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.
- 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.
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
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
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.
This commit fixes the nats TLS tests by generating new certificates
(root CA, server and client) - each valid for 10y. The new certificates
don't have a common name (deprecated by X.509) but SANs instead.
Since Go 1.15 the Go `crypto/x509` package rejects certificates that
only have a common name and no SAN. See: https://golang.org/doc/go1.15#commonname
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
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"
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.
I have built a fuzz test and it crashes heavily in seconds and will OOM shortly after.
It seems like supporting Parquet is basically a completely open way to crash the
server if you can upload a file and run s3 select on it.
Until Parquet is more hardened it is DISABLED by default since hostile
crafted input can easily crash the server.
If you are in a controlled environment where it is safe to assume no hostile
content can be uploaded to your cluster you can safely enable Parquet.
To enable Parquet set the environment variable `MINIO_API_SELECT_PARQUET=on`
while starting the MinIO server.
Furthermore, we guard parquet by recover functions.
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.
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.
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().
String x might contain trimming spaces. And it needs to be trimmed. For
example, in csv files, there might be trimming spaces in a field that
ought to meet a query condition that contains the value without
trimming spaces. This applies to both intCast and floatCast functions.
- 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.
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.
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
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.
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
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
Users having endpoints with this format http://url:80 or http://url:443
will face signature mismatch error.
The reason is that S3 spec ignores :80 or :443 port in the endpoint
when calculating the signature, so this PR will just strip them.
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
- 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