RenameData renames xl.meta and data dir and removes the parent directory
if empty, however, there is a duplicate check for empty dir, since the
parent dir of xl.meta is always the same as the data-dir.
on freshReads if drive returns errInvalidArgument, we
should simply turn-off DirectIO and read normally, there
are situations in k8s like environments where the drives
behave sporadically in a single deployment and may not
have been implemented properly to handle O_DIRECT for
reads.
This PR adds deadlines per Write() calls, such
that slow drives are timed-out appropriately and
the overall responsiveness for Writes() is always
up to a predefined threshold providing applications
sustained latency even if one of the drives is slow
to respond.
MRF was starting to heal when it receives a disk connection event, which
is not good when a node having multiple disks reconnects to the cluster.
Besides, MRF needs Remove healing option to remove stale files.
- write in o_dsync instead of o_direct for smaller
objects to avoid unaligned double Write() situations
that may arise for smaller objects < 128KiB
- avoid fallocate() as its not useful since we do not
use Append() semantics anymore, fallocate is not useful
for streaming I/O we can save on a syscall
- createFile() doesn't need to validate `bucket` name
with a Lstat() call since createFile() is only used
to write at `minioTmpBucket`
- use io.Copy() when writing unAligned writes to allow
usage of ReadFrom() from *os.File providing zero
buffer writes().
```
mc admin info --json
```
provides these details, for now, we shall eventually
expose this at Prometheus level eventually.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This commit fixes a security issue in the signature v4 chunked
reader. Before, the reader returned unverified data to the caller
and would only verify the chunk signature once it has encountered
the end of the chunk payload.
Now, the chunk reader reads the entire chunk into an in-memory buffer,
verifies the signature and then returns data to the caller.
In general, this is a common security problem. We verifying data
streams, the verifier MUST NOT return data to the upper layers / its
callers as long as it has not verified the current data chunk / data
segment:
```
func (r *Reader) Read(buffer []byte) {
if err := r.readNext(r.internalBuffer); err != nil {
return err
}
if err := r.verify(r.internalBuffer); err != nil {
return err
}
copy(buffer, r.internalBuffer)
}
```
For operations that require the object to exist make it possible to
detect if the file isn't found in *any* pool.
This will allow these to return the error early without having to re-check.
Cases where we have applications making request
for `//` in object names make sure that all
are normalized to `/` and all such requests that
are prefixed '/' are removed. To ensure a
consistent view from all operations.
Some deployments have low parity (EC:2), but we really do not need to
save our config data with the same parity configuration.
N/2 would be better to keep MinIO configurations intact when unexpected
a number of drives fail.
This commit disables the Hashicorp Vault
support but provides a way to temp. enable
it via the `MINIO_KMS_VAULT_DEPRECATION=off`
Vault support has been deprecated long ago
and this commit just requires users to take
action if they maintain a Vault integration.
major performance improvements in range GETs to avoid large
read amplification when ranges are tiny and random
```
-------------------
Operation: GET
Operations: 142014 -> 339421
Duration: 4m50s -> 4m56s
* Average: +139.41% (+1177.3 MiB/s) throughput, +139.11% (+658.4) obj/s
* Fastest: +125.24% (+1207.4 MiB/s) throughput, +132.32% (+612.9) obj/s
* 50% Median: +139.06% (+1175.7 MiB/s) throughput, +133.46% (+660.9) obj/s
* Slowest: +203.40% (+1267.9 MiB/s) throughput, +198.59% (+753.5) obj/s
```
TTFB from 10MiB BlockSize
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 81ms, Median: 61ms, Best: 20ms, Worst: 2.056s
```
TTFB from 1MiB BlockSize
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 22ms, Median: 21ms, Best: 8ms, Worst: 91ms
```
Full object reads however do see a slight change which won't be
noticeable in real world, so not doing any comparisons
TTFB still had improvements with full object reads with 1MiB
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 68ms, Median: 35ms, Best: 11ms, Worst: 1.16s
```
v/s
TTFB with 10MiB
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 388ms, Median: 98ms, Best: 20ms, Worst: 4.156s
```
This change should affect all new uploads, previous uploads should
continue to work with business as usual. But dramatic improvements can
be seen with these changes.
A group can have multiple policies, a user subscribed to readwrite &
diagnostics can perform S3 operations & admin operations as well.
However, the current code only returns one policy for one group.
This commit disables SHA-3 for OpenID when building a
FIPS-140 2 compatible binary. While SHA-3 is a
crypto. hash function accepted by NIST there is no
FIPS-140 2 compliant implementation available when
using the boringcrypto Go branch.
Therefore, SHA-3 must not be used when building
a FIPS-140 2 binary.
