In this PR:
## Improve recompute metadata cache performance. We are aiming for
~100ms
Deleting relationMetadata table and FKs pointing on it
Fetching indexMetadata and indexFieldMetadata in a separate query as
typeorm is suboptimizing
## Remove caching lock
As recomputing the metadata cache is lighter, we try to stop preventing
multiple concurrent computations. This also simplifies interfaces
## Introduce self recovery mecanisms to recompute cache automatically if
corrupted
Aka getFreshObjectMetadataMaps
## custom object resolver performance improvement: 1sec to 200ms
Double check queries and indexes used while creating a custom object
Remove the queries to db to use the cached objectMetadataMap
## reduce objectMetadataMaps to 500kb
<img width="222" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2370dc80-49b6-4b63-8d5e-30c5ebdaa062"
/>
We used to stored 3 fieldMetadataMaps (byId, byName, byJoinColumnName).
While this is great for devXP, this is not great for performances.
Using the same mecanisme as for objectMetadataMap: we only keep byIdMap
and introduce two otherMaps to idByName, idByJoinColumnName to make the
bridge
## Add dataloader on IndexMetadata (aka indexMetadataList in the API)
## Improve field resolver performances too
## Deprecate ClientConfig
# Introduction
Added a no-explicit-any rule to the twenty-server, not applicable to
tests and integration tests folder
Related to https://github.com/twentyhq/core-team-issues/issues/975
Discussed with Charles
## In case of conflicts
Until this is approved I won't rebased and handle conflict, just need to
drop two latest commits and re run the scripts etc
## Legacy
We decided not to handle the existing lint error occurrences and
programmatically ignored them through a disable next line rule comment
## Open question
We might wanna activate the
[no-explicit-any](https://typescript-eslint.io/rules/no-explicit-any/)
`ignoreRestArgs` for our use case ?
```
ignoreRestArgs?: boolean;
```
---------
Co-authored-by: etiennejouan <jouan.etienne@gmail.com>
This is a first PR to remove old relation logic
Next steps:
- remove relationMetadata from cache
- remove relationMetadata table content and structure
- refactor relationDefinition to leverage field.settings instead
In this PR we are
1. cleaning typeORM service by removing connectToDataSource method
2. using workspaceDataSource instead of mainDataSource when possible,
and replacing raw SQL with workspaceRepository methods to use
In this PR we are
- introducing a cached map `{ userworkspaceId: roleId } `to reduce calls
to get a userWorkspace's role (we were having N+1 around that with
combinedFindMany queries and generally having a lot of avoidable
queries)
- using the roles permissions cache (`{ roleId: { objectNameSingular:
{ canRead: bool, canUpdate: bool, ...} } `) in Permissions V1's
userHasObjectPermission, in order to 1) improve performances to avoid
calls to get roles 2) start using our permissions cache
In this PR we are
- (if permissionsV2 is enabled) executing permission checks at query
builder level. To do so we want to override the query builders methods
that are performing db calls (.execute(), .getMany(), ... etc.) For now
I have just overriden some of the query builders methods for the poc. To
do so I created custom query builder classes that extend typeorm's query
builder (selectQueryBuilder and updateQueryBuilder, for now and later I
will tackle softDeleteQueryBuilder, etc.).
- adding a notion of roles permissions version and roles permissions
object to datasources. We will now use one datasource per roleId and
rolePermissionVersion. Both rolesPermissionsVersion and rolesPermissions
objects are stored in redis and recomputed at role update or if queried
and found empty. Unlike for metadata version we don't need to store a
version in the db that stands for the source of truth. We also don't
need to destroy and recreate the datasource if the rolesPermissions
version changes, but only to update the value for rolesPermissions and
rolesPermissionsVersions on the existing datasource.
What this PR misses
- computing of roles permissions should take into account
objectPermissions table (for now it only looks at what's on the roles
table)
- pursue extension of query builder classes and overriding of their db
calling-methods
- what should the behaviour be for calls from twentyOrmGlobalManager
that don't have a roleId?
