Add shortcut for `APN/1.0 Veeam/1.0 Backup/10.0`
It requests unique blocks with a specific prefix. We skip
scanning the parent directory for more objects matching the prefix.
Allow each crawler operation to sleep up to 10 seconds on very heavily loaded systems.
This will of course make minimum crawler speed less, but should be more effective at stopping.
Delete marker replication is implemented for V2
configuration specified in AWS spec (though AWS
allows it only in the V1 configuration).
This PR also brings in a MinIO only extension of
replicating permanent deletes, i.e. deletes specifying
version id are replicated to target cluster.
This will make the health check clients 'silent'.
Use `IsNetworkOrHostDown` determine if network is ok so it mimics the functionality in the actual client.
this is needed such that we make sure to heal the
users, policies and bucket metadata right away as
we do listing based on list cache which only lists
'3' sufficiently good drives, to avoid possibly
losing access to these users upon upgrade make
sure to heal them.
If a scanning server shuts down unexpectedly we may have "successful" caches that are incomplete on a set.
In this case mark the cache with an error so it will no longer be handed out.
Add `MINIO_API_EXTEND_LIST_CACHE_LIFE` that will extend
the life of generated caches for a while.
This changes caches to remain valid until no updates have been
received for the specified time plus a fixed margin.
This also changes the caches from being invalidated when the *first*
set finishes until the *last* set has finished plus the specified time
has passed.
Similar to #10775 for fewer memory allocations, since we use
getOnlineDisks() extensively for listing we should optimize it
further.
Additionally, remove all unused walkers from the storage layer
A new field called AccessKey is added to the ReqInfo struct and populated.
Because ReqInfo is added to the context, this allows the AccessKey to be
accessed from 3rd-party code, such as a custom ObjectLayer.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Kaloyan Raev <kaloyan@storj.io>
On extremely long running listings keep the transient list 15 minutes after last update instead of using start time.
Also don't do overlap checks on transient lists.
Add trashcan that keeps recently updated lists after bucket deletion.
All caches were deleted once a bucket was deleted, so caches still running would report errors. Now they are canceled.
Fix `.minio.sys` not being transient.
Bonus fixes, remove package retry it is harder to get it
right, also manage context remove it such that we don't have
to rely on it anymore instead use a simple Jitter retry.
WriteAll saw 127GB allocs in a 5 minute timeframe for 4MiB buffers
used by `io.CopyBuffer` even if they are pooled.
Since all writers appear to write byte buffers, just send those
instead and write directly. The files are opened through the `os`
package so they have no special properties anyway.
This removes the alloc and copy for each operation.
REST sends content length so a precise alloc can be made.
this reduces allocations in order of magnitude
Also, revert "erasure: delete dangling objects automatically (#10765)"
affects list caching should be investigated.
Add store and a forward option for a single part
uploads when an async mode is enabled with env
MINIO_CACHE_COMMIT=writeback
It defaults to `writethrough` if unspecified.
Bonus fixes, we do not need reload format anymore
as the replaced drive is healed locally we only need
to ensure that drive heal reloads the drive properly.
We preserve the UUID of the original order, this means
that the replacement in `format.json` doesn't mean that
the drive needs to be reloaded into memory anymore.
fixes#10791
when server is booting up there is a possibility
that users might see '503' because object layer
when not initialized, then the request is proxied
to neighboring peers first one which is online.
* Fix caches having EOF marked as a failure.
* Simplify cache updates.
* Provide context for checkMetacacheState failures.
* Log 499 when the client disconnects.
`decryptObjectInfo` is a significant bottleneck when listing objects.
Reduce the allocations for a significant speedup.
https://github.com/minio/sio/pull/40
```
λ benchcmp before.txt after.txt
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 24260928 808656 -96.67%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 0.04 1.24 31.00x
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 75112 48996 -34.77%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
Benchmark_decryptObjectInfo-32 287694772 4228076 -98.53%
```
Design: https://gist.github.com/klauspost/025c09b48ed4a1293c917cecfabdf21c
Gist of improvements:
* Cross-server caching and listing will use the same data across servers and requests.
