- Adds versioning support for S3 based remote tiers that have versioning
enabled. This ensures that when reading or deleting we specify the specific
version ID of the object. In case of deletion, this is important to ensure that
the object version is actually deleted instead of simply being marked for
deletion.
- Stores the remote object's version id in the tier-journal. Tier-journal file
version is not bumped up as serializing the new struct version is
compatible with old journals without the remote object version id.
- `storageRESTVersion` is bumped up as FileInfo struct now includes a
`TransitionRemoteVersionID` member.
- Azure and GCS support for this feature will be added subsequently.
Co-authored-by: Krishnan Parthasarathi <krisis@users.noreply.github.com>
Also adding an API to allow resyncing replication when
existing object replication is enabled and the remote target
is entirely lost. With the `mc replicate reset` command, the
objects that are eligible for replication as per the replication
config will be resynced to target if existing object replication
is enabled on the rule.
This is to ensure that there are no projects
that try to import `minio/minio/pkg` into
their own repo. Any such common packages should
go to `https://github.com/minio/pkg`
IAM not initialized doesn't mean we can't still
read the content from the disk, we should just
allow the request to go-through if object layer
is initialized.
Real-time metrics calculated in-memory rely on the initial
replication metrics saved with data usage. However, this can
lag behind the actual state of the cluster at the time of server
restart leading to inaccurate Pending size/counts reported to
Prometheus. Dropping the Pending metrics as this can be more
reliably monitored by applications with replication notifications.
Signed-off-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
LDAPusername is the simpler form of LDAPUser (userDN),
using a simpler version is convenient from policy
conditions point of view, since these are unique id's
used for LDAP login.
In cases where a cluster is degraded, we do not uphold our consistency
guarantee and we will write fewer erasure codes and rely on healing
to recreate the missing shards.
In some cases replacing known bad disks in practice take days.
We want to change the behavior of a known degraded system to keep
the erasure code promise of the storage class for each object.
This will create the objects with the same confidence as a fully
functional cluster. The tradeoff will be that objects created
during a partial outage will take up slightly more space.
This means that when the storage class is EC:4, there should
always be written 4 parity shards, even if some disks are unavailable.
When an object is created on a set, the disks are immediately
checked. If any disks are unavailable additional parity shards
will be made for each offline disk, up to 50% of the number of disks.
We add an internal metadata field with the actual and intended
erasure code level, this can optionally be picked up later by
the scanner if we decide that data like this should be re-sharded.
Bonus change LDAP settings such as user, group mappings
are now listed as part of `mc admin user list` and
`mc admin group list`
Additionally this PR also deprecates the `/v2` API
that is no longer in use.
A configured audit logger or HTTP logger is validated during MinIO
server startup. Relax the timeout to 10 seconds in that case, otherwise,
both loggers won't be used.
1 second could be too low for a busy HTTP endpoint.
This commit fixes a bug causing the MinIO server to compute
the ETag of a single-part object as MD5 of the compressed
content - not as MD5 of the actual content.
This usually does not affect clients since the MinIO appended
a `-1` to indicate that the ETag belongs to a multipart object.
However, this behavior was problematic since:
- A S3 client being very strict should reject such an ETag since
the client uploaded the object via single-part API but got
a multipart ETag that is not the content MD5.
- The MinIO server leaks (via the ETag) that it compressed the
object.
This commit addresses both cases. Now, the MinIO server returns
an ETag equal to the content MD5 for single-part objects that got
compressed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
A lot of healing is likely to be on non-existing objects and
locks are very expensive and will slow down scanning
significantly.
In cases where all are valid or, all are broken allow
rejection without locking.
Keep the existing behavior, but move the check for
dangling objects to after the lock has been acquired.
```
_, err = getLatestFileInfo(ctx, partsMetadata, errs)
if err != nil {
return er.purgeObjectDangling(ctx, bucket, object, versionID, partsMetadata, errs, []error{}, opts)
}
```
Revert "heal: Hold lock when reading xl.meta from disks (#12362)"
This reverts commit abd32065aa
This PR fixes two bugs
- Remove fi.Data upon overwrite of objects from inlined-data to non-inlined-data
- Workaround for an existing bug on disk with latest releases to ignore fi.Data
and instead read from the disk for non-inlined-data
- Addtionally add a reserved metadata header to indicate data is inlined for
a given version.
Lock is hold in healObject() after reading xl.meta from disks the first
time. This commit will held the lock since the beginning of HealObject()
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Fixes `testSSES3EncryptedGetObjectReadSeekFunctional` mint test.
