NAME

    DBIx::BatchChunker - Run large database changes safely

VERSION

    version v0.941.0

SYNOPSIS

        use DBIx::BatchChunker;
    
        my $account_rs = $schema->resultset('Account')->search({
            account_type => 'deprecated',
        });
    
        my %params = (
            chunk_size  => 5000,
            target_time => 5,
    
            rs      => $account_rs,
            id_name => 'account_id',
    
            coderef => sub { $_[1]->delete },
            sleep   => 1,
            debug   => 1,
    
            progress_name    => 'Deleting deprecated accounts',
            process_past_max => 1,
        );
    
        # EITHER:
        # 1) Automatically construct and execute the changes:
    
        DBIx::BatchChunker->construct_and_execute(%params);
    
        # OR
        # 2) Manually construct and execute the changes:
    
        my $batch_chunker = DBIx::BatchChunker->new(%params);
    
        $batch_chunker->calculate_ranges;
        $batch_chunker->execute;

DESCRIPTION

    This utility class is for running a large batch of DB changes in a
    manner that doesn't cause huge locks, outages, and missed transactions.
    It's highly flexible to allow for many different kinds of change
    operations, and dynamically adjusts chunks to its workload.

    It works by splitting up DB operations into smaller chunks within a
    loop. These chunks are transactionalized, either naturally as
    single-operation bulk work or by the loop itself. The full range is
    calculated beforehand to get the right start/end points. A progress bar
    will be created to let the deployer know the processing status.

    There are two ways to use this class: call the automatic constructor
    and executor ("construct_and_execute") or manually construct the object
    and call its methods. See "SYNOPSIS" for examples of both.

    DISCLAIMER: You should not rely on this class to magically fix any and
    all locking problems the DB might experience just because it's being
    used. Thorough testing and best practices are still required.

 Processing Modes

    This class has several different modes of operation, depending on what
    was passed to the constructor:

  DBIC Processing

    If both "rs" and "coderef" are passed, a chunk ResultSet is built from
    the base ResultSet, to add in a BETWEEN clause, and the new ResultSet
    is passed into the coderef. The coderef should run some sort of active
    ResultSet operation from there.

    An "id_name" should be provided, but if it is missing it will be looked
    up based on the primary key of the ResultSource.

    If "single_rows" is also enabled, then each chunk is wrapped in a
    transaction and the coderef is called for each row in the chunk. In
    this case, the coderef is passed a Result object instead of the chunk
    ResultSet.

    Note that whether "single_rows" is enabled or not, the coderef
    execution is encapsulated in DBIC's retry logic, so any failures will
    re-connect and retry the coderef. Because of this, any changes you make
    within the coderef should be idempotent, or should at least be able to
    skip over any already-processed rows.

  Active DBI Processing

    If an "stmt" (DBI statement handle args) is passed without a "coderef",
    the statement handle is merely executed on each iteration with the
    start and end IDs. It is assumed that the SQL for the statement handle
    contains exactly two placeholders for a BETWEEN clause. For example:

        my $update_stmt = q{
        UPDATE
            accounts a
            JOIN account_updates au USING (account_id)
        SET
            a.time_stamp = au.time_stamp
        WHERE
            a.account_id BETWEEN ? AND ? AND
            a.time_stamp != au.time_stamp
        });

    The BETWEEN clause should, of course, match the IDs being used in the
    loop.

    The statement is ran with "dbi_connector" for retry protection.
    Therefore, the statement should also be idempotent.

  Query DBI Processing

    If both a "stmt" and a "coderef" are passed, the statement handle is
    prepared and executed. Like the "Active DBI Processing" mode, the SQL
    for the statement should contain exactly two placeholders for a BETWEEN
    clause. Then the $sth is passed to the coderef. It's up to the coderef
    to extract data from the executed statement handle, and do something
    with it.

    If single_rows is enabled, each chunk is wrapped in a transaction and
    the coderef is called for each row in the chunk. In this case, the
    coderef is passed a hashref of the row instead of the executed $sth,
    with lowercase alias names used as keys.

    Note that in both cases, the coderef execution is encapsulated in a
    DBIx::Connector::Retry call to either run or txn (using
    "dbi_connector"), so any failures will re-connect and retry the
    coderef. Because of this, any changes you make within the coderef
    should be idempotent, or should at least be able to skip over any
    already-processed rows.

