This commit fixes a DoS vulnerability in the
request authentication. The root cause is an 'unlimited'
read-into-RAM from the request body.
Since this read happens before the request authentication
is verified the vulnerability can be exploit without any
access privileges.
This commit limits the size of the request body to 3 MB.
This is about the same size as AWS. The limit seems to be
between 1.6 and 3.2 MB - depending on the AWS machine which
is handling the request.
- remove old bucket policy handling
- add new policy handling
- add new policy handling unit tests
This patch brings support to bucket policy to have more control not
limiting to anonymous. Bucket owner controls to allow/deny any rest
API.
For example server side encryption can be controlled by allowing
PUT/GET objects with encryptions including bucket owner.
This PR adds disk based edge caching support for minio server.
Cache settings can be configured in config.json to take list of disk drives,
cache expiry in days and file patterns to exclude from cache or via environment
variables MINIO_CACHE_DRIVES, MINIO_CACHE_EXCLUDE and MINIO_CACHE_EXPIRY
Design assumes that Atime support is enabled and the list of cache drives is
fixed.
- Objects are cached on both GET and PUT/POST operations.
- Expiry is used as hint to evict older entries from cache, or if 80% of cache
capacity is filled.
- When object storage backend is down, GET, LIST and HEAD operations fetch
object seamlessly from cache.
Current Limitations
- Bucket policies are not cached, so anonymous operations are not supported in
offline mode.
- Objects are distributed using deterministic hashing among list of cache
drives specified.If one or more drives go offline, or cache drive
configuration is altered - performance could degrade to linear lookup.
Fixes#4026
This is a trival fix to support server level WORM. The feature comes
with an environment variable `MINIO_WORM`.
Usage:
```
$ export MINIO_WORM=on
$ minio server endpoint
```
This PR implements an object layer which
combines input erasure sets of XL layers
into a unified namespace.
This object layer extends the existing
erasure coded implementation, it is assumed
in this design that providing > 16 disks is
a static configuration as well i.e if you started
the setup with 32 disks with 4 sets 8 disks per
pack then you would need to provide 4 sets always.
Some design details and restrictions:
- Objects are distributed using consistent ordering
to a unique erasure coded layer.
- Each pack has its own dsync so locks are synchronized
properly at pack (erasure layer).
- Each pack still has a maximum of 16 disks
requirement, you can start with multiple
such sets statically.
- Static sets set of disks and cannot be
changed, there is no elastic expansion allowed.
- Static sets set of disks and cannot be
changed, there is no elastic removal allowed.
- ListObjects() across sets can be noticeably
slower since List happens on all servers,
and is merged at this sets layer.
Fixes#5465Fixes#5464Fixes#5461Fixes#5460Fixes#5459Fixes#5458Fixes#5460Fixes#5488Fixes#5489Fixes#5497Fixes#5496
This PR brings semver capabilities in our RPC layer to
ensure that we can upgrade the servers in rolling fashion
while keeping I/O in progress. This is only a framework change
the functionality remains the same as such and we do not
have any special API changes for now. But in future when
we bring in API changes we will be able to upgrade servers
without a downtime.
Additional change in this PR is to not abort when serverVersions
mismatch in a distributed cluster, instead wait for the quorum
treat the situation as if the server is down. This allows
for administrator to properly upgrade all the servers in the cluster.
Fixes#5393
in-memory caching cannot be cleanly implemented
without the access to GC which Go doesn't naturally
provide. At times we have seen that object caching
is more of an hindrance rather than a boon for
our use cases.
Removing it completely from our implementation
related to #5160 and #5182
This fix removes logrus package dependency and refactors the console
logging as the only logging mechanism by removing file logging support.
It rearranges the log message format and adds stack trace information
whenever trace information is not available in the error structure.
It also adds `--json` flag support for server logging.
When minio server is started with `--json` flag, all log messages are
displayed in json format, with no start-up and informational log
messages.
Fixes#5265#5220#5197
Save http trace to a file instead of displaying it onto the console.
the environment variable MINIO_HTTP_TRACE will be a filepath instead
of a boolean.
This to handle the scenario where both json and http tracing are
turned on. In that case, both http trace and json output are displayed
on the screen making the json not parsable. Loging this trace onto
a file helps us avoid that scenario.
Fixes#5263
This adds configurable data and parity options on a per object
basis. To use variable parity
- Users can set environment variables to cofigure variable
parity
- Then add header x-amz-storage-class to putobject requests
with relevant storage class values
Fixes#4997
This PR allows 'minio update' to not only shows update banner
but also allows for in-place upgrades.
Updates are done safely by validating the downloaded
sha256 of the binary.
Fixes#4781
When MINIO_TRACE_DIR is provided, create a new log file and store all
HTTP requests + responses data, body are excluded to reduce memory
consumption. MINIO_HTTP_TRACE=1 enables logging. Use non mem
consuming http req/resp recorders, the maximum is about 32k per request.
This logs to STDOUT, body logging is disabled for PutObject PutObjectPart
GetObject.
Previously init multipart upload stores metadata of an object which is
used for complete multipart. This patch makes azure gateway to store
metadata information of init multipart object in azure in the name of
'minio.sys.tmp/multipart/v1/<UPLOAD-ID>/meta.json' and uses this
information on complete multipart.
The default timeout of 30secs is not enough for high latency
environments, change these values to use 15 minutes instead.
With 30secs I/O timeouts seem to be quite common, this leads
to pretty much most SDKs and clients reconnect. This in-turn
causes significant performance problems. On a low latency
interconnect this can be quite challenging to transfer large
amounts of data. Setting this value to 15minutes covers
pretty much all known cases.
This PR was tested with `wondershaper <NIC> 20000 20000` by
limiting the network bandwidth to 20Mbit/sec. Default timeout
caused a significant amount of I/O timeouts, leading to
constant retires from the client. This seems to be more common
with tools like rclone, restic which have high concurrency set
by default. Once the value was fixed to 15minutes i/o timeouts
stopped and client could steadily upload data to the server
even while saturating the network.
Fixes#4670
* Refactor HTTP server to address bugs
* Remove unnecessary goroutine to start multiple TCP listeners.
* HTTP server waits for shutdown to maximum of Server.ShutdownTimeout
than per serverShutdownPoll.
* Handles new connection errors properly.
* Handles read and write timeout properly.
* Handles error on start of HTTP server properly by exiting minio
process.
Fixes#4494#4476 & fixed review comments
Sending envVars along with access and secret
exposes the entire minio server's sensitive
information. This will be an unexpected
situation for all users.
If at all we need to look for things like if
credentials are set through env, we should
only have access to only this information
not the entire set of system envs.
Network: total bytes of incoming and outgoing server's data
by taking advantage of our ConnMux Read/Write wrapping
HTTP: total number of different http verbs passed in http
requests and different status codes passed in http responses.
This is counted in a new http handler.
Avoid passing size = -1 to PutObject API by requiring content-length
header in POST request (as AWS S3 does) and in Upload web handler.
Post handler is modified to completely store multipart file to know
its size before sending it to PutObject().