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
- using miniogo.ObjectInfo.UserMetadata is not correct
- using UserTags from Map->String() can change order
- ContentType comparison needs to be removed.
- Compare both lowercase and uppercase key names.
- do not silently error out constructing PutObjectOptions
if tag parsing fails
- avoid notification for empty object info, failed operations
should rely on valid objInfo for notification in all
situations
- optimize copyObject implementation, also introduce a new
replication event
- clone ObjectInfo() before scheduling for replication
- add additional headers for comparison
- remove strings.EqualFold comparison avoid unexpected bugs
- fix pool based proxying with multiple pools
- compare only specific metadata
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poornas@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit refactors the SSE implementation and add
S3-compatible SSE-KMS context handling.
SSE-KMS differs from SSE-S3 in two main aspects:
1. The client can request a particular key and
specify a KMS context as part of the request.
2. The ETag of an SSE-KMS encrypted object is not
the MD5 sum of the object content.
This commit only focuses on the 1st aspect.
A client can send an optional SSE context when using
SSE-KMS. This context is remembered by the S3 server
such that the client does not have to specify the
context again (during multipart PUT / GET / HEAD ...).
The crypto. context also includes the bucket/object
name to prevent renaming objects at the backend.
Now, AWS S3 behaves as following:
- If the user does not provide a SSE-KMS context
it does not store one - resp. does not include
the SSE-KMS context header in the response (e.g. HEAD).
- If the user specifies a SSE-KMS context without
the bucket/object name then AWS stores the exact
context the client provided but adds the bucket/object
name internally. The response contains the KMS context
without the bucket/object name.
- If the user specifies a SSE-KMS context with
the bucket/object name then AWS again stores the exact
context provided by the client. The response contains
the KMS context with the bucket/object name.
This commit implements this behavior w.r.t. SSE-KMS.
However, as of now, no such object can be created since
the server rejects SSE-KMS encryption requests.
This commit is one stepping stone for SSE-KMS support.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
```
minio server /tmp/disk{1...4}
mc mb myminio/testbucket/
mkdir -p /tmp/disk{1..4}/testbucket/test-prefix/
```
This would end up being listed in the current
master, this PR fixes this situation.
If a directory is a leaf dir we should it
being listed, since it cannot be deleted anymore
with DeleteObject, DeleteObjects() API calls
because we natively support directories now.
Avoid listing it and let healing purge this folder
eventually in the background.
MINIO_API_REPLICATION_WORKERS env.var and
`mc admin config set api` allow number of replication
workers to be configurable. Defaults to half the number
of cpus available.
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
This commit fixes a bug in the S3 gateway that causes
GET requests to fail when the object is encrypted by the
gateway itself.
The gateway was not able to GET the object since it always
specified a `If-Match` pre-condition checking that the object
ETag matches an expected ETag - even for encrypted ETags.
The problem is that an encrypted ETag will never match the ETag
computed by the backend causing the `If-Match` pre-condition
to fail.
This commit fixes this by not sending an `If-Match` header when
the ETag is encrypted. This is acceptable because:
1. A gateway-encrypted object consists of two objects at the backend
and there is no way to provide a concurrency-safe implementation
of two consecutive S3 GETs in the deployment model of the S3
gateway.
Ref: S3 gateways are self-contained and isolated - and there may
be multiple instances at the same time (no lock across
instances).
2. Even if the data object changes (concurrent PUT) while gateway
A has download the metadata object (but not issued the GET to
the data object => data race) then we don't return invalid data
to the client since the decryption (of the currently uploaded data)
will fail - given the metadata of the previous object.
Currently, it is not possible to create a delete-marker when xl.meta
does not exist (no version is created for that object yet). This makes a
problem for replication and mc mirroring with versioning enabled.
This also follows S3 specification.
This commit deprecates the native Hashicorp Vault
support and removes the legacy Vault documentation.
The native Hashicorp Vault documentation is marked as
outdated and deprecated for over a year now. We give
another 6 months before we start removing Hashicorp Vault
support and show a deprecation warning when a MinIO server
starts with a native Vault configuration.
currently we had a restriction where older setups would
need to follow previous style of "stripe" count being same
expansion, we can relax that instead newer pools can be
expanded for older setups with newer constraints of
common parity ratio.
In PR #11165 due to incorrect proxying for 2
way replication even when the object was not
yet replicated
Additionally, fix metadata comparisons when
deciding to do full replication vs metadata copy.
fixes#11340
Previously we added heal trigger when bit-rot checks
failed, now extend that to support heal when parts
are not found either. This healing gets only triggered
if we can successfully decode the object i.e read
quorum is still satisfied for the object.
under large deployments loading credentials might be
time consuming, while this is okay and we will not
respond quickly for `mc admin user list` like queries
but it is possible to support `mc admin user info`
just like how we handle authentication by fetching
the user directly from persistent store.
additionally support service accounts properly,
reloaded from etcd during watch() - this was missing
This PR is also half way remedy for #11305
This change allows the MinIO server to be configured with a special (read-only)
LDAP account to perform user DN lookups.
The following configuration parameters are added (along with corresponding
environment variables) to LDAP identity configuration (under `identity_ldap`):
- lookup_bind_dn / MINIO_IDENTITY_LDAP_LOOKUP_BIND_DN
- lookup_bind_password / MINIO_IDENTITY_LDAP_LOOKUP_BIND_PASSWORD
- user_dn_search_base_dn / MINIO_IDENTITY_LDAP_USER_DN_SEARCH_BASE_DN
- user_dn_search_filter / MINIO_IDENTITY_LDAP_USER_DN_SEARCH_FILTER
This lookup-bind account is a service account that is used to lookup the user's
DN from their username provided in the STS API. When configured, searching for
the user DN is enabled and configuration of the base DN and filter for search is
required. In this "lookup-bind" mode, the username format is not checked and must
not be specified. This feature is to support Active Directory setups where the
DN cannot be simply derived from the username.
When the lookup-bind is not configured, the old behavior is enabled: the minio
server performs LDAP lookups as the LDAP user making the STS API request and the
username format is checked and configuring it is required.
STS tokens can be obtained by using local APIs
once the remote JWT token is presented, current
code was not validating the incoming token in the
first place and was incorrectly making a network
operation using that token.
For the most part this always works without issues,
but under adversarial scenarios it exposes client
to hand-craft a request that can reach internal
services without authentication.
This kind of proxying should be avoided before
validating the incoming token.
The user can see __XLDIR__ prefix in mc admin heal when the command
heals an empty object with a trailing slash. This commit decodes the
name of the object before sending it back to the upper level.
In-case user enables O_DIRECT for reads and backend does
not support it we shall proceed to turn it off instead
and print a warning. This validation avoids any unexpected
downtimes that users may incur.
DNSCache dialer is a global value initialized in
init(), whereas `go` keeps `var =` before `init()`
, also we don't need to keep proxy routers as
global entities - register the forwarder as
necessary to avoid crashes.
```
mc admin config set alias/ storage_class standard=EC:3
```
should only succeed if parity ratio is valid for all
server pools, if not we should fail proactively.
This PR also needs to bring other changes now that
we need to cater for variadic drive counts per pool.
Bonus fixes also various bugs reproduced with
- GetObjectWithPartNumber()
- CopyObjectPartWithOffsets()
- CopyObjectWithMetadata()
- PutObjectPart,PutObject with truncated streams
Trace data can be rather large and compresses fine.
Compress profile data in zip files:
```
277.895.314 before.profiles.zip
152.800.318 after.profiles.zip
```
Delete marker can have `metaSys` set to nil, that
can lead to crashes after the delete marker has
been healed.
Additionally also fix isObjectDangling check
for transitioned objects, that do not have parts
should be treated similar to Delete marker.
During expansion we need to validate if
- new deployment is expanded with newer constraints
- existing deployment is expanded with older constraints
- multiple server pools rejected if they have different
deploymentID and distribution algo
to verify moving content and preserving legacy content,
we have way to detect the objects through readdir()
this path is not necessary for most common cases on
newer setups, avoid readdir() to save multiple system
calls.
also fix the CheckFile behavior for most common
use case i.e without legacy format.
If an erasure set had a drive replacement recently, we don't
need to attempt healing on another drive with in the same erasure
set - this would ensure we do not double heal the same content
and also prioritizes usage for such an erasure set to be calculated
sooner.
For objects with `N` prefix depth, this PR reduces `N` such network
operations by converting `CheckFile` into a single bulk operation.
Reduction in chattiness here would allow disks to be utilized more
cleanly, while maintaining the same functionality along with one
extra volume check stat() call is removed.
Update tests to test multiple sets scenario
Fixes support for using multiple base DNs for user search in the LDAP directory
allowing users from different subtrees in the LDAP hierarchy to request
credentials.
- The username in the produced credentials is now the full DN of the LDAP user
to disambiguate users in different base DNs.
parentDirIsObject is not using set level understanding
to check for parent objects, without this it can lead to
objects that can actually reside on a separate set as
objects and would conflict.
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.
This ensures that all the prometheus monitoring and usage
trackers to avoid alerts configured, although we cannot
support v1 to v2 here - we can v2 to v3.
A lot of memory is consumed when uploading small files in parallel, use
the default upload parameters and add MINIO_AZURE_UPLOAD_CONCURRENCY for
users to tweak.
Synchronous replication can be enabled by setting the --sync
flag while adding a remote replication target.
This PR also adds proxying on GET/HEAD to another node in a
active-active replication setup in the event of a 404 on the current node.
This PR refactors the way we use buffers for O_DIRECT and
to re-use those buffers for messagepack reader writer.
After some extensive benchmarking found that not all objects
have this benefit, and only objects smaller than 64KiB see
this benefit overall.
Benefits are seen from almost all objects from
1KiB - 32KiB
Beyond this no objects see benefit with bulk call approach
as the latency of bytes sent over the wire v/s streaming
content directly from disk negate each other with no
remarkable benefits.
All other optimizations include reuse of msgp.Reader,
msgp.Writer using sync.Pool's for all internode calls.
30 seconds white spaces is long for some setups which time out when no
read activity in short time, reduce the subnet health white space ticker
to 5 seconds, since it has no cost at all.
Use separate sync.Pool for writes/reads
Avoid passing buffers for io.CopyBuffer()
if the writer or reader implement io.WriteTo or io.ReadFrom
respectively then its useless for sync.Pool to allocate
buffers on its own since that will be completely ignored
by the io.CopyBuffer Go implementation.
Improve this wherever we see this to be optimal.
This allows us to be more efficient on memory usage.
```
385 // copyBuffer is the actual implementation of Copy and CopyBuffer.
386 // if buf is nil, one is allocated.
387 func copyBuffer(dst Writer, src Reader, buf []byte) (written int64, err error) {
388 // If the reader has a WriteTo method, use it to do the copy.
389 // Avoids an allocation and a copy.
390 if wt, ok := src.(WriterTo); ok {
391 return wt.WriteTo(dst)
392 }
393 // Similarly, if the writer has a ReadFrom method, use it to do the copy.
394 if rt, ok := dst.(ReaderFrom); ok {
395 return rt.ReadFrom(src)
396 }
```
From readahead package
```
// WriteTo writes data to w until there's no more data to write or when an error occurs.
// The return value n is the number of bytes written.
// Any error encountered during the write is also returned.
func (a *reader) WriteTo(w io.Writer) (n int64, err error) {
if a.err != nil {
return 0, a.err
}
n = 0
for {
err = a.fill()
if err != nil {
return n, err
}
n2, err := w.Write(a.cur.buffer())
a.cur.inc(n2)
n += int64(n2)
if err != nil {
return n, err
}
```
with changes present to automatically throttle crawler
at runtime, there is no need to have an environment
value to disable crawling. crawling is a fundamental
piece for healing, lifecycle and many other features
there is no good reason anyone would need to disable
this on a production system.
