on "unversioned" buckets there are situations
when successive concurrent I/O can lead to
an inconsistent state() with mtime while the
etag might be the same for the object on disk.
in such a scenario it is possible for us to
allow reading of the object since etag matches
and if etag matches we are guaranteed that we
have enough copies the object will be readable
and same.
This PR allows fallback in such scenarios.
This PR also returns the replication status in
proxy calls and defers replication attempt if
HEAD on object version returned a error different
from NoSuchKey
A specific node should do the decommissioning task, however routing the
start decommissioning to that node was not working properly.
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
fixes an issue under bucket replication could cause
ETags for replicated SSE-S3 single part PUT objects,
to fail as we would attempt a decryption while listing,
or stat() operation.
- lifecycle must return InvalidArgument for rule errors
- do not return `null` versionId in HTTP header
- reject mixed SSE uploads with correct error message
- getObjectTagging to be allowed for anonymous policies
- return correct errors for invalid retention period
- return sorted list of tags for an object
- putObjectTagging must return 200 OK not 204 OK
- return 409 ErrObjectLockConfigurationNotAllowed for existing buckets
PUT calls cannot afford to have large latency build-ups due
to contentious usage.json, or worse letting them fail with
some unexpected error, this can happen when this file is
concurrently being updated via scanner or it is being
healed during a disk replacement heal.
However, these are fairly quick in theory, stressed clusters
can quickly show visible latency this can add up leading to
invalid errors returned during PUT.
It is perhaps okay for us to relax this error return requirement
instead, make sure that we log that we are proceeding to take in
the requests while the quota is using an older value for the quota
enforcement. These things will reconcile themselves eventually,
via scanner making sure to overwrite the usage.json.
Bonus: make sure that storage-rest-client sets ExpectTimeouts to
be 'true', such that DiskInfo() call with contextTimeout does
not prematurely disconnect the servers leading to a longer
healthCheck, back-off routine. This can easily pile up while also
causing active callers to disconnect, leading to quorum loss.
DiskInfo is actively used in the PUT, Multipart call path for
upgrading parity when disks are down, it in-turn shouldn't cause
more disks to go down.