Tasks 1.1-1.9 marked done with their landing commit SHAs. Tasks 1.10 (observability), 1.12 (production hardening), and 1.13 (device authority) marked paused with explicit resume triggers — pilot deployment on real Teltonika hardware takes priority. Task 1.11 remains as next, in slimmed form for the pilot (no /readyz healthcheck since the metrics endpoint is part of paused 1.10).
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Task 1.12 — Production hardening
Phase: 1 — Inbound telemetry
Status: ⏸ Paused — deferred until after the real-device pilot test. See ROADMAP.md "Deferred" section for resume triggers. installGracefulShutdown exists as a stub from task 1.8; this task fully implements signal handling, drain timeouts, unhandled-rejection handlers, and writes OPERATIONS.md. Resume before any always-on deployment or rolling-restart workflow.
Depends on: 1.8, 1.10, 1.11
Wiki refs: docs/wiki/concepts/failure-domains.md
Goal
Make the service safe for unattended production operation: graceful shutdown, robust error handling, structured logging discipline, sane defaults for resource limits, and operational documentation.
Deliverables
src/core/lifecycle.ts—installGracefulShutdown({ ... })that wires SIGTERM/SIGINT/SIGHUP to a coordinated shutdown.src/core/errors.ts— typed error classes (HandshakeError,FrameError,PublishOverflowError,RedisUnavailableError).- Updates to
src/main.tsto install error handlers and shutdown. OPERATIONS.md(or section inREADME.md) covering: env var reference, signals, log fields, metric meanings, common alert rules, troubleshooting.- (Optional)
docs/runbook.mdfor on-call: "what to do when X alert fires."
Specification
Graceful shutdown
On SIGTERM (deployment rolling update) or SIGINT (Ctrl-C):
- Stop accepting new connections.
server.close()— existing sockets continue. - Drain the publish queue. Stop accepting new
publish()calls; wait for the worker to flush queued records to Redis (with a timeout, e.g. 10s). - Send a final goodbye on each open socket. Optional: just let TCP FIN naturally; devices will reconnect to a new instance.
- Close Redis connection.
- Exit cleanly with code 0.
If shutdown takes longer than SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT_MS (default 30s), log and exit with code 1 — the orchestrator will SIGKILL anyway, but exiting deliberately gives a cleaner signal.
export function installGracefulShutdown(handles: ShutdownHandles) {
let shuttingDown = false;
const shutdown = async (signal: string) => {
if (shuttingDown) return;
shuttingDown = true;
handles.logger.info({ signal }, 'shutdown: starting');
const deadline = setTimeout(() => {
handles.logger.error({}, 'shutdown: timed out, forcing exit');
process.exit(1);
}, handles.timeoutMs ?? 30_000);
try {
await new Promise<void>((res) => handles.server.close(() => res()));
await handles.publisher.drain(10_000);
await handles.redis.quit();
handles.metricsServer.close();
clearTimeout(deadline);
handles.logger.info({}, 'shutdown: clean exit');
process.exit(0);
} catch (err) {
handles.logger.error({ err }, 'shutdown: error during drain');
clearTimeout(deadline);
process.exit(1);
}
};
process.on('SIGTERM', () => shutdown('SIGTERM'));
process.on('SIGINT', () => shutdown('SIGINT'));
}
Unhandled promise / uncaught exception
process.on('unhandledRejection', (reason) => {
logger.fatal({ reason }, 'unhandledRejection');
process.exit(1);
});
process.on('uncaughtException', (err) => {
logger.fatal({ err }, 'uncaughtException');
process.exit(1);
});
Crashing the process on either is the right move — the orchestrator restarts, devices reconnect, no harm done. The wrong move is to log and continue; that hides real bugs.
ESLint's no-floating-promises (added in task 1.1) is the first line of defense; these handlers are the safety net.
Per-socket error handling
In the session loop:
- Errors from
BufferedReader/frame.ts/ codec parsers: log atwarnwithimei, drop the socket. - Errors from
ctx.publish(specificallyPublishOverflowError): skip the ACK, continue reading. Device retransmits. - Errors from
ctx.publish(other, unexpected): log aterror, drop the socket. Open question: should we crash the process? Recommendation: drop the socket only; let the publisher's own logic decide whether the underlying issue (e.g. Redis hang) warrants process exit.
Resource limits
- Max concurrent connections per instance: soft cap via gauge alert (
teltonika_connections_active > 5000). No hard cap in code — let the OS-level fd limit be the real ceiling. - Per-connection memory: the
BufferedReaderbuffer is bounded byMAX_AVL_PACKET_SIZE(~1.3KB) per session. With 5,000 connections, ~6.5MB of buffer state — fine. - Node heap: set via
NODE_OPTIONS=--max-old-space-size=512in the Dockerfile or compose. 512MB is plenty for this workload.
Logging discipline (audit pass)
Before declaring this task done, walk through every logger.* call site and confirm:
info: lifecycle events (startup, shutdown, server bound).warn: recoverable per-frame issues (CRC fail, malformed handshake), per-connection drops.error: per-publish failures, unexpected per-session errors.fatal: process-killing conditions (Redis unreachable for >X seconds,unhandledRejection).debug: per-frame parse details, per-record publish details.- No
console.loganywhere in production paths. If there are any, replace.
OPERATIONS.md outline
# tcp-ingestion — Operations
## Configuration
[table of env vars from task 1.3]
## Signals
| Signal | Effect |
|--------|--------|
| SIGTERM | Graceful shutdown (drain publish queue, close connections, exit 0) |
| SIGINT | Same as SIGTERM |
## Metrics
[table of metrics from task 1.10]
## Alerts (recommended)
- `teltonika_unknown_codec_total > 0` for 5 min: investigate codec coverage drift.
- `teltonika_publish_overflow_total > 0` for 1 min: Redis or downstream backed up.
- `rate(teltonika_frames_total{result="crc_fail"}[5m]) / rate(teltonika_frames_total[5m]) > 0.01`: high CRC error rate, suspect device firmware or line quality.
- `teltonika_connections_active{instance=...} == 0` for 10 min while peer instances have traffic: instance is silently broken; investigate.
## Troubleshooting
- "Devices not connecting" → check TCP_PORT firewall, /readyz response, Redis connectivity.
- "Records not appearing in Redis" → check publish queue depth metric, then Redis connectivity.
- "High CRC failures from one IMEI" → likely a firmware bug or bad cellular link; coordinate with device fleet ops.
Acceptance criteria
- SIGTERM during steady-state traffic results in a clean exit with no data loss (verified by killing the process and confirming the publish queue drained, no
PublishOverflowErrorin the last second of logs). - SIGTERM under publish-queue-overflow conditions still exits within
SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT_MS. - An
unhandledRejection(intentionally injected via test) logs at fatal and exits non-zero. - OPERATIONS.md is populated and accurate; an on-caller could read it cold and find the answer to "what does this metric mean."
- All log calls audited; no
console.login production paths.
Risks / open questions
- The "drain publish queue with timeout" balance: too long blocks deployments; too short loses records on shutdown. Default 10s is a reasonable starting point; tune after real production data.
- Crashing on
unhandledRejectionis opinionated. Some teams prefer to log and continue. We choose crash because the alternative hides bugs and we have a fast restart path. Document the choice.
Done
(Fill in once complete.)