- For every process that is spawned (every new non-trivial goroutine
such as http requests, queues or tasks) start a [execution
tracer](https://pkg.go.dev/runtime/trace). This allows very precise
diagnosis of how each individual process over a time period.
- It's safe and [fast](https://go.dev/blog/execution-traces-2024#low-overhead-tracing) to
be run in production, hence no setting to disable this. There's only
noticable overhead when tracing is actually performed and not continuous.
- Proper tracing support would mean the codebase would be full of
`trace.WithRegion` and `trace.Log`, which feels premature for this patch
as there's no real-world usage yet to indicate which places would need
this the most. So far only Git commands and SQL queries receive somewhat
proper tracing support given that these are used throughout the codebase.
- Make git commands a new process type.
- Add tracing to diagnosis zip file.
Change all license headers to comply with REUSE specification.
Fix#16132
Co-authored-by: flynnnnnnnnnn <flynnnnnnnnnn@github>
Co-authored-by: John Olheiser <john.olheiser@gmail.com>
Continues on from #19202.
Following the addition of pprof labels we can now more easily understand the relationship between a goroutine and the requests that spawn them.
This PR takes advantage of the labels and adds a few others, then provides a mechanism for the monitoring page to query the pprof goroutine profile.
The binary profile that results from this profile is immediately piped in to the google library for parsing this and then stack traces are formed for the goroutines.
If the goroutine is within a context or has been created from a goroutine within a process context it will acquire the process description labels for that process.
The goroutines are mapped with there associate pids and any that do not have an associated pid are placed in a group at the bottom as unbound.
In this way we should be able to more easily examine goroutines that have been stuck.
A manager command `gitea manager processes` is also provided that can export the processes (with or without stacktraces) to the command line.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
This PR registers requests with the process manager and manages hierarchy within the processes.
Git repos are then associated with a context, (usually the request's context) - with sub commands using this context as their base context.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>