* Provide information on *actively* healing, buckets healed/queued, objects healed/failed.
* Add concurrent healing of multiple sets (typically on startup).
* Add bucket level resume, so restarts will only heal non-healed buckets.
* Print summary after healing a disk is done.
currently when one of the peer is down, the
drives from that peer are reported as '0/0'
offline instead we should capture/filter the
drives from the peer and populate it appropriately
such that `mc admin info` displays correct info.
This commit adds the `FromContentMD5` function to
parse a client-provided content-md5 as ETag.
Further, it also adds multipart ETag computation
for future needs.
prometheus metrics was using total disks instead
of online disk count, when disks were down, this
PR fixes this and also adds a new metric for
total_disk_count
Creating notification events for replica creation
is not particularly useful to send as the notification
event generated at source already includes replication
completion events.
For applications using replica cluster as failover, avoiding
duplicate notifications for replica event will allow seamless
failover.
also re-use storage disks for all `mc admin server info`
calls as well, implement a new LocalStorageInfo() API
call at ObjectLayer to lookup local disks storageInfo
also fixes bugs where there were double calls to StorageInfo()
While starting up a request that needs all IAM data will start another load operation if the first on startup hasn't finished. This slows down both operations.
Block these requests until initial load has completed.
Blocking calls will be ListPolicies, ListUsers, ListServiceAccounts, ListGroups - and the calls that eventually trigger these. These will wait for the initial load to complete.
Fixes issue seen in #11305
Implicit permissions for any user is to be allowed to
change their own password, we need to restrict this
further even if there is an implicit allow for this
scenario - we have to honor Deny statements if they
are specified.
ListObjectVersions would skip past the object in the marker when version id is specified.
Make `listPath` return the object with the marker and truncate it if not needed.
Avoid having to parse unintended objects to find a version marker.
The previous code was iterating over replies from peers and assigning
pool numbers to them, thus missing to add it for the local server.
Fixed by iterating over the server properties of all the servers
including the local one.
There was an io.LimitReader was missing for the 'length'
parameter for ranged requests, that would cause client to
get truncated responses and errors.
fixes#11651
The base profiles contains no valuable data, don't record them.
Reduce block rate by 2 orders of magnitude, should still capture just as valuable data with less CPU strain.
most of the delete calls today spend time in
a blocking operation where multiple calls need
to be recursively sent to delete the objects,
instead we can use rename operation to atomically
move the objects from the namespace to `tmp/.trash`
we can schedule deletion of objects at this
location once in 15, 30mins and we can also add
wait times between each delete operation.
this allows us to make delete's faster as well
less chattier on the drives, each server runs locally
a groutine which would clean this up regularly.
This commit removes the `GetObject` method
from the `ObjectLayer` interface.
The `GetObject` method is not longer used by
the HTTP handlers implementing the high-level
S3 semantics. Instead, they use the `GetObjectNInfo`
method which returns both, an object handle as well
as the object metadata.
Therefore, it is no longer necessary that a concrete
`ObjectLayer` implements `GetObject`.
store the cache in-memory instead of disks to avoid large
write amplifications for list heavy workloads, store in
memory instead and let it auto expire.
This commit replaces the usage of
github.com/minio/sha256-simd with crypto/sha256
of the standard library in all non-performance
critical paths.
This is necessary for FIPS 140-2 compliance which
requires that all crypto. primitives are implemented
by a FIPS-validated module.
Go can use the Google FIPS module. The boringcrypto
branch of the Go standard library uses the BoringSSL
FIPS module to implement crypto. primitives like AES
or SHA256.
We only keep github.com/minio/sha256-simd when computing
the content-SHA256 of an object. Therefore, this commit
relies on a build tag `fips`.
When MinIO is compiled without the `fips` flag it will
use github.com/minio/sha256-simd. When MinIO is compiled
with the fips flag (go build --tags "fips") then MinIO
uses crypto/sha256 to compute the content-SHA256.
Instead of using O_SYNC, we are better off using O_DSYNC
instead since we are only ever interested in data to be
persisted to disk not the associated filesystem metadata.
For reads we ask customers to turn off noatime, but instead
we can proactively use O_NOATIME flag to avoid atime updates
upon reads.
This removes the Content-MD5 response header on Range requests in Azure
Gateway mode. The partial content MD5 doesn't match the full object MD5
in metadata.
This commit adds a new package `etag` for dealing
with S3 ETags.
Even though ETag is often viewed as MD5 checksum of
an object, handling S3 ETags correctly is a surprisingly
complex task. While it is true that the ETag corresponds
to the MD5 for the most basic S3 API operations, there are
many exceptions in case of multipart uploads or encryption.
