zulip/zerver/lib/queue.py

375 lines
15 KiB
Python

import logging
import random
import threading
import time
from collections import defaultdict
from typing import Any, Callable, Dict, List, Mapping, Optional, Set
import orjson
import pika
import pika.adapters.tornado_connection
from django.conf import settings
from pika.adapters.blocking_connection import BlockingChannel
from pika.spec import Basic
from tornado import ioloop
from zerver.lib.utils import statsd
MAX_REQUEST_RETRIES = 3
Consumer = Callable[[BlockingChannel, Basic.Deliver, pika.BasicProperties, bytes], None]
# This simple queuing library doesn't expose much of the power of
# rabbitmq/pika's queuing system; its purpose is to just provide an
# interface for external files to put things into queues and take them
# out from bots without having to import pika code all over our codebase.
class SimpleQueueClient:
def __init__(self,
# Disable RabbitMQ heartbeats by default because BlockingConnection can't process them
rabbitmq_heartbeat: Optional[int] = 0,
) -> None:
self.log = logging.getLogger('zulip.queue')
self.queues: Set[str] = set()
self.channel: Optional[BlockingChannel] = None
self.consumers: Dict[str, Set[Consumer]] = defaultdict(set)
self.rabbitmq_heartbeat = rabbitmq_heartbeat
self.is_consuming = False
self._connect()
def _connect(self) -> None:
start = time.time()
self.connection = pika.BlockingConnection(self._get_parameters())
self.channel = self.connection.channel()
self.log.info(f'SimpleQueueClient connected (connecting took {time.time() - start:.3f}s)')
def _reconnect(self) -> None:
self.connection = None
self.channel = None
self.queues = set()
self._connect()
def _get_parameters(self) -> pika.ConnectionParameters:
credentials = pika.PlainCredentials(settings.RABBITMQ_USERNAME,
settings.RABBITMQ_PASSWORD)
# With BlockingConnection, we are passed
# self.rabbitmq_heartbeat=0, which asks to explicitly disable
# the RabbitMQ heartbeat feature. This is correct since that
# heartbeat doesn't make sense with BlockingConnection (we do
# need it for TornadoConnection).
#
# Where we've disabled RabbitMQ's heartbeat, the only
# keepalive on this connection is the TCP keepalive (defaults:
# `/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_*`). On most Linux
# systems, the default is to start sending keepalive packets
# after TCP_KEEPIDLE (7200 seconds) of inactivity; after that
# point, it send them every TCP_KEEPINTVL (typically 75s).
# Some Kubernetes / Docker Swarm networks can kill "idle" TCP
# connections after as little as ~15 minutes of inactivity.
# To avoid this killing our RabbitMQ connections, we set
# TCP_KEEPIDLE to something significantly below 15 minutes.
tcp_options = None
if self.rabbitmq_heartbeat == 0:
tcp_options = dict(TCP_KEEPIDLE=60 * 5)
return pika.ConnectionParameters(settings.RABBITMQ_HOST,
heartbeat=self.rabbitmq_heartbeat,
tcp_options=tcp_options,
credentials=credentials)
def _generate_ctag(self, queue_name: str) -> str:
return f"{queue_name}_{str(random.getrandbits(16))}"
def _reconnect_consumer_callback(self, queue: str, consumer: Consumer) -> None:
self.log.info(f"Queue reconnecting saved consumer {consumer} to queue {queue}")
self.ensure_queue(
queue,
lambda channel: channel.basic_consume(
queue,
consumer,
consumer_tag=self._generate_ctag(queue),
),
)
def _reconnect_consumer_callbacks(self) -> None:
for queue, consumers in self.consumers.items():
for consumer in consumers:
self._reconnect_consumer_callback(queue, consumer)
def close(self) -> None:
if self.connection:
self.connection.close()
def ready(self) -> bool:
return self.channel is not None
def ensure_queue(self, queue_name: str, callback: Callable[[BlockingChannel], None]) -> None:
'''Ensure that a given queue has been declared, and then call
the callback with no arguments.'''
