#!/usr/bin/env python """ stream changes in mysql (on the torrents and statistics table) into elasticsearch as they happen on the binlog. This keeps elasticsearch in sync with whatever you do to the database, including stuff like admin queries. Also, because mysql keeps the binlog around for N days before deleting old stuff, you can survive a hiccup of elasticsearch or this script dying and pick up where you left off. For that "picking up" part, this script depends on one piece of external state: its last known binlog filename and position. This is saved off as a JSON file to a configurable location on the filesystem periodically. If the file is not present then you can initialize it with the values from `SHOW MASTER STATUS` from the mysql repl, which will start the sync from current state. In the case of catastrophic elasticsearch meltdown where you need to reconstruct the index, you'll want to be a bit careful with coordinating sync_es and import_to_es scripts. If you run import_to_es first than run sync_es against SHOW MASTER STATUS, anything that changed the database between when import_to_es and sync_es will be lost. Instead, you can run SHOW MASTER STATUS _before_ you run import_to_es. That way you'll definitely pick up any changes that happen while the import_to_es script is dumping stuff from the database into es, at the expense of redoing a (small) amount of indexing. This uses multithreading so we don't have to block on socket io (both binlog reading and es POSTing). asyncio soon™ This script will exit on any sort of exception, so you'll want to use your supervisor's restart functionality, e.g. Restart=failure in systemd, or the poor man's `while true; do sync_es.py; sleep 1; done` in tmux. """ from elasticsearch import Elasticsearch from elasticsearch.helpers import bulk, BulkIndexError from pymysqlreplication import BinLogStreamReader from pymysqlreplication.row_event import UpdateRowsEvent, DeleteRowsEvent, WriteRowsEvent from datetime import datetime from nyaa import create_app, db, models from nyaa.models import TorrentFlags app = create_app('config') import sys import json import time import logging from statsd import StatsClient from threading import Thread from queue import Queue, Empty logging.basicConfig(format='%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(name)s - %(message)s') log = logging.getLogger('sync_es') log.setLevel(logging.INFO) # config in json, 2lazy to argparse if len(sys.argv) != 2: print("need config.json location", file=sys.stderr) sys.exit(-1) with open(sys.argv[1]) as f: config = json.load(f) # goes to netdata or other statsd listener stats = StatsClient('localhost', 8125, prefix="sync_es") #logging.getLogger('elasticsearch').setLevel(logging.DEBUG) # in prod want in /var/lib somewhere probably SAVE_LOC = config.get('save_loc', "/tmp/pos.json") MYSQL_HOST = config.get('mysql_host', '127.0.0.1') MYSQL_PORT = config.get('mysql_port', 3306) MYSQL_USER = config.get('mysql_user', 'root') MYSQL_PW = config.get('mysql_password', 'dunnolol') NT_DB = config.get('database', 'nyaav2') INTERNAL_QUEUE_DEPTH = config.get('internal_queue_depth', 10000) ES_CHUNK_SIZE = config.get('es_chunk_size', 10000) # seconds since no events happening to flush to es. remember this also # interacts with es' refresh_interval setting. FLUSH_INTERVAL = config.get('flush_interval', 5) def pad_bytes(in_bytes, size): return in_bytes + (b'\x00' * max(0, size - len(in_bytes))) def reindex_torrent(t, index_name): # XXX annoyingly different from import_to_es, and # you need to keep them in sync manually. f = t['flags'] doc = { "id": t['id'], "display_name": t['display_name'], "created_time": t['created_time'], "updated_time": t['updated_time'], "description": t['description'], # not analyzed but included so we can render magnet links # without querying sql again. "info_hash": pad_bytes(t['info_hash'], 20).hex(), "filesize": t['filesize'], "uploader_id": t['uploader_id'], "main_category_id": t['main_category_id'], "sub_category_id": t['sub_category_id'], "comment_count": t['comment_count'], # XXX