Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view website/issues/detectors/statusauditor.py @ 6610:db3f0ba75b4a
Change checkpoint_data and restore_connection_on_error to subtransaction
checkpoint_data and restore_connection_on_error used to commit() and
rollback() the db connection. This causes additional I/O and load.
Changed them to use 'SAVEPOINT name' and 'ROLLBACK TO name' to get a
faster method for handling errors within a tranaction.
One thing to note is that postgresql (unlike SQL std) doesn't
overwrite an older savepoint with he same name. It keeps all
savepoints but only rolls back to the newest one with a given name.
This could be a resource issue. I left a commented out release
statement in case somebody runs into an issue due to too many
savepoints. I expect it to slow down the import but....
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 29 Jan 2022 11:29:36 -0500 |
| parents | 13e8f188f8dd |
| children |
line wrap: on
line source
def preset_new(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues): """ Make sure the status is set on new issues""" if 'status' in newvalues and newvalues['status']: return new = db.status.lookup('new') newvalues['status'] = new def update_pending(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues): ''' If the issue is currently 'pending' and person other than assigned updates it, then set it to 'open'. ''' # don't fire if there's no new message (ie. update) if 'messages' not in newvalues: return if newvalues['messages'] == cl.get(nodeid, 'messages'): return # get the open state ID try: open_id = db.status.lookup('open') except KeyError: # no open state, ignore all this stuff return # get the current value current_status = cl.get(nodeid, 'status') # see if there's an explicit change in this transaction if 'status' in newvalues: # yep, skip return assignee = cl.get(nodeid, 'assignee') if assignee == db.getuid(): # this change is brought to you by the assignee and number 4 # so don't change status. return # determine the id of 'pending' fromstates = [] for state in 'pending'.split(): try: fromstates.append(db.status.lookup(state)) except KeyError: pass # ok, there's no explicit change, so check if we are in a state that # should be changed if current_status in fromstates + [None]: # yep, we're now open newvalues['status'] = open_id def init(db): # fire before changes are made db.issue.audit('create', preset_new) db.issue.audit('set', update_pending)
