mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
90 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
90 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
# Queue processors
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Zulip uses RabbitMQ to manage a system of internal queues. These are
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used for a variety of purposes:
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- Asynchronously doing expensive operations like sending email
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notifications which can take seconds per email and thus would
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otherwise time out when 100s are triggered at once (e.g., inviting a
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lot of new users to a realm).
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- Asynchronously doing non-time-critical somewhat expensive operations
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like updating analytics tables (e.g., UserActivityInternal) which
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don't have any immediate runtime effect.
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- Communicating events to push to clients (browsers, etc.) from the
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main Zulip Django application process to the Tornado-based events
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system. Example events might be that a new message was sent, a user
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has changed their subscriptions, etc.
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- Processing mobile push notifications and email mirroring system
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messages.
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- Processing various errors, frontend tracebacks, and slow database
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queries in a batched fashion.
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Needless to say, the RabbitMQ-based queuing system is an important
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part of the overall Zulip architecture, since it's in critical code
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paths for everything from signing up for account, to rendering
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messages, to delivering updates to clients.
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We use the `pika` library to interface with RabbitMQ, using a simple
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custom integration defined in `zerver/lib/queue.py`.
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### Adding a new queue processor
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To add a new queue processor:
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- Define the processor in `zerver/worker/` using the `@assign_queue` decorator;
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it's pretty easy to get the template for an existing similar queue
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processor. This suffices to test your queue worker in the Zulip development
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environment (`tools/run-dev` will automatically restart the queue processors
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and start running your new queue processor code). You can also run a single
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queue processor manually using, for example,
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`./manage.py process_queue --queue=user_activity`.
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- So that supervisord will know to run the queue processor in
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production, you will need to add to the `queues` variable in
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`puppet/zulip/manifests/app_frontend_base.pp`; the list there is
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used to generate `/etc/supervisor/conf.d/zulip.conf`.
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The queue will automatically be added to the list of queues tracked by
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`scripts/nagios/check-rabbitmq-consumers`, so Nagios can properly
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check whether a queue processor is running for your queue. You still
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need to update the sample Nagios configuration in `puppet/kandra`
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manually.
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### Publishing events into a queue
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You can publish events to a RabbitMQ queue using the
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`queue_json_publish` function defined in `zerver/lib/queue.py`.
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An interesting challenge with queue processors is what should happen
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when queued events in Zulip's backend tests. Our current solution is
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that in the tests, `queue_json_publish` will (by default) simple call
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the `consume` method for the relevant queue processor. However,
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`queue_json_publish` also supports being passed a function that should
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be called in the tests instead of the queue processor's `consume`
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method. Where possible, we prefer the model of calling `consume` in
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tests since that's more predictable and automatically covers the queue
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processor's code path, but it isn't always possible.
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### Clearing a RabbitMQ queue
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If you need to clear a queue (delete all the events in it), run
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`./manage.py purge_queue <queue_name>`, for example:
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```bash
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./manage.py purge_queue user_activity
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```
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You can also use the amqp tools directly. Install `amqp-tools` from
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apt and then run:
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```bash
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amqp-delete-queue --username=zulip --password='...' --server=localhost \
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--queue=user_presence
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```
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with the RabbitMQ password from `/etc/zulip/zulip-secrets.conf`.
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