In worse, some S3 clients expect very specific behavior when
it comes to ETags. For example, some clients expect that the
ETag is a double-quoted string and fail otherwise.
Non-AWS compliant ETag handling has been a source of many bugs
in the past.
Therefore, this commit adds a dedicated `etag` package that provides
functionality for parsing, generating and converting S3 ETags.
Further, this commit removes the ETag computation from the `hash`
package. Instead, the `hash` package (i.e. `hash.Reader`) should
focus only on computing and verifying the content-sha256.
One core feature of this commit is to provide a mechanism to
communicate a computed ETag from a low-level `io.Reader` to
a high-level `io.Reader`.
This problem occurs when an S3 server receives a request and
has to compute the ETag of the content. However, the server
may also wrap the initial body with several other `io.Reader`,
e.g. when encrypting or compressing the content:
```
reader := Encrypt(Compress(ETag(content)))
```
In such a case, the ETag should be accessible by the high-level
`io.Reader`.
The `etag` provides a mechanism to wrap `io.Reader` implementations
such that the `ETag` can be accessed by a type-check.
This technique is applied to the PUT, COPY and Upload handlers.
server startup code expects the object layer to properly
convert error into a proper type, so that in situations when
servers are coming up and quorum is not available servers
wait on each other.
using isServerResolvable for expiration can lead to chicken
and egg problems, a lock might expire knowingly when server
is booting up causing perpetual locks getting expired.
- In username search filter and username format variables we support %s for
replacing with the username.
- In group search filter we support %s for username and %d for the full DN of
the username.
root-disk implemented currently had issues where root
disk partitions getting modified might race and provide
incorrect results, to avoid this lets rely again back on
DeviceID and match it instead.
In-case of containers `/data` is one such extra entity that
needs to be verified for root disk, due to how 'overlay'
filesystem works and the 'overlay' presents a completely
different 'device' id - using `/data` as another entity
for fallback helps because our containers describe 'VOLUME'
parameter that allows containers to automatically have a
virtual `/data` that points to the container root path this
can either be at `/` or `/var/lib/` (on different partition)
also additionally make sure errors during deserializer closes
the reader with right error type such that Write() end
actually see the final error, this avoids a waitGroup usage
and waiting.
reduce the page-cache pressure completely by moving
the entire read-phase of our operations to O_DIRECT,
primarily this is going to be very useful for chatty
metadata operations such as listing, scanner, ilm, healing
like operations to avoid filling up the page-cache upon
repeated runs.
since we have changed our default envs to MINIO_ROOT_USER,
MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD this was not supported by minio-go
credentials package, update minio-go to v7.0.10 for this
support. This also addresses few bugs related to users
had to specify AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID as well to authenticate
with their S3 backend if they only used MINIO_ROOT_USER.
We can use this metric to check if there are too many S3 clients in the
queue and could explain why some of those S3 clients are timing out.
```
minio_s3_requests_waiting_total{server="127.0.0.1:9000"} 9981
```
If max_requests is 10000 then there is a strong possibility that clients
are timing out because of the queue deadline.
If the periodic `case <-t.C:` save gets held up for a long time it will end up
synchronize all disk writes for saving the caches.
We add jitter to per set writes so they don't sync up and don't hold a
lock for the write, since it isn't needed anyway.
If an outage prevents writes for a long while we also add individual
waits for each disk in case there was a queue.
Furthermore limit the number of buffers kept to 2GiB, since this could get
huge in large clusters. This will not act as a hard limit but should be enough
for normal operation.
in the case of active-active replication.
This PR also has the following changes:
- add docs on replication design
- fix corner case of completing versioned delete on a delete marker
when the target is down and `mc rm --vid` is performed repeatedly. Instead
the version should still be retained in the `PENDING|FAILED` state until
replication sync completes.
- remove `s3:Replication:OperationCompletedReplication` and
`s3:Replication:OperationFailedReplication` from ObjectCreated
events type
currently crawler waits for an entire readdir call to
return until it processes usage, lifecycle, replication
and healing - instead we should pass the applicator all
the way down to avoid building any special stack for all
the contents in a single directory.
This allows for
- no need to remember the entire list of entries per directory
before applying the required functions
- no need to wait for entire readdir() call to finish before
applying the required functions
This PR fixes
- allow 's3:versionid` as a valid conditional for
Get,Put,Tags,Object locking APIs
- allow additional headers missing for object APIs
- allow wildcard based action matching
additionally simply timedValue to have RWMutex
to avoid concurrent calls to DiskInfo() getting
serialized, this has an effect on all calls that
use GetDiskInfo() on the same disks.
Such as getOnlineDisks, getOnlineDisksWithoutHealing
The function used for getting host information
(host.SensorsTemperaturesWithContext) returns warnings in some cases.