```
{
"args": {
"bucketName": "minio-go-test-w53hbpat649nhvws",
"objectName": "6mdswladz4vfpp2oit1pkn3qd11te5"
},
"duration": 7537,
"error": "We encountered an internal error, please try again.: cause(The requested range \"bytes 251717932 -> -116384170 of 135333762\" is not satisfiable.)",
"function": "GetObject(bucketName, objectName)",
"message": "CopyN failed",
"name": "minio-go: testSSES3EncryptedGetObjectReadSeekFunctional",
"status": "FAIL"
}
```
Compressed files always start at the beginning of a part so no additional offset should be added.
Previous PR #12351 added functions to read from the reader
stream to reduce memory usage, use the same technique in
few other places where we are not interested in reading the
data part.
in setups with lots of drives the server
startup is slow, initialize all local drives
in parallel before registering with muxer.
this speeds up when there are multiple pools
and large collection of drives.
This commit adds the `X-Amz-Server-Side-Encryption-Aws-Kms-Key-Id`
response header to the GET, HEAD, PUT and Download API.
Based on AWS documentation [1] AWS S3 returns the KMS key ID as part
of the response headers.
[1] https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/specifying-kms-encryption.html
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
multi-disk clusters initialize buffer pools
per disk, this is perhaps expensive and perhaps
not useful, for a running server instance. As this
may disallow re-use of buffers across sets,
this change ensures that buffers across sets
can be re-used at drive level, this can reduce
quite a lot of memory on large drive setups.
In lieu of new changes coming for server command line, this
change is to deprecate strict requirement for distributed setups
to provide root credentials.
Bonus: remove MINIO_WORM warning from April 2020, it is time to
remove this warning.
However, this slice is also used for closing the writers, so close is never called on these.
Furthermore when an error is returned from a write it is now reported to the reader.
bonus: remove unused heal param from `newBitrotWriter`.
* Remove copy, now that we don't mutate.
At some places bloom filter tracker was getting
updated for `.minio.sys/tmp` bucket, there is no
reason to update bloom filters for those.
And add a missing bloom filter update for MakeBucket()
Bonus: purge unused function deleteEmptyDir()
gracefully start the server, if there are other drives
available - print enough information for administrator
to notice the errors in console.
Bonus: for really large streams use larger buffer for
writes.
- GetObject() should always use a common dataDir to
read from when it starts reading, this allows the
code in erasure decoding to have sane expectations.
- Healing should always heal on the common dataDir, this
allows the code in dangling object detection to purge
dangling content.
These both situations can happen under certain types of
retries during PUT when server is restarting etc, some
namespace entries might be left over.
attempt a delete on remote DNS store first before
attempting locally, because removing at DNS store
is cheaper than deleting locally, in case of
errors locally we can cheaply recreate the
bucket on dnsStore instead of.
This commit adds support for SSE-KMS bucket configurations.
Before, the MinIO server did not support SSE-KMS, and therefore,
it was not possible to specify an SSE-KMS bucket config.
Now, this is possible. For example:
```
mc encrypt set sse-kms some-key <alias>/my-bucket
```
Further, this commit fixes an issue caused by not supporting
SSE-KMS bucket configuration and switching to SSE-KMS as default
SSE method.
Before, the server just checked whether an SSE bucket config was
present (not which type of SSE config) and applied the default
SSE method (which was switched from SSE-S3 to SSE-KMS).
This caused objects to get encrypted with SSE-KMS even though a
SSE-S3 bucket config was present.
This issue is fixed as a side-effect of this commit.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
when bidirectional replication is set up.
If ReplicaModifications is enabled in the replication
configuration, sync metadata updates to source if
replication rules are met. By default, if this
configuration is unset, MinIO automatically sync's
metadata updates on replica back to the source.
This commit adds a check to the MinIO server setup that verifies
that MinIO can reach KES, if configured, and that the default key
exists. If the default key does not exist it will create it
automatically.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
A cache structure will be kept with a tree of usages.
The cache is a tree structure where each keeps track
of its children.
An uncompacted branch contains a count of the files
only directly at the branch level, and contains link to
children branches or leaves.
The leaves are "compacted" based on a number of properties.
A compacted leaf contains the totals of all files beneath it.
A leaf is only scanned once every dataUsageUpdateDirCycles,
rarer if the bloom filter for the path is clean and no lifecycles
are applied. Skipped leaves have their totals transferred from
the previous cycle.
A clean leaf will be included once every healFolderIncludeProb
for partial heal scans. When selected there is a one in
healObjectSelectProb that any object will be chosen for heal scan.
Compaction happens when either:
- The folder (and subfolders) contains less than dataScannerCompactLeastObject objects.
- The folder itself contains more than dataScannerCompactAtFolders folders.
- The folder only contains objects and no subfolders.
- A bucket root will never be compacted.
