a8e1a707d5
ref https://linear.app/tryghost/issue/ENG-1240/race-condition-when-updating-members-last-seen-at-timestamp When members click a link in an email, Ghost updates the member's `last_seen_at` timestamp, but it should only update the timestamp if the member hasn't yet been seen in the current day (based on the publication's timezone). Currently there is a race condition present where multiple simultaneous requests from the same member (if e.g. an email link checker is following all links in an email) can cause the `last_seen_at` timestamp to be updated multiple times in the same day for the same member. These additional queries add a significant load on Ghost and its database, which can contribute to the exhaustion of the connection pool and eventually requests may time out. The primary motivation for this change is to avoid that race condition by adding a lock to the member row, checking if `last_seen_at` has already been updated in the current day, and only updating it if it hasn't. Another beneficial side-effect of this change is that it avoids locking the `labels` and `newsletters` tables, which are locked when we update the `last_seen_at` timestamp in the `members` table currently. This should improve Ghost's ability to handle a large influx of requests to redirect endpoints (confirmed with load tests), which tend to happen immediately after a publisher sends an email. |
||
---|---|---|
.github | ||
.vscode | ||
apps | ||
ghost | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.envrc | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
flake.lock | ||
flake.nix | ||
LICENSE | ||
nx.json | ||
package.json | ||
PRIVACY.md | ||
README.md | ||
SECURITY.md | ||
yarn.lock |
Ghost.org •
Forum •
Docs •
Contributing •
Twitter
The easiest way to get a production instance deployed is with our official Ghost(Pro) managed service. It takes about 2 minutes to launch a new site with worldwide CDN, backups, security and maintenance all done for you.
For most people this ends up being the best value option because of how much time it saves — and 100% of revenue goes to the Ghost Foundation; funding the maintenance and further development of the project itself. So you’ll be supporting open source software and getting a great service!
Quickstart install
If you want to run your own instance of Ghost, in most cases the best way is to use our CLI tool
npm install ghost-cli -g
Then, if installing locally add the local
flag to get up and running in under a minute - Local install docs
ghost install local
or on a server run the full install, including automatic SSL setup using LetsEncrypt - Production install docs
ghost install
Check out our official documentation for more information about our recommended hosting stack & properly upgrading Ghost, plus everything you need to develop your own Ghost themes or work with our API.
Contributors & advanced developers
For anyone wishing to contribute to Ghost or to hack/customize core files we recommend following our full development setup guides: Contributor guide • Developer setup
Ghost sponsors
We'd like to extend big thanks to our sponsors and partners who make Ghost possible. If you're interested in sponsoring Ghost and supporting the project, please check out our profile on GitHub sponsors ❤️
Getting help
You can find answers to a huge variety of questions, along with a large community of helpful developers over on the Ghost forum - replies are generally very quick. Ghost(Pro) customers also have access to 24/7 email support.
To stay up to date with all the latest news and product updates, make sure you subscribe to our blog — or you can always follow us on Twitter, if you prefer your updates bite-sized and facetious. 🎷🐢
Copyright & license
Copyright (c) 2013-2023 Ghost Foundation - Released under the MIT license. Ghost and the Ghost Logo are trademarks of Ghost Foundation Ltd. Please see our trademark policy for info on acceptable usage.