on unversioned buckets its possible that 0-byte objects
might lose quorum on flaky systems, allow them to be same
as DELETE markers. Since practically speak they have no
content.
Optimize DeleteObject API to avoid extra
GetObjectInfo call on the replicating side.
For receiving side, it is just a regular
DeleteObject call.
Bonus: Fix a corner case where version purged is
absent on target (either due to replication not yet
complete or target version already deleted in a
one-way replication or when replication was disabled).
In such cases, mark version purge complete.
* Reduce allocations
* Add stringsHasPrefixFold which can compare string prefixes, while ignoring case and not allocating.
* Reuse all msgp.Readers
* Reuse metadata buffers when not reading data.
* Make type safe. Make buffer 4K instead of 8.
* Unslice
there is a possibility that slow drives can actually add latency
to the overall call, leading to a large spike in latency.
this can happen if there are other parallel listObjects()
calls to the same drive, in-turn causing each other to sort
of serialize.
this potentially improves performance and makes PutObject()
also non-blocking.
on "unversioned" buckets there are situations
when successive concurrent I/O can lead to
an inconsistent state() with mtime while the
etag might be the same for the object on disk.
in such a scenario it is possible for us to
allow reading of the object since etag matches
and if etag matches we are guaranteed that we
have enough copies the object will be readable
and same.
This PR allows fallback in such scenarios.
fixes an issue under bucket replication could cause
ETags for replicated SSE-S3 single part PUT objects,
to fail as we would attempt a decryption while listing,
or stat() operation.
Removes the bloom filter since it has so limited usability, often gets saturated anyway and adds a bunch of complexity to the scanner.
Also removes a tiny bit of CPU by each write operation.