- PutObjectMetadata()
- PutObjectTags()
- DeleteObjectTags()
- TransitionObject()
- RestoreTransitionObject()
Also improve the behavior of multipart code across
pool locks, hold locks only once per upload ID for
- CompleteMultipartUpload()
- AbortMultipartUpload()
- ListObjectParts() (read-lock)
- GetMultipartInfo() (read-lock)
- PutObjectPart() (read-lock)
This avoids lock attempts across pools for no
reason, this increases O(n) when there are n-pools.
In regular listing, this commit will avoid showing an object when its
latest version has a pending or failed deletion. In replicated setup.
It will also prevent showing older versions in the same case.
without atomic load() it is possible that for
a slow receiver we would get into a hot-loop, when
logCh is full and there are many incoming callers.
to avoid this as a workaround enable BATCH_SIZE
greater than 100 to ensure that your slow receiver
receives data in bulk to avoid being throttled in
some manner.
this PR however fixes the unprotected access to
the current workers value.
precondition check was being honored before, validating
if anonymous access is allowed on the metadata of an
object, leading to metadata disclosure of the following
headers.
```
Last-Modified
Etag
x-amz-version-id
Expires:
Cache-Control:
```
although the information presented is minimal in nature,
and of opaque nature. It still simply discloses that an
object by a specific name exists or not without even having
enough permissions.
Since the object is being permanently deleted, the lack of read quorum should not
matter as long as sufficient disks are online to complete the deletion with parity
requirements.
If several pools have the same object with insufficient read quorum, attempt to
delete object from all the pools where it exists
instead upon any error in renameData(), we still
preserve the existing dataDir in some form for
recoverability in strange situations such as out
of disk space type errors.
Bonus: avoid running list and heal() instead allow
versions disparity to return the actual versions,
uuid to heal. Currently limit this to 100 versions
and lesser disparate objects.
an undo now reverts back the xl.meta from xl.meta.bkp
during overwrites on such flaky setups.
Bonus: Save N depth syscalls via skipping the parents
upon overwrites and versioned updates.
Flaky setup examples are stretch clusters with regular
packet drops etc, we need to add some defensive code
around to avoid dangling objects.
If site replication enabled across sites, replicate the SSE-C
objects as well. These objects could be read from target sites
using the same client encryption keys.
Signed-off-by: Shubhendu Ram Tripathi <shubhendu@minio.io>
The middleware sets up tracing, throttling, gzipped responses and
collecting API stats.
Additionally, this change updates the names of handler functions in
metric labels to be the same as the name derived from Go lang reflection
on the handler name.
The metric api labels are now stored in memory the same as the handler
name - they will be camelcased, e.g. `GetObject` instead of `getobject`.
For compatibility, we lowercase the metric api label values when emitting the metrics.
GetActualSize() was heavily relying on o.Parts()
to be non-empty to figure out if the object is multipart or not,
However, we have many indicators of whether an object is multipart
or not.
Blindly assuming that o.Parts == nil is not a multipart, is an
incorrect expectation instead, multipart must be obtained via
- Stored metadata value indicating this is a multipart encrypted object.
- Rely on <meta>-actual-size metadata to get the object's actual size.
This value is preserved for additional reasons such as these.
- ETag != 32 length
fixes#18724
A regression was introduced in #18547, that attempted
to file adding a missing `null` marker however we
should not skip returning based on versionID instead
it must be based on if we are being asked to create
a DEL marker or not.
The PR also has a side-affect for replicating `null`
marker permanent delete, as it may end up adding a
`null` marker while removing one.
This PR should address both scenarios.
While healing the latest changes of expiry rules across sites
if target had pre existing transition rules, they were getting
overwritten as cloned latest expiry rules from remote site were
getting written as is. Fixed the same and added test cases as
well.
Signed-off-by: Shubhendu Ram Tripathi <shubhendu@minio.io>
Optionally allows customers to enable
- Enable an external cache to catch GET/HEAD responses
- Enable skipping disks that are slow to respond in GET/HEAD
when we have already achieved a quorum
resync status may not be upto-date by
the time the resync is over due to how
the timer is triggered.
diff is sufficient to know if replication
happened or not.
Following extension allows users to specify immediate purge of
all versions as soon as the latest version of this object has
expired.
```
<LifecycleConfiguration>
<Rule>
<ID>ClassADocRule</ID>
<Filter>
<Prefix>classA/</Prefix>
</Filter>
<Status>Enabled</Status>
<Expiration>
<Days>3650</Days>
<ExpiredObjectAllVersions>true</ExpiredObjectAllVersions>
</Expiration>
</Rule>
...
```
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.
The bottom line is delete markers are a nuisance,
most applications are not version aware and this
has simply complicated the version management.
AWS S3 gave an unnecessary complication overhead
for customers, they need to now manage these
markers by applying ILM settings and clean
them up on a regular basis.
To make matters worse all these delete markers
get replicated as well in a replicated setup,
requiring two ILM settings on each site.
This PR is an attempt to address this inferior
implementation by deviating MinIO towards an
idempotent delete marker implementation i.e
MinIO will never create any more than single
consecutive delete markers.
This significantly reduces operational overhead
by making versioning more useful for real data.
This is an S3 spec deviation for pragmatic reasons.