* Apply suggestions from code review
globalSubscribers.NumSubscribers() is heavily used in S3 requests and it
uses mutex, use atomic.Load instead since it is faster
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Rewrite parentIsObject() function. Currently if a client uploads
a/b/c/d, we always check if c, b, a are actual objects or not.
The new code will check with the reverse order and quickly quit if
the segment doesn't exist.
So if a, b, c in 'a/b/c' does not exist in the first place, then returns
false quickly.
The only purpose of check-dir flag in
ReadVersion is to return 404 when
an object has xl.meta but without data.
This is causing an extract call to the disk
which can be penalizing in case of busy system
where disks receive many concurrent access.
mc admin trace does not show the correct handler name in the output: it
is printing `maxClients' for all handlers. The reason is that the wrong
order of handler wrapping.
Fixes two problems
- Double healing when bitrot is enabled, instead heal attempt
once in applyActions() before lifecycle is applied.
- If applyActions() is successful and getSize() returns proper
value, then object is accounted for and should be removed
from the oldCache namespace map to avoid double heal attempts.
main reason is that HealObjects starts a recursive listing
for each object, this can be a really really long time on
large namespaces instead avoid recursive listing just
perform HealObject() instead at the prefix.
delete's already handle purging dangling content, we
don't need to achieve this by doing recursive listing,
this in-turn can delay crawling significantly.
Optimizations include
- do not write the metacache block if the size of the
block is '0' and it is the first block - where listing
is attempted for a transient prefix, this helps to
avoid creating lots of empty metacache entries for
`minioMetaBucket`
- avoid the entire initialization sequence of cacheCh
, metacacheBlockWriter if we are simply going to skip
them when discardResults is set to true.
- No need to hold write locks while writing metacache
blocks - each block is unique, per bucket, per prefix
and also is written by a single node.
current implementation was incorrect, it in-fact
assumed only read quorum number of disks. in-fact
that value is only meant for read quorum good entries
from all online disks.
This PR fixes this behavior properly.
This commit refactors the code in `cmd/crypto`
and separates SSE-S3, SSE-C and SSE-KMS.
This commit should not cause any behavior change
except for:
- `IsRequested(http.Header)`
which now returns the requested type {SSE-C, SSE-S3,
SSE-KMS} and does not consider SSE-C copy headers.
However, SSE-C copy headers alone are anyway not valid.
Additional cases handled
- fix address situations where healing is not
triggered on failed writes and deletes.
- consider object exists during listing when
metadata can be successfully decoded.
always find the right set of online peers for remote listing,
this may have an effect on listing if the server is down - we
should do this to avoid always performing transient operations
on bucket->peerClient that is permanently or down for a long
period.
additionally also configure http2 healthcheck
values to quickly detect unstable connections
and let them timeout.
also use single transport for proxying requests
with missing nextMarker with delimiter based listing,
top level prefixes beyond 4500 or max-keys value
wouldn't be sent back for client to ask for the next
batch.
reproduced at a customer deployment, create prefixes
as shown below
```
for year in $(seq 2017 2020)
do
for month in {01..12}
do for day in {01..31}
do
mc -q cp file myminio/testbucket/dir/day_id=$year-$month-$day/;
done
done
done
```
Then perform
```
aws s3api --profile minio --endpoint-url http://localhost:9000 list-objects \
--bucket testbucket --prefix dir/ --delimiter / --max-keys 1000
```
You shall see missing NextMarker, this would disallow listing beyond max-keys
requested and also disallow beyond 4500 (maxKeyObjectList) prefixes being listed
because client wouldn't know the NextMarker available.
This PR addresses this situation properly by making the implementation
more spec compatible. i.e NextMarker in-fact can be either an object, a prefix
with delimiter depending on the input operation.
This issue was introduced after the list caching changes and has been present
for a while.
issue was introduced in #11106 the following
pattern
<-t.C // timer fired
if !t.Stop() {
<-t.C // timer hangs
}
Seems to hang at the last `t.C` line, this
issue happens because a fired timer cannot be
Stopped() anymore and t.Stop() returns `false`
leading to confusing state of usage.
Refactor the code such that use timers appropriately
with exact requirements in place.
Both Azure & S3 gateways call for object information before returning
the stream of the object, however, the object content/length could be
modified meanwhile, which means it can return a corrupted object.
Use ETag to ensure that the object was not modified during the GET call
crawler should only ListBuckets once not for each serverPool,
buckets are same across all pools, across sets and ListBuckets
always returns an unified view, once list buckets returns
sort it by create time to scan the latest buckets earlier
with the assumption that latest buckets would have lesser
content than older buckets allowing them to be scanned faster
and also to be able to provide more closer to latest view.
When searching the caches don't copy the ids, instead inline the loop.
```
Benchmark_bucketMetacache_findCache-32 19200 63490 ns/op 8303 B/op 5 allocs/op
Benchmark_bucketMetacache_findCache-32 20338 58609 ns/op 111 B/op 4 allocs/op
```
Add a reasonable, but still the simplistic benchmark.
Bonus - make nicer zero alloc logging
With new refactor of bucket healing, healing bucket happens
automatically including its metadata, there is no need to
redundant heal buckets also in ListBucketsHeal remove
it.
optimization mainly to avoid listing the entire
`.minio.sys/buckets/.minio.sys` directory, this
can get really huge and comes in the way of startup
routines, contents inside `.minio.sys/buckets/.minio.sys`
are rather transient and not necessary to be healed.
Tests environments (go test or manual testing) should always consider
the passed disks are root disks and should not rely on disk.IsRootDisk()
function. The reason is that this latter can return a false negative
when called in a busy system. However, returning a false negative will
only occur in a testing environment and not in a production, so we can
accept this trade-off for now.
Perform cleanup operations on copied data. Avoids read locking
data while determining which caches to keep.
Also, reduce the log(N*N) operation to log(N*M) where M caches
with the same root or below when checking potential replacements.
This refactor is done for few reasons below
- to avoid deadlocks in scenarios when number
of nodes are smaller < actual erasure stripe
count where in N participating local lockers
can lead to deadlocks across systems.
- avoids expiry routines to run 1000 of separate
network operations and routes per disk where
as each of them are still accessing one single
local entity.
- it is ideal to have since globalLockServer
per instance.
- In a 32node deployment however, each server
group is still concentrated towards the
same set of lockers that partipicate during
the write/read phase, unlike previous minio/dsync
implementation - this potentially avoids send
32 requests instead we will still send at max
requests of unique nodes participating in a
write/read phase.
- reduces overall chattiness on smaller setups.
The bucket forwarder handler considers MakeBucket to be always local but
it mistakenly thinks that PUT bucket lifecycle to be a MakeBucket call.
Fix the check of the MakeBucket call by ensuring that the query is empty
in the PUT url.
till now we used to match the inode number of the root
drive and the drive path minio would use, if they match
we knew that its a root disk.
this may not be true in all situations such as running
inside a container environment where the container might
be mounted from a different partition altogether, root
disk detection might fail.
partNumber was miscalculting the start and end of parts when partNumber
query is specified in the GET request. This commit fixes it and also
fixes the ContentRange header in that case.
PR 038bcd9079 introduced
version '3', we need to make sure that we do not
print an unexpected error instead log a message to
indicate we will auto update the version.
Due to botched upstream renames of project repositories
and incomplete migration to go.mod support, our current
dependency version of `go.mod` had bugs i.e it was
using commits from master branch which didn't have
the required fixes present in release-3.4 branches
which leads to some rare bugs
https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd/pull/11477 provides
a workaround for now and we should migrate to this.
release-3.5 eventually claims to fix all of this
properly until then we cannot use /v3 import right now
supports `mc admin config set <alias> heal sleep=100ms` to
enable more aggressive healing under certain times.
also optimize some areas that were doing extra checks than
necessary when bitrotscan was enabled, avoid double sleeps
make healing more predictable.
fixes#10497
- accountInfo API that returns information about
user, access to buckets and the size per bucket
- addUser - user is allowed to change their secretKey
- getUserInfo - returns user info if the incoming
is the same user requesting their information
In some cases a writer could be left behind unclosed, leaking compression blocks.
Always close and set compression concurrency to 2 which should be fine to keep up.
Due to https://github.com/philhofer/fwd/issues/20 when skipping a metadata entry that is >2048 bytes and the buffer is full (2048 bytes) the skip will fail with `io.ErrNoProgress`.
Enlarge the buffer so we temporarily make this much more unlikely.
If it still happens we will have to rewrite the skips to reads.
Fixes#10959
dangling object when deleted means object doesn't exist
anymore, so we should return appropriate errors, this
allows crawler heal to ensure that it removes the tracker
for dangling objects.
AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT and AZURE_STORAGE_KEY are used in
azure CLI to specify the azure blob storage access & secret keys. With this commit,
it is possible to set them if you want the gateway's own credentials to be
different from the Azure blob credentials.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
dangling objects when removed `mc admin heal -r` or crawler
auto heal would incorrectly return error - this can interfere
with usage calculation as the entry size for this would be
returned as `0`, instead upon success use the resultant
object size to calculate the final size for the object
and avoid reporting this in the log messages
Also do not set ObjectSize in healResultItem to be '-1'
this has an effect on crawler metrics calculating 1 byte
less for objects which seem to be missing their `xl.meta`
X-Minio-Replication-Delete-Status header shows the
status of the replication of a permanent delete of a version.
All GETs are disallowed and return 405 on this object version.
In the case of replicating delete markers.
X-Minio-Replication-DeleteMarker-Status shows the status
of replication, and would similarly return 405.
Additionally, this PR adds reporting of delete marker event completion
and updates documentation
Alternative to #10927
Instead of having an upstream fix, do unwrap when checking network errors.
'As' will also work when destination is an interface as checked by the tests.
This PR adds transition support for ILM
to transition data to another MinIO target
represented by a storage class ARN. Subsequent
GET or HEAD for that object will be streamed from
the transition tier. If PostRestoreObject API is
invoked, the transitioned object can be restored for
duration specified to the source cluster.
allow directories to be replicated as well, along with
their delete markers in replication.
Bonus fix to fix bloom filter updates for directories
to be preserved.
fixes a regression introduced in #10859, due
to the error returned by rest.Client being typed
i.e *rest.NetworkError - IsNetworkHostDown function
didn't work as expected to detect network issues.
This in-turn aggravated the situations when nodes
are disconnected leading to performance loss.
Do listings with prefix filter when bloom filter is dirty.
This will forward the prefix filter to the lister which will make it
only scan the folders/objects with the specified prefix.
If we have a clean bloom filter we try to build a more generally
useful cache so in that case, we will list all objects/folders.
Add shortcut for `APN/1.0 Veeam/1.0 Backup/10.0`
It requests unique blocks with a specific prefix. We skip
scanning the parent directory for more objects matching the prefix.
Allow each crawler operation to sleep up to 10 seconds on very heavily loaded systems.
This will of course make minimum crawler speed less, but should be more effective at stopping.
Delete marker replication is implemented for V2
configuration specified in AWS spec (though AWS
allows it only in the V1 configuration).
This PR also brings in a MinIO only extension of
replicating permanent deletes, i.e. deletes specifying
version id are replicated to target cluster.
This will make the health check clients 'silent'.