Returning with error in such cases means we miss out on the other useful
information already fetched (os info).
If the OS info has been succesfully fetched, it should always be
included in the output irrespective of whether the other data (CPU
sensors, users) could be fetched or not.
To avoid large delays in metacache cleanup, use rename
instead of recursive delete calls, renames are cheaper
move the content to minioMetaTmpBucket and then cleanup
this folder once in 24hrs instead.
If the new cache can replace an existing one, we should
let it replace since that is currently being saved anyways,
this avoids pile up of 1000's of metacache entires for
same listing calls that are not necessary to be stored
on disk.
Skip notifications on objects that might have had
an error during deletion, this also avoids unnecessary
replication attempt on such objects.
Refactor some places to make sure that we have notified
the client before we
- notify
- schedule for replication
- lifecycle etc.
continuation of PR#11491 for multiple server pools and
bi-directional replication.
Moving proxying for GET/HEAD to handler level rather than
server pool layer as this was also causing incorrect proxying
of HEAD.
Also fixing metadata update on CopyObject - minio-go was not passing
source version ID in X-Amz-Copy-Source header
filter out relevant objects for each pool to
avoid calling, further delete operations on
subsequent pools where some of these objects
might not exist.
This is mainly useful to avoid situations
during bi-directional bucket replication.
top-level options shouldn't be passed down for
GetObjectInfo() while verifying the objects in
different pools, this is to make sure that
we always get the value from the pool where
the object exists.
This change moves away from a unified constructor for plaintext and encrypted
usage. NewPutObjReader is simplified for the plain-text reader use. For
encrypted reader use, WithEncryption should be called on an initialized PutObjReader.
Plaintext:
func NewPutObjReader(rawReader *hash.Reader) *PutObjReader
The hash.Reader is used to provide payload size and md5sum to the downstream
consumers. This is different from the previous version in that there is no need
to pass nil values for unused parameters.
Encrypted:
func WithEncryption(encReader *hash.Reader,
key *crypto.ObjectKey) (*PutObjReader, error)
This method sets up encrypted reader along with the key to seal the md5sum
produced by the plain-text reader (already setup when NewPutObjReader was
called).
Usage:
```
pReader := NewPutObjReader(rawReader)
// ... other object handler code goes here
// Prepare the encrypted hashed reader
pReader, err = pReader.WithEncryption(encReader, objEncKey)
```
Collection of SMART information doesn't work in certain scenarios e.g.
in a container based setup. In such cases, instead of returning an error
(without any data), we should only set the error on the smartinfo
struct, so that other important drive hw info like device, mountpoint,
etc is retained in the output.
during rolling upgrade, provide a more descriptive error
message and discourage rolling upgrade in such situations,
allowing users to take action.
additionally also rename `slashpath -> pathutil` to avoid
a slighly mis-pronounced usage of `path` package.
When lifecycle decides to Delete an object and not a version in a
versioned bucket, the code should create a delete marker and not
removing the scanned version.
This commit fixes the issue.
The connections info of the processes takes up a huge amount of space,
and is not important for adding any useful health checks. Removing it
will significantly reduce the size of the subnet health report.
- lock maintenance loop was incorrectly sleeping
as well as using ticker badly, leading to
extra expiration routines getting triggered
that could flood the network.
- multipart upload cleanup should be based on
timer instead of ticker, to ensure that long
running jobs don't get triggered twice.
- make sure to get right lockers for object name
Replaces #11449
Does concurrent healing but limits concurrency to 50 buckets.
Aborts on first error.
`errgroup.Group` is extended to facilitate this in a generic way.
We use multiple libraries in health info, but the returned error does
not indicate exactly what library call is failing, hence adding named
tags to returned errors whenever applicable.
After recent refactor where lifecycle started to rely on ObjectInfo to
make decisions, it turned out there are some issues calculating
Successor Modtime and NumVersions, hence the lifecycle is not working as
expected in a versioning bucket in some cases.
This commit fixes the behavior.
When a directory object is presented as a `prefix`
param our implementation tend to only list objects
present common to the `prefix` than the `prefix` itself,
to mimic AWS S3 like flat key behavior this PR ensures
that if `prefix` is directory object, it should be
automatically considered to be part of the eventual
listing result.
fixes#11370
few places were still using legacy call GetObject()
which was mainly designed for client response writer,
use GetObjectNInfo() for internal calls instead.
for some flaky networks this may be too fast of a value
choose a defensive value, and let this be addressed
properly in a new refactor of dsync with renewal logic.
Also enable faster fallback delay to cater for misconfigured
IPv6 servers
refer
- https://golang.org/pkg/net/#Dialer
- https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6555