## Context
This fix ensures that even if a datasource creation promise throws and
is cached, subsequent requests won't return that cached exception.
Also adding a TTL on MetadataObjectMetadataOngoingCachingLock, this is
not something that should stay in the cache forever and could
potentially unlock some race conditions (the origin of the issue is
probably due to performances where the lock is not removed as it should
be after metadata computation and caching)
Fix https://github.com/twentyhq/core-team-issues/issues/295
Based on the feature-flag `IsNewRelationEnabled` the schema will be
marked as outdated and regenerated, this will cause an error on the
front-end on the first request on the following ones schema will be well
generated ans request will work.
## Context
We recently added an infinite ttl to metadata version however other keys
such as the object metadata map are also linked to the version so
keeping the version in cache without the rest breaks the app. I'm
editing all engine related keys with infinite ttl
In this PR:
- removing ugprade-0.24 commands as we are releasing 0.30
- introducing cache:flush command
- refactoring upgrade command and sync-metadata command to use the
ActiveWorkspacesCommand so they consistently run on all workspaces or
selected workspaces
Fixes:
- clear localStorage on sign out
- fix missing workspaceMember in verify resolver
- do not throw on datasource already destroyed exception which can
happen with race condition when several resolvers are resolving in
parallel
In this PR:
1. Refactor guards to avoid duplicated queries: WorkspaceAuthGuard and
UserAuthGuard only check for existence of workspace and user in the
request without querying the database
This PR introduces the following changes:
- add the metadataVersion to all our metadata cache keys to ease
troubleshooting:
<img width="1146" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8427805b-e07f-465e-9e69-1403652c8b12">
- introduce a cache recompute lock to avoid overloading the database to
recompute the cache many time
The code removed in the PR was flagged as unused by the JetBrains
inspector.
I did a QA on the dev environment but other checks are highly
recommended.
There is one commit by scope to make the review easier.
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Bochet <charles@twenty.com>
## Context
As we grow, the messaging scripts are experiencing performance issues
forcing us to temporarily disable them on the cloud.
While investigating the performance, I have noticed that generating the
entity schema (for twentyORM) in the repository is taking ~500ms locally
on my Mac M2 so likely more on pods. Caching the entitySchema then!
I'm also clarifying naming around schemaVersion and cacheVersions ==>
both are renamed workspaceMetadataVersion and migrated to the workspace
table (the workspaceCacheVersion table is dropped).
Calling `getObjectMetadata` from `WorkspaceCacheStorageService` in every
query was causing big performance issues. The `objectMetadataCollection`
is now part of the `WorkspaceInternalContext` so we only instance it
once in the `WorkspaceDatasourceFactory`.
Queries are now much faster, for instance for TimelineCalendar, it went
from ~450ms to 80ms.
### Overview
This PR builds upon #5153, adding the ability to get a repository for
custom objects. The `entitySchema` is now generated for both standard
and custom objects based on metadata stored in the database instead of
the decorated `WorkspaceEntity` in the code. This change ensures that
standard objects with custom fields and relations can also support
custom objects.
### Implementation Details
#### Key Changes:
- **Dynamic Schema Generation:** The `entitySchema` for standard and
custom objects is now dynamically generated from the metadata stored in
the database. This shift allows for greater flexibility and
adaptability, particularly for standard objects with custom fields and
relations.
- **Custom Object Repository Retrieval:** A repository for a custom
object can be retrieved using `TwentyORMManager` based on the object's
name. Here's an example of how this can be achieved:
```typescript
const repository = await this.twentyORMManager.getRepository('custom');
/*
* `repository` variable will be typed as follows, ensuring that standard
fields and relations are properly typed:
* const repository: WorkspaceRepository<CustomWorkspaceEntity & {
* [key: string]: any;
* }>
*/
const res = await repository.find({});
```
Fix#6179
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Bochet <charles@twenty.com>
Co-authored-by: Weiko <corentin@twenty.com>