Use `IsNetworkOrHostDown` determine if network is ok so it mimics the functionality in the actual client.
this is needed such that we make sure to heal the
users, policies and bucket metadata right away as
we do listing based on list cache which only lists
'3' sufficiently good drives, to avoid possibly
losing access to these users upon upgrade make
sure to heal them.
If a scanning server shuts down unexpectedly we may have "successful" caches that are incomplete on a set.
In this case mark the cache with an error so it will no longer be handed out.
Add `MINIO_API_EXTEND_LIST_CACHE_LIFE` that will extend
the life of generated caches for a while.
This changes caches to remain valid until no updates have been
received for the specified time plus a fixed margin.
This also changes the caches from being invalidated when the *first*
set finishes until the *last* set has finished plus the specified time
has passed.
Similar to #10775 for fewer memory allocations, since we use
getOnlineDisks() extensively for listing we should optimize it
further.
Additionally, remove all unused walkers from the storage layer
A new field called AccessKey is added to the ReqInfo struct and populated.
Because ReqInfo is added to the context, this allows the AccessKey to be
accessed from 3rd-party code, such as a custom ObjectLayer.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Kaloyan Raev <kaloyan@storj.io>
On extremely long running listings keep the transient list 15 minutes after last update instead of using start time.
Also don't do overlap checks on transient lists.
Add trashcan that keeps recently updated lists after bucket deletion.
All caches were deleted once a bucket was deleted, so caches still running would report errors. Now they are canceled.
Fix `.minio.sys` not being transient.
Bonus fixes, remove package retry it is harder to get it
right, also manage context remove it such that we don't have
to rely on it anymore instead use a simple Jitter retry.
WriteAll saw 127GB allocs in a 5 minute timeframe for 4MiB buffers
used by `io.CopyBuffer` even if they are pooled.
Since all writers appear to write byte buffers, just send those
instead and write directly. The files are opened through the `os`
package so they have no special properties anyway.
This removes the alloc and copy for each operation.
REST sends content length so a precise alloc can be made.
this reduces allocations in order of magnitude
Also, revert "erasure: delete dangling objects automatically (#10765)"
affects list caching should be investigated.
Add store and a forward option for a single part
uploads when an async mode is enabled with env
MINIO_CACHE_COMMIT=writeback
It defaults to `writethrough` if unspecified.
Bonus fixes, we do not need reload format anymore
as the replaced drive is healed locally we only need
to ensure that drive heal reloads the drive properly.
We preserve the UUID of the original order, this means
that the replacement in `format.json` doesn't mean that
the drive needs to be reloaded into memory anymore.
fixes#10791
when server is booting up there is a possibility
that users might see '503' because object layer
when not initialized, then the request is proxied
to neighboring peers first one which is online.
* Fix caches having EOF marked as a failure.
* Simplify cache updates.
* Provide context for checkMetacacheState failures.
* Log 499 when the client disconnects.
`decryptObjectInfo` is a significant bottleneck when listing objects.
Reduce the allocations for a significant speedup.
https://github.com/minio/sio/pull/40
```
λ benchcmp before.txt after.txt
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 24260928 808656 -96.67%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 0.04 1.24 31.00x
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 75112 48996 -34.77%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 287694772 4228076 -98.53%
```
Design: https://gist.github.com/klauspost/025c09b48ed4a1293c917cecfabdf21c
Gist of improvements:
* Cross-server caching and listing will use the same data across servers and requests.
* Lists can be arbitrarily resumed at a constant speed.
* Metadata for all files scanned is stored for streaming retrieval.
* The existing bloom filters controlled by the crawler is used for validating caches.
* Concurrent requests for the same data (or parts of it) will not spawn additional walkers.
* Listing a subdirectory of an existing recursive cache will use the cache.
* All listing operations are fully streamable so the number of objects in a bucket no
longer dictates the amount of memory.
* Listings can be handled by any server within the cluster.
* Caches are cleaned up when out of date or superseded by a more recent one.
only newly replaced drives get the new `format.json`,
this avoids disks reloading their in-memory reference
format, ensures that drives are online without
reloading the in-memory reference format.
keeping reference format in-tact means UUIDs
never change once they are formatted.
lockers currently might leave stale lockers,
in unknown ways waiting for downed lockers.
locker check interval is high enough to safely
cleanup stale locks.
reference format should be source of truth
for inconsistent drives which reconnect,
add them back to their original position
remove automatic fix for existing offline
disk uuids
Bonus fixes
- logging improvements to ensure that we don't use
`go logger.LogIf` to avoid runtime.Caller missing
the function name. log where necessary.
- remove unused code at erasure sets
Test TestDialContextWithDNSCacheRand was failing sometimes because it depends
on a random selection of addresses when testing random DNS resolution from cache.
Lower addr selection exception to 10%
Allow requests to come in for users as soon as object
layer and config are initialized, this allows users
to be authenticated sooner and would succeed automatically
on servers which are yet to fully initialize.
Go stdlib resolver doesn't support caching DNS
resolutions, since we compile with CGO disabled
we are more probe to DNS flooding for all network
calls to resolve for DNS from the DNS server.
Under various containerized environments such as
VMWare this becomes a problem because there are
no DNS caches available and we may end up overloading
the kube-dns resolver under concurrent I/O.
To circumvent this issue implement a DNSCache resolver
which resolves DNS and caches them for around 10secs
with every 3sec invalidation attempted.
connect disks pre-emptively upon startup, to ensure we have
enough disks are connected at startup rather than wait
for them.
we need to do this to avoid long wait times for server to
be online when we have servers come up in rolling upgrade
fashion
Only use dynamic delays for the crawler. Even though the max wait was 1 second the number
of waits could severely impact crawler speed.
Instead of relying on a global metric, we use the stateless local delays to keep the crawler
running at a speed more adjusted to current conditions.
The only case we keep it is before bitrot checks when enabled.
This PR fixes a hang which occurs quite commonly at higher concurrency
by allowing following changes
- allowing lower connections in time_wait allows faster socket open's
- lower idle connection timeout to ensure that we let kernel
reclaim the time_wait connections quickly
- increase somaxconn to 4096 instead of 2048 to allow larger tcp
syn backlogs.
fixes#10413
This change tracks bandwidth for a bucket and object
- [x] Add Admin API
- [x] Add Peer API
- [x] Add BW throttling
- [x] Admin APIs to set replication limit
- [x] Admin APIs for fetch bandwidth
In almost all scenarios MinIO now is
mostly ready for all sub-systems
independently, safe-mode is not useful
anymore and do not serve its original
intended purpose.
allow server to be fully functional
even with config partially configured,
this is to cater for availability of actual
I/O v/s manually fixing the server.
In k8s like environments it will never make
sense to take pod into safe-mode state,
because there is no real access to perform
any remote operation on them.
- select lockers which are non-local and online to have
affinity towards remote servers for lock contention
- optimize lock retry interval to avoid sending too many
messages during lock contention, reduces average CPU
usage as well
- if bucket is not set, when deleteObject fails make sure
setPutObjHeaders() honors lifecycle only if bucket name
is set.
- fix top locks to list out always the oldest lockers always,
avoid getting bogged down into map's unordered nature.
This is to allow remote targets to be generalized
for replication/ILM transition
Also adding a field in BucketTarget to identify
a remote target with a label.
This commit fixes a misuse of the `http.ResponseWriter.WriteHeader`.
A caller should **either** call `WriteHeader` exactly once **or**
write to the response writer and causing an implicit 200 OK.
Writing the response headers more than once causes a `http: superfluous
response.WriteHeader call` log message. This commit fixes this
by preventing a 2nd `WriteHeader` call being forwarded to the underlying
`ResponseWriter`.
Updates #10587
* add NVMe drive info [model num, serial num, drive temp. etc.]
* Ignore fuse partitions
* Add the nvme logic only for linux
* Move smart/nvme structs to a separate file
Co-authored-by: wlan0 <sidharthamn@gmail.com>
throw proper error when port is not accessible
for the regular user, this is possibly a regression.
```
ERROR Unable to start the server: Insufficient permissions to use specified port
> Please ensure MinIO binary has 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' permissions
HINT:
Use 'sudo setcap cap_net_bind_service=+ep /path/to/minio' to provide sufficient permissions
```
After #10594 let's invalidate the bloom filters to force the next cycles to go through all data.
There is a small chance that the linked PR could have caused missing bloom filter data.
This will invalidate the current bloom filters and make the crawler go through everything.
Routing using on source IP if found. This should distribute
the listing load for V1 and versioning on multiple nodes
evenly between different clients.
If source IP is not found from the http request header, then falls back
to bucket name instead.
Disallow versioning suspension on a bucket with
pre-existing replication configuration
If versioning is suspended on the target,replication
should fail.
`mc admin info` on busy setups will not move HDD
heads unnecessarily for repeated calls, provides
a better responsiveness for the call overall.
Bonus change allow listTolerancePerSet be N-1
for good entries, to avoid skipping entries
for some reason one of the disk went offline.
add a hint on the disk to allow for tracking fresh disk
being healed, to allow for restartable heals, and also
use this as a way to track and remove disks.
There are more pending changes where we should move
all the disk formatting logic to backend drives, this
PR doesn't deal with this refactor instead makes it
easier to track healing in the future.
- Add owner information for expiry, locking, unlocking a resource
- TopLocks returns now locks in quorum by default, provides
a way to capture stale locks as well with `?stale=true`
- Simplify the quorum handling for locks to avoid from storage
class, because there were challenges to make it consistent
across all situations.
- And other tiny simplifications to reset locks.
context canceled errors bubbling up from the network
layer has the potential to be misconstrued as network
errors, taking prematurely a server offline and triggering
a health check routine avoid this potential occurrence.
isEnded() was incorrectly calculating if the current healing sequence is
ended or not. h.currentStatus.Items could be empty if healing is very
slow and mc admin heal consumed all items.
As the bulk/recursive delete will require multiple connections to open at an instance,
The default open connections limit will be reached which results in the following error
```FATAL: sorry, too many clients already```
By setting the open connections to a reasonable value - `2`, We ensure that the max open connections
will not be exhausted and lie under bounds.
The queries are simple inserts/updates/deletes which is operational and sufficient with the
the maximum open connection limit is 2.
Fixes#10553
Allow user configuration for MaxOpenConnections
It is possible the heal drives are not reported from
the maintenance check because the background heal
state simply relied on the `format.json` for capturing
unformatted drives. It is possible that drives might
be still healing - make sure that applications which
rely on cluster health check respond back this detail.
Also, revamp the way ListBuckets work make few portions
of the healing logic parallel
- walk objects for healing disks in parallel
- collect the list of buckets in parallel across drives
- provide consistent view for listBuckets()
Healing was not working correctly in the distributed mode because
errFileVersionNotFound was not properly converted in storage rest
client.
Besides, fixing the healing delete marker is not working as expected.
performance improves by around 100x or more
```
go test -v -run NONE -bench BenchmarkGetPartFile
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/minio/minio/cmd
BenchmarkGetPartFileWithTrie
BenchmarkGetPartFileWithTrie-4 1000000000 0.140 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
PASS
ok github.com/minio/minio/cmd 1.737s
```
fixes#10520
* Fix cases where minimum timeout > default timeout.
* Add defensive code for too small/negative timeouts.
* Never set timeout below the maximum value of a request.
* Protect against (unlikely) int64 wraps.
* Decrease timeout slower.
* Don't re-lock before copying.
