we have been using an LRU caching for internode
auth tokens, migrate to using a typed implementation
and also do not cache auth tokens when its an error.
This fixes a regression from #19358 which prevents policy mappings
created in the latest release from being displayed in policy entity
listing APIs.
This is due to the possibility that the base DNs in the LDAP config are
not in a normalized form and #19358 introduced normalized of mapping
keys (user DNs and group DNs). When listing, we check if the policy
mappings are on entities that parse as valid DNs that are descendants of
the base DNs in the config.
Test added that demonstrates a failure without this fix.
Instead of relying on user input values, we use the DN value returned by
the LDAP server.
This handles cases like when a mapping is set on a DN value
`uid=svc.algorithm,OU=swengg,DC=min,DC=io` with a user input value (with
unicode variation) of `uid=svc﹒algorithm,OU=swengg,DC=min,DC=io`. The
LDAP server on lookup of this DN returns the normalized value where the
unicode dot character `SMALL FULL STOP` (in the user input), gets
replaced with regular full stop.
Fix races in IAM cache
Fixes#19344
On the top level we only grab a read lock, but we write to the cache if we manage to fetch it.
a03dac41eb/cmd/iam-store.go (L446) is also flipped to what it should be AFAICT.
Change the internal cache structure to a concurrency safe implementation.
Bonus: Also switch grid implementation.
our PoolNumber calculation was costly,
while we already had this information per
endpoint, we needed to deduce it appropriately.
This PR addresses this by assigning PoolNumbers
field that carries all the pool numbers that
belong to a server.
properties.PoolNumber still carries a valid value
only when len(properties.PoolNumbers) == 1, otherwise
properties.PoolNumber is set to math.MaxInt (indicating
that this value is undefined) and then one must rely
on properties.PoolNumbers for server participation
in multiple pools.
addresses the issue originating from #11327
With this commit, MinIO generates root credentials automatically
and deterministically if:
- No root credentials have been set.
- A KMS (KES) is configured.
- API access for the root credentials is disabled (lockdown mode).
Before, MinIO defaults to `minioadmin` for both the access and
secret keys. Now, MinIO generates unique root credentials
automatically on startup using the KMS.
Therefore, it uses the KMS HMAC function to generate pseudo-random
values. These values never change as long as the KMS key remains
the same, and the KMS key must continue to exist since all IAM data
is encrypted with it.
Backward compatibility:
This commit should not cause existing deployments to break. It only
changes the root credentials of deployments that have a KMS configured
(KES, not a static key) but have not set any admin credentials. Such
implementations should be rare or not exist at all.
Even if the worst case would be updating root credentials in mc
or other clients used to administer the cluster. Root credentials
are anyway not intended for regular S3 operations.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <github@aead.dev>
New disk healing code skips/expires objects that ILM supposed to expire.
Add more visibility to the user about this activity by calculating those
objects and print it at the end of healing activity.
add new update v2 that updates per node, allows idempotent behavior
new API ensures that
- binary is correct and can be downloaded checksummed verified
- committed to actual path
- restart returns back the relevant waiting drives
NOTE: This feature is not retro-active; it will not cater to previous transactions
on existing setups.
To enable this feature, please set ` _MINIO_DRIVE_QUORUM=on` environment
variable as part of systemd service or k8s configmap.
Once this has been enabled, you need to also set `list_quorum`.
```
~ mc admin config set alias/ api list_quorum=auto`
```
A new debugging tool is available to check for any missing counters.
By default the cpu load is the cumulative of all cores. Capture the
percentage load (load * 100 / cpu-count)
Also capture the percentage memory used (used * 100 / total)
this PR allows following policy
```
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "Deny a presigned URL request if the signature is more than 10 min old",
"Effect": "Deny",
"Action": "s3:*",
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::DOC-EXAMPLE-BUCKET1/*",
"Condition": {
"NumericGreaterThan": {
"s3:signatureAge": 600000
}
}
}
]
}
```
This is to basically disable all pre-signed URLs that are older than 10 minutes.