Furthermore, if a has more than dataScannerCompactAtChildren recursive
children (uncompacted folders) the tree will be recursively scanned and the
branches with the least number of objects will be compacted until the limit
is reached.
This ensures that any branch will never contain an unreasonable amount
of other branches, and also that small branches with few objects don't
take up unreasonable amounts of space.
Whenever a branch is scanned, it is assumed that it will be un-compacted
before it hits any of the above limits. This will make the branch rebalance
itself when scanned if the distribution of objects has changed.
TLDR; With current values: No bucket will ever have more than 10000
child nodes recursively. No single folder will have more than 2500 child
nodes by itself. All subfolders are compacted if they have less than 500
objects in them recursively.
We accumulate the (non-deletemarker) version count for paths as well,
since we are changing the structure anyway.
MRF does not detect when a node is disconnected and reconnected quickly
this change will ensure that MRF is alerted by comparing the last disk
reconnection timestamp with the last MRF check time.
Signed-off-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
wait groups are necessary with io.Pipes() to avoid
races when a blocking function may not be expected
and a Write() -> Close() before Read() races on each
other. We should avoid such situations..
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
This commit replaces the custom KES client implementation
with the KES SDK from https://github.com/minio/kes
The SDK supports multi-server client load-balancing and
requests retry out of the box. Therefore, this change reduces
the overall complexity within the MinIO server and there
is no need to maintain two separate client implementations.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
This commit enforces the usage of AES-256
for config and IAM data en/decryption in FIPS
mode.
Further, it improves the implementation of
`fips.Enabled` by making it a compile time
constant. Now, the compiler is able to evaluate
the any `if fips.Enabled { ... }` at compile time
and eliminate unused code.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
p.writers is a verbatim value of bitrotWriter
backed by a pipe() that should never be nil'ed,
instead use the captured errors to skip the writes.
additionally detect also short writes, and reject
them as errors.
currently GetUser() returns 403 when IAM is not initialized
this can lead to applications crashing, instead return 503
so that the applications can retry and backoff.
fixes#12078
as there is no automatic way to detect if there
is a root disk mounted on / or /var for the container
environments due to how the root disk information
is masked inside overlay root inside container.
this PR brings an environment variable to set
root disk size threshold manually to detect the
root disks in such situations.
This commit fixes a bug in the single-part object decryption
that is triggered in case of SSE-KMS. Before, it was assumed
that the encryption is either SSE-C or SSE-S3. In case of SSE-KMS
the SSE-C branch was executed. This lead to an invalid SSE-C
algorithm error.
This commit fixes this by inverting the `if-else` logic.
Now, the SSE-C branch only gets executed when SSE-C headers
are present.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
This commit fixes a bug introduced by af0c65b.
When there is no / an empty client-provided SSE-KMS
context the `ParseMetadata` may return a nil map
(`kms.Context`).
When unsealing the object key we must check that
the context is nil before assigning a key-value pair.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
UpdateServiceAccount ignores updating fields when not passed from upper
layer, such as empty policy, empty account status, and empty secret key.
This PR will check for a secret key only if it is empty and add more
check on the value of the account status.
Signed-off-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
This commit adds basic SSE-KMS support.
Now, a client can specify the SSE-KMS headers
(algorithm, optional key-id, optional context)
such that the object gets encrypted using the
SSE-KMS method. Further, auto-encryption now
defaults to SSE-KMS.
This commit does not try to do any refactoring
and instead tries to implement SSE-KMS as a minimal
change to the code base. However, refactoring the entire
crypto-related code is planned - but needs a separate
effort.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
It is possible in some scenarios that in multiple pools,
two concurrent calls for the same object as a multipart operation
can lead to duplicate entries on two different pools.
This PR fixes this
- hold locks to serialize multiple callers so that we don't race.
- make sure to look for existing objects on the namespace as well
not just for existing uploadIDs
When running MinIO server without LDAP/OpenID, we should error out when
the code tries to create a service account for a non existant regular
user.
Bonus: refactor the check code to be show all cases more clearly
Signed-off-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
This commit adds basic SSE-KMS support.
Now, a client can specify the SSE-KMS headers
(algorithm, optional key-id, optional context)
such that the object gets encrypted using the
SSE-KMS method. Further, auto-encryption now
defaults to SSE-KMS.
This commit does not try to do any refactoring
and instead tries to implement SSE-KMS as a minimal
change to the code base. However, refactoring the entire
crypto-related code is planned - but needs a separate
effort.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
avoid time_wait build up with getObject requests if there are
pending callers and they timeout, can lead to time_wait states
Bonus share the same buffer pool with erasure healing logic,
additionally also fixes a race where parallel readers were
never cleanup during Encode() phase, because pipe.Reader end
was never closed().
