We need to make sure if we cannot read bucket metadata
for some reason, and bucket metadata is not missing and
returning corrupted information we should panic such
handlers to disallow I/O to protect the overall state
on the system.
In-case of such corruption we have a mechanism now
to force recreate the metadata on the bucket, using
`x-minio-force-create` header with `PUT /bucket` API
call.
Additionally fix the versioning config updated state
to be set properly for the site replication healing
to trigger correctly.
Main motivation is move towards a common backend format
for all different types of modes in MinIO, allowing for
a simpler code and predictable behavior across all features.
This PR also brings features such as versioning, replication,
transitioning to single drive setups.
It would seem like the PR #11623 had chewed more
than it wanted to, non-fips build shouldn't really
be forced to use slower crypto/sha256 even for
presumed "non-performance" codepaths. In MinIO
there are really no "non-performance" codepaths.
This assumption seems to have had an adverse
effect in certain areas of CPU usage.
This PR ensures that we stick to sha256-simd
on all non-FIPS builds, our most common build
to ensure we get the best out of the CPU at
any given point in time.
* Do not use inline data size in xl.meta quorum calculation
Data shards of one object can different inline/not-inline decision
in multiple disks. This happens with outdated disks when inline
decision changes. For example, enabling bucket versioning configuration
will change the small file threshold.
When the parity of an object becomes low, GET object can return 503
because it is not unable to calculate the xl.meta quorum, just because
some xl.meta has inline data and other are not.
So this commit will be disable taking the size of the inline data into
consideration when calculating the xl.meta quorum.
* Add tests for simulatenous inline/notinline object
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Spark/Hadoop workloads which use Hadoop MR
Committer v1/v2 algorithm upload objects to a
temporary prefix in a bucket. These objects are
'renamed' to a different prefix on Job commit.
Object storage admins are forced to configure
separate ILM policies to expire these objects
and their versions to reclaim space.
Our solution:
This can be avoided by simply marking objects
under these prefixes to be excluded from versioning,
as shown below. Consequently, these objects are
excluded from replication, and don't require ILM
policies to prune unnecessary versions.
- MinIO Extension to Bucket Version Configuration
```xml
<VersioningConfiguration xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/">
<Status>Enabled</Status>
<ExcludeFolders>true</ExcludeFolders>
<ExcludedPrefixes>
<Prefix>app1-jobs/*/_temporary/</Prefix>
</ExcludedPrefixes>
<ExcludedPrefixes>
<Prefix>app2-jobs/*/__magic/</Prefix>
</ExcludedPrefixes>
<!-- .. up to 10 prefixes in all -->
</VersioningConfiguration>
```
Note: `ExcludeFolders` excludes all folders in a bucket
from versioning. This is required to prevent the parent
folders from accumulating delete markers, especially
those which are shared across spark workloads
spanning projects/teams.
- To enable version exclusion on a list of prefixes
```
mc version enable --excluded-prefixes "app1-jobs/*/_temporary/,app2-jobs/*/_magic," --exclude-prefix-marker myminio/test
```
DeleteMarkers do not have a default quorum, i.e it is possible that
DeleteMarkers were created with n/2+1 quorum as well to make sure
that we satisfy situations such as those we need to make sure delete
markers only expect n/2 read quorum.
Additionally we should also look at additional metadata on the
actual objects that might have been "erasure" upgraded with new
parity when disks are down.
In such a scenario do not default to the standard storage class
parity, instead use the parityBlocks present on the FileInfo to
ensure that we are dealing with the correct quorum for READs and
DELETEs.
This PR is an attempt to make this configurable
as not all situations have same level of tolerable
delta, i.e disks are replaced days apart or even
hours.
There is also a possibility that nodes have drifted
in time, when NTP is not configured on the system.
data shards were wrong due to a healing bug
reported in #13803 mainly with unaligned object
sizes.
This PR is an attempt to automatically avoid
these shards, with available information about
the `xl.meta` and actually disk mtime.
FileInfo quorum shouldn't be passed down, instead
inferred after obtaining a maximally occurring FileInfo.
This PR also changes other functions that rely on
wrong quorum calculation.
Update tests as well to handle the proper requirement. All
these changes are needed when migrating from older deployments
where we used to set N/2 quorum for reads to EC:4 parity in
newer releases.
dataDir loosely based on maxima is incorrect and does not
work in all situations such as disks in the following order
- xl.json migration to xl.meta there may be partial xl.json's
leftover if some disks are not yet connected when the disk
is yet to come up, since xl.json mtime and xl.meta is
same the dataDir maxima doesn't work properly leading to
quorum issues.
- its also possible that XLV1 might be true among the disks
available, make sure to keep FileInfo based on common quorum
and skip unexpected disks with the older data format.
Also, this PR tests upgrade from older to a newer release if the
data is readable and matches the checksum.
NOTE: this is just initial work we can build on top of this to do further tests.
Existing:
```go
type xlMetaV2 struct {
Versions []xlMetaV2Version `json:"Versions" msg:"Versions"`
}
```
Serialized as regular MessagePack.
```go
//msgp:tuple xlMetaV2VersionHeader
type xlMetaV2VersionHeader struct {
VersionID [16]byte
ModTime int64
Type VersionType
Flags xlFlags
}
```
Serialize as streaming MessagePack, format:
```
int(headerVersion)
int(xlmetaVersion)
int(nVersions)
for each version {
binary blob, xlMetaV2VersionHeader, serialized
binary blob, xlMetaV2Version, serialized.
}
```
xlMetaV2VersionHeader is <= 30 bytes serialized. Deserialized struct
can easily be reused and does not contain pointers, so efficient as a
slice (single allocation)
This allows quickly parsing everything as slices of bytes (no copy).