This bug was introduced in 14f0047295
almost 3yrs ago, as a side affect of removing stale `fs.json`
but we in-fact end up removing existing good `fs.json` for an
existing object, leading to some form of a data loss.
fixes#10496
from 20s for 10000 parts to less than 1sec
Without the patch
```
~ time aws --endpoint-url=http://localhost:9000 --profile minio s3api \
list-parts --bucket testbucket --key test \
--upload-id c1cd1f50-ea9a-4824-881c-63b5de95315a
real 0m20.394s
user 0m0.589s
sys 0m0.174s
```
With the patch
```
~ time aws --endpoint-url=http://localhost:9000 --profile minio s3api \
list-parts --bucket testbucket --key test \
--upload-id c1cd1f50-ea9a-4824-881c-63b5de95315a
real 0m0.891s
user 0m0.624s
sys 0m0.182s
```
fixes#10503
It was observed in VMware vsphere environment during a
pod replacement, `mc admin info` might report incorrect
offline nodes for the replaced drive. This issue eventually
goes away but requires quite a lot of time for all servers
to be in sync.
This PR fixes this behavior properly.
If the ILM document requires removing noncurrent versions, the
the server should be able to remove 'null' versions as well.
'null' versions are created when versioning is not enabled
or suspended.
The entire encryption layer is dependent on the fact that
KMS should be configured for S3 encryption to work properly
and we only support passing the headers as is to the backend
for encryption only if KMS is configured.
Make sure that this predictability is maintained, currently
the code was allowing encryption to go through and fail
at later to indicate that KMS was not configured. We should
simply reply "NotImplemented" if KMS is not configured, this
allows clients to simply proceed with their tests.
This is to ensure that Go contexts work properly, after some
interesting experiments I found that Go net/http doesn't
cancel the context when Body is non-zero and hasn't been
read till EOF.
The following gist explains this, this can lead to pile up
of go-routines on the server which will never be canceled
and will die at a really later point in time, which can
simply overwhelm the server.
https://gist.github.com/harshavardhana/c51dcfd055780eaeb71db54f9c589150
To avoid this refactor the locking such that we take locks after we
have started reading from the body and only take locks when needed.
Also, remove contextReader as it's not useful, doesn't work as expected
context is not canceled until the body reaches EOF so there is no point
in wrapping it with context and putting a `select {` on it which
can unnecessarily increase the CPU overhead.
We will still use the context to cancel the lockers etc.
Additional simplification in the locker code to avoid timers
as re-using them is a complicated ordeal avoid them in
the hot path, since locking is very common this may avoid
lots of allocations.
configurable remote transport timeouts for some special cases
where this value needs to be bumped to a higher value when
transferring large data between federated instances.
In `(*cacheObjects).GetObjectNInfo` copy the metadata before spawning a goroutine.
Clean up a few map[string]string copies as well, reducing allocs and simplifying the code.
Fixes#10426
From https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/intro-lifecycle-rules.html#intro-lifecycle-rules-actions
```
When specifying the number of days in the NoncurrentVersionTransition
and NoncurrentVersionExpiration actions in a Lifecycle configuration,
note the following:
It is the number of days from when the version of the object becomes
noncurrent (that is, when the object is overwritten or deleted), that
Amazon S3 will perform the action on the specified object or objects.
Amazon S3 calculates the time by adding the number of days specified in
the rule to the time when the new successor version of the object is
created and rounding the resulting time to the next day midnight UTC.
For example, in your bucket, suppose that you have a current version of
an object that was created at 1/1/2014 10:30 AM UTC. If the new version
of the object that replaces the current version is created at 1/15/2014
10:30 AM UTC, and you specify 3 days in a transition rule, the
transition date of the object is calculated as 1/19/2014 00:00 UTC.
```
This PR adds a DNS target that ensures to update an entry
into Kubernetes operator when a bucket is created or deleted.
See minio/operator#264 for details.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
MaxConnsPerHost can potentially hang a call without any
way to timeout, we do not need this setting for our proxy
and gateway implementations instead IdleConn settings are
good enough.
Also ensure to use NewRequestWithContext and make sure to
take the disks offline only for network errors.
Fixes#10304
inconsistent drive healing when one of the drive is offline
while a new drive was replaced, this change is to ensure
that we can add the offline drive back into the mix by
healing it again.
Add context to all (non-trivial) calls to the storage layer.
Contexts are propagated through the REST client.
- `context.TODO()` is left in place for the places where it needs to be added to the caller.
- `endWalkCh` could probably be removed from the walkers, but no changes so far.
The "dangerous" part is that now a caller disconnecting *will* propagate down, so a
"delete" operation will now be interrupted. In some cases we might want to disconnect
this functionality so the operation completes if it has started, leaving the system in a cleaner state.
This commit refactors the certificate management implementation
in the `certs` package such that multiple certificates can be
specified at the same time. Therefore, the following layout of
the `certs/` directory is expected:
```
certs/
│
├─ public.crt
├─ private.key
├─ CAs/ // CAs directory is ignored
│ │
│ ...
│
├─ example.com/
│ │
│ ├─ public.crt
│ └─ private.key
└─ foobar.org/
│
├─ public.crt
└─ private.key
...
```
However, directory names like `example.com` are just for human
readability/organization and don't have any meaning w.r.t whether
a particular certificate is served or not. This decision is made based
on the SNI sent by the client and the SAN of the certificate.
***
The `Manager` will pick a certificate based on the client trying
to establish a TLS connection. In particular, it looks at the client
hello (i.e. SNI) to determine which host the client tries to access.
If the manager can find a certificate that matches the SNI it
returns this certificate to the client.
However, the client may choose to not send an SNI or tries to access
a server directly via IP (`https://<ip>:<port>`). In this case, we
cannot use the SNI to determine which certificate to serve. However,
we also should not pick "the first" certificate that would be accepted
by the client (based on crypto. parameters - like a signature algorithm)
because it may be an internal certificate that contains internal hostnames.
We would disclose internal infrastructure details doing so.
Therefore, the `Manager` returns the "default" certificate when the
client does not specify an SNI. The default certificate the top-level
`public.crt` - i.e. `certs/public.crt`.
This approach has some consequences:
- It's the operator's responsibility to ensure that the top-level
`public.crt` does not disclose any information (i.e. hostnames)
that are not publicly visible. However, this was the case in the
past already.
- Any other `public.crt` - except for the top-level one - must not
contain any IP SAN. The reason for this restriction is that the
Manager cannot match a SNI to an IP b/c the SNI is the server host
name. The entire purpose of SNI is to indicate which host the client
tries to connect to when multiple hosts run on the same IP. So, a
client will not set the SNI to an IP.
If we would allow IP SANs in a lower-level `public.crt` a user would
expect that it is possible to connect to MinIO directly via IP address
and that the MinIO server would pick "the right" certificate. However,
the MinIO server cannot determine which certificate to serve, and
therefore always picks the "default" one. This may lead to all sorts
of confusing errors like:
"It works if I use `https:instance.minio.local` but not when I use
`https://10.0.2.1`.
These consequences/limitations should be pointed out / explained in our
docs in an appropriate way. However, the support for multiple
certificates should not have any impact on how deployment with a single
certificate function today.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
- do not fail the healthcheck if heal status
was not obtained from one of the nodes,
if many nodes fail then report this as a
catastrophic error.
- add "x-minio-write-quorum" value to match
the write tolerance supported by server.
- admin info now states if a drive is healing
where madmin.Disk.Healing is set to true
and madmin.Disk.State is "ok"
Currently, cache purges are triggered as soon as the low watermark is exceeded.
To reduce IO this should only be done when reaching the high watermark.
This simplifies checks and reduces all calls for a GC to go through
`dcache.diskSpaceAvailable(size)`. While a comment claims that
`dcache.triggerGC <- struct{}{}` was non-blocking I don't see how
that was possible. Instead, we add a 1 size to the queue channel
and use channel semantics to avoid blocking when a GC has
already been requested.
`bytesToClear` now takes the high watermark into account to it will
not request any bytes to be cleared until that is reached.
This commit reduces the retry delay when retrying a request
to a KES server by:
- reducing the max. jitter delay from 3s to 1.5s
- skipping the random delay when there are more KES endpoints
available.
If there are more KES endpoints we can directly retry to the request
by sending it to the next endpoint - as pointed out by @krishnasrinivas
- delete-marker should be created on a suspended bucket as `null`
- delete-marker should delete any pre-existing `null` versioned
object and create an entry `null`
When checking parts we already do a stat for each part.
Since we have the on disk size check if it is at least what we expect.
When checking metadata check if metadata is 0 bytes.
The `getNonLoopBackIP` may grab an IP from an interface that
doesn't allow binding (on Windows), so this test consistently fails.
We exclude that specific error.
* readDirN: Check if file is directory
`syscall.FindNextFile` crashes if the handle is a file.
`errFileNotFound` matches 'unix' functionality: d19b434ffc/cmd/os-readdir_unix.go (L106)Fixes#10384
This commit addresses a maintenance / automation problem when MinIO-KES
is deployed on bare-metal. In orchestrated env. the orchestrator (K8S)
will make sure that `n` KES servers (IPs) are available via the same DNS
name. There it is sufficient to provide just one endpoint.
ListObjectsV1 requests are actually redirected to a specific node,
depending on the bucket name. The purpose of this behavior was
to optimize listing.
However, the current code sends a Bad Gateway error if the
target node is offline, which is a bad behavior because it means
that the list request will fail, although this is unnecessary since
we can still use the current node to list as well (the default behavior
without using proxying optimization)
Currently, you can see mint fails when there is one offline node, after
this PR, mint will always succeed.
We can reduce this further in the future, but this is a good
value to keep around. With the advent of continuous healing,
we can be assured that namespace will eventually be
consistent so we are okay to avoid the necessity to
a list across all drives on all sets.
Bonus Pop()'s in parallel seem to have the potential to
wait too on large drive setups and cause more slowness
instead of gaining any performance remove it for now.
Also, implement load balanced reply for local disks,
ensuring that local disks have an affinity for
- cleanupStaleMultipartUploads()
If DiskInfo calls failed the information returned was used anyway
resulting in no endpoint being set.
This would make the drive be attributed to the local system since
`disk.Endpoint == disk.DrivePath` in that case.
Instead, if the call fails record the endpoint and the error only.
bonus make sure to ignore objectNotFound, and versionNotFound
errors properly at all layers, since HealObjects() returns
objectNotFound error if the bucket or prefix is empty.
When crawling never use a disk we know is healing.
Most of the change involves keeping track of the original endpoint on xlStorage
and this also fixes DiskInfo.Endpoint never being populated.
Heal master will print `data-crawl: Disk "http://localhost:9001/data/mindev/data2/xl1" is
Healing, skipping` once on a cycle (no more often than every 5m).
We should only enforce quotas if no error has been returned.
firstErr is safe to access since all goroutines have exited at this point.
If `firstErr` hasn't been set by something else return the context error if cancelled.
Keep dataUpdateTracker while goroutine is starting.
This will ensure the object is updated one `start` returns
Tested with
```
λ go test -cpu=1,2,4,8 -test.run TestDataUpdateTracker -count=1000
PASS
ok github.com/minio/minio/cmd 8.913s
```
Fixes#10295
fresh drive setups when one of the drive is
a root drive, we should ignore such a root
drive and not proceed to format.
This PR handles this properly by marking
the disks which are root disk and they are
taken offline.
newDynamicTimeout should be allocated once, in-case
of temporary locks in config and IAM we should
have allocated timeout once before the `for loop`
This PR doesn't fix any issue as such, but provides
enough dynamism for the timeout as per expectation.
Based on our previous conversations I assume we should send the version
id when healing an object.
