mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
270 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
270 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
# Exporting data from a large multi-realm Zulip server
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## Draft status
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This is a draft design document considering potential future
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refinements and improvements to make large migrations easier going
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forward, and is not yet a set of recommendations for Zulip systems
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administrators to follow.
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## Overview
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Zulip offers an export tool, `management/export.py`, which works well
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to export the data for a single Zulip realm, and which is your best
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choice if you're migrating a Zulip realm to a new server.
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This document supplements the explanation in `management/export.py`,
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but here we focus more on the logistics of a big conversion of a
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multi-realm Zulip installation. (For some historical perspective, this
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document was originally begun as part of a big Zulip cut-over in
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summer 2016.)
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There are many major operational aspects to doing a conversion. I will
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list them here, noting that several are not within the scope of this
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document:
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- Get new servers running.
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- Export data from the old DB.
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- Export files from Amazon S3.
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- Import files into new storage.
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- Import data into new DB.
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- Restart new servers.
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- Decommission old server.
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This document focuses almost entirely on the **export** piece. Issues
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with getting Zulip itself running are out of scope here; see [the
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production installation instructions](../index.html#zulip-in-production).
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As for the import side of things, we only touch on it implicitly. (My
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reasoning was that we *had* to get the export piece right in a timely
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fashion, even if it meant we would have to sort out some straggling
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issues on the import side later.)
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## Exporting multiple realms' data when moving to a new server
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The main exporting tools in place as of summer 2016 are below:
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- We can export single realms (but not yet limit users within the
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realm).
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- We can export single users (but then we get no realm-wide data in
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the process).
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- We can run exports simultaneously (but have to navigate a bunch of
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/tmp directories).
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Things that we still may need:
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- We may want to export multiple realms simultaneously.
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- We may want to export multiple single users simultaneously.
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- We may want to limit users within realm exports.
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- We may want more operational robustness/convenience while doing
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several exports simultaneously.
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- We may want to merge multiple export files to remove duplicates.
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We have a few major classes of data. They are listed below in the order
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that we process them in `do_export_realm()`:
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#### Public Realm Data
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`Realm/RealmDomain/RealmEmoji/RealmFilter/DefaultStream`.
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#### Cross Realm Data
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`Client/zerver_userprofile_cross_realm`
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This includes `Client` and three bots.
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`Client` is unique in being a fairly core table that is not tied to
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`UserProfile` or `Realm` (unless you somewhat painfully tie it back to
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users in a bottom-up fashion though other tables).
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#### Disjoint User Data
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`UserProfile/UserActivity/UserActivityInterval/UserPresence`.
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#### Recipient Data
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`Recipient/Stream/Subscription/Huddle`.
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These tables are tied back to users, but they introduce complications
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when you try to deal with multi-user subsets.
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#### File-related Data
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`Attachment`
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This includes `Attachment`, and it references the `avatar_source` field
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of `UserProfile`. Most importantly, of course, it requires us to grab
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files from S3. Finally, `Attachment`'s `m2m` relationship ties to
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`Message`.
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#### Message Data
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`Message/UserMessage`
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### Summary
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Here are the same classes of data, listed in roughly
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decreasing order of riskiness:
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- Message Data (sheer volume/lack of time/security)
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- File-Related Data (S3/security/lots of moving parts)
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- Recipient Data (complexity/security/cross-realm considerations)
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- Cross Realm Data (duplicate ids)
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- Disjoint User Data
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- Public Realm Data
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(Note the above list is essentially in reverse order of how we
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process the data, which isn't surprising for a top-down approach.)
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The next section of the document talks about risk factors.
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# Risk Mitigation
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## Generic considerations
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We have two major mechanisms for getting data:
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##### Top Down
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Get realm data, then all users in realm, then all recipients, then all
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messages, etc.
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The problem with the top-down approach will be **filtering**. Also,
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if errors arise during top-down passes, it may be time consuming to
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re-run the processes.
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##### Bottom Up
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Start with users, get their recipient data, etc.
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The problems with the bottom up approach will be **merging**. Also,
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if we run multiple bottom-up passes, there is the danger of
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duplicating some work, particularly on the message side of things.
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### Approved Transfers
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We have not yet integrated the approved-transfer model, which tells us
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which users can be moved.
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## Risk factors broken out by data categories
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### Message Data
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- models: `Message`/`UserMessage`.
