4.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	| stage | group | info | 
|---|---|---|
| Data Stores | Database | To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments | 
Creating enums
When creating a new enum, it should use the database type SMALLINT.
The SMALLINT type size is 2 bytes, which is sufficient for an enum.
This would help to save space in the database.
To use this type, add limit: 2 to the migration that creates the column.
Example:
def change
  add_column :ci_job_artifacts, :file_format, :integer, limit: 2
end
All of the key/value pairs should be defined in FOSS
Summary: All enums needs to be defined in FOSS, if a model is also part of the FOSS.
class Model < ApplicationRecord
  enum platform: {
    aws: 0,
    gcp: 1      # EE-only
  }
end
When you add a new key/value pair to a enum and if it's EE-specific, you might be
tempted to organize the enum as the following:
# Define `failure_reason` enum in `Pipeline` model:
class Pipeline < ApplicationRecord
  enum failure_reason: Enums::Pipeline.failure_reasons
end
# Define key/value pairs that used in FOSS and EE:
module Enums
  module Pipeline
    def self.failure_reasons
      { unknown_failure: 0, config_error: 1 }
    end
  end
end
Enums::Pipeline.prepend_mod_with('Enums::Pipeline')
# Define key/value pairs that used in EE only:
module EE
  module Enums
    module Pipeline
      override :failure_reasons
      def failure_reasons
        super.merge(activity_limit_exceeded: 2)
      end
    end
  end
end
This works as-is, however, it has a couple of downside that:
- Someone could define a key/value pair in EE that is conflicted with a value defined in FOSS.
For example, define activity_limit_exceeded: 1inEE::Enums::Pipeline.
- When it happens, the feature works totally different.
For example, we cannot figure out failure_reasonis eitherconfig_errororactivity_limit_exceeded.
- When it happens, we have to ship a database migration to fix the data integrity, which might be impossible if you cannot recover the original value.
Also, you might observe a workaround for this concern by setting an offset in the EE module's values.
For example, this example sets 1000 as the offset:
module EE
  module Enums
    module Pipeline
      override :failure_reasons
      def failure_reasons
        super.merge(activity_limit_exceeded: 1_000, size_limit_exceeded: 1_001)
      end
    end
  end
end
This looks working as a workaround, however, this approach has some downsides that:
- Features could move from EE to FOSS or vice versa. Therefore, the offset might be mixed between FOSS and EE in the future.
For example, when you move activity_limit_exceededto FOSS, you see{ unknown_failure: 0, config_error: 1, activity_limit_exceeded: 1_000 }.
- The integer column for the enumis likely created asSMALLINT. Therefore, you need to be careful of that the offset doesn't exceed the maximum value of 2 bytes integer.
As a conclusion, you should define all of the key/value pairs in FOSS. For example, you can write the following code in the above case:
class Pipeline < ApplicationRecord
  enum failure_reason: {
    unknown_failure: 0,
    config_error: 1,
    activity_limit_exceeded: 2
  }
end
Add new values in the gap
After merging some EE and FOSS enums, there might be a gap between the two groups of values:
module Enums
  module Ci
    module CommitStatus
      def self.failure_reasons
        {
          # ...
          data_integrity_failure: 12,
          forward_deployment_failure: 13,
          insufficient_bridge_permissions: 1_001,
          downstream_bridge_project_not_found: 1_002,
          # ...
        }
      end
    end
  end
end
To add new values, you should fill the gap first.
In the example above add 14 instead of 1_003:
{
  # ...
  data_integrity_failure: 12,
  forward_deployment_failure: 13,
  a_new_value: 14,
  insufficient_bridge_permissions: 1_001,
  downstream_bridge_project_not_found: 1_002,
  # ...
}