if self.connection is None or not self.connection.is_open:
self._connect()
assert self.channel is not None
if queue_name not in self.queues:
self.channel.queue_declare(queue=queue_name, durable=True)
self.queues.add(queue_name)
callback(self.channel)
def publish(self, queue_name: str, body: bytes) -> None:
def do_publish(channel: BlockingChannel) -> None:
channel.basic_publish(
exchange='',
routing_key=queue_name,
properties=pika.BasicProperties(delivery_mode=2),
body=body)
statsd.incr(f"rabbitmq.publish.{queue_name}")
self.ensure_queue(queue_name, do_publish)
def json_publish(self, queue_name: str, body: Mapping[str, Any]) -> None:
data = orjson.dumps(body)
try:
self.publish(queue_name, data)
return
except pika.exceptions.AMQPConnectionError:
self.log.warning("Failed to send to rabbitmq, trying to reconnect and send again")
self._reconnect()
self.publish(queue_name, data)
def start_json_consumer(self,
queue_name: str,
callback: Callable[[List[Dict[str, Any]]], None],
batch_size: int=1,
timeout: Optional[int]=None) -> None:
if batch_size == 1:
timeout = None
def do_consume(channel: BlockingChannel) -> None:
events: List[Dict[str, Any]] = []
last_process = time.time()
max_processed: Optional[int] = None
self.is_consuming = True
# This iterator technique will iteratively collect up to
# batch_size events from the RabbitMQ queue (if present)
# before calling the callback with the batch. If not
# enough events are present, it will sleep for at most
# timeout seconds before calling the callback with the
# batch of events it has.
for method, properties, body in channel.consume(queue_name, inactivity_timeout=timeout):
if body is not None:
events.append(orjson.loads(body))
max_processed = method.delivery_tag
now = time.time()
if len(events) >= batch_size or (timeout and now >= last_process + timeout):
if events:
try:
callback(events)
channel.basic_ack(max_processed, multiple=True)
except Exception:
channel.basic_nack(max_processed, multiple=True)
raise
events = []
last_process = now
if not self.is_consuming:
break
self.ensure_queue(queue_name, do_consume)
def local_queue_size(self) -> int:
assert self.channel is not None
return self.channel.get_waiting_message_count() + len(self.channel._pending_events)
def stop_consuming(self) -> None:
assert self.channel is not None
assert self.is_consuming
self.is_consuming = False
self.channel.stop_consuming()
# Patch pika.adapters.tornado_connection.TornadoConnection so that a socket error doesn't
# throw an exception and disconnect the tornado process from the rabbitmq
# queue. Instead, just re-connect as usual
class ExceptionFreeTornadoConnection(pika.adapters.tornado_connection.TornadoConnection):
def _adapter_disconnect(self) -> None:
try:
super()._adapter_disconnect()
except (pika.exceptions.ProbableAuthenticationError,
pika.exceptions.ProbableAccessDeniedError,
pika.exceptions.IncompatibleProtocolError):
logging.warning("Caught exception in ExceptionFreeTornadoConnection when \
calling _adapter_disconnect, ignoring", exc_info=True)
class TornadoQueueClient(SimpleQueueClient):
# Based on:
# https://pika.readthedocs.io/en/0.9.8/examples/asynchronous_consumer_example.html
def __init__(self) -> None:
super().__init__(
# TornadoConnection can process heartbeats, so enable them.
rabbitmq_heartbeat=None)
self._on_open_cbs: List[Callable[[BlockingChannel], None]] = []
self._connection_failure_count = 0
def _connect(self) -> None:
self.log.info("Beginning TornadoQueueClient connection")
self.connection = ExceptionFreeTornadoConnection(
self._get_parameters(),
on_open_callback = self._on_open,
on_open_error_callback = self._on_connection_open_error,
on_close_callback = self._on_connection_closed,
)
def _reconnect(self) -> None:
self.connection = None
self.channel = None
self.queues = set()
self.log.warning("TornadoQueueClient attempting to reconnect to RabbitMQ")
self._connect()