Added closer right away upon an error during Encode to make
sure to avoid racy Close() while stream was still being
Read().
This commit fixes a bug when parsing the env. variable
`MINIO_KMS_SECRET_KEY`. Before, the env. variable
name - instead of its value - was parsed. This (obviously)
did not work properly.
This commit fixes this.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
cleanup functions should never be cleaned before the reader is
instantiated, this type of design leads to situations where order
of lockers and places for them to use becomes confusing.
Allow WithCleanupFuncs() if the caller wishes to add cleanupFns
to be run upon close() or an error during initialization of the
reader.
Also make sure streams are closed before we unlock the resources,
this allows for ordered cleanup of resources.
upon errors to acquire lock context would still leak,
since the cancel would never be called. since the lock
is never acquired - proactively clear it before returning.
failed queue should be used for retried requests to
avoid cascading the failures into incoming queue, this
would allow for a more fair retry for failed replicas.
Additionally also avoid taking context in queue task
to avoid confusion, simplifies its usage.
There can be situations where replication completed but the
`X-Amz-Replication-Status` metadata update failed such as
when the server returns 503 under high load. This object version will
continue to be picked up by the scanner and replicateObject would perform
no action since the versions match between source and target.
The metadata would never reflect that replication was successful
without this fix, leading to repeated re-queuing.
This commit enhances the docs about IAM encryption.
It adds a quick-start section that explains how to
get started quickly with `MINIO_KMS_SECRET_KEY`
instead of setting up KES.
It also removes the startup message that gets printed
when the server migrates IAM data to plaintext.
We will point this out in the release notes.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
OpenID connect generated service accounts do not work
properly after console logout, since the parentUser state
is lost - instead use sub+iss claims for parentUser, according
to OIDC spec both the claims provide the necessary stability
across logins etc.
Currently, only credentials could be updated with
`mc admin bucket remote edit`.
Allow updating synchronous replication flag, path,
bandwidth and healthcheck duration on buckets, and
a flag to disable proxying in active-active replication.
* lock: Always cancel the returned Get(R)Lock context
There is a leak with cancel created inside the locking mechanism. The
cancel purpose was to cancel operations such erasure get/put that are
holding non-refreshable locks.
This PR will ensure the created context.Cancel is passed to the unlock
API so it will cleanup and avoid leaks.
* locks: Avoid returning nil cancel in local lockers
Since there is no Refresh mechanism in the local locking mechanism, we
do not generate a new context or cancel. Currently, a nil cancel
function is returned but this can cause a crash. Return a dummy function
instead.
https://github.com/minio/console takes over the functionality for the
future object browser development
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
LDAP DN should be used when allowing setting service accounts
for LDAP users instead of just simple user,
Bonus root owner should be allowed full access
to all service account APIs.
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Part ETags are not available after multipart finalizes, removing this
check as not useful.
Signed-off-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This commit reverts a change that added support for
parsing base64-encoded keys set via `MINIO_KMS_MASTER_KEY`.
The env. variable `MINIO_KMS_MASTER_KEY` is deprecated and
should ONLY support parsing existing keys - not the new format.
Any new deployment should use `MINIO_KMS_SECRET_KEY`. The legacy
env. variable `MINIO_KMS_MASTER_KEY` will be removed at some point
in time.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
avoid re-read of xl.meta instead just use
the success criteria from PutObjectPart()
and check the ETag matches per Part, if
they match then the parts have been
successfully restored as is.
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Bonus fix fallback to decrypt previously
encrypted content as well using older master
key ciphertext format.
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
just like replication workers, allow failed replication
workers to be configurable in situations like DR failures
etc to catch up on replication sooner when DR is back
online.
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
peer nodes would not update if policy is unset on
a user, until policies reload every 5minutes. Make
sure to reload the policies properly, if no policy
is found make sure to delete such users and groups
fixes#12074
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
With this change, MinIO's ILM supports transitioning objects to a remote tier.
This change includes support for Azure Blob Storage, AWS S3 compatible object
storage incl. MinIO and Google Cloud Storage as remote tier storage backends.
Some new additions include:
- Admin APIs remote tier configuration management
- Simple journal to track remote objects to be 'collected'
This is used by object API handlers which 'mutate' object versions by
overwriting/replacing content (Put/CopyObject) or removing the version
itself (e.g DeleteObjectVersion).
- Rework of previous ILM transition to fit the new model
In the new model, a storage class (a.k.a remote tier) is defined by the
'remote' object storage type (one of s3, azure, GCS), bucket name and a
prefix.
