This is to ensure that there are no projects
that try to import `minio/minio/pkg` into
their own repo. Any such common packages should
go to `https://github.com/minio/pkg`
IAM not initialized doesn't mean we can't still
read the content from the disk, we should just
allow the request to go-through if object layer
is initialized.
Real-time metrics calculated in-memory rely on the initial
replication metrics saved with data usage. However, this can
lag behind the actual state of the cluster at the time of server
restart leading to inaccurate Pending size/counts reported to
Prometheus. Dropping the Pending metrics as this can be more
reliably monitored by applications with replication notifications.
Signed-off-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
LDAPusername is the simpler form of LDAPUser (userDN),
using a simpler version is convenient from policy
conditions point of view, since these are unique id's
used for LDAP login.
In cases where a cluster is degraded, we do not uphold our consistency
guarantee and we will write fewer erasure codes and rely on healing
to recreate the missing shards.
In some cases replacing known bad disks in practice take days.
We want to change the behavior of a known degraded system to keep
the erasure code promise of the storage class for each object.
This will create the objects with the same confidence as a fully
functional cluster. The tradeoff will be that objects created
during a partial outage will take up slightly more space.
This means that when the storage class is EC:4, there should
always be written 4 parity shards, even if some disks are unavailable.
When an object is created on a set, the disks are immediately
checked. If any disks are unavailable additional parity shards
will be made for each offline disk, up to 50% of the number of disks.
We add an internal metadata field with the actual and intended
erasure code level, this can optionally be picked up later by
the scanner if we decide that data like this should be re-sharded.
Bonus change LDAP settings such as user, group mappings
are now listed as part of `mc admin user list` and
`mc admin group list`
Additionally this PR also deprecates the `/v2` API
that is no longer in use.
A configured audit logger or HTTP logger is validated during MinIO
server startup. Relax the timeout to 10 seconds in that case, otherwise,
both loggers won't be used.
1 second could be too low for a busy HTTP endpoint.
This commit fixes a bug causing the MinIO server to compute
the ETag of a single-part object as MD5 of the compressed
content - not as MD5 of the actual content.
This usually does not affect clients since the MinIO appended
a `-1` to indicate that the ETag belongs to a multipart object.
However, this behavior was problematic since:
- A S3 client being very strict should reject such an ETag since
the client uploaded the object via single-part API but got
a multipart ETag that is not the content MD5.
- The MinIO server leaks (via the ETag) that it compressed the
object.
This commit addresses both cases. Now, the MinIO server returns
an ETag equal to the content MD5 for single-part objects that got
compressed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
A lot of healing is likely to be on non-existing objects and
locks are very expensive and will slow down scanning
significantly.
In cases where all are valid or, all are broken allow
rejection without locking.
Keep the existing behavior, but move the check for
dangling objects to after the lock has been acquired.
```
_, err = getLatestFileInfo(ctx, partsMetadata, errs)
if err != nil {
return er.purgeObjectDangling(ctx, bucket, object, versionID, partsMetadata, errs, []error{}, opts)
}
```
Revert "heal: Hold lock when reading xl.meta from disks (#12362)"
This reverts commit abd32065aa
This PR fixes two bugs
- Remove fi.Data upon overwrite of objects from inlined-data to non-inlined-data
- Workaround for an existing bug on disk with latest releases to ignore fi.Data
and instead read from the disk for non-inlined-data
- Addtionally add a reserved metadata header to indicate data is inlined for
a given version.
Lock is hold in healObject() after reading xl.meta from disks the first
time. This commit will held the lock since the beginning of HealObject()
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Fixes `testSSES3EncryptedGetObjectReadSeekFunctional` mint test.
```
{
"args": {
"bucketName": "minio-go-test-w53hbpat649nhvws",
"objectName": "6mdswladz4vfpp2oit1pkn3qd11te5"
},
"duration": 7537,
"error": "We encountered an internal error, please try again.: cause(The requested range \"bytes 251717932 -> -116384170 of 135333762\" is not satisfiable.)",
"function": "GetObject(bucketName, objectName)",
"message": "CopyN failed",
"name": "minio-go: testSSES3EncryptedGetObjectReadSeekFunctional",
"status": "FAIL"
}
```
Compressed files always start at the beginning of a part so no additional offset should be added.
Previous PR #12351 added functions to read from the reader
stream to reduce memory usage, use the same technique in
few other places where we are not interested in reading the
data part.
in setups with lots of drives the server
startup is slow, initialize all local drives
in parallel before registering with muxer.
this speeds up when there are multiple pools
and large collection of drives.
This commit adds the `X-Amz-Server-Side-Encryption-Aws-Kms-Key-Id`
response header to the GET, HEAD, PUT and Download API.