* Lists can be arbitrarily resumed at a constant speed.
* Metadata for all files scanned is stored for streaming retrieval.
* The existing bloom filters controlled by the crawler is used for validating caches.
* Concurrent requests for the same data (or parts of it) will not spawn additional walkers.
* Listing a subdirectory of an existing recursive cache will use the cache.
* All listing operations are fully streamable so the number of objects in a bucket no
longer dictates the amount of memory.
* Listings can be handled by any server within the cluster.
* Caches are cleaned up when out of date or superseded by a more recent one.
only newly replaced drives get the new `format.json`,
this avoids disks reloading their in-memory reference
format, ensures that drives are online without
reloading the in-memory reference format.
keeping reference format in-tact means UUIDs
never change once they are formatted.
lockers currently might leave stale lockers,
in unknown ways waiting for downed lockers.
locker check interval is high enough to safely
cleanup stale locks.
reference format should be source of truth
for inconsistent drives which reconnect,
add them back to their original position
remove automatic fix for existing offline
disk uuids
Bonus fixes
- logging improvements to ensure that we don't use
`go logger.LogIf` to avoid runtime.Caller missing
the function name. log where necessary.
- remove unused code at erasure sets
Test TestDialContextWithDNSCacheRand was failing sometimes because it depends
on a random selection of addresses when testing random DNS resolution from cache.
Lower addr selection exception to 10%
Allow requests to come in for users as soon as object
layer and config are initialized, this allows users
to be authenticated sooner and would succeed automatically
on servers which are yet to fully initialize.
Go stdlib resolver doesn't support caching DNS
resolutions, since we compile with CGO disabled
we are more probe to DNS flooding for all network
calls to resolve for DNS from the DNS server.
Under various containerized environments such as
VMWare this becomes a problem because there are
no DNS caches available and we may end up overloading
the kube-dns resolver under concurrent I/O.
To circumvent this issue implement a DNSCache resolver
which resolves DNS and caches them for around 10secs
with every 3sec invalidation attempted.
connect disks pre-emptively upon startup, to ensure we have
enough disks are connected at startup rather than wait
for them.
we need to do this to avoid long wait times for server to
be online when we have servers come up in rolling upgrade
fashion
Only use dynamic delays for the crawler. Even though the max wait was 1 second the number
of waits could severely impact crawler speed.
Instead of relying on a global metric, we use the stateless local delays to keep the crawler
running at a speed more adjusted to current conditions.
The only case we keep it is before bitrot checks when enabled.
This PR fixes a hang which occurs quite commonly at higher concurrency
by allowing following changes
- allowing lower connections in time_wait allows faster socket open's
- lower idle connection timeout to ensure that we let kernel
reclaim the time_wait connections quickly
- increase somaxconn to 4096 instead of 2048 to allow larger tcp
syn backlogs.
fixes#10413
This change tracks bandwidth for a bucket and object
- [x] Add Admin API
- [x] Add Peer API
- [x] Add BW throttling
- [x] Admin APIs to set replication limit
- [x] Admin APIs for fetch bandwidth
In almost all scenarios MinIO now is
mostly ready for all sub-systems
independently, safe-mode is not useful
anymore and do not serve its original
intended purpose.
allow server to be fully functional
even with config partially configured,
this is to cater for availability of actual
I/O v/s manually fixing the server.
In k8s like environments it will never make
sense to take pod into safe-mode state,
because there is no real access to perform
any remote operation on them.
- select lockers which are non-local and online to have
affinity towards remote servers for lock contention
- optimize lock retry interval to avoid sending too many
messages during lock contention, reduces average CPU
usage as well
- if bucket is not set, when deleteObject fails make sure
setPutObjHeaders() honors lifecycle only if bucket name
is set.
- fix top locks to list out always the oldest lockers always,
avoid getting bogged down into map's unordered nature.
This is to allow remote targets to be generalized
for replication/ILM transition
Also adding a field in BucketTarget to identify
a remote target with a label.
