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Søren Løvborg
db: add some PullRequest.query() shortcuts

This makes database query code more explicit and increases readability.

E.g. the function name get_pullrequest_cnt_for_user was bad, because the
concept of "pullrequest for user" is incredibly vague, and could refer
to any kind of association between PRs and users. (Quiz time! Does it
mean that the user is the PR owner, that the user is reviewing, or that
the user has commented on the PR and thus is receiving notifications?)

A descriptive name could be "get_open_pull_request_count_for_reviewer",
because the function is indeed only concerned with reviewers and only
with open pull requests. But at this point, we might as well say
PullRequest.query(reviewer_id=user, include_closed=False).count()
which is only slightly longer, and doesn't require us to write dozens
of little wrapper functions (including, any moment now, a separate
function for listing the PRs instead of counting them).

Note that we're not actually going down an abstraction level by doing
this. We're still operating on the concepts of "pull request", "open"
and "reviewer", and are not leaking database implementation details.

The query() shortcuts are designed so they default to not altering
the query. Any processing requires explicit opt-in by the caller.
.. _statistics:

=====================
Repository statistics
=====================

Kallithea has a *repository statistics* feature, disabled by default. When
enabled, the amount of commits per committer is visualized in a timeline. This
feature can be enabled using the ``Enable statistics`` checkbox on the
repository ``Settings`` page.

The statistics system makes heavy demands on the server resources, so
in order to keep a balance between usability and performance, statistics are
cached inside the database and gathered incrementally.

When Celery is disabled:

  On each first visit to the summary page a set of 250 commits are parsed and
  added to the statistics cache. This incremental gathering also happens on each
  visit to the statistics page, until all commits are fetched.

  Statistics are kept cached until additional commits are added to the
  repository. In such a case Kallithea will only fetch the new commits when
  updating its statistics cache.

When Celery is enabled:

  On the first visit to the summary page, Kallithea will create tasks that will
  execute on Celery workers. These tasks will gather all of the statistics until
  all commits are parsed. Each task parses 250 commits, then launches a new
  task.