all the bitflags are numbers "anonymous": bool(f & TorrentFlags.ANONYMOUS), "trusted": bool(f & TorrentFlags.TRUSTED), "remake": bool(f & TorrentFlags.REMAKE), "complete": bool(f & TorrentFlags.COMPLETE), # TODO instead of indexing and filtering later # could delete from es entirely. Probably won't matter # for at least a few months. "hidden": bool(f & TorrentFlags.HIDDEN), "deleted": bool(f & TorrentFlags.DELETED), "has_torrent": bool(t['has_torrent']), } # update, so we don't delete the stats if present return { '_op_type': 'update', '_index': index_name, '_type': 'torrent', '_id': str(t['id']), "doc": doc, "doc_as_upsert": True } def reindex_stats(s, index_name): # update the torrent at torrent_id, assumed to exist; # this will always be the case if you're reading the binlog # in order; the foreign key constraint on torrent_id prevents # the stats row from existing if the torrent isn't around. return { '_op_type': 'update', '_index': index_name, '_type': 'torrent', '_id': str(s['torrent_id']), "doc": { "stats_last_updated": s["last_updated"], "download_count": s["download_count"], "leech_count": s['leech_count'], "seed_count": s['seed_count'], }} def delet_this(row, index_name): return { "_op_type": 'delete', '_index': index_name, '_type': 'torrent', '_id': str(row['values']['id'])} # we could try to make this script robust to errors from es or mysql, but since # the only thing we can do is "clear state and retry", it's easier to leave # this to the supervisor. If we we carrying around heavier state in-process, # it'd be more worth it to handle errors ourselves. # # Apparently there's no setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler in threading, and # sys.excepthook is also broken, so this gives us the same # exit-if-anything-happens semantics. class ExitingThread(Thread): def run(self): try: self.run_happy() except: log.exception("something happened") # sys.exit only exits the thread, lame import os os._exit(1) class BinlogReader(ExitingThread): # write_buf is the Queue we communicate with def __init__(self, write_buf): Thread.__init__(self) self.write_buf = write_buf def run_happy(self): with open(SAVE_LOC) as f: pos = json.load(f) stream = BinLogStreamReader( # TODO parse out from config.py or something connection_settings = { 'host': MYSQL_HOST, 'port': MYSQL_PORT, 'user': MYSQL_USER, 'passwd': MYSQL_PW }, server_id=10, # arbitrary # only care about this database currently only_schemas=[NT_DB], # these tables in the database only_tables=["nyaa_torrents", "nyaa_statistics", "sukebei_torrents", "sukebei_statistics"], # from our save file resume_stream=True, log_file=pos['log_file'], log_pos=pos['log_pos'], # skip the other stuff like table mapping only_events=[UpdateRowsEvent, DeleteRowsEvent, WriteRowsEvent], # if we're at the head of the log, block until something happens # note it'd be nice to block async-style instead, but the mainline # binlogreader is synchronous. there is an (unmaintained?) fork # using aiomysql if anybody wants to revive that. blocking=True) log.info(f"reading binlog from {stream.log_file}/{stream.log_pos}") for event in stream: # save the pos of the stream and timestamp with each message, so we # can commit in the other thread. and keep track of process latency pos = (stream.log_file, stream.log_pos, event.timestamp) with stats.pipeline() as s: s.incr('total_events') s.incr(f"event.{event.table}.{type(event).__name__}") s.incr('total_rows', len(event.rows)) s.incr(f"rows.{event.table}.{type(event).__name__}", len(event.rows)) # XXX not a "timer", but we get a histogram out of it s.timing(f"rows_per_event.{event.table}.{type(event).