This commit fixes a misuse of the `http.ResponseWriter.WriteHeader`.
A caller should **either** call `WriteHeader` exactly once **or**
write to the response writer and causing an implicit 200 OK.
Writing the response headers more than once causes a `http: superfluous
response.WriteHeader call` log message. This commit fixes this
by preventing a 2nd `WriteHeader` call being forwarded to the underlying
`ResponseWriter`.
Updates #10587
* add NVMe drive info [model num, serial num, drive temp. etc.]
* Ignore fuse partitions
* Add the nvme logic only for linux
* Move smart/nvme structs to a separate file
Co-authored-by: wlan0 <sidharthamn@gmail.com>
throw proper error when port is not accessible
for the regular user, this is possibly a regression.
```
ERROR Unable to start the server: Insufficient permissions to use specified port
> Please ensure MinIO binary has 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' permissions
HINT:
Use 'sudo setcap cap_net_bind_service=+ep /path/to/minio' to provide sufficient permissions
```
After #10594 let's invalidate the bloom filters to force the next cycles to go through all data.
There is a small chance that the linked PR could have caused missing bloom filter data.
This will invalidate the current bloom filters and make the crawler go through everything.
Routing using on source IP if found. This should distribute
the listing load for V1 and versioning on multiple nodes
evenly between different clients.
If source IP is not found from the http request header, then falls back
to bucket name instead.
Disallow versioning suspension on a bucket with
pre-existing replication configuration
If versioning is suspended on the target,replication
should fail.
`mc admin info` on busy setups will not move HDD
heads unnecessarily for repeated calls, provides
a better responsiveness for the call overall.
Bonus change allow listTolerancePerSet be N-1
for good entries, to avoid skipping entries
for some reason one of the disk went offline.
add a hint on the disk to allow for tracking fresh disk
being healed, to allow for restartable heals, and also
use this as a way to track and remove disks.
There are more pending changes where we should move
all the disk formatting logic to backend drives, this
PR doesn't deal with this refactor instead makes it
easier to track healing in the future.
- Add owner information for expiry, locking, unlocking a resource
- TopLocks returns now locks in quorum by default, provides
a way to capture stale locks as well with `?stale=true`
- Simplify the quorum handling for locks to avoid from storage
class, because there were challenges to make it consistent
across all situations.
- And other tiny simplifications to reset locks.
context canceled errors bubbling up from the network
layer has the potential to be misconstrued as network
errors, taking prematurely a server offline and triggering
a health check routine avoid this potential occurrence.
isEnded() was incorrectly calculating if the current healing sequence is
ended or not. h.currentStatus.Items could be empty if healing is very
slow and mc admin heal consumed all items.
As the bulk/recursive delete will require multiple connections to open at an instance,
The default open connections limit will be reached which results in the following error
```FATAL: sorry, too many clients already```
By setting the open connections to a reasonable value - `2`, We ensure that the max open connections
will not be exhausted and lie under bounds.
The queries are simple inserts/updates/deletes which is operational and sufficient with the
the maximum open connection limit is 2.
Fixes#10553
Allow user configuration for MaxOpenConnections
It is possible the heal drives are not reported from
the maintenance check because the background heal
state simply relied on the `format.json` for capturing
unformatted drives. It is possible that drives might
be still healing - make sure that applications which
rely on cluster health check respond back this detail.
Also, revamp the way ListBuckets work make few portions
of the healing logic parallel
- walk objects for healing disks in parallel
- collect the list of buckets in parallel across drives
- provide consistent view for listBuckets()
Healing was not working correctly in the distributed mode because
errFileVersionNotFound was not properly converted in storage rest
client.
Besides, fixing the healing delete marker is not working as expected.
performance improves by around 100x or more
```
go test -v -run NONE -bench BenchmarkGetPartFile
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/minio/minio/cmd
BenchmarkGetPartFileWithTrie
BenchmarkGetPartFileWithTrie-4 1000000000 0.140 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
PASS
ok github.com/minio/minio/cmd 1.737s
```
fixes#10520
* Fix cases where minimum timeout > default timeout.