* Fixed bugs, review comments, and more unit-tests
- Leverage inline small object feature
- Migrate legacy objects to the latest object format before transitioning
- Fix restore to particular version if specified
- Extend SharedDataDirCount to handle transitioned and restored objects
- Restore-object should accept version-id for version-suspended bucket (#12091)
- Check if remote tier creds have sufficient permissions
- Bonus minor fixes to existing error messages
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Krishna Srinivas <krishna@minio.io>
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
instead use expect continue timeout, and have
higher response header timeout, the new higher
timeout satisfies worse case scenarios for total
response time on a CreateFile operation.
Also set the "expect" continue header to satisfy
expect continue timeout behavior.
Some clients seem to cause CreateFile body to be
truncated, leading to no errors which instead
fails with ObjectNotFound on a PUT operation,
this change avoids such failures appropriately.
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
allow restrictions on who can access Prometheus
endpoint, additionally add prometheus as part of
diagnostics canned policy.
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This commit changes the config/IAM encryption
process. Instead of encrypting config data
(users, policies etc.) with the root credentials
MinIO now encrypts this data with a KMS - if configured.
Therefore, this PR moves the MinIO-KMS configuration (via
env. variables) to a "top-level" configuration.
The KMS configuration cannot be stored in the config file
since it is used to decrypt the config file in the first
place.
As a consequence, this commit also removes support for
Hashicorp Vault - which has been deprecated anyway.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
* fix: pick valid FileInfo additionally based on dataDir
historically we have always relied on modTime
to be consistent and same, we can now add additional
reference to look for the same dataDir value.
A dataDir is the same for an object at a given point in
time for a given version, let's say a `null` version
is overwritten in quorum we do not by mistake pick
up the fileInfo's incorrectly.
* make sure to not preserve fi.Data
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
InfoServiceAccount admin API does not correctly calculate the policy for
a given service account in case if the policy is implied. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
avoid potential for duplicates under multi-pool
setup, additionally also make sure CompleteMultipart
is using a more optimal API for uploadID lookup
and never delete the object there is a potential
to create a delete marker during complete multipart.
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This is an optimization by reducing one extra system call,
and many network operations. This reduction should increase
the performance for small file workloads.
When an error is reported it is ignored and zipping continues with the next object.
However, if there is an error it will write a response to `writeWebErrorResponse(w, err)`, but responses are still being built.
Fixes#12082
Bonus: Exclude common compressed image types.
Thanks to @Alevsk for noticing this nuanced behavior
change between releases from 03-04 to 03-20, make sure
that we handle the legacy path removal as well.
also make sure to close the channel on the producer
side, not in a separate go-routine, this can lead
to races between a writer and a closer.
fixes#12073
This is an optimization to save IOPS. The replication
failures will be re-queued once more to re-attempt
replication. If it still does not succeed, the replication
status is set as `FAILED` and will be caught up on
scanner cycle.
For InfoServiceAccount API, calculating the policy before showing it to
the user was not correctly done (only UX issue, not a security issue)
This commit fixes it.
policy might have an associated mapping with an expired
user key, do not return an error during DeletePolicy
for such situations - proceed normally as its an
expected situation.
This commit introduces a new package `pkg/kms`.
It contains basic types and functions to interact
with various KMS implementations.
This commit also moves KMS-related code from `cmd/crypto`
to `pkg/kms`. Now, it is possible to implement a KMS-based
config data encryption in the `pkg/config` package.
This commit introduces a new package `pkg/fips`
that bundles functionality to handle and configure
cryptographic protocols in case of FIPS 140.
If it is compiled with `--tags=fips` it assumes
that a FIPS 140-2 cryptographic module is used
to implement all FIPS compliant cryptographic
primitives - like AES, SHA-256, ...
In "FIPS mode" it excludes all non-FIPS compliant
cryptographic primitives from the protocol parameters.
- Add 32-bit checksum (32 LSB part of xxhash64) of the serialized metadata.
This will ensure that we always reject corrupted metadata.
- Add automatic repair of inline data, so the data structure can be used.
If data was corrupted, we remove all unreadable entries to ensure that operations
can succeed on the object. Since higher layers add bitrot checks this is not a big problem.
Cannot downgrade to v1.1 metadata, but since that isn't released, no need for a major bump.
only in case of S3 gateway we have a case where we
need to allow for SSE-S3 headers as passthrough,
If SSE-C headers are passed then they are rejected
if KMS is not configured.
This code is necessary for `mc admin update` command
to work with fips compiled binaries, with fips tags
the releaseInfo will automatically point to fips
specific binaries.
This commit fixes a bug in the put-part
implementation. The SSE headers should be
set as specified by AWS - See:
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_UploadPart.html
Now, the MinIO server should set SSE-C headers,
like `x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-algorithm`.
Fixes#11991
locks can get relinquished when Read() sees io.EOF
leading to prematurely closing of the readers
concurrent writes on the same object can have
undesired consequences here when these locks
are relinquished.
