- This change switches to a new parquet library
- SelectObjectContent now takes a single lock at the beginning and holds it
during the operation. Previously the operation took a lock every time the
parquet library performed a Seek on the underlying object stream.
- Add basic support for LogicalType annotations for timestamps.
This commit improves the listing of encrypted objects:
- Use `etag.Format` and `etag.Decrypt`
- Detect SSE-S3 single-part objects in a single iteration
- Fix batch size to `250`
- Pass request context to `DecryptAll` to not waste resources
when a client cancels the operation.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
This commit adds two new functions to the
internal `etag` package:
- `ETag.Format`
- `Decrypt`
The `Decrypt` function decrypts an encrypted
ETag using a decryption key. It returns not
encrypted / multipart ETags unmodified.
The `Decrypt` function is mainly used when
handling SSE-S3 encrypted single-part objects.
In particular, the ETag of an SSE-S3 encrypted
single-part object needs to be decrypted since
S3 clients expect that this ETag is equal to the
content MD5.
The `ETag.Format` method also covers SSE ETag handling.
MinIO encrypts all ETags of SSE single part objects.
However, only the ETag of SSE-S3 encrypted single part
objects needs to be decrypted.
The ETag of an SSE-C or SSE-KMS single part object
does not correspond to its content MD5 and can be
a random value.
The `ETag.Format` function formats an ETag such that
it is an AWS S3 compliant ETag. In particular, it
returns non-encrypted ETags (single / multipart)
unmodified. However, for encrypted ETags it returns
the trailing 16 bytes as ETag. For encrypted ETags
the last 16 bytes will be a random value.
The main purpose of `Format` is to format ETags
such that clients accept them as well-formed AWS S3
ETags.
It differs from the `String` method since `String`
will return string representations for encrypted
ETags that are not AWS S3 compliant.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
This commit adds support for encrypted KES
client private keys.
Now, it is possible to encrypt the KES client
private key (`MINIO_KMS_KES_KEY_FILE`) with
a password.
For example, KES CLI already supports the
creation of encrypted private keys:
```
kes identity new --encrypt --key client.key --cert client.crt MinIO
```
To decrypt an encrypted private key, the password
needs to be provided:
```
MINIO_KMS_KES_KEY_PASSWORD=<password>
```
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
This commit fixes a subtle bug in the ETag
`IsEncrypted` implementation.
An encrypted ETag may contain random bytes,
i.e. some randomness used for encryption.
This random value can contain a '-' byte
simple due to being randomly generated.
Before, the `IsEncrypted` implementation
incorrectly assumed that an encrypted ETag
cannot contain a '-' since it would be a
multipart ETag. Multipart ETags have a
16 byte value followed by a '-' and the part number.
For example:
```
059ba80b807c3c776fb3bcf3f33e11ae-2
```
However, the following encrypted ETag
```
20000f00db2d90a7b40782d4cff2b41a7799fc1e7ead25972db65150118dfbe2ba76a3c002da28f85c840cd2001a28a9
```
also contains a '-' byte but is not a multipart ETag.
This commit fixes the `IsEncrypted` implementation
simply by checking whether the ETag is at least 32
bytes long. A valid multipart ETag is never 32 bytes
long since a part number must be <= 10000.
However, an encrypted ETag must be at least 32 bytes
long. It contains the encrypted ETag bytes (16 bytes)
and the authentication tag added by the AEAD cipher (again
16 bytes).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
This commit adds support for bulk ETag
decryption for SSE-S3 encrypted objects.
If KES supports a bulk decryption API, then
MinIO will check whether its policy grants
access to this API. If so, MinIO will use
a bulk API call instead of sending encrypted
ETags serially to KES.
Note that MinIO will not use the KES bulk API
if its client certificate is an admin identity.
MinIO will process object listings in batches.
A batch has a configurable size that can be set
via `MINIO_KMS_KES_BULK_API_BATCH_SIZE=N`.
It defaults to `500`.
This env. variable is experimental and may be
renamed / removed in the future.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
In riscv64, the `syscall.Uname` function will return a uint8 slice.
func main() {
var buf syscall.Utsname
fmt.Printf("Buffer Type: %T\n", buf.Release)
}
output:
Buffer Type: [65]uint8
This is tested in the Arch Linux RISC-V 64 QEMU environment.
Signed-off-by: Avimitin <avimitin@gmail.com>
Fix `panic: "POST /minio/peer/v21/signalservice?signal=2": sync: WaitGroup is reused before previous Wait has returned`
Log entries already on the channel would cause `logEntry` to increment the
waitgroup when sending messages, after Cancel has been called.
Instead of tracking every single message, just check the send goroutine. Faster
and safe, since it will not decrement until the channel is closed.
