- remove use of getOnlineDisks() instead rely on fallbackDisks()
when disk return errors like diskNotFound, unformattedDisk
use other fallback disks to list from, instead of paying the
price for checking getOnlineDisks()
- optimize getDiskID() further to avoid large write locks when
looking formatLastCheck time window
This new change allows for a more relaxed fallback for listing
allowing for more tolerance and also eventually gain more
consistency in results even if using '3' disks by default.
When configured in Lookup Bind mode, the server now periodically queries the
LDAP IDP service to find changes to a user's group memberships, and saves this
info to update the access policies for all temporary and service account
credentials belonging to LDAP users.
Add a new goroutine file which has another printing format. We need it
to see how much time each goroutine was blocked. Easier to detect stops.
Co-authored-by: Anis Elleuch <anis@min.io>
- Show notice when `MINIO_IDENTITY_LDAP_STS_EXPIRY` or the
corresponding to the configuration option is used at server startup.
- Once support is removed, the default will be fixed at 1 hour.
- Users may specify expiry directly in the STS API.
- Update docs and help message
- Adds example in ldap.go to configure expiry in STS API.
when TLS is configured using IPs directly
might interfere and not work properly when
the server is configured with TLS certs but
the certs only have domain certs.
Also additionally allow users to specify
a public accessible URL for console to talk
to MinIO i.e `MINIO_SERVER_URL` this would
allow them to use an external ingress domain
to talk to MinIO. This internally fixes few
problems such as presigned URL generation on
the console UI etc.
This needs to be done additionally for any
MinIO deployments that might have a much more
stricter requirement when running in standalone
mode such as FS or standalone erasure code.
This method is used to add expected expiration and transition time
for an object in GET/HEAD Object response headers.
Also fixed bugs in lifecycle.PredictTransitionTime and
getLifecycleTransitionTier in handling current and
non-current versions.
This allows remote bucket admin to identify the origin of transitioned
objects by simply inspecting the object prefixes.
e.g let's take a remote tier TIER-1 pointing to a remote bucket (prefix)
testbucket/testprefix-1. The remote bucket admin can list all transitioned objects
from a MinIO deployment identified by '2e78e906-1c5d-4f94-8689-9df44cafde39' and
source bucket 'mybucket' like so,
```
$ ./mc ls -r minio-tier-target/testbucket/testprefix-1/2e78e906-1c5d-4f94-8689-9df44cafde39/mybucket/
[2021-07-12 17:15:50 PDT] 160B 48/fb/48fbc0e6-3a73-458b-9337-8e722c619ca4
[2021-07-12 16:58:46 PDT] 160B 7d/1c/7d1c96bd-031a-48d4-99ea-b1304e870830
```
In case of non-distributed setup, if the server start command contains a
`--console-address` flag and its value contains a hostname, it is not
getting anonymized.
Fixed by replacing the console host also with `server1`
This commit gathers MRF metrics from
all nodes in a cluster and return it to the caller. This will show information about the
number of objects in the MRF queues
waiting to be healed.
docker-entrypoint.sh will load configuration values from
'config.env' file, this is useful when MinIO is deployed in Kubernetes
environments and want to avoid reading secrets from environment
variables
Signed-off-by: Lenin Alevski <alevsk.8772@gmail.com>
In case of replication healing, we always store completed status in the
object metadata, which is wrong because replication could fail in the
further retries.
Ensure that hostnames / ip addresses are not printed in the subnet
health report. Anonymize them by replacing them with `servern` where `n`
represents the position of the server in the pool.
This is done by building a `host anonymizer` map that maps every
possible value containing the host e.g. host, host:port,
http://host:port, etc to the corresponding anonymized name and using
this map to replace the values at the time of health report generation.
A different logic is used to anonymize host names in the `procinfo`
data, as the host names are part of an ellipses pattern in the process
start command. Here we just replace the prefix/suffix of the ellipses
pattern with their hashes.