# frozen_string_literal: true require_relative '../../../core/environment/ext' require_relative '../utils/database' module Datadog module Tracing module Contrib module ActiveRecord # Common utilities for Rails module Utils EMPTY_CONFIG = {}.freeze def self.adapter_name Contrib::Utils::Database.normalize_vendor(connection_config[:adapter]) end def self.database_name connection_config[:database] end def self.adapter_host connection_config[:host] end def self.adapter_port connection_config[:port] end # Returns the connection configuration hash from the # current connection # # Since Rails 6.0, we have direct access to the object, # while older versions of Rails only provide us the # connection id. # # @see https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/34602 def self.connection_config(connection = nil, connection_id = nil) return default_connection_config if connection.nil? && connection_id.nil? conn = if !connection.nil? # Since Rails 6.0, the connection object # is directly available. connection else # For Rails < 6.0, only the `connection_id` # is available. We have to find the connection # object from it. connection_from_id(connection_id) end if conn && conn.instance_variable_defined?(:@config) conn.instance_variable_get(:@config) else EMPTY_CONFIG end end # DEV: JRuby responds to {ObjectSpace._id2ref}, despite raising an error # DEV: when invoked. Thus, we have to explicitly check for Ruby runtime. if Core::Environment::Ext::RUBY_ENGINE != 'jruby' # CRuby has access to {ObjectSpace._id2ref}, which allows for # direct look up of the connection object. def self.connection_from_id(connection_id) # `connection_id` is the `#object_id` of the # connection. We can perform an ObjectSpace # lookup to find it. # # This works not only for ActiveRecord, but for # extensions that might have their own connection # pool (e.g. https://rubygems.org/gems/makara). ObjectSpace._id2ref(connection_id) rescue => e # Because `connection_id` references a live connection # present in the current stack, it is very unlikely that # `_id2ref` will fail, but we add this safeguard just # in case. Datadog.logger.debug( "connection_id #{connection_id} does not represent a valid object. " \ "Cause: #{e.class.name} #{e.message} Source: #{Array(e.backtrace).first}" ) end else # JRuby does not enable {ObjectSpace._id2ref} by default, # as it has large performance impact: # https://github.com/jruby/jruby/wiki/PerformanceTuning/cf155dd9#dont-enable-objectspace # # This fallback code does not support the makara gem, # as its connections don't live in the ActiveRecord # connection pool. def self.connection_from_id(connection_id) ::ActiveRecord::Base .connection_handler .connection_pool_list .flat_map(&:connections) .find { |c| c.object_id == connection_id } end end # @return [Hash] def self.default_connection_config return @default_connection_config if instance_variable_defined?(:@default_connection_config) current_connection_name = if ::ActiveRecord::Base.respond_to?(:connection_specification_name) ::ActiveRecord::Base.connection_specification_name else ::ActiveRecord::Base end connection_pool = ::ActiveRecord::Base.connection_handler.retrieve_connection_pool(current_connection_name) connection_pool.nil? ? EMPTY_CONFIG : (@default_connection_config = db_config(connection_pool)) rescue StandardError EMPTY_CONFIG end # @return [Hash] def self.db_config(connection_pool) if connection_pool.respond_to? :db_config connection_pool.db_config.configuration_hash else connection_pool.spec.config end end end end end end end