Maybe we should even list object versions and heal all?
In a non recursive mode, issuing a list request where prefix
is an existing object with a slash and delimiter is a slash will
return entries in the object directory (data dir IDs)
```
$ aws s3api --profile minioadmin --endpoint-url http://localhost:9000 \
list-objects-v2 --bucket testbucket --prefix code_of_conduct.md/ --delimiter '/'
{
"CommonPrefixes": [
{
"Prefix":
"code_of_conduct.md/ec750fe0-ea7e-4b87-bbec-1e32407e5e47/"
}
]
}
```
This commit adds a fast exit track in Walk() in this specific case.
use `/etc/hosts` instead of `/` to check for common
device id, if the device is same for `/etc/hosts`
and the --bind mount to detect root disks.
Bonus enhance healthcheck logging by adding maintenance
tags, for all messages.
adds a feature where we can fetch the MinIO
command-line remotely, this
is primarily meant to add some stateless
nature to the MinIO deployment in k8s
environments, MinIO operator would run a
webhook service endpoint
which can be used to fetch any environment
value in a generalized approach.
It is possible in situations when server was deployed
in asymmetric configuration in the past such as
```
minio server ~/fs{1...4}/disk{1...5}
```
Results in setDriveCount of 10 in older releases
but with fairly recent releases we have moved to
having server affinity which means that a set drive
count ascertained from above config will be now '4'
While the object layer make sure that we honor
`format.json` the storageClass configuration however
was by mistake was using the global value obtained
by heuristics. Which leads to prematurely using
lower parity without being requested by the an
administrator.
This PR fixes this behavior.
Bonus also fix a bug where we did not purge relevant
service accounts generated by rotating credentials
appropriately, service accounts should become invalid
as soon as its corresponding parent user becomes invalid.
Since service account themselves carry parent claim always
we would never reach this problem, as the access get
rejected at IAM policy layer.
when source and destination are same and versioning is enabled
on the destination bucket - we do not need to re-create the entire
object once again to optimize on space utilization.
Cases this PR is not supporting
- any pre-existing legacy object will not
be preserved in this manner, meaning a new
dataDir will be created.
- key-rotation and storage class changes
of course will never re-use the dataDir
conflicting files can exist on FS at
`.minio.sys/buckets/testbucket/policy.json/`, this is an
expected valid scenario for FS mode allow it to work,
i.e ignore and move forward
With reduced parity our write quorum should be same
as read quorum, but code was still assuming
```
readQuorum+1
```
In all situations which is not necessary.
Generalize replication target management so
that remote targets for a bucket can be
managed with ARNs. `mc admin bucket remote`
command will be used to manage targets.
Context timeout might race on each other when timeouts are lower
i.e when two lock attempts happened very quickly on the same resource
and the servers were yet trying to establish quorum.
This situation can lead to locks held which wouldn't be unlocked
and subsequent lock attempts would fail.
This would require a complete server restart. A potential of this
issue happening is when server is booting up and we are trying
to hold a 'transaction.lock' in quick bursts of timeout.
replace dummy buffer with nullReader{} instead,
to avoid large memory allocations in memory
constrainted environments. allows running
obd tests in such environments.
Currently, listing directories on HDFS incurs a per-entry remote Stat() call
penalty, the cost of which can really blow up on directories with many
entries (+1,000) especially when considered in addition to peripheral
calls (such as validation) and the fact that minio is an intermediary to the
client (whereas other clients listed below can query HDFS directly).
Because listing directories this way is expensive, the Golang HDFS library
provides the [`Client.Open()`] function which creates a [`FileReader`] that is
able to batch multiple calls together through the [`Readdir()`] function.
This is substantially more efficient for very large directories.
In one case we were witnessing about +20 seconds to list a directory with 1,500
entries, admittedly large, but the Java hdfs ls utility as well as the HDFS
library sample ls utility were much faster.
Hadoop HDFS DFS (4.02s):
λ ~/code/minio → use-readdir
» time hdfs dfs -ls /directory/with/1500/entries/
…
hdfs dfs -ls 5.81s user 0.49s system 156% cpu 4.020 total
Golang HDFS library (0.47s):
λ ~/code/hdfs → master
» time ./hdfs ls -lh /directory/with/1500/entries/
…
./hdfs ls -lh 0.13s user 0.14s system 56% cpu 0.478 total
mc and minio **without** optimization (16.96s):
λ ~/code/minio → master
» time mc ls myhdfs/directory/with/1500/entries/
…
./mc ls 0.22s user 0.29s system 3% cpu 16.968 total
mc and minio **with** optimization (0.40s):
λ ~/code/minio → use-readdir
» time mc ls myhdfs/directory/with/1500/entries/
…
./mc ls 0.13s user 0.28s system 102% cpu 0.403 total
[`Client.Open()`]: https://godoc.org/github.com/colinmarc/hdfs#Client.Open
[`FileReader`]: https://godoc.org/github.com/colinmarc/hdfs#FileReader
[`Readdir()`]: https://godoc.org/github.com/colinmarc/hdfs#FileReader.Readdir
If there are many listeners to bucket notifications or to the trace
subsystem, healing fails to work properly since it suspends itself when
the number of concurrent connections is above a certain threshold.
These connections are also continuous and not costly (*no disk access*),
it is okay to just ignore them in waitForLowHTTPReq().
this is to detect situations of corruption disk
format etc errors quickly and keep the disk online
in such scenarios for requests to fail appropriately.
Fixes two different types of problems
- continuation of the problem seen in FS #9992
as not fixed for erasure coded deployments,
reproduced this issue with spark and its fixed now
- another issue was leaking walk go-routines which
would lead to high memory usage and crash the system
this is simply because all the walks which were purged
at the top limit had leaking end walkers which would
consume memory endlessly.
closes#9966closes#10088
not all claims need to be present for
the JWT claim, let the policies not
exist and only apply which are present
when generating the credentials
once credentials are generated then
those policies should exist, otherwise
the request will fail.
- copyObject in-place decryption failed
due to incorrect verification of headers
- do not decode ETag when object is encrypted
with SSE-C, so that pre-conditions don't fail
prematurely.
This PR adds support for healing older
content i.e from 2yrs, 1yr. Also handles
other situations where our config was
not encrypted yet.
This PR also ensures that our Listing
is consistent and quorum friendly,
such that we don't list partial objects
In federated NAS gateway setups, multiple hosts in srvRecords
was picked at random which could mean that if one of the
host was down the request can indeed fail and if client
retries it would succeed. Instead allow server to figure
out the current online host quickly such that we can
exclude the host which is down.
At the max the attempt to look for a downed node is to
300 millisecond, if the node is taking longer to respond
than this value we simply ignore and move to the node,
total attempts are equal to number of srvRecords if no
server is online we simply fallback to last dialed host.
healing was not working properly when drives were
replaced, due to the error check in root disk
calculation this PR fixes this behavior
This PR also adds additional fix for missing
metadata entries from .minio.sys as part of
disk healing as well.
Added code to ignore and print more context
sensitive errors for better debugging.
This PR is continuation of fix in 7b14e9b660
Enforce bucket quotas when crawling has finished.
This ensures that we will not do quota enforcement on old data.
Additionally, delete less if we are closer to quota than we thought.
for users who don't have access to HDFS rootPath '/'
can optionally specify `minio gateway hdfs hdfs://namenode:8200/path`
for which they have access to, allowing all writes to be
performed at `/path`.
NOTE: once configured in this manner you need to make
sure command line is correctly specified, otherwise
your data might not be visible
closes#10011
this PR to allow legacy support for big-data
applications which run older Java versions
which do not support the secure ciphers
currently defaulted in MinIO. This option
allows optionally to turn them off such
that client and server can negotiate the
best ciphers themselves.
This env is purposefully not documented,
meant as a last resort when client
application cannot be changed easily.
- admin info node offline check is now quicker
- admin info now doesn't duplicate the code
across doing the same checks for disks
- rely on StorageInfo to return appropriate errors
instead of calling locally.
- diskID checks now return proper errors when
disk not found v/s format.json missing.
- add more disk states for more clarity on the
underlying disk errors.
while we handle all situations for writes and reads
on older format, what we didn't cater for properly
yet was delete where we only ended up deleting
just `xl.meta` - instead we should allow all the
deletes to go through for older format without
versioning enabled buckets.
CORS is notorious requires specific headers to be
handled appropriately in request and response,
using cors package as part of handlerFunc() for
options method lacks the necessary control this
package needs to add headers.
Without instantiating a new rest client we can
have a recursive error which can lead to
healthcheck returning always offline, this can
prematurely take the servers offline.
gorilla/mux broke their recent release 1.7.4 which we
upgraded to, we need the current workaround to ensure
that our regex matches appropriately.
An upstream PR is sent, we should remove the
workaround once we have a new release.
- reduce locker timeout for early transaction lock
for more eagerness to timeout
- reduce leader lock timeout to range from 30sec to 1minute
- add additional log message during bootstrap phase
Main issue is that `t.pool[params]` should be `t.pool[oldest]`.
We add a bit more safety features for the code.
* Make writes to the endTimerCh non-blocking in all cases
so multiple releases cannot lock up.
* Double check expectations.
* Shift down deletes with copy instead of truncating slice.
* Actually delete the oldest if we are above total limit.
* Actually delete the oldest found and not the current.
* Unexport the mutex so nobody from the outside can meddle with it.
This commit adds a new admin API for creating master keys.
An admin client can send a POST request to:
```
/minio/admin/v3/kms/key/create?key-id=<keyID>
```
The name / ID of the new key is specified as request
query parameter `key-id=<ID>`.
Creating new master keys requires KES - it does not work with
the native Vault KMS (deprecated) nor with a static master key
(deprecated).
Further, this commit removes the `UpdateKey` method from the `KMS`
interface. This method is not needed and not used anymore.
with the merge of https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd/pull/11823
etcd v3.5.0 will now have a properly imported versioned path
this fixes our pending migration to newer repo
Use a separate client for these calls that can take a long time.
Add request context to these so they are canceled when the client
disconnects instead except for ListObject which doesn't have any equivalent.
Healing an object which has multiple versions was not working because
the healing code forgot to consider errFileVersionNotFound error as a
use case that needs healing
Currently, lifecycle expiry is deleting all object versions which is not
correct, unless noncurrent versions field is specified.
Also, only delete the delete marker if it is the only version of the
given object.
- additionally upgrade to msgp@v1.1.2
- change StatModTime,StatSize fields as
simple Size/ModTime
- reduce 50000 entries per List batch to 10000
as client needs to wait too long to see the
first batch some times which is not desired
and it is worth we write the data as soon
as we have it.
object KMS is configured with auto-encryption,
there were issues when using docker registry -
this has been left unnoticed for a while.
This PR fixes an issue with compatibility.
Additionally also fix the continuation-token implementation
infinite loop issue which was missed as part of #9939
Also fix the heal token to be generated as a client
facing value instead of what is remembered by the
server, this allows for the server to be stateless
regarding the token's behavior.
When manual healing is triggered, one node in a cluster will
become the authority to heal. mc regularly sends new requests
to fetch the status of the ongoing healing process, but a load
balancer could land the healing request to a node that is not
doing the healing request.
This PR will redirect a request to the node based on the node
index found described as part of the client token. A similar
technique is also used to proxy ListObjectsV2 requests
by encoding this information in continuation-token
The S3 specification says that versions are ordered in the response of
list object versions.
mc snapshot needs this to know which version comes first especially when
two versions have the same exact last-modified field.