  DIY Processing

    If a "coderef" is passed but neither a stmt nor a rs are passed, then
    the multiplier loop does not touch the database. The coderef is merely
    passed the start and end IDs for each chunk. It is expected that the
    coderef will run through all database operations using those start and
    end points.

    It's still valid to include "min_stmt", "max_stmt", and/or "count_stmt"
    in the constructor to enable features like max ID recalculation or
    chunk resizing.

    If you're not going to include any min/max statements for
    "calculate_ranges", you will need to set "min_id" and "max_id"
    yourself, either in the constructor or before the "execute" call. Using
    "construct_and_execute" is also not an option in this case, as this
    tries to call "calculate_ranges" without a way to do so.

  TL;DR Version

        $stmt                             = Active DBI Processing
        $stmt + $coderef                  = Query DBI Processing  | $bc->$coderef($executed_sth)
        $stmt + $coderef + single_rows=>1 = Query DBI Processing  | $bc->$coderef($row_hashref)
        $rs   + $coderef                  = DBIC Processing       | $bc->$coderef($chunk_rs)
        $rs   + $coderef + single_rows=>1 = DBIC Processing       | $bc->$coderef($result)
                $coderef                  = DIY Processing        | $bc->$coderef($start, $end)

ATTRIBUTES

    See the "METHODS" section for more in-depth descriptions of these
    attributes and their usage.

 DBIC Processing Attributes

  rs

    A DBIx::Class::ResultSet. This is used by all methods as the base
    ResultSet onto which the DB changes will be applied. Required for DBIC
    processing.

  rsc

    A DBIx::Class::ResultSetColumn. This is only used to override "rs" for
    min/max calculations. Optional.

  dbic_retry_opts

    A hashref of DBIC retry options. These options control how retry
    protection works within DBIC. So far, there are two supported options:

        max_attempts  = Number of times to retry
        retry_handler = Coderef that returns true to continue to retry or false to re-throw
                        the last exception

    The default is to let the DBIC storage engine handle its own
    protection, which will retry once if the DB connection was
    disconnected. If you specify any options, even a blank hashref,
    BatchChunker will fill in a default max_attempts of 10, and an
    always-true retry_handler. This is similar to DBIx::Connector::Retry's
    defaults.

    Under the hood, these are options that are passed to the
    as-yet-undocumented DBIx::Class::Storage::BlockRunner. The
    retry_handler has access to the same BlockRunner object (passed as its
    only argument) and its methods/accessors, such as storage,
    failed_attempt_count, and last_exception.

 DBI Processing Attributes

  dbi_connector

    A DBIx::Connector::Retry object. Instead of DBI statement handles, this
    is the recommended way for BatchChunker to interface with the DBI, as
    it handles retries on failures. The connection mode used is whatever
    default is set within the object.

    Required for DBI Processing, unless "dbic_storage" is specified.

  dbic_storage

    A DBIC storage object, as an alternative for "dbi_connector". There may
    be times when you want to run plain DBI statements, but are still using
    DBIC. In these cases, you don't have to create a DBIx::Connector::Retry
    object to run those statements.

    This uses a BlockRunner object for retry protection, so the options in
    "dbic_retry_opts" would apply here.

    Required for DBI Processing, unless "dbi_connector" is specified.

  min_stmt

  max_stmt

    SQL statement strings or an arrayref of parameters for
    "selectrow_array" in DBI.

    When executed, these statements should each return a single value,
    either the minimum or maximum ID that will be affected by the DB
    changes. These are used by "calculate_ranges". Required if using either
    type of DBI Processing.

  stmt

    A SQL statement string or an arrayref of parameters for "prepare" in
    DBI + binds.

    If using "Active DBI Processing" (no coderef), this is a do-able
    statement (usually DML like INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE). If using "Query DBI
    Processing" (with coderef), this is a passive DQL (SELECT) statement.

    In either case, the statement should contain BETWEEN placeholders,
    which will be executed with the start/end ID points. If there are
    already bind placeholders in the arrayref, then make sure the BETWEEN
    bind points are last on the list.

    Required for DBI Processing.

  count_stmt

    A SELECT COUNT SQL statement string or an arrayref of parameters for
    "selectrow_array" in DBI.

