These default to off, because in situations with thousands of queues,
consumers, and producers, they cause unreasonable overhead. Our use
case has few enough queues that we do want to be able to inspect them
individually.
Enable per-object Prometheus metrics, per [1].
[1]: 78851828ec/deps/rabbitmq_prometheus (configuration)
We require a `pg_dump` whose version matches the version of the server
we are configured against (see 3a8b4b0205). Installing the latest
`postgresql-client` does not guarantee that we have such a binary
present.
This only defaults to on for local-disk backups, since they are more
disk-size-sensitive, and local accesses are quite cheap compared to
loading multiple incremental backups from S3.
Replace a separate call to subprocess, starting `node` from scratch,
with an optional standalone node Express service which performs the
rendering. In benchmarking, this reduces the overhead of a KaTeX call
from 120ms to 2.8ms. This is notable because enough calls to KaTeX in
a single message would previously time out the whole message
rendering.
The service is optional because he majority of deployments do not use
enough LaTeX to merit the additional memory usage (60Mb).
Fixes: #17425.
This makes no immediate reloads the default for runtornado, matching
the production configuration, and changes the development incantation
to be the one to specify the departure from the norm, with
--immediate-reloads.
Decouple the sending of client restart events from the restarting of
the servers. Restarts use the new Tornado restart-clients endpoint to
inject "restart" events into queues of clients which were loaded from
the previous Tornado process. The rate is controlled by the
`application_server.client_restart_rate`, in clients per minute, or a
flag to `restart-clients` which overrides it. Note that a web client
will also spread its restart over 5 minutes, so artificially-slow
client restarts are generally not very necessary.
Restarts of clients are deferred to until after post-deploy hooks are
run, such that the pre- and post- deploy hooks are around the actual
server restarts, even if pushing restart events to clients takes
significant time.
Note that this uses `ssh-keyscan` to write in the currently-observed
host fingerprint; if DNS or network is untrusted during initial puppet
apply, this can allow attackers to write their own host key, obviating
the utility of known_hosts.
We do not view this as a likely attack mechanism, since in our
deployment the network and DNS is almost certainly trusted, and if
not, the timing attack to catch only initial configuration is likely
impossible.
572443edc6 removed the callsite that triggered the exec in
`zulip::systemd_daemon_reload`, making its inclusion and ordering via
`require` moot.
Remove the call.
This should give some more room for systems that are still below 4GB
of RAM to use the lower-memory multithreaded mode, which is less
likely to have OOM kills (a very bad experience).
There should be little cost, as few systems are likely allocated with
memory in this range.