Remove include_metrics param

The metrics are now available via the request, so this is redundant and can go
away at last.
This commit is contained in:
Richard van der Hoff 2018-05-09 23:49:29 +01:00
parent 49e5a613f1
commit 9589a1925e

View file

@ -45,12 +45,12 @@ import simplejson
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
def request_handler(include_metrics=False):
def request_handler():
"""Decorator for ``wrap_request_handler``"""
return lambda request_handler: wrap_request_handler(request_handler, include_metrics)
return wrap_request_handler
def wrap_request_handler(request_handler, include_metrics=False):
def wrap_request_handler(request_handler):
"""Wraps a request handler method with the necessary logging and exception
handling.
@ -88,11 +88,6 @@ def wrap_request_handler(request_handler, include_metrics=False):
with request.processing(servlet_name):
try:
with PreserveLoggingContext(request_context):
if include_metrics:
d = request_handler(
self, request, request.request_metrics,
)
else:
d = request_handler(self, request)
# record the arrival of the request *after*
@ -206,13 +201,9 @@ class JsonResource(HttpServer, resource.Resource):
self._async_render(request)
return server.NOT_DONE_YET
# Disable metric reporting because _async_render does its own metrics.
# It does its own metric reporting because _async_render dispatches to
# a callback and it's the class name of that callback we want to report
# against rather than the JsonResource itself.
@request_handler(include_metrics=True)
@request_handler()
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def _async_render(self, request, request_metrics):
def _async_render(self, request):
""" This gets called from render() every time someone sends us a request.
This checks if anyone has registered a callback for that method and
path.
@ -224,8 +215,7 @@ class JsonResource(HttpServer, resource.Resource):
servlet_classname = servlet_instance.__class__.__name__
else:
servlet_classname = "%r" % callback
request_metrics.name = servlet_classname
request.request_metrics.name = servlet_classname
# Now trigger the callback. If it returns a response, we send it
# here. If it throws an exception, that is handled by the wrapper