#a-note-on-uwsgi
This is a reprise of c97162e485, but for the case where certbot
certs are no longer in use by way of enabling `http_only` and letting
another server handle TLS termination.
Fixes: #22034.
This allows system-level configuration to be done by `apt-get install`
of nginx modules, which place their load statements in this directory.
The initial import in ed0cb0a5f8 of the stock nginx config omitted
this include -- one potential explanation was in an effort to reduce
the memory footprint of the server.
The default nginx install enables:
50-mod-http-auth-pam.conf
50-mod-http-dav-ext.conf
50-mod-http-echo.conf
50-mod-http-geoip2.conf
50-mod-http-geoip.conf
50-mod-http-image-filter.conf
50-mod-http-subs-filter.conf
50-mod-http-upstream-fair.conf
50-mod-http-xslt-filter.conf
50-mod-mail.conf
50-mod-stream.conf
While Zulip doesn't actively use any of these, they likely don't do
any harm to simply be loaded -- they are loaded into every nginx by
default.
Having the `modules-enabled` include allows easier extension of the
server, as neither of the existing wildcard
includes (`/etc/nginx/conf.d/*.conf` and
`/etc/nginx/zulip-include/app.d/*.conf`) are in the top context, and
thus able to load modules.
54b6a83412 fixed the typo introduced in 49ad188449, but that does
not clean up existing installs which had the file with the wrong name
already.
Remove the file with the typo'd name, so two jobs do not race, and fix
the typo in the comment.
The top-level `chdir` setting only does the chdir once, at initial
`uwsgi` startup time. Rolling restarts, however, however, require
that `uwsgi` pick up the _new_ value of the `current` directory, and
start new workers in that directory -- as currently implemented,
rolling restarts cannot restart into newer versions of the code, only
the same one in which they were started.
Use [configurable hooks][1] to execute the `chdir` after every fork.
This causes the following behaviour:
```
Thu May 12 18:56:55 2022 - chain reload starting...
Thu May 12 18:56:55 2022 - chain next victim is worker 1
Gracefully killing worker 1 (pid: 1757689)...
worker 1 killed successfully (pid: 1757689)
Respawned uWSGI worker 1 (new pid: 1757969)
Thu May 12 18:56:56 2022 - chain is still waiting for worker 1...
running "chdir:/home/zulip/deployments/current" (post-fork)...
Thu May 12 18:56:57 2022 - chain is still waiting for worker 1...
Thu May 12 18:56:58 2022 - chain is still waiting for worker 1...
Thu May 12 18:56:59 2022 - chain is still waiting for worker 1...
WSGI app 0 (mountpoint='') ready in 3 seconds on interpreter 0x55dfca409170 pid: 1757969 (default app)
Thu May 12 18:57:00 2022 - chain next victim is worker 2
[...]
```
..and so forth down the line of processes. Each process is correctly
started in the _current_ value of `current`, and thus picks up the
correct code.
[1]: https://uwsgi-docs.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Hooks.html
Our current EC2 systems don’t have an interface named ‘eth0’, and if
they did, this script would do nothing but crash with ImportError
because we have never installed boto.utils for Python 3.
(The message of commit 2a4d851a7c made
an effort to document for future researchers why this script should
not have been blindly converted to Python 3. However, commit
2dc6d09c2a (#14278) was evidently
unresearched and untested.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
6f5ae8d13d removed the `$replication` variable from the
configurations of PostgreSQL 12 and higher, but left it in the
templates for PostgreSQL 10 and 11. Because `undef != ''`,
deployments on PostgreSQL 10 and 11 started trying to push to S3
backups, regardless of if they were configured, leaving frequent log
messages like:
```
2022-04-30 12:45:47.805 UTC [626d24ec.1f8db0]: [107-1] LOG: archiver process (PID 2086106) exited with exit code 1
2022-04-30 12:45:49.680 UTC [626d24ee.1f8dc3]: [18-1] LOG: checkpoint complete: wrote 19 buffers (0.0%); 0 WAL file(s) added, 0 removed, 0 recycled; write=1.910 s, sync=0.022 s, total=1.950 s; sync files=16, longest=0.018 s, average=0.002 s; distance=49 kB, estimate=373 kB
/usr/bin/timeout: failed to run command "/usr/local/bin/env-wal-g": No such file or directory
2022-04-30 12:46:17.852 UTC [626d2f99.1fd4e9]: [1-1] FATAL: archive command failed with exit code 127
2022-04-30 12:46:17.852 UTC [626d2f99.1fd4e9]: [2-1] DETAIL: The failed archive command was: /usr/bin/timeout 10m /usr/local/bin/env-wal-g wal-push pg_wal/000000010000000300000080
```
Switch the PostgreSQL 10 and 11 configuration to check
`s3_backups_bucket`, like the other versions.
It is possible to have previously installed certbot, but switched back
to using self-signed certificates -- in which case renewing them using
certbot may fail.
Verify that the certificate is a symlink into certbot's output
directory before running `fix-standalone-certbot`.
Commit f6d27562fa (#21564) tried to
ensure Chrony is running, which fails in containers where Chrony
doesn’t have permission to update the host clock.
The Debian package should still attempt to start it, and Puppet should
still restart it when chrony.conf is modified.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Since wal-g does not provide binaries for aarch64, build them from
source. While building them from source for arm64 would better ensure
that build process is tested, the build process takes 7min and 700M of
temp files, which is an unacceptable cost; we thus only build on
aarch64.
Since the wal-g build process uses submodules, which are not in the
Github export, we clone the full wal-g repository. Because the
repository is relatively small, we clone it anew on each new version,
rather than attempt to manage the remotes.
Fixes#21070.
The default timeout for `exec` commands in Puppet is 5 minutes[1]. On
slow connections, this may not be sufficient to download larger
downloads, such as the ~135MB golang tarball.
Increase the timeout to 10 minutes; this is a minimum download speed
of is ~225kB/s.
Fixes#21449.
[1]: https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/5.5/types/exec.html#exec-attribute-timeout
This commit adds a cron job which runs every hour to add the users to
full members system group if user is promoted to a full member.
This should ensure that full member status is available no more than
an hour after configuration suggests it should be.
Previously, it was possible to configure `wal-g` backups without
replication enabled; this resulted in only daily backups, not
streaming backups. It was also possible to enable replication without
configuring the `wal-g` backups bucket; this simply failed to work.
Make `wal-g` backups always streaming, and warn loudly if replication
is enabled but `wal-g` is not configured.