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  1. Mar 21, 2018
    • Sean McGivern's avatar
      Fix N+1 in `MergeRequest#merge_request_diff_for` · 39c9928c
      Sean McGivern authored
      Previously, this would issue a query for each unique `diff_refs_or_sha`
      passed. This was because we didn't want to load other MR diffs into memory, as
      they had some very large columns.
      
      Now they are actually very small, and it's more efficient to just load them all
      at once and do the finding in Ruby.
      39c9928c
  2. Mar 16, 2018
  3. Mar 15, 2018
  4. Mar 07, 2018
  5. Jan 30, 2018
  6. Jan 29, 2018
  7. Jan 25, 2018
    • Nick Thomas's avatar
      Look at notes created just before merge when deciding if an MR can be reverted · b02f9b61
      Nick Thomas authored
      On MySQL, at least, `Note#created_at` doesn't seem to store fractional seconds,
      while `MergeRequest::Metrics#merged_at` does. This breaks the optimization
      assumption that we only need to search for notes created *after* the MR has
      been merged.
      
      Unsynchronized system clocks also make this a dangerous assumption to make.
      
      Adding a minute of leeway still optimizes away most notes, but allows both
      cases to be handled more gracefully. If the system clocks are more than a
      minute out, we'll still be broken, of course.
      Verified
      b02f9b61
  8. Jan 24, 2018
  9. Jan 23, 2018
  10. Jan 12, 2018
  11. Jan 10, 2018
  12. Jan 08, 2018
  13. Jan 05, 2018
    • Jan Provaznik's avatar
      Backport 'Rebase' feature from EE to CE · 27a75ea1
      Jan Provaznik authored
      When a project uses fast-forward merging strategy user has
      to rebase MRs to target branch before it can be merged.
      Now user can do rebase in UI by clicking 'Rebase' button
      instead of doing rebase locally.
      
      This feature was already present in EE, this is only backport
      of the feature to CE. Couple of changes:
      * removed rebase license check
      * renamed migration (changed timestamp)
      
      Closes #40301
      27a75ea1
  14. Jan 02, 2018
  15. Dec 22, 2017
  16. Dec 14, 2017
  17. Dec 13, 2017
  18. Dec 12, 2017
    • Zeger-Jan van de Weg's avatar
      Use memoization for commits on diffs · 3ab026b7
      Zeger-Jan van de Weg authored
      The Gitaly CommitService is being hammered by n + 1 calls, mostly when
      finding commits. This leads to this gRPC being turned of on production:
      https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly/issues/514#note_48991378
      
      Hunting down where it came from, most of them were due to
      MergeRequest#show. To prove this, I set a script to request the
      MergeRequest#show page 50 times. The GDK was being scraped by
      Prometheus, where we have metrics on controller#action and their Gitaly
      calls performed. On both occations I've restarted the full GDK so all
      caches had to be rebuild.
      
      Current master, 806a68a8, needed 435 requests
      After this commit, 154 requests
      Unverified
      3ab026b7
  19. Dec 07, 2017
  20. Dec 06, 2017
    • Yorick Peterse's avatar
      Throttle the number of UPDATEs triggered by touch · 856447cc
      Yorick Peterse authored
      This throttles the number of UPDATE queries that can be triggered by
      calling "touch" on a Note, Issue, or MergeRequest. For Note objects we
      also take care of updating the associated "noteable" relation in a
      smarter way than Rails does by default.
      Verified
      856447cc
  21. Dec 05, 2017
  22. Nov 28, 2017
    • Sean McGivern's avatar
      Ensure MRs always use branch refs for comparison · 3c6a4d63
      Sean McGivern authored
      If a merge request was created with a branch name that also matched a tag name,
      we'd generate a comparison to or from the tag respectively, rather than the
      branch. Merging would still use the branch, of course.
      
      To avoid this, ensure that when we get the branch heads, we prepend the
      reference prefix for branches, which will ensure that we generate the correct
      comparison.
      3c6a4d63
  23. Nov 23, 2017
    • Sean McGivern's avatar
      Use latest_merge_request_diff association · 991bf24e
      Sean McGivern authored
      Compared to the merge_request_diff association:
      
      1. It's simpler to query. The query uses a foreign key to the
         merge_request_diffs table, so no ordering is necessary.
      2. It's faster for preloading. The merge_request_diff association has to load
         every diff for the MRs in the set, then discard all but the most recent for
         each. This association means that Rails can just query for N diffs from N
         MRs.
      3. It's more complicated to update. This is a bidirectional foreign key, so we
         need to update two tables when adding a diff record. This also means we need
         to handle this as a special case when importing a GitLab project.
      
      There is some juggling with this association in the merge request model:
      
      * `MergeRequest#latest_merge_request_diff` is _always_ the latest diff.
      * `MergeRequest#merge_request_diff` reuses
        `MergeRequest#latest_merge_request_diff` unless:
          * Arguments are passed. These are typically to force-reload the association.
          * It doesn't exist. That means we might be trying to implicitly create a
            diff. This only seems to happen in specs.
          * The association is already loaded. This is important for the reasons
            explained in the comment, which I'll reiterate here: if we a) load a
            non-latest diff, then b) get its `merge_request`, then c) get that MR's
            `merge_request_diff`, we should get the diff we loaded in c), even though
            that's not the latest diff.
      
      Basically, `MergeRequest#merge_request_diff` is the latest diff in most cases,
      but not quite all.
      991bf24e
  24. Nov 13, 2017
  25. Nov 11, 2017
  26. Nov 06, 2017
  27. Nov 03, 2017
  28. Oct 27, 2017
  29. Oct 13, 2017
  30. Oct 11, 2017
  31. Oct 09, 2017
  32. Oct 07, 2017
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