Readiness as no reasoning to be cluster scope
because that is not how the k8s networking works
for pods, all the pods to a deployment are not
sharing the network in a singleton. Instead they
are run as local scopes to themselves, with
readiness failures the pod is potentially taken
out of the network to be resolvable - this
affects the distributed setup in myriad of
different ways.
Instead readiness should behave like liveness
with local scope alone, and should be a dummy
implementation.
This PR all the startup times and overal k8s
startup time dramatically improves.
Added another handler called as `/minio/health/cluster`
to understand the cluster scope health.
Walk() functionality was missing on gateway
implementations leading to missing functionality
for the browser UI such as remove multiple objects,
download as zip file etc.
This PR brings a generic implementation across
all gateway's, it is not required to repeat the
same code in all gateway's
The default behavior is to cache each range requested
to cache drive. Add an environment variable
`MINIO_RANGE_CACHE` - when set to off, it disables
range caching and instead downloads entire object
in the background.
Fixes#9870
Bonus fix during versioning merge one of the PR was missing
the offline/online disk count fix from #9801 port it correctly
over to the master branch from release.
Additionally, add versionID support for MRF
Fixes#9910Fixes#9931
This PR has the following changes
- Removing duplicate lookupConfigs() calls.
- Deprecate admin config APIs for NAS gateways. This will avoid repeated reloads of the config from the disk.
- WatchConfigNASDisk will be removed
- Migration guide for NAS gateways users to migrate to ENV settings.
NOTE: THIS PR HAS A BREAKING CHANGE
Fixes#9875
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Looking into full disk errors on zoned setup. We don't take the
5% space requirement into account when selecting a zone.
The interesting part is that even considering this we don't
know the size of the object the user wants to upload when
they do multipart uploads.
It seems quite defensive to always upload multiparts to
the zone where there is the most space since all load will
be directed to a part of the cluster.
In these cases we make sure it can at least hold a 1GiB file
and we disadvantage fuller zones more by subtracting the
expected size before weighing.
- x-amz-storage-class specified CopyObject
should proceed regardless, its not a precondition
- sourceVersionID is specified CopyObject should
proceed regardless, its not a precondition
This PR fixes all the below scenarios
and handles them correctly.
- existing data/bucket is replaced with
new content, no versioning enabled old
structure vanishes.
- existing data/bucket - enable versioning
before uploading any data, once versioning
enabled upload new content, old content
is preserved.
- suspend versioning on the bucket again, now
upload content again the old content is purged
since that is the default "null" version.
Additionally sync data after xl.json -> xl.meta
rename(), to avoid any surprises if there is a
crash during this rename operation.
- Add changes to ensure remote disks are not
incorrectly taken online if their order has
changed or are incorrect disks.
- Bring changes to peer to detect disconnection
with separate Health handler, to avoid a
rather expensive call GetLocakDiskIDs()
- Follow up on the same changes for Lockers
as well
Just like GET/DELETE APIs it is possible to preserve
client supplied versionId's, of course the versionIds
have to be uuid, if an existing versionId is found
it is overwritten if no object locking policies
are found.
- PUT /bucketname/objectname?versionId=<id>
- POST /bucketname/objectname?uploads=&versionId=<id>
- PUT /bucketname/objectname?verisonId=<id> (with x-amz-copy-source)
Fixes potentially infinite allocations, especially in FS mode,
since lookups live up to 30 minutes. Limit walk pool sizes to 50
max parameter entries and 4 concurrent operations with the same
parameters.
Fixes#9835
PutObject on multiple-zone with versioning would not
overwrite the correct location of the object if the
object has delete marker, leading to duplicate objects
on two zones.
This PR fixes by adding affinity towards delete marker
when GetObjectInfo() returns error, use the zone index
which has the delete marker.
Bonus change to use channel to serialize triggers,
instead of using atomic variables. More efficient
mechanism for synchronization.
Co-authored-by: Nitish Tiwari <nitish@minio.io>
In the Current bug we were re-using the context
from previously granted lockers, this would
lead to lock timeouts for existing valid
read or write locks, leading to premature
timeout of locks.
This bug affects only local lockers in FS
or standalone erasure coded mode. This issue
is rather historical as well and was present
in lsync for some time but we were lucky to
not see it.
Similar changes are done in dsync as well
to keep the code more familiar
Fixes#9827
When updating all servers following the constructions of mc update,
only the endpoint server will be updated successfully.
All the other peer servers' updating failed due to the error below:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
parsing time "2006-01-02T15:04:05Z07:00" as "<release version>": cannot parse "-01-02T15:04:05Z07:00" as "0-"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Implement a new xl.json 2.0.0 format to support,
this moves the entire marshaling logic to POSIX
layer, top layer always consumes a common FileInfo
construct which simplifies the metadata reads.
- Implement list object versions
- Migrate to siphash from crchash for new deployments
for object placements.
Fixes#2111
Historically due to lack of support for middlewares
we ended up writing wrapped handlers for all
middlewares on top of the gorilla/mux, this causes
multiple issues when we want to let's say
- Overload r.Body with some custom implementation
to track the incoming Reads()
- Add other sort of top level checks to avoid
DDOSing the server with large incoming HTTP
bodies.
Since 1.7.x release gorilla/mux provides proper
use of middlewares, which are honored by the muxer
directly. This makes sure that Go can honor its
own internal ServeHTTP(w, r) implementation where
Go net/http can wrap into its own customer readers.
This PR as a side-affect fixes rare issues of client
hangs which were reported in the wild but never really
understood or fixed in our codebase.
Fixes#9759Fixes#7266Fixes#6540Fixes#5455Fixes#5150
Refer https://github.com/boto/botocore/pull/1328 for
one variation of the same issue in #9759
PR #9801 while it is correct, the loop isEndpointConnected()
was changed to rely on endpoint.String() which has the host
information as well, which is not correct value as input to
detect if the disk is down or up, if endpoint is local use
its local path value instead.
This commit changes the data key generation such that
if a MinIO server/nodes tries to generate a new DEK
but the particular master key does not exist - then
MinIO asks KES to create a new master key and then
requests the DEK again.
From now on, a SSE-S3 master key must not be created
explicitly via: `kes key create <key-name>`.
Instead, it is sufficient to just set the env. var.
```
export MINIO_KMS_KES_KEY_NAME=<key-name>
```
However, the MinIO identity (mTLS client certificate)
must have the permission to access the `/v1/key/create/`
API. Therefore, KES policy for MinIO must look similar to:
```
[
/v1/key/create/<key-name-pattern>
/v1/key/generate/<key-name-pattern>
/v1/key/decrypt/<key-name-pattern>
]
```
However, in our guides we already suggest that.
See e.g.: https://github.com/minio/kes/wiki/MinIO-Object-Storage#kes-server-setup
***
The ability to create master keys on request may also be
necessary / useful in case of SSE-KMS.
Current code was relying on globalEndpoints as
the source of secondary truth to obtain
the missing endpoints list when the disk
is offline, this is problematic
- there is no way to know if the getDisks()
returned endpoints total is same as the
ones list of globalEndpoints and it
belongs to a particular set.
- there is no order guarantee as getDisks()
is ordered as per format.json, globalEndpoints
may not be, so potentially end up including
incorrect endpoints.
To fix this bring getEndpoints() just like getDisks()
to ensure that consistently ordered endpoints are
always available for us to ensure that returned values
are consistent with what each erasure set would observe.
Uploading files with names that could not be written to disk
would result in "reduce your request" errors returned.
Instead check explicitly for disallowed characters and reject
files with `Object name contains unsupported characters.`
At a customer setup with lots of concurrent calls
it can be observed that in newRetryTimer there
were lots of tiny alloations which are not
relinquished upon retries, in this codepath
we were only interested in re-using the timer
and use it wisely for each locker.
```
(pprof) top
Showing nodes accounting for 8.68TB, 97.02% of 8.95TB total
Dropped 1198 nodes (cum <= 0.04TB)
Showing top 10 nodes out of 79
flat flat% sum% cum cum%
5.95TB 66.50% 66.50% 5.95TB 66.50% time.NewTimer
1.16TB 13.02% 79.51% 1.16TB 13.02% github.com/ncw/directio.AlignedBlock
0.67TB 7.53% 87.04% 0.70TB 7.78% github.com/minio/minio/cmd.xlObjects.putObject
0.21TB 2.36% 89.40% 0.21TB 2.36% github.com/minio/minio/cmd.(*posix).Walk
0.19TB 2.08% 91.49% 0.27TB 2.99% os.statNolog
0.14TB 1.59% 93.08% 0.14TB 1.60% os.(*File).readdirnames
0.10TB 1.09% 94.17% 0.11TB 1.25% github.com/minio/minio/cmd.readDirN
0.10TB 1.07% 95.23% 0.10TB 1.07% syscall.ByteSliceFromString
0.09TB 1.03% 96.27% 0.09TB 1.03% strings.(*Builder).grow
0.07TB 0.75% 97.02% 0.07TB 0.75% path.(*lazybuf).append
```
For example `{1...17}/{1...52}` symmetrical
distribution of drives cannot be obtained
- Because 17 is a prime number
- Is not divisible by any pre-defined setCounts i.e
from 1 to 16
Manual healing (as background healing) creates a heal task with a
possiblity to override healing options, such as deep or normal mode.
Use a pointer type in heal opts so nil would mean use the default
healing options.
aws cli fails to set a bucket encryption configuration to MinIO server.
The reason is that aws cli does not send MD5-Content header. It seems
that MD5-Content is not required anymore.
This commit also returns Not Implemented header early to help mint tests
to ignore testing this API in gateway modes.
CopyObject was not correctly figuring out the correct
destination object location and would end up creating
duplicate objects on two different zones, reproduced
by doing encryption based key rotation.
Advantages avoids 100's of stats which are needed for each
upload operation in FS/NAS gateway mode when uploading a large
multipart object, dramatically increases performance for
multipart uploads by avoiding recursive calls.
For other gateway's simplifies the approach since
azure, gcs, hdfs gateway's don't capture any specific
metadata during upload which needs handler validation
for encryption/compression.
Erasure coding was already optimized, additionally
just avoids small allocations of large data structure.
Fixes#7206
GetDiskID() in storage rest client does not really issue a REST request
to the remote disk, but returns an in-memory value instead.
However, GetDiskID() should return an error when format.json is not
found or for other similar issues (unmounted disks, etc..)
GetDiskID() is only called when formatting disks and getting storage
informatio, hence this commit should not have a performance degradation.
Additionally also fix STS logs to filter out LDAP
password to be sent out in audit logs.
Bonus fix handle the reload of users properly by
making sure to preserve the newer users during the
reload to be not invalidated.
Fixes#9707Fixes#9644Fixes#9651
Bonus fixes in quota enforcement to use the
new datastructure and use timedValue to cache
a value/reload automatically avoids one less
global variable.
If the requested server is part of the set this will always read
from the local disk, even if the disk contains a parity shard.
In default setup there is a 50% chance that at least
one shard that otherwise would have been fetched remotely
will be read locally instead.
It basically trades RPC call overhead for reed-solomon.
On distributed localhost this seems to be fairly break-even,
with a very small gain in throughput and latency.
However on networked servers this should be a bigger
1MB objects, before:
```
Operation: GET. Concurrency: 32. Hosts: 4.
Requests considered: 76257:
* Avg: 25ms 50%: 24ms 90%: 32ms 99%: 42ms Fastest: 7ms Slowest: 67ms
* First Byte: Average: 23ms, Median: 22ms, Best: 5ms, Worst: 65ms
Throughput:
* Average: 1213.68 MiB/s, 1272.63 obj/s (59.948s, starting 14:45:44 CEST)
```
After:
```
Operation: GET. Concurrency: 32. Hosts: 4.