EOF may be sent along with data so queue it up and
return it when the buffer is empty.
Also, when reading data without direct io don't add a buffer
that only results in extra memcopy.
Multiple disks from the same set would be writing concurrently.
```
WARNING: DATA RACE
Write at 0x00c002100ce0 by goroutine 166:
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.(*erasureSets).connectDisks.func1()
d:/minio/minio/cmd/erasure-sets.go:254 +0x82f
Previous write at 0x00c002100ce0 by goroutine 129:
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.(*erasureSets).connectDisks.func1()
d:/minio/minio/cmd/erasure-sets.go:254 +0x82f
Goroutine 166 (running) created at:
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.(*erasureSets).connectDisks()
d:/minio/minio/cmd/erasure-sets.go:210 +0x324
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.(*erasureSets).monitorAndConnectEndpoints()
d:/minio/minio/cmd/erasure-sets.go:288 +0x244
Goroutine 129 (finished) created at:
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.(*erasureSets).connectDisks()
d:/minio/minio/cmd/erasure-sets.go:210 +0x324
github.com/minio/minio/cmd.(*erasureSets).monitorAndConnectEndpoints()
d:/minio/minio/cmd/erasure-sets.go:288 +0x244
```
This commit adds a self-test for all bitrot algorithms:
- SHA-256
- BLAKE2b
- HighwayHash
The self-test computes an incremental checksum of pseudo-random
messages. If a bitrot algorithm implementation stops working on
some CPU architecture or with a certain Go version this self-test
will prevent the server from starting and silently corrupting data.
For additional context see: minio/highwayhash#19
Metrics calculation was accumulating inital usage across all nodes
rather than using initial usage only once.
Also fixing:
- bug where all peer traffic was going to the same node.
- reset counters when replication status changes from
PENDING -> FAILED
This PR fixes
- close leaking bandwidth report channel leakage
- remove the closer requirement for bandwidth monitor
instead if Read() fails remember the error and return
error for all subsequent reads.
- use locking for usage-cache.bin updates, with inline
data we cannot afford to have concurrent writes to
usage-cache.bin corrupting xl.meta
implementation in #11949 only catered from single
node, but we need cluster metrics by capturing
from all peers. introduce bucket stats API that
will be used for capturing in-line bucket usage
as well eventually
Current implementation heavily relies on readAllFileInfo
but with the advent of xl.meta inlined with data, we cannot
easily avoid reading data when we are only interested is
updating metadata, this leads to invariably write
amplification during metadata updates, repeatedly reading
data when we are only interested in updating metadata.
This PR ensures that we implement a metadata only update
API at storage layer, that handles updates to metadata alone
for any given version - given the version is valid and
present.
This helps reduce the chattiness for following calls..
- PutObjectTags
- DeleteObjectTags
- PutObjectLegalHold
- PutObjectRetention
- ReplicateObject (updates metadata on replication status)
- collect real time replication metrics for prometheus.
- add pending_count, failed_count metric for total pending/failed replication operations.
- add API to get replication metrics
- add MRF worker to handle spill-over replication operations
- multiple issues found with replication
- fixes an issue when client sends a bucket
name with `/` at the end from SetRemoteTarget
API call make sure to trim the bucket name to
avoid any extra `/`.
- hold write locks in GetObjectNInfo during replication
to ensure that object version stack is not overwritten
while reading the content.
- add additional protection during WriteMetadata() to
ensure that we always write a valid FileInfo{} and avoid
ever writing empty FileInfo{} to the lowest layers.
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
current master breaks this important requirement
we need to preserve legacyXLv1 format, this is simply
ignored and overwritten causing a myriad of issues
by leaving stale files on the namespace etc.
for now lets still use the two-phase approach of
writing to `tmp` and then renaming the content to
the actual namespace.
versionID is the one that needs to be preserved and as
well as overwritten in case of replication, transition
etc - dataDir is an ephemeral entity that changes
during overwrites - make sure that versionID is used
to save the object content.
this would break things if you are already running
the latest master, please wipe your current content
and re-do your setup after this change.
upgrading from 2yr old releases is expected to work,
the issue was we were missing checksum info to be
passed down to newBitrotReader() for whole bitrot
calculation
Ensure that we don't use potentially broken algorithms for critical functions, whether it be a runtime problem or implementation problem for a specific platform.
It is inefficient to decide to heal an object before checking its
lifecycle for expiration or transition. This commit will just reverse
the order of action: evaluate lifecycle and heal only if asked and
lifecycle resulted a NoneAction.
replication didn't work as expected when deletion of
delete markers was requested in DeleteMultipleObjects
API, this is due to incorrect lookup elements being
used to look for delete markers.
