This adds middleware that will create custom parameter metrics in
New Relic to track the size of all the cookies being received for
our domain. The custom fields are "cookies_total_size" and a
separate named parameter for every cookie size, e.g.
"cookies.csrftoken.size".
This is intended to help us track cookie growth and better diagnose
issues where users lose their sessions. It is toggled by the
'request_utils.capture_cookie_sizes' Waffle Flag.
With the expanded idea of what `settings.DATA_DIR` pertains to, there is an inconsistency in the assumed location of course repositories that can lead to failed impots. In `import_olx` the root is set to be `settings.GITHUB_REPO_ROOT`, whereas in the `extract_tar.py` file it is validating against `settings.DATA_DIR` which can no longer be assumed to be the same location. This PR brings those two assumptions in line to rely on the `settings.GITHUB_REPO_ROOT` in both locations.
Prior to this commit, the course api (/api/courses/v1/courses/)
performed all the work necessary to return all courses available
to the user, and then only actually returned on page's worth of those
courses.
With this change, the api now does the work incrementally, computing
only the data needed to fetch the courses up to and including the page
being returned. This still increases approximately linearly as
the page number accessed being increases, but should be more cache-friendly.
One side effect of this is that the max_page reported by pagination
will be an overestimate (it will include pages that are removed due
to a users access restrictions).
This change also changes the sort-order of courses being returned by the
course_api. By sorting by course-id, rather than course-number, we
can sort in the database, rather than in Python, and defer loading data
from the end of the list until it is requested.
REVMI-90
Prior to this commit, the course api (/api/courses/v1/courses/)
performed all the work necessary to return all courses available
to the user, and then only actually returned on page's worth of those
courses.
With this change, the api now does the work incrementally, computing
only the data needed to fetch the courses up to and including the page
being returned. This still increases approximately linearly as
the page number accessed being increases, but should be more cache-friendly.
One side effect of this is that the max_page reported by pagination
will be an overestimate (it will include pages that are removed due
to a users access restrictions).
This change also changes the sort-order of courses being returned by the
course_api. By sorting by course-id, rather than course-number, we
can sort in the database, rather than in Python, and defer loading data
from the end of the list until it is requested.
REVMI-90