* Add defensive code for too small/negative timeouts.
* Never set timeout below the maximum value of a request.
* Protect against (unlikely) int64 wraps.
* Decrease timeout slower.
* Don't re-lock before copying.
This bug was introduced in 14f0047295
almost 3yrs ago, as a side affect of removing stale `fs.json`
but we in-fact end up removing existing good `fs.json` for an
existing object, leading to some form of a data loss.
fixes#10496
from 20s for 10000 parts to less than 1sec
Without the patch
```
~ time aws --endpoint-url=http://localhost:9000 --profile minio s3api \
list-parts --bucket testbucket --key test \
--upload-id c1cd1f50-ea9a-4824-881c-63b5de95315a
real 0m20.394s
user 0m0.589s
sys 0m0.174s
```
With the patch
```
~ time aws --endpoint-url=http://localhost:9000 --profile minio s3api \
list-parts --bucket testbucket --key test \
--upload-id c1cd1f50-ea9a-4824-881c-63b5de95315a
real 0m0.891s
user 0m0.624s
sys 0m0.182s
```
fixes#10503
It was observed in VMware vsphere environment during a
pod replacement, `mc admin info` might report incorrect
offline nodes for the replaced drive. This issue eventually
goes away but requires quite a lot of time for all servers
to be in sync.
This PR fixes this behavior properly.
If the ILM document requires removing noncurrent versions, the
the server should be able to remove 'null' versions as well.
'null' versions are created when versioning is not enabled
or suspended.
The entire encryption layer is dependent on the fact that
KMS should be configured for S3 encryption to work properly
and we only support passing the headers as is to the backend
for encryption only if KMS is configured.
Make sure that this predictability is maintained, currently
the code was allowing encryption to go through and fail
at later to indicate that KMS was not configured. We should
simply reply "NotImplemented" if KMS is not configured, this
allows clients to simply proceed with their tests.
This is to ensure that Go contexts work properly, after some
interesting experiments I found that Go net/http doesn't
cancel the context when Body is non-zero and hasn't been
read till EOF.
The following gist explains this, this can lead to pile up
of go-routines on the server which will never be canceled
and will die at a really later point in time, which can
simply overwhelm the server.
https://gist.github.com/harshavardhana/c51dcfd055780eaeb71db54f9c589150
To avoid this refactor the locking such that we take locks after we
have started reading from the body and only take locks when needed.
Also, remove contextReader as it's not useful, doesn't work as expected
context is not canceled until the body reaches EOF so there is no point
in wrapping it with context and putting a `select {` on it which
can unnecessarily increase the CPU overhead.
We will still use the context to cancel the lockers etc.
Additional simplification in the locker code to avoid timers
as re-using them is a complicated ordeal avoid them in
the hot path, since locking is very common this may avoid
lots of allocations.
configurable remote transport timeouts for some special cases
where this value needs to be bumped to a higher value when
transferring large data between federated instances.
In `(*cacheObjects).GetObjectNInfo` copy the metadata before spawning a goroutine.
Clean up a few map[string]string copies as well, reducing allocs and simplifying the code.
Fixes#10426
From https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/intro-lifecycle-rules.html#intro-lifecycle-rules-actions
```
When specifying the number of days in the NoncurrentVersionTransition
and NoncurrentVersionExpiration actions in a Lifecycle configuration,
note the following:
It is the number of days from when the version of the object becomes
noncurrent (that is, when the object is overwritten or deleted), that
Amazon S3 will perform the action on the specified object or objects.
Amazon S3 calculates the time by adding the number of days specified in
the rule to the time when the new successor version of the object is
created and rounding the resulting time to the next day midnight UTC.
For example, in your bucket, suppose that you have a current version of
an object that was created at 1/1/2014 10:30 AM UTC. If the new version
of the object that replaces the current version is created at 1/15/2014
10:30 AM UTC, and you specify 3 days in a transition rule, the
transition date of the object is calculated as 1/19/2014 00:00 UTC.
```