    Like "stmt", it should contain BETWEEN placeholders. In fact, the SQL
    should look exactly like the "stmt" query, except with COUNT(*) instead
    of the column list.

    Used only for "Query DBI Processing". Optional, but recommended for
    chunk resizing.

 Progress Bar Attributes

  progress_bar

    The progress bar used for all methods. This can be specified right
    before the method call to override the default used for that method.
    Unlike most attributes, this one is read-write, so it can be switched
    on-the-fly.

    Don't forget to remove or switch to a different progress bar if you
    want to use a different one for another method:

        $batch_chunker->progress_bar( $calc_pb );
        $batch_chunker->calculate_ranges;
        $batch_chunker->progress_bar( $loop_pb );
        $batch_chunker->execute;

    All of this is optional. If the progress bar isn't specified, the
    method will create a default one. If the terminal isn't interactive,
    the default Term::ProgressBar will be set to silent to naturally skip
    the output.

  progress_name

    A string used by "execute" to assist in creating a progress bar.
    Ignored if "progress_bar" is already specified.

    This is the preferred way of customizing the progress bar without
    having to create one from scratch.

  cldr

    A CLDR::Number object. English speakers that use a typical 1,234.56
    format would probably want to leave it at the default. Otherwise, you
    should provide your own.

  debug

    Boolean. If turned on, displays timing stats on each chunk, as well as
    total numbers.

 Common Attributes

  id_name

    The column name used as the iterator in the processing loops. This
    should be a primary key or integer-based (indexed) key, tied to the
    resultset.

    Optional. Used mainly in DBIC processing. If not specified, it will
    look up the first primary key column from "rs" and use that.

    This can still be specified for other processing modes to use in
    progress bars.

  coderef

    The coderef that will be called either on each chunk or each row,
    depending on how "single_rows" is set. The first input is always the
    BatchChunker object. The rest vary depending on the processing mode:

        $stmt + $coderef                  = Query DBI Processing  | $bc->$coderef($executed_sth)
        $stmt + $coderef + single_rows=>1 = Query DBI Processing  | $bc->$coderef($row_hashref)
        $rs   + $coderef                  = DBIC Processing       | $bc->$coderef($chunk_rs)
        $rs   + $coderef + single_rows=>1 = DBIC Processing       | $bc->$coderef($result)
                $coderef                  = DIY Processing        | $bc->$coderef($start, $end)

    The loop does not monitor the return values from the coderef.

    Required for all processing modes except "Active DBI Processing".

  chunk_size

    The amount of rows to be processed in each loop.

    Default is 1000 rows. This figure should be sized to keep per-chunk
    processing time at around 5 seconds. If this is too large, rows may
    lock for too long. If it's too small, processing may be unnecessarily
    slow.

  target_time

    The target runtime (in seconds) that chunk processing should strive to
    achieve, not including "sleep". If the chunk processing times are too
    high or too low, this will dynamically adjust "chunk_size" to try to
    match the target.

    Turning this on does not mean you should ignore chunk_size! If the
    starting chunk size is grossly inaccurate to the workload, you could
    end up with several chunks in the beginning causing long-lasting locks
    before the runtime targeting reduces them down to a reasonable size.

    Default is 5 seconds. Set this to zero to turn off runtime targeting.
    (This was previously defaulted to off prior to v0.92, and set to 15 in
    v0.92.)

  sleep

    The number of seconds to sleep after each chunk. It uses Time::HiRes's
    version, so fractional numbers are allowed.

    Default is 0, which is fine for most operations. But, it is highly
    recommended to turn this on (say, 1 to 5 seconds) for really long
    one-off DB operations, especially if a lot of disk I/O is involved.
    Without this, there's a chance that the slaves will have a hard time
    keeping up, and/or the master won't have enough processing power to
    keep up with standard load.

    This will increase the overall processing time of the loop, so try to
    find a balance between the two.

  process_past_max

    Boolean that controls whether to check past the "max_id" during the
    loop. If the loop hits the end point, it will run another maximum ID
    check in the DB, and adjust max_id accordingly. If it somehow cannot
    run a DB check (no "rs" or "max_stmt" available, for example), the last
    chunk will just be one at the end of max_id + chunk_size.

    This is useful if the entire table is expected to be processed, and you
    don't want to miss any new rows that come up between "calculate_ranges"
    and the end of the loop.

