This PR adds a WebSocket grid feature that allows servers to communicate via
a single two-way connection.
There are two request types:
* Single requests, which are `[]byte => ([]byte, error)`. This is for efficient small
roundtrips with small payloads.
* Streaming requests which are `[]byte, chan []byte => chan []byte (and error)`,
which allows for different combinations of full two-way streams with an initial payload.
Only a single stream is created between two machines - and there is, as such, no
server/client relation since both sides can initiate and handle requests. Which server
initiates the request is decided deterministically on the server names.
Requests are made through a mux client and server, which handles message
passing, congestion, cancelation, timeouts, etc.
If a connection is lost, all requests are canceled, and the calling server will try
to reconnect. Registered handlers can operate directly on byte
slices or use a higher-level generics abstraction.
There is no versioning of handlers/clients, and incompatible changes should
be handled by adding new handlers.
The request path can be changed to a new one for any protocol changes.
First, all servers create a "Manager." The manager must know its address
as well as all remote addresses. This will manage all connections.
To get a connection to any remote, ask the manager to provide it given
the remote address using.
```
func (m *Manager) Connection(host string) *Connection
```
All serverside handlers must also be registered on the manager. This will
make sure that all incoming requests are served. The number of in-flight
requests and responses must also be given for streaming requests.
The "Connection" returned manages the mux-clients. Requests issued
to the connection will be sent to the remote.
* `func (c *Connection) Request(ctx context.Context, h HandlerID, req []byte) ([]byte, error)`
performs a single request and returns the result. Any deadline provided on the request is
forwarded to the server, and canceling the context will make the function return at once.
* `func (c *Connection) NewStream(ctx context.Context, h HandlerID, payload []byte) (st *Stream, err error)`
will initiate a remote call and send the initial payload.
```Go
// A Stream is a two-way stream.
// All responses *must* be read by the caller.
// If the call is canceled through the context,
//The appropriate error will be returned.
type Stream struct {
// Responses from the remote server.
// Channel will be closed after an error or when the remote closes.
// All responses *must* be read by the caller until either an error is returned or the channel is closed.
// Canceling the context will cause the context cancellation error to be returned.
Responses <-chan Response
// Requests sent to the server.
// If the handler is defined with 0 incoming capacity this will be nil.
// Channel *must* be closed to signal the end of the stream.
// If the request context is canceled, the stream will no longer process requests.
Requests chan<- []byte
}
type Response struct {
Msg []byte
Err error
}
```
There are generic versions of the server/client handlers that allow the use of type
safe implementations for data types that support msgpack marshal/unmarshal.
Since `addCustomerHeaders` middleware was after the `httpTracer`
middleware, the request ID was not set in the http tracing context. By
reordering these middleware functions, the request ID header becomes
available. We also avoid setting the tracing context key again in
`newContext`.
Bonus: All middleware functions are renamed with a "Middleware" suffix
to avoid confusion with http Handler functions.
- combine similar looking functionalities into single
handlers, and remove unnecessary proxying of the
requests at handler layer.
- remove bucket forwarding handler as part of default setup
add it only if bucket federation is enabled.
Improvements observed for 1kiB object reads.
```
-------------------
Operation: GET
Operations: 4538555 -> 4595804
* Average: +1.26% (+0.2 MiB/s) throughput, +1.26% (+190.2) obj/s
* Fastest: +4.67% (+0.7 MiB/s) throughput, +4.67% (+739.8) obj/s
* 50% Median: +1.15% (+0.2 MiB/s) throughput, +1.15% (+173.9) obj/s
```
This feature also changes the default port where
the browser is running, now the port has moved
to 9001 and it can be configured with
```
--console-address ":9001"
```
This is to ensure that there are no projects
that try to import `minio/minio/pkg` into
their own repo. Any such common packages should
go to `https://github.com/minio/pkg`
https://github.com/minio/console takes over the functionality for the
future object browser development
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
This commit refactors the code in `cmd/crypto`
and separates SSE-S3, SSE-C and SSE-KMS.
This commit should not cause any behavior change
except for:
- `IsRequested(http.Header)`
which now returns the requested type {SSE-C, SSE-S3,
SSE-KMS} and does not consider SSE-C copy headers.
However, SSE-C copy headers alone are anyway not valid.
additionally also configure http2 healthcheck
values to quickly detect unstable connections
and let them timeout.
also use single transport for proxying requests
- Implement a new xl.json 2.0.0 format to support,
this moves the entire marshaling logic to POSIX
layer, top layer always consumes a common FileInfo
construct which simplifies the metadata reads.