This allows us to speed up or slow down sleeps
between multiple scanner cycles, helps in testing
as well as some deployments might want to run
scanner more frequently.
This change is also dynamic can be applied on
a running cluster, subsequent cycles pickup
the newly set value.
using Lstat() is causing tiny memory allocations,
that are usually wasted and never used, instead
we can simply uses Access() call that does 0
memory allocations.
This feature brings in support for auto extraction
of objects onto MinIO's namespace from an incoming
tar gzipped stream, the only expected metadata sent
by the client is to set `snowball-auto-extract`.
All the contents from the tar stream are saved as
folders and objects on the namespace.
fixes#8715
service accounts were not inheriting parent policies
anymore due to refactors in the PolicyDBGet() from
the latest release, fix this behavior properly.
The local node name is heavily used in tracing, create a new global
variable to store it. Multiple goroutines can access it since it won't be
changed later.
In #11888 we observe a lot of running, WalkDir calls.
There doesn't appear to be any listerners for these calls, so they should be aborted.
Ensure that WalkDir aborts when upstream cancels the request.
Fixes#11888
The background healing can return NoSuchUpload error, the reason is that
healing code can return errFileNotFound with three parameters. Simplify
the code by returning exact errUploadNotFound error in multipart code.
Also ensure that a typed error is always returned whatever the number of
parameters because it is better than showing internal error.
For large objects taking more than '3 minutes' response
times in a single PUT operation can timeout prematurely
as 'ResponseHeader' timeout hits for 3 minutes. Avoid
this by keeping the connection active during CreateFile
phase.
baseDirFromPrefix(prefix) for object names without
parent directory incorrectly uses empty path, leading
to long listing at various paths that are not useful
for healing - avoid this listing completely if "baseDir"
returns empty simple use the "prefix" as is.
this improves startup performance significantly
For large objects taking more than '3 minutes' response
times in a single PUT operation can timeout prematurely
as 'ResponseHeader' timeout hits for 3 minutes. Avoid
this by keeping the connection active during CreateFile
phase.
some SDKs might incorrectly send duplicate
entries for keys such as "conditions", Go
stdlib unmarshal for JSON does not support
duplicate keys - instead skips the first
duplicate and only preserves the last entry.
This can lead to issues where a policy JSON
while being valid might not properly apply
the required conditions, allowing situations
where POST policy JSON would end up allowing
uploads to unauthorized buckets and paths.
This PR fixes this properly.
This commit adds a `MarshalText` implementation
to the `crypto.Context` type.
The `MarshalText` implementation replaces the
`WriteTo` and `AppendTo` implementation.
It is slightly slower than the `AppendTo` implementation
```
goos: darwin
goarch: arm64
pkg: github.com/minio/minio/cmd/crypto
BenchmarkContext_AppendTo/0-elems-8 381475698 2.892 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkContext_AppendTo/1-elems-8 17945088 67.54 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkContext_AppendTo/3-elems-8 5431770 221.2 ns/op 72 B/op 2 allocs/op
BenchmarkContext_AppendTo/4-elems-8 3430684 346.7 ns/op 88 B/op 2 allocs/op
```
vs.
```
BenchmarkContext/0-elems-8 135819834 8.658 ns/op 2 B/op 1 allocs/op
BenchmarkContext/1-elems-8 13326243 89.20 ns/op 128 B/op 1 allocs/op
BenchmarkContext/3-elems-8 4935301 243.1 ns/op 200 B/op 3 allocs/op
BenchmarkContext/4-elems-8 2792142 428.2 ns/op 504 B/op 4 allocs/op
goos: darwin
```
However, the `AppendTo` benchmark used a pre-allocated buffer. While
this improves its performance it does not match the actual usage of
`crypto.Context` which is passed to a `KMS` and always encoded into
a newly allocated buffer.
Therefore, this change seems acceptable since it should not impact the
actual performance but reduces the overall code for Context marshaling.
When an object is removed, its parent directory is inspected to check if
it is empty to remove if that is the case.
However, we can use os.Remove() directly since it is only able to remove
a file or an empty directory.
RenameData renames xl.meta and data dir and removes the parent directory
if empty, however, there is a duplicate check for empty dir, since the
parent dir of xl.meta is always the same as the data-dir.
on freshReads if drive returns errInvalidArgument, we
should simply turn-off DirectIO and read normally, there
are situations in k8s like environments where the drives
behave sporadically in a single deployment and may not
have been implemented properly to handle O_DIRECT for
reads.
This PR adds deadlines per Write() calls, such
that slow drives are timed-out appropriately and
the overall responsiveness for Writes() is always
up to a predefined threshold providing applications
sustained latency even if one of the drives is slow
to respond.