Based on AWS documentation [1] AWS S3 returns the KMS key ID as part
of the response headers.
[1] https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/specifying-kms-encryption.html
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
multi-disk clusters initialize buffer pools
per disk, this is perhaps expensive and perhaps
not useful, for a running server instance. As this
may disallow re-use of buffers across sets,
this change ensures that buffers across sets
can be re-used at drive level, this can reduce
quite a lot of memory on large drive setups.
In lieu of new changes coming for server command line, this
change is to deprecate strict requirement for distributed setups
to provide root credentials.
Bonus: remove MINIO_WORM warning from April 2020, it is time to
remove this warning.
However, this slice is also used for closing the writers, so close is never called on these.
Furthermore when an error is returned from a write it is now reported to the reader.
bonus: remove unused heal param from `newBitrotWriter`.
* Remove copy, now that we don't mutate.
At some places bloom filter tracker was getting
updated for `.minio.sys/tmp` bucket, there is no
reason to update bloom filters for those.
And add a missing bloom filter update for MakeBucket()
Bonus: purge unused function deleteEmptyDir()
gracefully start the server, if there are other drives
available - print enough information for administrator
to notice the errors in console.
Bonus: for really large streams use larger buffer for
writes.
- GetObject() should always use a common dataDir to
read from when it starts reading, this allows the
code in erasure decoding to have sane expectations.
- Healing should always heal on the common dataDir, this
allows the code in dangling object detection to purge
dangling content.
These both situations can happen under certain types of
retries during PUT when server is restarting etc, some
namespace entries might be left over.
attempt a delete on remote DNS store first before
attempting locally, because removing at DNS store
is cheaper than deleting locally, in case of
errors locally we can cheaply recreate the
bucket on dnsStore instead of.
This commit adds support for SSE-KMS bucket configurations.
Before, the MinIO server did not support SSE-KMS, and therefore,
it was not possible to specify an SSE-KMS bucket config.
Now, this is possible. For example:
```
mc encrypt set sse-kms some-key <alias>/my-bucket
```
Further, this commit fixes an issue caused by not supporting
SSE-KMS bucket configuration and switching to SSE-KMS as default
SSE method.
Before, the server just checked whether an SSE bucket config was
present (not which type of SSE config) and applied the default
SSE method (which was switched from SSE-S3 to SSE-KMS).
This caused objects to get encrypted with SSE-KMS even though a
SSE-S3 bucket config was present.
This issue is fixed as a side-effect of this commit.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
when bidirectional replication is set up.
If ReplicaModifications is enabled in the replication
configuration, sync metadata updates to source if
replication rules are met. By default, if this
configuration is unset, MinIO automatically sync's
metadata updates on replica back to the source.
This commit adds a check to the MinIO server setup that verifies
that MinIO can reach KES, if configured, and that the default key
exists. If the default key does not exist it will create it
automatically.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
A cache structure will be kept with a tree of usages.
The cache is a tree structure where each keeps track
of its children.
An uncompacted branch contains a count of the files
only directly at the branch level, and contains link to
children branches or leaves.
The leaves are "compacted" based on a number of properties.
A compacted leaf contains the totals of all files beneath it.
A leaf is only scanned once every dataUsageUpdateDirCycles,
rarer if the bloom filter for the path is clean and no lifecycles
are applied. Skipped leaves have their totals transferred from
the previous cycle.
A clean leaf will be included once every healFolderIncludeProb
for partial heal scans. When selected there is a one in
healObjectSelectProb that any object will be chosen for heal scan.
Compaction happens when either:
- The folder (and subfolders) contains less than dataScannerCompactLeastObject objects.
- The folder itself contains more than dataScannerCompactAtFolders folders.
- The folder only contains objects and no subfolders.
- A bucket root will never be compacted.
Furthermore, if a has more than dataScannerCompactAtChildren recursive
children (uncompacted folders) the tree will be recursively scanned and the
branches with the least number of objects will be compacted until the limit
is reached.
This ensures that any branch will never contain an unreasonable amount
of other branches, and also that small branches with few objects don't
take up unreasonable amounts of space.
Whenever a branch is scanned, it is assumed that it will be un-compacted
before it hits any of the above limits. This will make the branch rebalance
itself when scanned if the distribution of objects has changed.
TLDR; With current values: No bucket will ever have more than 10000
child nodes recursively. No single folder will have more than 2500 child
nodes by itself. All subfolders are compacted if they have less than 500
objects in them recursively.
We accumulate the (non-deletemarker) version count for paths as well,
since we are changing the structure anyway.