- Implement list object versions
- Migrate to siphash from crchash for new deployments
for object placements.
Fixes#2111
- adding oauth support to MinIO browser (#8400) by @kanagaraj
- supports multi-line get/set/del for all config fields
- add support for comments, allow toggle
- add extensive validation of config before saving
- support MinIO browser to support proper claims, using STS tokens
- env support for all config parameters, legacy envs are also
supported with all documentation now pointing to latest ENVs
- preserve accessKey/secretKey from FS mode setups
- add history support implements three APIs
- ClearHistory
- RestoreHistory
- ListHistory
- add help command support for each config parameters
- all the bug fixes after migration to KV, and other bug
fixes encountered during testing.
This commit fixes a privilege escalation issue against
the S3 and web handlers. An authenticated IAM user
can:
- Read from or write to the internal '.minio.sys'
bucket by simply sending a properly signed
S3 GET or PUT request. Further, the user can
- Read from or write to the internal '.minio.sys'
bucket using the 'Upload'/'Download'/'DownloadZIP'
API by sending a "browser" request authenticated
with its JWT token.
guessIsRPCReq() considers all POST requests as RPC but doesn't
check if this is an object operation API or not, which is actually
confusing bucket forwarder handler when it receives a new multipart
upload API which is a POST http request.
Due to this bug, users having a federated setup are not able to
upload a multipart object using an endpoint which doesn't actually
contain the specified bucket that will store the object.
Hence this commit will fix the described issue.
This commit moves the check that SSE-C requests
must be made over TLS into a generic HTTP handler.
Since the HTTP server uses custom TCP connection handling
it is not possible to use `http.Request.TLS` to check
for TLS connections. So using `globalIsSSL` is the only
option to detect whether the request is made over TLS.
By extracting this check into a separate handler it's possible
to refactor other parts of the SSE handling code further.
Add support for sse-s3 encryption with vault as KMS.
Also refactoring code to make use of headers and functions defined in
crypto package and clean up duplicated code.
Added support for new RPC support using HTTP POST. RPC's
arguments and reply are Gob encoded and sent as HTTP
request/response body.
This patch also removes Go RPC based implementation.
This chnage replaces the current SSE-C key derivation scheme. The 'old'
scheme derives an unique object encryption key from the client provided key.
This key derivation was not invertible. That means that a client cannot change
its key without changing the object encryption key.
AWS S3 allows users to update there SSE-C keys by executing a SSE-C COPY with
source == destination. AWS probably updates just the metadata (which is a very
cheap operation). The old key derivation scheme would require a complete copy
of the object because the minio server would not be able to derive the same
object encryption key from a different client provided key (without breaking
the crypto. hash function).
This change makes the key derivation invertible.
This change adds server-side-encryption support for HEAD, GET and PUT
operations. This PR only addresses single-part PUTs and GETs without
HTTP ranges.
Further this change adds the concept of reserved object metadata which is required
to make encrypted objects tamper-proof and provide API compatibility to AWS S3.
This PR adds the following reserved metadata entries:
- X-Minio-Internal-Server-Side-Encryption-Iv ('guarantees' tamper-proof property)
- X-Minio-Internal-Server-Side-Encryption-Kdf (makes Key-MAC computation negotiable in future)
- X-Minio-Internal-Server-Side-Encryption-Key-Mac (provides AWS S3 API compatibility)
The prefix `X-Minio_Internal` specifies an internal metadata entry which must not
send to clients. All client requests containing a metadata key starting with `X-Minio-Internal`
must also rejected. This is implemented by a generic-handler.
This PR implements SSE-C separated from client-side-encryption (CSE). This cannot decrypt
server-side-encrypted objects on the client-side. However, clients can encrypted the same object
with CSE and SSE-C.
This PR does not address:
- SSE-C Copy and Copy part
- SSE-C GET with HTTP ranges
- SSE-C multipart PUT
- SSE-C Gateway
Each point must be addressed in a separate PR.
Added to vendor dir:
- x/crypto/chacha20poly1305
- x/crypto/poly1305
- github.com/minio/sio
All `net/rpc` requests go to `/minio`, so the existing
generic handler for reserved bucket check would essentially
erroneously send errors leading to distributed setups to
wait infinitely.
For `net/rpc` requests alone we should skip this check and
allow resource bucket names to be from `/minio` .
S3 only allows http headers with a size of 8 KB and user-defined metadata
with a size of 2 KB. This change adds a new API error and returns this
error to clients which sends to large http requests.
Fixes#4634
Make sure to skip reserved bucket names in `ListBuckets()`
current code didn't skip this properly and also generalize
this behavior for both XL and FS.