    Turned off by default.

  single_rows

    Boolean that controls whether single rows are passed to the "coderef"
    or the chunk's ResultSets/statement handle is passed.

    Since running single-row operations in a DB is painfully slow (compared
    to bulk operations), this also controls whether the entire set of
    coderefs are encapsulated into a DB transaction. Transactionalizing the
    entire chunk brings the speed, and atomicity, back to what a bulk
    operation would be. (Bulk operations are still faster, but you can't do
    anything you want in a single DML statement.)

    Used only by "DBIC Processing" and "Query DBI Processing".

  min_chunk_percent

    The minimum row count, as a percentage of "chunk_size". This value is
    actually expressed in decimal form, i.e.: between 0 and 1.

    This value will be used to determine when to process, skip, or expand a
    block, based on a count query. The default is 0.5 or 50%, which means
    that it will try to expand the block to a larger size if the row count
    is less than 50% of the chunk size. Zero-sized blocks will be skipped
    entirely.

    This "chunk resizing" is useful for large regions of the table that
    have been deleted, or when the incrementing ID has large gaps in it for
    other reasons. Wasting time on numerical gaps that span millions can
    slow down the processing considerably, especially if "sleep" is
    enabled.

    If this needs to be disabled, set this to 0. The maximum chunk
    percentage does not have a setting and is hard-coded at 100% +
    min_chunk_percent.

    If DBIC processing isn't used, "count_stmt" is also required to enable
    chunk resizing.

  min_id

  max_id

    Used by "execute" to figure out the main start and end points.
    Calculated by "calculate_ranges".

    Manually setting this is not recommended, as each database is different
    and the information may have changed between the DB change development
    and deployment. Instead, use "calculate_ranges" to fill in these values
    right before running the loop.

  loop_state

    A DBIx::BatchChunker::LoopState object designed to hold variables
    during the processing loop. The object will be cleared out after use.
    Most of the complexity is needed for chunk resizing.

CONSTRUCTORS

    See "ATTRIBUTES" for information on what can be passed into these
    constructors.

 new

        my $batch_chunker = DBIx::BatchChunker->new(...);

    A standard object constructor. If you use this constructor, you will
    need to manually call "calculate_ranges" and "execute" to execute the
    DB changes.

 construct_and_execute

        my $batch_chunker = DBIx::BatchChunker->construct_and_execute(...);

    Constructs a DBIx::BatchChunker object and automatically calls
    "calculate_ranges" and "execute" on it. Anything passed to this method
    will be passed through to the constructor.

    Returns the constructed object, post-execution. This is typically only
    useful if you want to inspect the attributes after the process has
    finished. Otherwise, it's safe to just ignore the return and throw away
    the object immediately.

METHODS

 calculate_ranges

        my $batch_chunker = DBIx::BatchChunker->new(
            rsc      => $account_rsc,    # a ResultSetColumn
            ### OR ###
            rs       => $account_rs,     # a ResultSet
            id_name  => 'account_id',    # can be looked up if not provided
            ### OR ###
            dbi_connector => $conn,      # DBIx::Connector::Retry object
            min_stmt      => $min_stmt,  # a SQL statement or DBI $sth args
            max_stmt      => $max_stmt,  # ditto
    
            ### Optional but recommended ###
            id_name      => 'account_id',  # will also be added into the progress bar title
            chunk_size   => 20_000,        # default is 1000
    
            ### Optional ###
            progress_bar => $progress,     # defaults to a 2-count 'Calculating ranges' bar
    
            # ...other attributes for execute...
        );
    
        my $has_data_to_process = $batch_chunker->calculate_ranges;

    Given a DBIx::Class::ResultSetColumn, DBIx::Class::ResultSet, or DBI
    statement argument set, this method calculates the min/max IDs of those
    objects. It fills in the "min_id" and "max_id" attributes, based on the
    ID data, and then returns 1.

