From 26a029d407be480d791972afb5975cf62c9360a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Fri, 19 Apr 2024 02:47:55 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 124.0.1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- .../telemetry/docs/obsolete/fhr/architecture.rst | 226 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 226 insertions(+) create mode 100644 toolkit/components/telemetry/docs/obsolete/fhr/architecture.rst (limited to 'toolkit/components/telemetry/docs/obsolete/fhr/architecture.rst') diff --git a/toolkit/components/telemetry/docs/obsolete/fhr/architecture.rst b/toolkit/components/telemetry/docs/obsolete/fhr/architecture.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..2e9c37f3d3 --- /dev/null +++ b/toolkit/components/telemetry/docs/obsolete/fhr/architecture.rst @@ -0,0 +1,226 @@ +.. _healthreport_architecture: + +============ +Architecture +============ + +``healthreporter.jsm`` contains the main interface for FHR, the +``HealthReporter`` type. An instance of this is created by the +``data_reporting_service``. + +``providers.jsm`` contains numerous ``Metrics.Provider`` and +``Metrics.Measurement`` used for collecting application metrics. If you +are looking for the FHR probes, this is where they are. + +Storage +======= + +Firefox Health Report stores data in 3 locations: + +* Metrics measurements and provider state is stored in a SQLite database + (via ``Metrics.Storage``). +* Service state (such as the IDs of documents uploaded) is stored in a + JSON file on disk (via OS.File). +* Lesser state and run-time options are stored in preferences. + +Preferences +=========== + +Preferences controlling behavior of Firefox Health Report live in the +``datareporting.healthreport.*`` branch. + +Service and Data Control +------------------------ + +The follow preferences control behavior of the service and data upload. + +service.enabled + Controls whether the entire health report service runs. The overall + service performs data collection, storing, and submission. + + This is the primary kill switch for Firefox Health Report + outside of the build system variable. i.e. if you are using an + official Firefox build and wish to disable FHR, this is what you + should set to false to prevent FHR from not only submitting but + also collecting data. + +uploadEnabled + Whether uploading of data is enabled. This is the preference the + checkbox in the preferences UI reflects. If this is + disabled, FHR still collects data - it just doesn't upload it. + +service.loadDelayMsec + How long (in milliseconds) after initial application start should FHR + wait before initializing. + + FHR may initialize sooner than this if the FHR service is requested. + This will happen if e.g. the user goes to ``about:healthreport``. + +service.loadDelayFirstRunMsec + How long (in milliseconds) FHR should wait to initialize on first + application run. + + FHR waits longer than normal to initialize on first application run + because first-time initialization can use a lot of I/O to initialize + the SQLite database and this I/O should not interfere with the + first-run user experience. + +documentServerURI + The URI of a Bagheera server that FHR should interface with for + submitting documents. + + You typically do not need to change this. + +documentServerNamespace + The namespace on the document server FHR should upload documents to. + + You typically do not need to change this. + +infoURL + The URL of a page containing more info about FHR, it's privacy + policy, etc. + +about.reportUrl + The URL to load in ``about:healthreport``. + +about.reportUrlUnified + The URL to load in ``about:healthreport``. This is used instead of ``reportUrl`` for UnifiedTelemetry when it is not opt-in. + +service.providerCategories + A comma-delimited list of category manager categories that contain + registered ``Metrics.Provider`` records. Read below for how provider + registration works. + +If the entire service is disabled, you lose data collection. This means +that **local** data analysis won't be available because there is no data +to analyze! Keep in mind that Firefox Health Report can be useful even +if it's not submitting data to remote servers! + +Logging +------- + +The following preferences allow you to control the logging behavior of +Firefox Health Report. + +logging.consoleEnabled + Whether to write log messages to the web console. This is true by + default. + +logging.consoleLevel + The minimum log level FHR messages must have to be written to the + web console. By default, only FHR warnings or errors will be written + to the web console. During normal/expected operation, no messages of + this type should be produced. + +logging.dumpEnabled + Whether to write log messages via ``dump()``. If true, FHR will write + messages to stdout/stderr. + + This is typically only enabled when developing FHR. + +logging.dumpLevel + The minimum log level messages must have to be written via + ``dump()``. + +State +----- + +currentDaySubmissionFailureCount + How many submission failures the client has encountered while + attempting to upload the most recent document. + +lastDataSubmissionFailureTime + The time of the last failed document upload. + +lastDataSubmissionRequestedTime + The time of the last document upload attempt. + +lastDataSubmissionSuccessfulTime + The time of the last successful document upload. + +nextDataSubmissionTime + The time the next data submission is scheduled for. FHR will not + attempt to upload a new document before this time. + +pendingDeleteRemoteData + Whether the client currently has a pending request to delete remote + data. If true, the client will attempt to delete all remote data + before an upload is performed. + +FHR stores various state in preferences. + +Registering Providers +===================== + +Firefox Health Report providers are registered via the category manager. +See ``HealthReportComponents.manifest`` for providers defined in this +directory. + +Essentially, the category manager receives the name of a JS type and the +URI of a JSM to import that exports this symbol. At run-time, the +providers registered in the category manager are instantiated. + +Providers are registered via the category manager to make registration +simple and less prone to errors. Any XPCOM component can create a +category manager entry. Therefore, new data providers can be added +without having to touch core Firefox Health Report code. Additionally, +category manager registration means providers are more likely to be +registered on FHR's terms, when it wants. If providers were registered +in code at application run-time, there would be the risk of other +components prematurely instantiating FHR (causing a performance hit if +performed at an inopportune time) or semi-complicated code around +observers or listeners. Category manager entries are only 1 line per +provider and leave FHR in control: they are simple and safe. + +Document Generation and Lifecycle +================================= + +FHR will attempt to submit a JSON document containing data every 24 wall +clock hours. + +At upload time, FHR will query the database for **all** information from +the last 180 days and assemble this data into a JSON document. We +attempt to upload this JSON document with a client-generated UUID to the +configured server. + +Before we attempt upload, the generated UUID is stored in the JSON state +file on local disk. At this point, the client assumes the document with +that UUID has been successfully stored on the server. + +If the client is aware of other document UUIDs that presumably exist on +the server, those UUIDs are sent with the upload request so the client +can request those UUIDs be deleted. This helps ensure that each client +only has 1 document/UUID on the server at any one time. + +Importance of Persisting UUIDs +------------------------------ + +The choices of how, where, and when document UUIDs are stored and updated +are very important. One should not attempt to change things unless she +has a very detailed understanding of why things are the way they are. + +The client is purposefully very conservative about forgetting about +generated UUIDs. In other words, once a UUID is generated, the client +deliberately holds on to that UUID until it's very confident that UUID +is no longer stored on the server. The reason we do this is because +*orphaned* documents/UUIDs on the server can lead to faulty analysis, +such as over-reporting the number of Firefox installs that stop being +used. + +When uploading a new UUID, we update the state and save the state file +to disk *before* an upload attempt because if the upload succeeds but +the response never makes it back to the client, we want the client to +know about the uploaded UUID so it can delete it later to prevent an +orphan. + +We maintain a list of UUIDs locally (not simply the last UUID) because +multiple upload attempts could fail the same way as the previous +paragraph describes and we have no way of knowing which (if any) +actually succeeded. The safest approach is to assume every document +produced managed to get uploaded some how. + +We store the UUIDs on a file on disk and not anywhere else because we +want storage to be robust. We originally stored UUIDs in preferences, +which only flush to disk periodically. Writes to preferences were +apparently getting lost. We switched to writing directly to files to +eliminate this window. -- cgit v1.2.3