`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.
Bonus: allow replication to attempt Deletes/Puts when
the remote returns quorum errors of some kind, this is
to ensure that MinIO can rewrite the namespace with the
latest version that exists on the source.
globalDeploymentID was being read while it was being set.
Fixes race:
```
WARNING: DATA RACE
Write at 0x0000079605a0 by main goroutine:
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.connectLoadInitFormats()
github.com/minio/minio/cmd/prepare-storage.go:269 +0x14f0
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.waitForFormatErasure()
github.com/minio/minio/cmd/prepare-storage.go:294 +0x21d
...
Previous read at 0x0000079605a0 by goroutine 105:
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.newContext()
github.com/minio/minio/cmd/utils.go:817 +0x31e
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.adminMiddleware.func1()
github.com/minio/minio/cmd/admin-router.go:110 +0x96
net/http.HandlerFunc.ServeHTTP()
net/http/server.go:2136 +0x47
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.setBucketForwardingMiddleware.func1()
github.com/minio/minio/cmd/generic-handlers.go:460 +0xb1a
net/http.HandlerFunc.ServeHTTP()
net/http/server.go:2136 +0x47
...
```
without this the rename2() can rename the previous dataDir
causing issues for different versions of the object, only
latest version is preserved due to this bug.
Added healing code to ensure recovery of such content.
- this PR avoids sending a large ChecksumInfo slice
when its not needed
- also for a file with XLV2 format there is no reason
to allocate Checksum slice while reading
there is a possibility that slow drives can actually add latency
to the overall call, leading to a large spike in latency.
this can happen if there are other parallel listObjects()
calls to the same drive, in-turn causing each other to sort
of serialize.
this potentially improves performance and makes PutObject()
also non-blocking.
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.
Removes the bloom filter since it has so limited usability, often gets saturated anyway and adds a bunch of complexity to the scanner.
Also removes a tiny bit of CPU by each write operation.
xl.meta gets written and never rolled back, however
we definitely need to validate the state that is
persisted on the disk, if there are inconsistencies
- more than write quorum we should return an error
to the client
- if write quorum was achieved however there are
inconsistent xl.meta's we should simply trigger
an MRF on them
The path is marked dirty automatically when healObject() is called, which is
wrong. HealObject() is called during self-healing and this will lead to
an increase in the false positive result of the bloom filter.
Also move NSUpdated() from renameData() and call it directly in
CompleteMultipart and PutObject, this is not a functional change but
it will make it less prone to errors in the future.
`mc admin heal -r <alias>` in a multi setup pools returns incorrectly
grey objects. The reason is that erasure-server-pools.HealObject() runs
HealObject in all pools and returns the result of the first nil
error. However, in the lower erasureObject level, HealObject() returns
nil if an object does not exist + missing error in each disk of the object
in that pool, therefore confusing mc.
Make erasureObject.HealObject() to return not found error in the lower
level, so at least erasureServerPools will know what pools to ignore.
this PR also fixes a situation where incorrect
partsMetadata slice was used where fi.Data was
re-used from a single drive causing duplication
of the shards across all drives.
This happens for situations where shouldHeal()
returns true for all drives > parityBlocks.
To avoid this we should never attempt to heal on all
drives > parityBlocks, unless we are doing metadata
migration from xl.json -> xl.meta
When scanning using normal mode, HealObject() can report an
error saying that it found a corrupted part. This doesn't have
when HealObject() is called with bitrot scan flag. However, when
this happens, we can still restart HealObject() with the bitrot scan.
This is also important because this means the scanner and the
new disks healer will not be able to heal an object that doesn't
exist in a specific disk and has corruption in another disk.
Also without this PR, mc admin heal command without bitrot will report
an error.