__name__}", len(event.rows)) if event.table == "nyaa_torrents" or event.table == "sukebei_torrents": if event.table == "nyaa_torrents": index_name = "nyaa" else: index_name = "sukebei" if type(event) is WriteRowsEvent: for row in event.rows: self.write_buf.put( (pos, reindex_torrent(row['values'], index_name)), block=True) elif type(event) is UpdateRowsEvent: # UpdateRowsEvent includes the old values too, but we don't care for row in event.rows: self.write_buf.put( (pos, reindex_torrent(row['after_values'], index_name)), block=True) elif type(event) is DeleteRowsEvent: # ok, bye for row in event.rows: self.write_buf.put((pos, delet_this(row, index_name)), block=True) else: raise Exception(f"unknown event {type(event)}") elif event.table == "nyaa_statistics" or event.table == "sukebei_statistics": if event.table == "nyaa_statistics": index_name = "nyaa" else: index_name = "sukebei" if type(event) is WriteRowsEvent: for row in event.rows: self.write_buf.put( (pos, reindex_stats(row['values'], index_name)), block=True) elif type(event) is UpdateRowsEvent: for row in event.rows: self.write_buf.put( (pos, reindex_stats(row['after_values'], index_name)), block=True) elif type(event) is DeleteRowsEvent: # uh ok. Assume that the torrent row will get deleted later, # which will clean up the entire es "torrent" document pass else: raise Exception(f"unknown event {type(event)}") else: raise Exception(f"unknown table {s.table}") class EsPoster(ExitingThread): # read_buf is the queue of stuff to bulk post def __init__(self, read_buf, chunk_size=1000, flush_interval=5): Thread.__init__(self) self.read_buf = read_buf self.chunk_size = chunk_size self.flush_interval = flush_interval def run_happy(self): es = Elasticsearch(hosts=app.config['ES_HOSTS'], timeout=30) last_save = time.time() since_last = 0 # XXX keep track of last posted position for save points, awkward posted_log_file = None posted_log_pos = None while True: actions = [] now = time.time() # wait up to flush_interval seconds after starting the batch deadline = now + self.flush_interval while len(actions) < self.chunk_size and now < deadline: timeout = deadline - now try: # grab next event from queue with metadata that creepily # updates, surviving outside the scope of the loop ((log_file, log_pos, timestamp), action) = \ self.read_buf.get(block=True, timeout=timeout) actions.append(action) now = time.time() except Empty: # nothing new for the whole interval break if actions: # XXX "time" to get histogram of no events per bulk stats.timing('actions_per_bulk', len(actions)) try: with stats.timer('post_bulk'): bulk(es, actions, chunk_size=self.chunk_size) except BulkIndexError as bie: # in certain cases where we're really out of sync, we update a # stat when the torrent doc is, causing a "document missing" # error from es, with no way to suppress that server-side. # Thus ignore that type of error if it's the only problem for e in bie.errors: try: if e['update']['error']['type'] != 'document_missing_exception': raise bie except KeyError: raise bie # how far we've gotten in the actual log posted_log_file = log_file posted_log_pos = log_pos # how far we're behind, wall clock stats.gauge('process_latency', int((time.time() - timestamp) * 1000)) else: log.debug("no changes...") since_last += len(actions) # TODO instead of this manual timeout loop, could move this to another queue/thread if posted_log_file is not None and (since_last >= 10000 or (time.time() - last_save) > 10): log.info(f"saving position {log_file}/{log_pos}, {time.time() - timestamp:,.3f} seconds behind") with stats.timer('save_pos'): with open(SAVE_LOC, 'w') as f: json.dump({"log_file": posted_log_file, "log_pos": posted_log_pos}, f) last_save = time.time() since_last = 0 posted_log_file = None posted_log_pos = None # in-memory queue between binlog and es. The bigger it is, the more events we # can parse in memory while waiting for es to catch up, at the expense of heap. buf = Queue(maxsize=INTERNAL_QUEUE_DEPTH) reader = BinlogReader(buf) reader.daemon = True writer = EsPoster(buf, chunk_size=ES_CHUNK_SIZE, flush_interval=FLUSH_INTERVAL) writer.daemon = True reader.start() writer.start() # on the main thread, poll the queue size for monitoring while True: stats.gauge('queue_depth', buf.qsize()) time.sleep(1)