MRF was starting to heal when it receives a disk connection event, which
is not good when a node having multiple disks reconnects to the cluster.
Besides, MRF needs Remove healing option to remove stale files.
- write in o_dsync instead of o_direct for smaller
objects to avoid unaligned double Write() situations
that may arise for smaller objects < 128KiB
- avoid fallocate() as its not useful since we do not
use Append() semantics anymore, fallocate is not useful
for streaming I/O we can save on a syscall
- createFile() doesn't need to validate `bucket` name
with a Lstat() call since createFile() is only used
to write at `minioTmpBucket`
- use io.Copy() when writing unAligned writes to allow
usage of ReadFrom() from *os.File providing zero
buffer writes().
```
mc admin info --json
```
provides these details, for now, we shall eventually
expose this at Prometheus level eventually.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This commit fixes a security issue in the signature v4 chunked
reader. Before, the reader returned unverified data to the caller
and would only verify the chunk signature once it has encountered
the end of the chunk payload.
Now, the chunk reader reads the entire chunk into an in-memory buffer,
verifies the signature and then returns data to the caller.
In general, this is a common security problem. We verifying data
streams, the verifier MUST NOT return data to the upper layers / its
callers as long as it has not verified the current data chunk / data
segment:
```
func (r *Reader) Read(buffer []byte) {
if err := r.readNext(r.internalBuffer); err != nil {
return err
}
if err := r.verify(r.internalBuffer); err != nil {
return err
}
copy(buffer, r.internalBuffer)
}
```
For operations that require the object to exist make it possible to
detect if the file isn't found in *any* pool.
This will allow these to return the error early without having to re-check.
Cases where we have applications making request
for `//` in object names make sure that all
are normalized to `/` and all such requests that
are prefixed '/' are removed. To ensure a
consistent view from all operations.
Some deployments have low parity (EC:2), but we really do not need to
save our config data with the same parity configuration.
N/2 would be better to keep MinIO configurations intact when unexpected
a number of drives fail.
This commit disables the Hashicorp Vault
support but provides a way to temp. enable
it via the `MINIO_KMS_VAULT_DEPRECATION=off`
Vault support has been deprecated long ago
and this commit just requires users to take
action if they maintain a Vault integration.
major performance improvements in range GETs to avoid large
read amplification when ranges are tiny and random
```
-------------------
Operation: GET
Operations: 142014 -> 339421
Duration: 4m50s -> 4m56s
* Average: +139.41% (+1177.3 MiB/s) throughput, +139.11% (+658.4) obj/s
* Fastest: +125.24% (+1207.4 MiB/s) throughput, +132.32% (+612.9) obj/s
* 50% Median: +139.06% (+1175.7 MiB/s) throughput, +133.46% (+660.9) obj/s
* Slowest: +203.40% (+1267.9 MiB/s) throughput, +198.59% (+753.5) obj/s
```
TTFB from 10MiB BlockSize
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 81ms, Median: 61ms, Best: 20ms, Worst: 2.056s
```
TTFB from 1MiB BlockSize
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 22ms, Median: 21ms, Best: 8ms, Worst: 91ms
```
Full object reads however do see a slight change which won't be
noticeable in real world, so not doing any comparisons
TTFB still had improvements with full object reads with 1MiB
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 68ms, Median: 35ms, Best: 11ms, Worst: 1.16s
```
v/s
TTFB with 10MiB
```
* First Access TTFB: Avg: 388ms, Median: 98ms, Best: 20ms, Worst: 4.156s
```
This change should affect all new uploads, previous uploads should
continue to work with business as usual. But dramatic improvements can
be seen with these changes.
A group can have multiple policies, a user subscribed to readwrite &
diagnostics can perform S3 operations & admin operations as well.
However, the current code only returns one policy for one group.
This commit disables SHA-3 for OpenID when building a
FIPS-140 2 compatible binary. While SHA-3 is a
crypto. hash function accepted by NIST there is no
FIPS-140 2 compliant implementation available when
using the boringcrypto Go branch.
Therefore, SHA-3 must not be used when building
a FIPS-140 2 binary.
* 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.
currently when one of the peer is down, the
drives from that peer are reported as '0/0'
offline instead we should capture/filter the
drives from the peer and populate it appropriately
such that `mc admin info` displays correct info.
This commit adds the `FromContentMD5` function to
parse a client-provided content-md5 as ETag.
Further, it also adds multipart ETag computation
for future needs.
prometheus metrics was using total disks instead
of online disk count, when disks were down, this
PR fixes this and also adds a new metric for
total_disk_count
Creating notification events for replica creation
is not particularly useful to send as the notification
event generated at source already includes replication
completion events.
For applications using replica cluster as failover, avoiding
duplicate notifications for replica event will allow seamless
failover.
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()
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