fedibird-fe/config/initializers/chewy.rb

55 lines
1.6 KiB
Ruby

enabled = ENV['ES_ENABLED'] == 'true'
host = ENV.fetch('ES_HOST') { 'localhost' }
port = ENV.fetch('ES_PORT') { 9200 }
fallback_prefix = ENV.fetch('REDIS_NAMESPACE') { nil }
prefix = ENV.fetch('ES_PREFIX') { fallback_prefix }
Chewy.settings = {
host: "#{host}:#{port}",
prefix: prefix,
enabled: enabled,
journal: false,
sidekiq: { queue: 'pull' },
}
# We use our own async strategy even outside the request-response
# cycle, which takes care of checking if ElasticSearch is enabled
# or not. However, mind that for the Rails console, the :urgent
# strategy is set automatically with no way to override it.
Chewy.root_strategy = :custom_sidekiq
Chewy.request_strategy = :custom_sidekiq
Chewy.use_after_commit_callbacks = false
module Chewy
class << self
def enabled?
settings[:enabled]
end
end
end
# ElasticSearch uses Faraday internally. Faraday interprets the
# http_proxy env variable by default which leads to issues when
# Mastodon is run with hidden services enabled, because
# ElasticSearch is *not* supposed to be accessed through a proxy
Faraday.ignore_env_proxy = true
# Elasticsearch 7.x workaround
Elasticsearch::Transport::Client.prepend Module.new {
def search(arguments = {})
arguments[:rest_total_hits_as_int] = true
super arguments
end
}
Elasticsearch::API::Indices::IndicesClient.prepend Module.new {
def create(arguments = {})
arguments[:include_type_name] = true
super arguments
end
def put_mapping(arguments = {})
arguments[:include_type_name] = true
super arguments
end
}