Requests considered: 78845:
* Avg: 24ms 50%: 24ms 90%: 31ms 99%: 39ms Fastest: 8ms Slowest: 62ms
* First Byte: Average: 22ms, Median: 21ms, Best: 6ms, Worst: 57ms
Throughput:
* Average: 1255.11 MiB/s, 1316.08 obj/s (59.938s, starting 14:43:58 CEST)
```
Bonus fix: Only ask for heal once on an object.
This value is requested on every upload when there are multiple zones.
Since this will result in an RPC call to every remote disk this scales
quite badly in a distributed setup. Load every 1second interval.
2 servers, localhost only. In large distributed setups much bigger
gains can be expected.
```
Operations: 21743 -> 22454
* Average: +3.28% (+0.0 MiB/s) throughput, +3.28% (+11.9) obj/s
* Fastest: +3.37% (+0.0 MiB/s) throughput, +3.37% (+13.0) obj/s
* 50% Median: +3.03% (+0.0 MiB/s) throughput, +3.03% (+11.2) obj/s
* Slowest: +8.03% (+0.0 MiB/s) throughput, +8.03% (+22.8) obj/s
```
For easy management of this a generic helper has been added.
some clients such as veeam expect the x-amz-meta to
be sent in lower cased form, while this does indeed
defeats the HTTP protocol contract it is harder to
change these applications, while these applications
get fixed appropriately in future.
x-amz-meta is usually sent in lowercased form
by AWS S3 and some applications like veeam
incorrectly end up relying on the case sensitivity
of the HTTP headers.
Bonus fixes
- Fix the iso8601 time format to keep it same as
AWS S3 response
- Increase maxObjectList to 50,000 and use
maxDeleteList as 10,000 whenever multi-object
deletes are needed.
No one really uses FS for large scale accounting
usage, neither we crawl in NAS gateway mode. It is
worthwhile to simply disable this feature as its
not useful for anyone.
Bonus disable bucket quota ops as well in, FS
and gateway mode
size calculation in crawler was using the real size
of the object instead of its actual size i.e either
a decrypted or uncompressed size.
this is needed to make sure all other accounting
such as bucket quota and mcs UI to display the
correct values.
This PR adds a new configuration parameter which allows readiness
check to respond within 10secs, this can be reduced to a lower value
if necessary using
```
mc admin config set api ready_deadline=5s
```
or
```
export MINIO_API_READY_DEADLINE=5s
```
net/http exposes ErrorLog but it is log.Logger
instance not an interface which can be overridden,
because of this reason the logging is interleaved
sometimes with TLS with messages like this on the
server
```
http: TLS handshake error from 139.178.70.188:63760: EOF
```
This is bit problematic for us as we need to have
consistent logging view for allow --json or --quiet
flags.
With this PR we ensure that this format is adhered to.
Groups information shall be now stored as part of the
credential data structure, this is a more idiomatic
way to support large LDAP groups.
Avoids the complication of setups where LDAP groups
can be in the range of 150+ which may lead to excess
HTTP header size > 8KiB, to reduce such an occurrence
we shall save the group information on the server as
part of the credential data structure.
Bonus change support multiple mapped policies, across
all types of users.
This PR is a continuation from #9586, now the
entire parsing logic is fully merged into
bucket metadata sub-system, simplify the
quota API further by reducing the remove
quota handler implementation.
Shuffling arguments that we pass to MinIO server are supported. However,
when that happens, Prometheus returns wrong information about disks usage
and online/offline status.
The commit fixes the issue by avoiding relying on xl.endpoints since
it is not ordered.
this is a major overhaul by migrating off all
bucket metadata related configs into a single
object '.metadata.bin' this allows us for faster
bootups across 1000's of buckets and as well
as keeps the code simple enough for future
work and additions.
Additionally also fixes#9396, #9394
To avoid this issue with refCounter refactor the code
such that
- locker() always increases refCount upon success
- unlocker() always decrements refCount upon success
(as a special case removes the resource if the
refCount is zero)
By these two assumptions we are able to see that we
are never granted two write lockers in any situation.
Thanks to @vcabbage for writing a nice reproducer.
enable linter using golangci-lint across
codebase to run a bunch of linters together,
we shall enable new linters as we fix more
things the codebase.
This PR fixes the first stage of this
cleanup.
There is a disparency of behavior under Linux & Windows about
the returned error when trying to rename a non existant path.
err := os.Rename("/path/does/not/exist", "/tmp/copy")
Linux:
isSysErrNotDir(err) = false
os.IsNotExist(err) = true
Windows:
isSysErrNotDir(err) = true
os.IsNotExist(err) = true
ENOTDIR in Linux is returned when the destination path
of the rename call contains a file in one of the middle
segments of the path (e.g. /tmp/file/dst, where /tmp/file
is an actual file not a directory)
However, as shown above, Windows has more scenarios when
it returns ENOTDIR. For example, when the source path contains
an inexistant directory in its path.
In that case, we want errFileNotFound returned and not
errFileAccessDenied, so this commit will add a further check to close
the disparency between Windows & Linux.
The `ioutil.NopCloser(reader)` was hiding nested hash readers.
We make it an `io.Closer` so it can be attached without wrapping
and allows for nesting, by merging the requests.
The `keepHTTPResponseAlive` would cause errors to be
returned with status OK.
- Add '32' as a filler byte until a response is ready
- '0' to indicate the response is ready to be consumed
- '1' to indicate response has an error which needs
to be returned to the caller
Clear out 'file not found' errors from dir walker, since it may be
in a folder that has been deleted since it was scanned.
This PR is to ensure that we call the relevant object
layer APIs for necessary S3 API level functionalities
allowing gateway implementations to return proper
errors as NotImplemented{}
This allows for all our tests in mint to behave
appropriately and can be handled appropriately as
well.
S3 is now natively supported by B2 cloud storage provider
there is no reason to use specialized gateway for B2 anymore,
our current S3 gateway with caching would work with B2.
Resolves#8584
requests in federated setups for STS type calls which are
performed at '/' resource should be routed by the muxer,
the assumption is simply such that requests without a bucket
in a federated setup cannot be proxied, so serve them at
current server.
This commit makes the KES client use HTTP/2
when establishing a connection to the KES server.
This is necessary since the next KES server release
will require HTTP/2.
We should allow quorum errors to be send upwards
such that caller can retry while reading bucket
encryption/policy configs when server is starting
up, this allows distributed setups to load the
configuration properly.
Current code didn't facilitate this and would have
never loaded the actual configs during rolling,
server restarts.
In large setups this avoids unnecessary data transfer
across nodes and potential locks.
This PR also optimizes heal result channel, which should
be avoided for each queueHealTask as its expensive
to create/close channels for large number of objects.
This PR allows setting a "hard" or "fifo" quota
restriction at the bucket level. Buckets that
have reached the FIFO quota configured, will
automatically be cleaned up in FIFO manner until
bucket usage drops to configured quota.
If a bucket is configured with a "hard" quota
ceiling, all further writes are disallowed.
ResponseWriter & RecordAPIStats has similar role, merge them.
This commit will also fix wrong auditing for STS and Web and others
since they are using ResponseWriter instead of the RecordAPIStats.
A user can incorrectly mounts a newly fresh disk. MinIO will detect
that it is writing with a rootfs disk and will mark it down. However,
it is hard for the user to understand what's going on.
This commit will just print a notice so it will be easy to spot
such use case.
- elasticsearch client should rely on the SDK helpers
instead of pure HTTP calls.
- webhook shouldn't need to check for IsActive() for
all notifications, failure should be delayed.
- Remove DialHTTP as its never used properly
Fixes#9460
allow generating service accounts for temporary credentials
which have a designated parent, currently OpenID is not yet
supported.
added checks to ensure that service account cannot generate
further service accounts for itself, service accounts can
never be a parent to any credential.
Audit was not working properly when enabled from the environment
caused by a typo in the code.
This commit fixes that but also consider the following variables:
`MINIO_LOGGER_WEBHOOK_ENABLE_*` and
`MINIO_AUDIT_WEBHOOK_ENABLE_*` so the user can use
this latter to temporarily disable a logger or audit configuration.
data usage tracker and crawler seem to be logging
non-actionable information on console, which is not
useful and is fixed on its own in almost all deployments,
lets keep this logging to minimal.
it is possible in many screnarios that even
if the divisible value is optimal, we may
end up with uneven distribution due to number
of nodes present in the configuration.
added code allow for affinity towards various
ellipses to figure out optimal value across
ellipses such that we can always reach a
symmetric value automatically.
Fixes#9416
By monitoring PUT/DELETE and heal operations it is possible
to track changed paths and keep a bloom filter for this data.
This can help prioritize paths to scan. The bloom filter can identify
paths that have not changed, and the few collisions will only result
in a marginal extra workload. This can be implemented on either a
bucket+(1 prefix level) with reasonable performance.
The bloom filter is set to have a false positive rate at 1% at 1M
entries. A bloom table of this size is about ~2500 bytes when serialized.
To not force a full scan of all paths that have changed cycle bloom
filters would need to be kept, so we guarantee that dirty paths have
been scanned within cycle runs. Until cycle bloom filters have been
collected all paths are considered dirty.
this commit avoids lots of tiny allocations, repeated
channel creates which are performed when filtering
the incoming events, unescaping a key just for matching.
also remove deprecated code which is not needed
anymore, avoids unexpected data structure transformations
from the map to slice.
we have policy available for sub-admin users to set/get/delete
config, but we incorrectly decrypt the content using admin secret
key which in-fact should be the credential authenticating the
request.
global WORM mode is a complex piece for which
the time has passed, with the advent of S3 compatible
object locking and retention implementation global
WORM is sort of deprecated, this has been mentioned
in our documentation for some time, now the time
has come for this to go.
re-implement the cache purging routine to
avoid using ioutil.ReadDir which can lead
to high allocations when there are cache
directories with lots of content, or
when cache is installed in memory constrainted
environments.
Instead rely on a callback function where we
are not using memory no-more than 8KiB per
cycle.
Precursor for this change refer #9425, original
issue pointed by Caleb Case <caleb@storj.io>
OSS go sdk lacks licensing terms in their
repository, and there has been no activity
On the issue here https://github.com/aliyun/aliyun-oss-go-sdk/issues/245
This PR is to ensure we remove any dependency code which
lacks explicit license file in their repo.
- keep long running obd network tests alive
- fix error - wrong number of parents in process OBD info
- ensure that osinfo does not error out when inside containers
- remove limit on max number of connections per client transport
The generic client transport uses a default limit of 64 conns per transport.
This could end up limiting and throttling usage, and artificially slowing
down the performance of MinIO even on hardware capable of doing better.
New value defaults to 100K events by default,
but users can tune this value upto any value
they seem necessary.
* increase the limit to maxint64 while validating
This PR also fixes issues when
deletePolicy, deleteUser is idempotent so can lead to
issues when client can prematurely timeout, so a retry
call error response should be ignored when call returns
http.StatusNotFound
Fixes#9347
allow `mc admin config set mygateway/ audit_webhook --env`
to fetch the documentation as needed, this is just to
ensure that our users can still access the relevant
ENV docs while running in gateway mode.
Instead of GlobalContext use a local context for tests.
Most notably this allows stuff created to be shut down
when tests using it is done. After PR #9345 9331 CI is
often running out of memory/time.
