- Supports object locked buckets that require
PutObject() to set content-md5 always.
- Use SSE-S3 when S3 gateway is being used instead
of SSE-KMS for auto-encryption.
if object was uploaded with multipart. This is to ensure that
GetObject calls with partNumber in URI request parameters
have same behavior on source and replication target.
This is to ensure that there are no projects
that try to import `minio/minio/pkg` into
their own repo. Any such common packages should
go to `https://github.com/minio/pkg`
* Provide information on *actively* healing, buckets healed/queued, objects healed/failed.
* Add concurrent healing of multiple sets (typically on startup).
* Add bucket level resume, so restarts will only heal non-healed buckets.
* Print summary after healing a disk is done.
also re-use storage disks for all `mc admin server info`
calls as well, implement a new LocalStorageInfo() API
call at ObjectLayer to lookup local disks storageInfo
also fixes bugs where there were double calls to StorageInfo()
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`.
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.
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.
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.
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
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)
```
- 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 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.
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.
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
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>
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.
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