This is to fix a situation where an object name incorrectly
is sent with '//' in its path heirarchy, we should reject
such object names because they may be hashed to a set where
the object might not originally belong because, this can
cause situations where once object is uploaded we cannot
delete it anymore.
Fixes#8873
This commit fixes typos in the displayed server info
w.r.t. the KMS and removes the update status.
For more information about why the update status
is removed see: PR #8943
This commit removes the `Update` functionality
from the admin API. While this is technically
a breaking change I think this will not cause
any harm because:
- The KMS admin API is not complete, yet.
At the moment only the status can be fetched.
- The `mc` integration hasn't been merged yet.
So no `mc` client could have used this API
in the past.
The `Update`/`Rewrap` status is not useful anymore.
It provided a way to migrate from one master key version
to another. However, KES does not support the concept of
key versions. Instead, key migration should be implemented
as migration from one master key to another.
Basically, the `Update` functionality has been implemented just
for Vault.
- pkg/bucket/encryption provides support for handling bucket
encryption configuration
- changes under cmd/ provide support for AES256 algorithm only
Co-Authored-By: Poorna <poornas@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This commit updates the KMS getting started guide
and replaces the legacy MinIO<-->Vault setup with a
MinIO<-->KES<-->Vault setup.
Therefore, add some architecture ASCII diagrams and
provide a step-by-step guide to setup Vault, KES and
MinIO such that MinIO can encrypt objects with KES +
Vault.
The legacy Vault guide has been moved to `./vault-legacy.md`.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
XL crawling wrongly returns a zero buckets count when
there are no objects uploaded in the server yet. The reason is
data of the crawler of posix returns invalid result when all
disks has zero objects.
A simple fix is to always pick the crawling result of the first
disk but choose over the result of the disk which has the most
objects in it.
looks like 1024 buffer size is not enough in
all situations, use 8192 instead which
can satisfy all the rare situations that
may arise in base64 decoding.
multi-delete API failed with write quorum errors
under following situations
- list of files requested for delete doesn't exist
anymore can lead to quorum errors and failure
- due to usage of query param for paths, for really
long paths MinIO server rejects these requests as
malformed as unexpected.
This was reproduced with warp
The server info handler makes a http connection to other
nodes to check if they are up but does not load the custom
CAs in ~/.minio/certs/CAs.
This commit fix it.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
JWT parsing is simplified by using a custom claim
data structure such as MapClaims{}, also writes
a custom Unmarshaller for faster unmarshalling.
- Avoid as much reflections as possible
- Provide the right types for functions as much
as possible
- Avoid strings.Join, strings.Split to reduce
allocations, rely on indexes directly.
For 'snapshot' type profiles, record a 'before' profile that can be used
as `go tool pprof -base=before ...` to compare before and after.
"Before" profiles are included in the zipped package.
[`runtime.MemProfileRate`](https://golang.org/pkg/runtime/#pkg-variables)
should not be updated while the application is running, so we set it at startup.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
On every restart of the server, usage was being
calculated which is not useful instead wait for
sufficient time to start the crawling routine.
This PR also avoids lots of double allocations
through strings, optimizes usage of string builders
and also avoids crawling through symbolic links.
Fixes#8844