This gives an easy way to do so across all services without adding new options.
Reasons to do so might be to avoid overheads or because your prometheus metrics grow too large.
To be clear, this is an awful hack.
It means that any implicit str/unicode coersion will use the utf-8 encoding,
which is basically always what you want.
However, it is possible that some badly-written libraries might be relying
on the default encoding being ascii, and will do weird things as a result.
Finally, it's especially hacky to be doing this as part of importing a library.
Normally you're meant to do this as part of a sitecustomize.py in your python system directory,
and the function is deleted before passing control to normal code (this is why we need
to reload() to get it back).
The caller can pick depending on the needs of the output format.
This reverses most of 80d829b83b,
re-introducing streaming full cuts but keeping non-streaming as an option.
Most formats like mp4 require ffmpeg to make changes at the start of the file
throughout writing.
Unfortunately, this prevents us from streaming the upload as we cut it.
Instead, we spool to a temporary file until ffmpeg exits,
then upload that all at once.
In a fast cut, we edit the first and last segments then concatenate them all.
However, this leads to some tiny but perciptible artifacting around the border
of the first and second (and second-last and last) segments.
A full cut is much slower, but re-encodes the video into the desired format
and is more reliable.
We want both options to be available.
With this commit, we only add the option, we don't use it in restreamer or cutter.
To make this work, we make type a proper segment field.
We also tell get_best_segments to ignore temp segments, since they might go away
before we can actually use them.
This allows manual uploads to work without needing to fill all the edit fields
with junk.
We also set a constraint on uploader asserting that any videos from claimed onwards have a known uploader.
Again, an exception is made for DONE to allow manual uploads.
These can happen if a downloader or backfiller dies suddenly.
We treat it similarly to partial but lacking any hash.
At some point in the future we should probably have something
to find any temp segments, hash them and rename them to partials.
We wrap direct dateutil calls to handle two distinct cases:
* `common.dateutil.parse()`: We want to handle arbitrary timestamps including tz info,
then convert them to UTC.
This is used in HLS parsing, and for command line input for backfiller
* `common.dateutil.parse_utc_only()`: We want to only handle UTC timestamps,
but datetime.strptime isn't flexible enough (eg. can't handle missing fractional component).
This is used for restreamer request params.
Note this moves over the 'experimental' cutter and deletes the original cutter
that concatenates entire videos before cutting.
We may eventually want to revive that method if the experimental cutter turns out
to introduce too many issues.
We move most of the code over verbatim, but adjust it such that it acts
as a generic iterator that can be used in a variety of contexts.
Some other changes made during the move include telling ffmpeg to be quieter
(don't output version info and junk, only log if something goes wrong),
and avoiding errors during cleanup.
This is a performance optimization, allowing us to fail out early (potentially avoiding a LOT
of work) if we know we're going to reject any result that contains holes.
We add a new exception ContainsHoles that is raised in this condition.
This should help prevent changing state to EDITED with any of these fields unset,
which would blow up the cutter.
We also fix up upload_location, which was set up as a sheet input (NOT NULL DEFAULT ''),
and add a similar constraint saying any DONE columns must have non-NULL video link.
All our usage was of a single query anyway, so autocommit is easier to handle.
You can still opt into a longer transaction using the transaction() helper.
This code manages the database connections, setting their isolation level correctly
and ensuring the idempotent schema is applied before they're used.
Applying the schema on startup means we don't need to deal with the database's state,
setting it up before running, running migrations etc. However, it does put constraints on
the changes we can safely make.
Our use of seralizable isolation means that all transactions can be treated as fully
independent - the server must behave as though they'd been run seperately in some valid order.
This will give us the least surprising results when multiple connections try to modify the same
data, though we'll need to deal with occasional transaction commit failures due to conficts.
get_best_segments can sometimes take a very long time,
we don't want to stop other work from happening while it's ongoing.
So we ask gevent to run other things until there's no other work to do,
then we do one hour, then check back with gevent again.
In combination with the performance improvements, this should mean we don't block
other things from running for more than a few hundred ms at most.
strptime is much faster but can't handle as varied formats.
But in this case we fully control the format, so there's no reason not to use it.
Profiling suggests we spend about 80% of our time in get_best_segments just parsing dates,
so this is a signifigant performance gain.
The prometheus client uses a threading.Lock() to prevent shared access to
certain metric state. This lock is taken as part of doing collection, as well
as during metric.labels().
We hit a deadlock where our stack sampler signal arrived during a collection,
when the lock was held. This meant that flamegraph.labels() blocked forever,
and the lock was never released, hanging all metrics collection.
Our solution is a hack, which is to reach into the internals of our metric object
and replace its lock with a dummy one. This is reasonably safe, but only as long as
the prometheus_client internal structure doesn't change signfigiantly.