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- assets: `messages-*.json`, subprocesses, partial files
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Rows in the `Message` model depend on `Recipient/UserProfile`.
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Rows in the `UserMessage` model depend on `UserProfile/Message`.
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The biggest concern here is the **sheer volume** of data, with
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security being a close second. (They are interrelated, as without
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security concerns, we could just bulk-export everything one time.)
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We currently have these measures in place for top-down processing:
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- chunking
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- multi-processing
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- messages are filtered by both sender and recipient
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### File Related Data
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- models: `Attachment`
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- assets: S3, `attachment.json`, `uploads-temp/`, image files in
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`avatars/`, assorted files in `uploads/`, `avatars/records.json`,
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`uploads/records.json`, `zerver_attachment_messages`
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When it comes to exporting attachment data, we have some minor volume
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issues, but the main concern is just that there are **lots of moving
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parts**:
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- S3 needs to be up, and we get some metadata from it as well as
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files.
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- We have security concerns about copying over only files that belong
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to users who approved the transfer.
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- This piece is just different in how we store data from all the other
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DB-centric pieces.
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- At import time we have to populate the `m2m` table (but fortunately,
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this is pretty low risk in terms of breaking anything.)
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### Recipient Data
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- models: `Recipient/Stream/Subscription/Huddle`
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- assets: `realm.json`, `(user,stream,huddle)_(recipient,subscription)`
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This data is fortunately low to medium in volume. The risk here will
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come from **model complexity** and **cross-realm concerns**.
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From the top down, here are the dependencies:
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- `Recipient` depends on `UserProfile`
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- `Subscription` depends on `Recipient`
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- `Stream` currently depends on `Realm` (but maybe it should be tied
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to `Subscription`)
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- `Huddle` depends on `Subscription` and `UserProfile`
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The biggest risk factor here is probably just the possibility that we
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could introduce some bug in our code as we try to segment `Recipient`
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into user, stream, and huddle components, especially if we try to
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handle multiple users or realms. I think this can be largely
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mitigated by the new `Config` approach.
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And then we also have some complicated `Huddle` logic that will be
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customized regardless. The fiddliest part of the `Huddle` logic is
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creating the set of `unsafe_huddle_recipient_ids`.
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Last but not least, if we go with some hybrid of bottom-up and
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top-down, these tables are neither close to the bottom nor close to
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the top, so they may have the most fiddly edge cases when it comes to
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filtering and merging.
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Recommendation: We probably want to get a backup of all this data that
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is very simply bulk-exported from the entire DB, and we should
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obviously put it in a secure place.
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### Cross Realm Data
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- models: `Client`
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- assets: `realm.json`, three bots (`notification`/`email`/`welcome`),
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`id_maps`
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The good news here is that `Client` is a small table, and there are
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only three special bots.
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The bad news is that cross-realm data **complicates everything else**,
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and we have to avoid **database ID conflicts**.
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If we use bottom-up approaches to load small user populations at a
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time, we may have **merging** issues here. We will need to
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consolidate IDs either by merging exports in `/tmp` or handle it at
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import time.
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For the three bots, they live in `zerver_userprofile_crossrealm`, and
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we re-map their IDs on the new server.
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Recommendation: Do not sweat the exports too much. Deal with all the
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messiness at import time, and rely on the tables being really small.
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We already have logic to catch `Client.DoesNotExist` exceptions, for
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example. As for possibly missing messages that the welcome bot and
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friends have sent in the past, I am not sure what our risk profile is
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there, but I imagine it is relatively low.
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### Disjoint User Data
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- models: `UserProfile/UserActivity/UserActivityInterval/UserPresence`
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- assets: `realm.json`, `password`, `api_key`, `avatar salt`,
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`id_maps`
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On the DB side this data should be fairly easy to deal with. All of
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these tables are basically disjoint by user profile ID. Our biggest
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risk is **remapped user ids** at import time, but this is mostly
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covered in the section above.
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We have code in place to exclude `password` and `api_key` from
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`UserProfile` rows. The import process calls
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`set_unusable_password()`.
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### Public Realm Data
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- models: `Realm/RealmDomain/RealmEmoji/RealmFilter/DefaultStream`
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- asserts: `realm.json`
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All of these tables are public (per-realm), and they are keyed by
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realm ID. There is not a ton to worry about here, except possibly
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**merging** if we run multiple bottom-up jobs for a single realm.
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