Create new code paths for multiple subsystems in the code. This will
make maintaing this easier later.
Also introduce bugLogIf() for errors that should not happen in the first
place.
Fix races in IAM cache
Fixes#19344
On the top level we only grab a read lock, but we write to the cache if we manage to fetch it.
a03dac41eb/cmd/iam-store.go (L446) is also flipped to what it should be AFAICT.
Change the internal cache structure to a concurrency safe implementation.
Bonus: Also switch grid implementation.
IAM loading is a lazy operation, allow these
fallbacks to be in place when we cannot find
in-memory state().
this allows us to honor the request even if pay
a small price for lookup and populating the data.
This change is to decouple need for root credentials to match between
site replication deployments.
Also ensuring site replication config initialization is re-tried until
it succeeds, this deoendency is critical to STS flow in site replication
scenario.
On a policy detach operation, if there are no policies remaining
attached to the user/group, remove the policy mapping file, instead of
leaving a file containing an empty list of policies.
`OpMuxConnectError` was not handled correctly.
Remove local checks for single request handlers so they can
run before being registered locally.
Bonus: Only log IAM bootstrap on startup.
Since relaxing quorum the error across pools
for ListBuckets(), GetBucketInfo() we hit a
situation where loading IAM could potentially
return an error for second pool that server
is not initialized.
We need to handle this, let the pool come online
and retry transparently - this PR fixes that.
To ensure that policy mappings are current for service accounts
belonging to (non-derived) STS accounts (like an LDAP user's service
account) we periodically reload such mappings.
This is primarily to handle a case where a policy mapping update
notification is missed by a minio node. Such a node would continue to
have the stale mapping in memory because STS creds/mappings were never
periodically scanned from storage.
This helps reduce disk operations as these periodic routines would not
run concurrently any more.
Also add expired STS purging periodic operation: Since we do not scan
the on-disk STS credentials (and instead only load them on-demand) a
separate routine is needed to purge expired credentials from storage.
Currently this runs about a quarter as often as IAM refresh.
Also fix a bug where with etcd, STS accounts could get loaded into the
iamUsersMap instead of the iamSTSAccountsMap.
In situations with large number of STS credentials on disk, IAM load
time is high. To mitigate this, STS accounts will now be loaded into
memory only on demand - i.e. when the credential is used.
In each IAM cache (re)load we skip loading STS credentials and STS
policy mappings into memory. Since STS accounts only expire and cannot
be deleted, there is no risk of invalid credentials being reused,
because credential validity is checked when it is used.
For policy attach/detach API to work correctly the server should hold a
lock before reading existing policy mapping and until after writing the
updated policy mapping. This is fixed in this change.
A site replication bug, where LDAP policy attach/detach were not
correctly propagated is also fixed in this change.
Bonus: Additionally, the server responds with the actual (or net)
changes performed in the attach/detach API call. For e.g. if a user
already has policy A applied, and a call to attach policies A and B is
performed, the server will respond that B was attached successfully.
```
commit 7bdaf9bc50
Author: Aditya Manthramurthy <donatello@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Wed Jul 24 17:34:23 2019 -0700
Update on-disk storage format for users system (#7949)
```
Bonus: fixes a bug when etcd keys were being re-encrypted.
"consoleAdmin" was used as the policy for root derived accounts, but this
lead to unexpected bugs when an administrator modified the consoleAdmin
policy
This change avoids evaluating a policy for root derived accounts as by
default no policy is mapped to the root user. If a session policy is
attached to a root derived account, it will be evaluated as expected.
anything that is stuck on the disk today can cause latency
spikes for all incoming S3 I/O, we need to have this
de-coupled so that we can make sure that latency in loading
credentials are not reflected back to the S3 API calls.
The approach this PR takes is by checking if the calls were
updated just in case when the IAM load was in progress,
so that we can use merge instead of "replacement" to avoid
missing state.