The current code considers a pool with all root disks to be as part
of a testing environment even if there are other pools with mounted
disks. This will result to illegitimate writing in root disks.
Fix this by simplifing the logic: require MINIO_CI_CD in order to skip
root disk check.
MinIO configuration is loaded after the initialization of the server
handlers, which will miss the initialization of the bucket forwarder
handler.
Though the federation is deprecated, let's fix this for the time being.
S3 spec returns x-amz-restore header in HEAD/GET object with the
following format:
```
x-amz-restore: ongoing-request="false", expiry-date="Fri, 21 Dec 2012
00:00:00 GMT"
```
This commit adds quotes as the current code does not support it. It will
also supports the old format saved in the disk (in xl.meta) for backward
compatibility.
A regression removed support of federation in the gateway mode.
Enable it again.
Federation is deprecated for a while but let's fix this for the time being.
Deleting bulk objects had an issue since the relevant versionID
is not passed through the layers to ensure that the dangling
object purge actually works cleanly.
This is a continuation of quorum related error returned by
multi-object delete API from #14248
This PR ensures that we pass down correct information as
well as extend the scope of dangling object detection.
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.
Some users running MinIO claim that their system became slow. One
way to investigate is to look at this Prometheus history of the number of
the requests reaching the server. The existing current S3 requests metric
is not enough because it can increase of the system really becomes slow,
due to disk issues for example.
startup speed-up, currently getFormatErasureInQuorum()
would spend up to 2-3secs when there are 3000+ drives
for example in a setup, simplify this implementation
to use drive counts.
DeleteMarkers do not have a default quorum, i.e it is possible that
DeleteMarkers were created with n/2+1 quorum as well to make sure
that we satisfy situations such as those we need to make sure delete
markers only expect n/2 read quorum.
Additionally we should also look at additional metadata on the
actual objects that might have been "erasure" upgraded with new
parity when disks are down.
In such a scenario do not default to the standard storage class
parity, instead use the parityBlocks present on the FileInfo to
ensure that we are dealing with the correct quorum for READs and
DELETEs.