    If either of the min/max statements don't return any ID data, this
    method will return 0.

 execute

        my $batch_chunker = DBIx::BatchChunker->new(
            # ...other attributes for calculate_ranges...
    
            dbi_connector => $conn,          # DBIx::Connector::Retry object
            stmt          => $do_stmt,       # INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE $stmt with BETWEEN placeholders
            ### OR ###
            dbi_connector => $conn,          # DBIx::Connector::Retry object
            stmt          => $select_stmt,   # SELECT $stmt with BETWEEN placeholders
            count_stmt    => $count_stmt,    # SELECT COUNT $stmt to be used for min_chunk_percent; optional
            coderef       => $coderef,       # called code that does the actual work
            ### OR ###
            rs      => $account_rs,          # base ResultSet, which gets filtered with -between later on
            id_name => 'account_id',         # can be looked up if not provided
            coderef => $coderef,             # called code that does the actual work
            ### OR ###
            coderef => $coderef,             # DIY database work; just pass the $start/$end IDs
    
            ### Optional but recommended ###
            sleep             => 0.25, # number of seconds to sleep each chunk; defaults to 0
            process_past_max  => 1,    # use this if processing the whole table
            single_rows       => 1,    # does $coderef get a single $row or the whole $chunk_rs / $stmt
            min_chunk_percent => 0.25, # minimum row count of chunk size percentage; defaults to 0.5 (or 50%)
            target_time       => 5,    # target runtime for dynamic chunk size scaling; default is 5 seconds
    
            progress_name => 'Updating Accounts',  # easier than creating your own progress_bar
    
            ### Optional ###
            progress_bar     => $progress,  # defaults to "Processing $source_name" bar
            debug            => 1,          # displays timing stats on each chunk
        );
    
        $batch_chunker->execute if $batch_chunker->calculate_ranges;

    Applies the configured DB changes in chunks. Runs through the loop,
    processing a statement handle, ResultSet, and/or coderef as it goes.
    Each loop iteration processes a chunk of work, determined by
    "chunk_size".

    The "calculate_ranges" method should be run first to fill in "min_id"
    and "max_id". If either of these are missing, the function will assume
    "calculate_ranges" couldn't find them and warn about it.

    More details can be found in the "Processing Modes" and "ATTRIBUTES"
    sections.

PRIVATE METHODS

 _process_block

    Runs the DB work and passes it to the coderef. Its return value
    determines whether the block should be processed or not.

 _process_past_max_checker

    Checks to make sure the current endpoint is actually the end, by
    checking the database. Its return value determines whether the block
    should be processed or not.

    See "process_past_max".

 _chunk_count_checker

    Checks the chunk count to make sure it's properly sized. If not, it
    will try to shrink or expand the current chunk (in chunk_size
    increments) as necessary. Its return value determines whether the block
    should be processed or not.

    See "min_chunk_percent".

    This is not to be confused with the "_runtime_checker", which adjusts
    chunk_size after processing, based on previous run times.

 _runtime_checker

    Stores the previously processed chunk's runtime, and then adjusts
    chunk_size as necessary.

    See "target_time".

 _increment_progress

    Increments the progress bar.

 _print_debug_status

    Prints out a standard debug status line, if debug is enabled. What it
    prints is generally uniform, but it depends on the processing action.
    Most of the data is pulled from "loop_state".

CAVEATS

 Big Number Support

    If the module detects that the ID numbers are no longer safe for
    standard Perl NV storage, it will automatically switch to using
    Math::BigInt and Math::BigFloat for big number support. If any blessed
    numbers are already being used to define the attributes, this will also
    switch on the support.

 String-based IDs

    If you're working with VARCHAR types or other string-based IDs to
    represent integers, these may be subject to whatever string-based
    comparison rules your RDBMS uses when calculating with MIN/MAX or using
    BETWEEN. Row counting and chunk size scaling will try to compensate,
    but will be mixing string-based comparisons from the RDBMS and
    Perl-based integer math.

    Using the CAST function may help, but it may also cause critical
    indexes to be ignored, especially if the function is used on the
    left-hand side against the column. Strings with the exact same length
    may be safe from comparison weirdness, but YMMV.

    Non-integer inputs from ID columns, such as GUIDs or other alphanumeric
    strings, are not currently supported. They would have to be converted
    to integers via SQL, and doing so may run into a similar risk of having
    your RDBMS ignore indexes.

SEE ALSO

    DBIx::BulkLoader::Mysql, DBIx::Class::BatchUpdate, DBIx::BulkUtil

AUTHOR

    Grant Street Group <developers@grantstreet.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

    This software is Copyright (c) 2018 - 2021 by Grant Street Group.

    This is free software, licensed under:

      The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)