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Without this, CURRENT_UID isnt actually passed in from the host, and wipes out /etc/passwd even when we’re actually running as root.
I tested this as a non-root user on Linux, and on Docker for Mac
run this command on _any_ node in an awx cluster:
$ awx-manage profile_sql --threshold=2.0 --minutes=1
...and for 1 minute, the timing for _every_ SQL query in _every_ awx
Python process that uses the Django ORM will be measured
queries that run longer than (in this example) 2 seconds will be
written to a per-process sqlite database in /var/lib/awx/profile, and
the file will contain an EXPLAIN VERBOSE for the query and the full
Python stack that led to that SQL query's execution (this includes not
just WSGI requests, but background processes like the runworker and
dispatcher)
$ awx-manage profile_sql --threshold=0
...can be used to disable profiling again (if you don't want to wait for
the minute to expire)
I wanted to pass `—user` to `docker-compose` up, but that option doesnt exist. To get around this, I had to record the uid on the host (CURRENT_UID), interpolate the variable in tools/docker-compose.yml, and detect that inside the container. I then piggy-backed on the /etc/passwd hack we use for scenarios with unpredictable uids.
this commit implements the bulk of `awx-manage run_dispatcher`, a new
command that binds to RabbitMQ via kombu and balances messages across
a pool of workers that are similar to celeryd workers in spirit.
Specifically, this includes:
- a new decorator, `awx.main.dispatch.task`, which can be used to
decorate functions or classes so that they can be designated as
"Tasks"
- support for fanout/broadcast tasks (at this point in time, only
`conf.Setting` memcached flushes use this functionality)
- support for job reaping
- support for success/failure hooks for job runs (i.e.,
`handle_work_success` and `handle_work_error`)
- support for auto scaling worker pool that scale processes up and down
on demand
- minimal support for RPC, such as status checks and pool recycle/reload