Regression from #14289
avoids creating new transport for each `isServerResolvable`
request, instead re-use the available global transport and do
not try to forcibly close connections to avoid TIME_WAIT
build upon large clusters.
Never use httpClient.CloseIdleConnections() since that can have
a drastic effect on existing connections on the transport pool.
Remove it everywhere.
PR introduced in #13819 was incorrect and was not
handling the situation where a buffer is full can
cause incessant amount of logs that would keep the
logger webhook overrun by the requests.
To avoid this only log failures to console logger
instead of all targets as it can cause self reference,
leading to an infinite loop.
This PR simply adds a warning message when it detects older kernel
versions and warn's them about potential performance issues on this
kernel.
The issue can be seen only with parallel I/O across all drives
on denser setups such as 90 drives or 45 drives per server configurations.
The main goal of this PR is to solve the situation where disks stop
responding to operations. This generally causes an FD build-up and
eventually will crash the server.
This adds detection of hung disks, where calls on disk get stuck.
We add functionality to `xlStorageDiskIDCheck` where it keeps
track of the number of concurrent requests on a given disk.
A total number of 100 operations are allowed. If this limit is reached
we will block (but not reject) new requests, but we will monitor the
state of the disk.
If no requests have been completed or updated within a 15-second
window, we mark the disk as offline. Requests that are blocked will be
unblocked and return an error as "faulty disk".
New requests will be rejected until the disk is marked OK again.
Once a disk has been marked faulty, a check will run every 5 seconds that
will attempt to write and read back a file. As long as this fails the disk will
remain faulty.
To prevent lots of long-running requests to mark the disk faulty we
implement a callback feature that allows updating the status as parts
of these operations are running.
We add a reader and writer wrapper that will update the status of each
successful read/write operation. This should allow fine enough granularity
that a slow, but still operational disk will not reach 15 seconds where
50 operations have not progressed.
Note that errors themselves are not enough to mark a disk faulty.
A nil (or io.EOF) error will mark a disk as "good".
* Make concurrent disk setting configurable via `_MINIO_DISK_MAX_CONCURRENT`.
* de-couple IsOnline() from disk health tracker
The purpose of IsOnline() is to ensure that we
reconnect the drive only when the "drive" was
- disconnected from network we need to validate
if the drive is "correct" and is the same drive
which belongs to this server.
- drive was replaced we have to format it - we
support hot swapping of the drives.
IsOnline() is not meant for taking the drive offline
when it is hung, it is not useful we can let the
drive be online instead "return" errors for relevant
calls.
* return errFaultyDisk for DiskInfo() call
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Possible future Improvements:
* Unify the REST server and local xlStorageDiskIDCheck. This would also improve stats significantly.
* Allow reads/writes to be aborted by the context.
* Add usage stats, concurrent count, blocked operations, etc.
This commit removes some duplicate code that
converts KES API errors.
This code was added since KES `0.18.0` changed
some exported API errors. However, the KES SDK
handles this error conversion itself.
Therefore, it is not necessary to duplicate this
behavior in MinIO.
See: 21555fa624/error.go (L94)
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
- Updating KES dependency to v.0.18.0
- Fixing incompatibility issue when checking for errors during KES key creation
Signed-off-by: Lenin Alevski <alevsk.8772@gmail.com>
fixes a regression introduced in #14269 that refactored
the notification registration logic, all the amqp targets
however online will not be available for use anymore.
fixes#14451
Up until now `InitializeProvider` method of `Config` struct was
implemented on a value receiver which is why changes on `provider`
field where never reflected to method callers. In order to fix this
issue, the method was implemented on a pointer receiver.
This is a regression from #14037, distributed setups
with MQTT was not working anymore. According to MQTT
spec it is expected this is unique per server.
We shall proceed to use unix nano timestamp hex
value instead here.
Currently, when applying any dynamic config, the system reloads and
re-applies the config of all the dynamic sub-systems.
This PR refactors the code in such a way that changing config of a given
dynamic sub-system will work on only that sub-system.
The `LookupConfig` code was not using `GetWithDefault`, because of which
some of the config values were being returned as empty string, and calls
like `strconv.Atoi` and `time.ParseDuration` on these were failing.
Enabled with `mc admin config set alias/ api gzip_objects=on`
Standard filtering applies (1K response minimum, not compressed content
type, not range request, gzip accepted by client).
When setting a config of a particular sub-system, validate the existing
config and notification targets of only that sub-system, so that
existing errors related to one sub-system (e.g. notification target
offline) do not result in errors for other sub-systems.
This change allows the MinIO server to lookup users in different directory
sub-trees by allowing specification of multiple search bases separated by
semicolons.