Versions are always *saved* sorted by modTime, newest *first*.
No more need to sort on load.
* Allows checking if a version exists.
* Allows reading single version without unmarshal all.
* Allows reading latest version of type without unmarshal all.
* Allows reading latest version without unmarshal of all.
* Allows checking if the latest is deleteMarker by reading first entry.
* Allows adding/updating/deleting a version with only header deserialization.
* Reduces allocations on conversion to FileInfo(s).
- remove some duplicated code
- reported a bug, separately fixed in #13664
- using strings.ReplaceAll() when needed
- using filepath.ToSlash() use when needed
- remove all non-Go style comments from the codebase
Co-authored-by: Aditya Manthramurthy <donatello@users.noreply.github.com>
DeleteMarkers were unreadable if they had quorum based
guarantees, this PR tries to fix this behavior appropriately.
DeleteMarkers with sufficient should be allowed and the
return error should be accordingly with or without version-id.
This also allows for overwrites which may not be possible
in a multi-pool setup.
fixes#12787
Replication was not working properly for encrypted
objects in single PUT object for preserving etag,
We need to make sure to preserve etag such that replication
works properly and not gets into infinite loops of copying
due to ETag mismatches.
- deletes should always Sweep() for tiering at the
end and does not need an extra getObjectInfo() call
- puts, copy and multipart writes should conditionally
do getObjectInfo() when tiering targets are configured
- introduce 'TransitionedObject' struct for ease of usage
and understanding.
- multiple-pools optimization deletes don't need to hold
read locks verifying objects across namespace and pools.
its possible that some multipart uploads would have
uploaded only single parts so relying on `len(o.Parts)`
alone is not sufficient, we need to look for ETag
pattern to be absolutely sure.
- Adds versioning support for S3 based remote tiers that have versioning
enabled. This ensures that when reading or deleting we specify the specific
version ID of the object. In case of deletion, this is important to ensure that
the object version is actually deleted instead of simply being marked for
deletion.
- Stores the remote object's version id in the tier-journal. Tier-journal file
version is not bumped up as serializing the new struct version is
compatible with old journals without the remote object version id.
- `storageRESTVersion` is bumped up as FileInfo struct now includes a
`TransitionRemoteVersionID` member.
- Azure and GCS support for this feature will be added subsequently.
Co-authored-by: Krishnan Parthasarathi <krisis@users.noreply.github.com>
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`
With this change, MinIO's ILM supports transitioning objects to a remote tier.
This change includes support for Azure Blob Storage, AWS S3 compatible object
storage incl. MinIO and Google Cloud Storage as remote tier storage backends.
Some new additions include:
- Admin APIs remote tier configuration management
- Simple journal to track remote objects to be 'collected'
This is used by object API handlers which 'mutate' object versions by
overwriting/replacing content (Put/CopyObject) or removing the version
itself (e.g DeleteObjectVersion).
- Rework of previous ILM transition to fit the new model
In the new model, a storage class (a.k.a remote tier) is defined by the
'remote' object storage type (one of s3, azure, GCS), bucket name and a
prefix.
* Fixed bugs, review comments, and more unit-tests
- Leverage inline small object feature
- Migrate legacy objects to the latest object format before transitioning
- Fix restore to particular version if specified
- Extend SharedDataDirCount to handle transitioned and restored objects
- Restore-object should accept version-id for version-suspended bucket (#12091)
- Check if remote tier creds have sufficient permissions
- Bonus minor fixes to existing error messages
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Krishna Srinivas <krishna@minio.io>
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
* fix: pick valid FileInfo additionally based on dataDir
historically we have always relied on modTime
to be consistent and same, we can now add additional
reference to look for the same dataDir value.
A dataDir is the same for an object at a given point in
time for a given version, let's say a `null` version
is overwritten in quorum we do not by mistake pick
up the fileInfo's incorrectly.
* make sure to not preserve fi.Data
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This is an optimization by reducing one extra system call,
and many network operations. This reduction should increase
the performance for small file workloads.
- collect real time replication metrics for prometheus.
- add pending_count, failed_count metric for total pending/failed replication operations.
- add API to get replication metrics
- add MRF worker to handle spill-over replication operations
- multiple issues found with replication
- fixes an issue when client sends a bucket
name with `/` at the end from SetRemoteTarget
API call make sure to trim the bucket name to
avoid any extra `/`.
- hold write locks in GetObjectNInfo during replication
to ensure that object version stack is not overwritten
while reading the content.
- add additional protection during WriteMetadata() to
ensure that we always write a valid FileInfo{} and avoid
ever writing empty FileInfo{} to the lowest layers.
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
current master breaks this important requirement
we need to preserve legacyXLv1 format, this is simply
ignored and overwritten causing a myriad of issues
by leaving stale files on the namespace etc.
for now lets still use the two-phase approach of
writing to `tmp` and then renaming the content to
the actual namespace.
versionID is the one that needs to be preserved and as
well as overwritten in case of replication, transition
etc - dataDir is an ephemeral entity that changes
during overwrites - make sure that versionID is used
to save the object content.
this would break things if you are already running
the latest master, please wipe your current content
and re-do your setup after this change.
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.
Current implementation requires server pools to have
same erasure stripe sizes, to facilitate same SLA
and expectations.
This PR allows server pools to be variadic, i.e they
do not have to be same erasure stripe sizes - instead
they should have SLA for parity ratio.
If the parity ratio cannot be guaranteed by the new
server pool, the deployment is rejected i.e server
pool expansion is not allowed.