""" Implements the per-domain data retention policy. The goal is to have a single place where the policy is defined. This is complicated by needing to apply this policy both to the database and to log files. Additionally, we want to use an efficient query for the database, rather than iterating through messages one by one. The code in this module does not actually remove anything; it just identifies which items should be kept or removed. """ import sys import operator from django.utils import timezone from django.db.models import Q from datetime import datetime, timedelta from zephyr.models import Realm, UserMessage # Each domain has a maximum age for retained messages. # # FIXME: Move this into the database. max_age = { 'customer1.invalid': timedelta(days=31), } def should_expunge_from_log(msg, now): """Should a particular log entry be expunged? msg: a log entry dict now: current time for purposes of determining log entry age""" # This function will be called many times, but we want to compare all # entries against a consistent "current time". So the caller passes # that time as a parameter. if msg.get('type') not in ('stream', 'huddle', 'personal'): # Keep all metadata changes like realm_created, subscription_added, # etc. return False # FIXME: Yet another place where we compute the domain manually. # See #260. domain = msg['sender_email'].split('@', 1)[1] if domain not in max_age: # Keep forever. return False age = now - datetime.fromtimestamp(msg['timestamp']) return age > max_age[domain] def get_UserMessages_to_expunge(): """Fetch all UserMessages which should be expunged from the database. After deleting these, you may also want to call Message.remove_unreachable().""" # Unlike retain_in_log, this handles all messages at once, so we # use the actual current time. now = timezone.now() queries = [Q(user_profile__realm = realm, message__pub_date__lt = now - max_age[realm.domain]) for realm in Realm.objects.all() if realm.domain in max_age] if not queries: return UserMessage.objects.none() # Return all objects matching any of the queries in 'queries'. return UserMessage.objects.filter(reduce(operator.or_, queries))