MRF does not detect when a node is disconnected and reconnected quickly
this change will ensure that MRF is alerted by comparing the last disk
reconnection timestamp with the last MRF check time.
Signed-off-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
wait groups are necessary with io.Pipes() to avoid
races when a blocking function may not be expected
and a Write() -> Close() before Read() races on each
other. We should avoid such situations..
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
This commit replaces the custom KES client implementation
with the KES SDK from https://github.com/minio/kes
The SDK supports multi-server client load-balancing and
requests retry out of the box. Therefore, this change reduces
the overall complexity within the MinIO server and there
is no need to maintain two separate client implementations.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
This commit enforces the usage of AES-256
for config and IAM data en/decryption in FIPS
mode.
Further, it improves the implementation of
`fips.Enabled` by making it a compile time
constant. Now, the compiler is able to evaluate
the any `if fips.Enabled { ... }` at compile time
and eliminate unused code.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
p.writers is a verbatim value of bitrotWriter
backed by a pipe() that should never be nil'ed,
instead use the captured errors to skip the writes.
additionally detect also short writes, and reject
them as errors.
currently GetUser() returns 403 when IAM is not initialized
this can lead to applications crashing, instead return 503
so that the applications can retry and backoff.
fixes#12078
as there is no automatic way to detect if there
is a root disk mounted on / or /var for the container
environments due to how the root disk information
is masked inside overlay root inside container.
this PR brings an environment variable to set
root disk size threshold manually to detect the
root disks in such situations.
This commit fixes a bug in the single-part object decryption
that is triggered in case of SSE-KMS. Before, it was assumed
that the encryption is either SSE-C or SSE-S3. In case of SSE-KMS
the SSE-C branch was executed. This lead to an invalid SSE-C
algorithm error.
This commit fixes this by inverting the `if-else` logic.
Now, the SSE-C branch only gets executed when SSE-C headers
are present.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
This commit fixes a bug introduced by af0c65b.
When there is no / an empty client-provided SSE-KMS
context the `ParseMetadata` may return a nil map
(`kms.Context`).
When unsealing the object key we must check that
the context is nil before assigning a key-value pair.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
UpdateServiceAccount ignores updating fields when not passed from upper
layer, such as empty policy, empty account status, and empty secret key.
This PR will check for a secret key only if it is empty and add more
check on the value of the account status.
Signed-off-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
This commit adds basic SSE-KMS support.
Now, a client can specify the SSE-KMS headers
(algorithm, optional key-id, optional context)
such that the object gets encrypted using the
SSE-KMS method. Further, auto-encryption now
defaults to SSE-KMS.
This commit does not try to do any refactoring
and instead tries to implement SSE-KMS as a minimal
change to the code base. However, refactoring the entire
crypto-related code is planned - but needs a separate
effort.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
It is possible in some scenarios that in multiple pools,
two concurrent calls for the same object as a multipart operation
can lead to duplicate entries on two different pools.
This PR fixes this
- hold locks to serialize multiple callers so that we don't race.
- make sure to look for existing objects on the namespace as well
not just for existing uploadIDs
When running MinIO server without LDAP/OpenID, we should error out when
the code tries to create a service account for a non existant regular
user.
Bonus: refactor the check code to be show all cases more clearly
Signed-off-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
This commit adds basic SSE-KMS support.
Now, a client can specify the SSE-KMS headers
(algorithm, optional key-id, optional context)
such that the object gets encrypted using the
SSE-KMS method. Further, auto-encryption now
defaults to SSE-KMS.
This commit does not try to do any refactoring
and instead tries to implement SSE-KMS as a minimal
change to the code base. However, refactoring the entire
crypto-related code is planned - but needs a separate
effort.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
avoid time_wait build up with getObject requests if there are
pending callers and they timeout, can lead to time_wait states
Bonus share the same buffer pool with erasure healing logic,
additionally also fixes a race where parallel readers were
never cleanup during Encode() phase, because pipe.Reader end
was never closed().
Added closer right away upon an error during Encode to make
sure to avoid racy Close() while stream was still being
Read().
This commit fixes a bug when parsing the env. variable
`MINIO_KMS_SECRET_KEY`. Before, the env. variable
name - instead of its value - was parsed. This (obviously)
did not work properly.
This commit fixes this.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
cleanup functions should never be cleaned before the reader is
instantiated, this type of design leads to situations where order
of lockers and places for them to use becomes confusing.
Allow WithCleanupFuncs() if the caller wishes to add cleanupFns
to be run upon close() or an error during initialization of the
reader.
Also make sure streams are closed before we unlock the resources,
this allows for ordered cleanup of resources.
upon errors to acquire lock context would still leak,
since the cancel would never be called. since the lock
is never acquired - proactively clear it before returning.