Add two new configuration entries, api.requests-max and
api.requests-deadline which have the same role of
MINIO_API_REQUESTS_MAX and MINIO_API_REQUESTS_DEADLINE.
This PR fixes couple of behaviors with service accounts
- not need to have session token for service accounts
- service accounts can be generated by any user for themselves
implicitly, with a valid signature.
- policy input for AddNewServiceAccount API is not fully typed
allowing for validation before it is sent to the server.
- also bring in additional context for admin API errors if any
when replying back to client.
- deprecate GetServiceAccount API as we do not need to reply
back session tokens
- Introduced a function `FetchRegisteredTargets` which will return
a complete set of registered targets irrespective to their states,
if the `returnOnTargetError` flag is set to `False`
- Refactor NewTarget functions to return non-nil targets
- Refactor GetARNList() to return a complete list of configured targets
- Removes PerfInfo admin API as its not OBDInfo
- Keep the drive path without the metaBucket in OBD
global latency map.
- Remove all the unused code related to PerfInfo API
- Do not redefined global mib,gib constants use
humanize.MiByte and humanize.GiByte instead always
if needed use --no-compat to disable md5sum while
verifying any performance numbers.
bring back --compat behavior as default to avoid
additional documentation and confusing behavior,
as we are working towards improving md5sum to
be faster on AVX instructions, enabling this
should be hardly a problem in future versions
of MinIO.
fixes#8012fixes#7859fixes#7642
Continuing from previous PR #9304, comment
is a special key is not present in the
default KV list. Add it explicitly when
tokenizing fields as it may be possible that
some clients might try to set comments.
This PR adds context-based `k=v` splits based
on the sub-system which was obtained, if the
keys are not provided an error will be thrown
during parsing, if keys are provided with wrong
values an error will be thrown. Keys can now
have values which are of a much more complex
form such as `k="v=v"` or `k=" v = v"`
and other variations.
additionally, deprecate unnecessary postgres/mysql
configuration styles, support only
- connection_string for Postgres
- dsn_string for MySQL
All other parameters are removed.
This commit fixes a performance issue caused
by too many calls to the external KMS - i.e.
for single-part PUT requests.
In general, the issue is caused by a sub-optimal
code structure. In particular, when the server
encrypts an object it requests a new data encryption
key from the KMS. With this key it does some key
derivation and encrypts the object content and
ETag.
However, to behave S3-compatible the MinIO server
has to return the plaintext ETag to the client
in case SSE-S3.
Therefore, the server code used to decrypt the
(previously encrypted) ETag again by requesting
the data encryption key (KMS decrypt API) from
the KMS.
This leads to 2 KMS API calls (1 generate key and
1 decrypt key) per PUT operation - while only
one KMS call is necessary.
This commit fixes this by fetching a data key only
once from the KMS and keeping the derived object
encryption key around (for the lifetime of the request).
This leads to a significant performance improvement
w.r.t. to PUT workloads:
```
Operation: PUT
Operations: 161 -> 239
Duration: 28s -> 29s
* Average: +47.56% (+25.8 MiB/s) throughput, +47.56% (+2.6) obj/s
* Fastest: +55.49% (+34.5 MiB/s) throughput, +55.49% (+3.5) obj/s
* 50% Median: +58.24% (+32.8 MiB/s) throughput, +58.24% (+3.3) obj/s
* Slowest: +1.83% (+0.6 MiB/s) throughput, +1.83% (+0.1) obj/s
```
Fixes#8667
In addition to the above, if the user is mapped to a policy or
belongs in a group, the user-info API returns this information,
but otherwise, the API will now return a non-existent user error.
make rest of the Walk() function more predictable,
it was observed that in nominal deployments even
without much workload the drives are generally
slow for respond for readdir operations, for the
sleepDuration factor of 10 this can cause
unexpected slowness in the Listing calls, while
it is good for all other I/O, it may simply slow
down Listing immensely which is not useful.
fixes#9261
In FS mode under Windows, removing an object will not automatically.
remove parent empty prefixes.
The reason is that path.Dir() was used, however filepath.Dir() is
more appropriate since filepath is physical (meaning it operates
on OS filesystem paths)
This is not caught because failure for Windows CI is not caught.
fs-v1 in server mode only checks to see if the path exist, so that it
returns ready before it is indeed ready.
This change adds a check to ensure that the global object api is
available too before reporting ready.
Fixes#9283
It is some times common and convenient to use
just local IPs for testing purposes, 127.0.0.x
are special IPs regardless of being available on
an interface they can be bound to on all operating
systems.
Allow this behavior to work for minio server
fixes#9274
also, bring in an additional policy to ensure that
force delete bucket is only allowed with the right
policy for the user, just DeleteBucketAction
policy action is not enough.
This PR also tries to simplify the approach taken in
object-locking implementation by preferential treatment
given towards full validation.
This in-turn has fixed couple of bugs related to
how policy should have been honored when ByPassGovernance
is provided.
Simplifies code a bit, but also duplicates code intentionally
for clarity due to complex nature of object locking
implementation.
Too many deployments come up with an odd number
of hosts or drives, to facilitate even distribution
among those setups allow for odd and prime numbers
based packs.
- B2 does actually return an MD5 hash for newly uploaded objects
so we can use it to provide better compatibility with S3 client
libraries that assume the ETag is the MD5 hash such as boto.
- depends on change in blazer library.
- new behaviour is only enabled if MinIO's --compat mode is active.
- behaviour for multipart uploads is unchanged (works fine as is).
- Implement a graph algorithm to test network bandwidth from every
node to every other node
- Saturate any network bandwidth adaptively, accounting for slow
and fast network capacity
- Implement parallel drive OBD tests
- Implement a paging mechanism for OBD test to provide periodic updates to client
- Implement Sys, Process, Host, Mem OBD Infos
- total number of S3 API calls per server
- maximum wait duration for any S3 API call
This implementation is primarily meant for situations
where HDDs are not capable enough to handle the incoming
workload and there is no way to throttle the client.
This feature allows MinIO server to throttle itself
such that we do not overwhelm the HDDs.
- acquire since leader lock for all background operations
- healing, crawling and applying lifecycle policies.
- simplify lifecyle to avoid network calls, which was a
bug in implementation - we should hold a leader and
do everything from there, we have access to entire
name space.
- make listing, walking not interfere by slowing itself
down like the crawler.
- effectively use global context everywhere to ensure
proper shutdown, in cache, lifecycle, healing
- don't read `format.json` for prometheus metrics in
StorageInfo() call.
- Add conservative timeouts upto 3 minutes
for internode communication
- Add aggressive timeouts of 30 seconds
for gateway communication
Fixes#9105Fixes#8732Fixes#8881Fixes#8376Fixes#9028
This is to improve responsiveness for all
admin API operations and allowing callers
to cancel any on-going admin operations,
if they happen to be waiting too long.
canonicalize the ENVs such that we can bring these ENVs
as part of the config values, as a subsequent change.
- fix location of per bucket usage to `.minio.sys/buckets/<bucket_name>/usage-cache.bin`
- fix location of the overall usage in `json` at `.minio.sys/buckets/.usage.json`
(avoid conflicts with a bucket named `usage.json` )
- fix location of the overall usage in `msgp` at `.minio.sys/buckets/.usage.bin`
(avoid conflicts with a bucket named `usage.bin`
As an optimization of the healing, HealObjects() avoid sending an
object to the background healing subsystem when the object is
present in all disks.
However, HealObjects() should have checked the scan type, if this
deep, always pass the object to the healing subsystem.
Currently, a tree walking, needed to a list objects in a specific
set quits listing as long as it finds no entries in a disk, which
is wrong.
This affected background healing, because the latter is using
tree walk directly. If one object does not exist in the first
disk for example, it will be seemed like the object does not
exist at all and no healing work is needed.
This commit fixes the behavior.
The staleness of a lock should be determined by
the quorum number of entries returning stale,
this allows for situations when locks are held
when nodes are down - we don't accidentally
clear locks unintentionally when they are valid
and correct.
Also lock maintenance should be run by all servers,
not one server, stale locks need to be run outside
the requirement for holding distributed locks.
Thanks @klauspost for reproducing this issue
Some AWS SDKs latently rely on this value some times
to calculate the right number of parts during a parallel
GetObject request, this is feature used along with
content-range - we should support this as well.
- avoid setting last heal activity when starting self-healing
This can be confusing to users thinking that the self healing
cycle was already performed.
- add info about the next background healing round
OperationTimedout error occurs when locking
timesout, trying to acquire a lock. This
error should be returned appropriately to
the client with http status "408" (request timedout)
This translation was broken, fix it.
Bulk delete API was using cleanupObjectsBulk() which calls posix
listing and delete API to remove objects internal files in the
backend (xl.json and parts) one by one.
Add DeletePrefixes in the storage API to remove the content
of a directory in a single call.
Also use a remove goroutine for each disk to accelerate removal.
Currently the code assumed some orthogonal requirements
which led situations where when we have a setup where
we have let's say for example 168 drives, the final
set_drive_count chosen was 14. Indeed 168 drives are
divisible by 12 but this wasn't allowed due to an
unexpected requirement to have 12 to be a perfect modulo
of 14 which is not possible. This assumption was incorrect.
This PR fixes this old assumption properly, also adds
few tests and some negative tests as well. Improvements
are seen in error messages as well.
- Remove the requirement to honor storage class for deletes
- Improve `posix.DeleteFileBulk` code to Stat the volumeDir
only once per call, rather than for all object paths.
Recent modification in the code led to incorrect calculation
of offline disks.
This commit saves the endpoint list in a xlObjects then we know
the name of each disk.
lock ownership is limited to endpoints on first zone,
as we do not hold locks on other zones in an expanded
setup. current code unintentionally expired active locks
when it couldn't see ownership from the secondary zone
which leads to unexpected bugs as locking fails to work
as expected.
this PR enforces md5sum verification for following
API's to be compatible with AWS S3 spec
- PutObjectRetention
- PutObjectLegalHold
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Allow downloading goroutine dump to help detect leaks
or overuse of goroutines.
Extensions are now type dependent.
Change `profiling` -> `profile` prefix, since that is what they are
not the abstract concept.
This is a precursor change before versioning,
removes/deprecates the requirement of remembering
partName and partETag which are not useful after
a multipart transaction has finished.
This PR reduces the overall size of the backend
JSON for large file uploads.
For a non-existent user server would return STS not initialized
```
aws --profile harsha --endpoint-url http://localhost:9000 \
sts assume-role \
--role-arn arn:xxx:xxx:xxx:xxxx \
--role-session-name anything
```
instead return an appropriate error as expected by STS API
Additionally also format the `trace` output for STS APIs
Upgrades between releases are failing due to strict
rule to avoid rolling upgrades, it is enough to
bump up APIs between versions to allow for quorum
failure and wait times. Authentication failures are
catastrophic in nature which leads to server not
be able to upgrade properly.
Fixes#9021Fixes#8968
To allow better control the cache eviction process.
Introduce MINIO_CACHE_WATERMARK_LOW and
MINIO_CACHE_WATERMARK_HIGH env. variables to specify
when to stop/start cache eviction process.
Deprecate MINIO_CACHE_EXPIRY environment variable. Cache
gc sweeps at 30 minute intervals whenever high watermark is
reached to clear least recently accessed entries in the cache
until sufficient space is cleared to reach the low watermark.
Garbage collection uses an adaptive file scoring approach based
on last access time, with greater weights assigned to larger
objects and those with more hits to find the candidates for eviction.
Thanks to @klauspost for this file scoring algorithm
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@minio.io>