CONNECTION_RETRY_SECS = 2
# When the RabbitMQ server is restarted, it's normal for it to
# take a few seconds to come back; we'll retry a few times and all
# will be well. So for the first few failures, we report only at
# "warning" level, avoiding an email to the server admin.
#
# A loss of an existing connection starts a retry loop just like a
# failed connection attempt, so it counts as the first failure.
#
# On an unloaded test system, a RabbitMQ restart takes about 6s,
# potentially causing 4 failures. We add some headroom above that.
CONNECTION_FAILURES_BEFORE_NOTIFY = 10
def _on_connection_open_error(self, connection: pika.connection.Connection,
reason: Exception) -> None:
self._connection_failure_count += 1
retry_secs = self.CONNECTION_RETRY_SECS
self.log.log(
logging.CRITICAL
if self._connection_failure_count > self.CONNECTION_FAILURES_BEFORE_NOTIFY
else logging.WARNING,
"TornadoQueueClient couldn't connect to RabbitMQ, retrying in %d secs...",
retry_secs,
)
ioloop.IOLoop.instance().call_later(retry_secs, self._reconnect)
def _on_connection_closed(self, connection: pika.connection.Connection,
reason: Exception) -> None:
self._connection_failure_count = 1
retry_secs = self.CONNECTION_RETRY_SECS
self.log.warning(
"TornadoQueueClient lost connection to RabbitMQ, reconnecting in %d secs...",
retry_secs,
)
ioloop.IOLoop.instance().call_later(retry_secs, self._reconnect)
def _on_open(self, connection: pika.connection.Connection) -> None:
self._connection_failure_count = 0
try:
self.connection.channel(
on_open_callback = self._on_channel_open)
except pika.exceptions.ConnectionClosed:
# The connection didn't stay open long enough for this code to get to it.
# Let _on_connection_closed deal with trying again.
self.log.warning("TornadoQueueClient couldn't open channel: connection already closed")
def _on_channel_open(self, channel: BlockingChannel) -> None:
self.channel = channel
for callback in self._on_open_cbs:
callback(channel)
self._reconnect_consumer_callbacks()
self.log.info('TornadoQueueClient connected')
def ensure_queue(self, queue_name: str, callback: Callable[[BlockingChannel], None]) -> None:
def finish(frame: Any) -> None:
assert self.channel is not None
self.queues.add(queue_name)
callback(self.channel)
if queue_name not in self.queues:
# If we're not connected yet, send this message
# once we have created the channel
if not self.ready():
self._on_open_cbs.append(lambda channel: self.ensure_queue(queue_name, callback))
return
assert self.channel is not None
self.channel.queue_declare(queue=queue_name, durable=True, callback=finish)
else:
assert self.channel is not None
callback(self.channel)
def start_json_consumer(self,
queue_name: str,
callback: Callable[[List[Dict[str, Any]]], None],
batch_size: int=1,
timeout: Optional[int]=None) -> None:
def wrapped_consumer(ch: BlockingChannel,
method: Basic.Deliver,
properties: pika.BasicProperties,
body: bytes) -> None:
callback([orjson.loads(body)])
ch.basic_ack(delivery_tag=method.delivery_tag)
assert batch_size == 1
assert timeout is None
self.consumers[queue_name].add(wrapped_consumer)
if not self.ready():
return
self.ensure_queue(
queue_name,
lambda channel: channel.basic_consume(
queue_name,
wrapped_consumer,
consumer_tag=self._generate_ctag(queue_name),
),
)
queue_client: Optional[SimpleQueueClient] = None
def get_queue_client() -> SimpleQueueClient:
global queue_client
if queue_client is None:
if settings.RUNNING_INSIDE_TORNADO and settings.USING_RABBITMQ:
queue_client = TornadoQueueClient()
elif settings.USING_RABBITMQ:
queue_client = SimpleQueueClient()
else:
raise RuntimeError("Cannot get a queue client without USING_RABBITMQ")
return queue_client
# We using a simple lock to prevent multiple RabbitMQ messages being
# sent to the SimpleQueueClient at the same time; this is a workaround
# for an issue with the pika BlockingConnection where using
# BlockingConnection for multiple queues causes the channel to
# randomly close.
queue_lock = threading.RLock()
def queue_json_publish(
queue_name: str,
event: Dict[str, Any],
processor: Optional[Callable[[Any], None]] = None,
) -> None:
with queue_lock:
if settings.USING_RABBITMQ:
get_queue_client().json_publish(queue_name, event)
elif processor:
processor(event)
else:
# Must be imported here: A top section import leads to circular imports
from zerver.worker.queue_processors import get_worker
get_worker(queue_name).consume_single_event(event)
def retry_event(queue_name: str,
event: Dict[str, Any],
failure_processor: Callable[[Dict[str, Any]], None]) -> None:
if 'failed_tries' not in event:
event['failed_tries'] = 0
event['failed_tries'] += 1
if event['failed_tries'] > MAX_REQUEST_RETRIES:
failure_processor(event)
else:
queue_json_publish(queue_name, event, lambda x: None)