When lifecycle decides to Delete an object and not a version in a
versioned bucket, the code should create a delete marker and not
removing the scanned version.
This commit fixes the issue.
The connections info of the processes takes up a huge amount of space,
and is not important for adding any useful health checks. Removing it
will significantly reduce the size of the subnet health report.
- lock maintenance loop was incorrectly sleeping
as well as using ticker badly, leading to
extra expiration routines getting triggered
that could flood the network.
- multipart upload cleanup should be based on
timer instead of ticker, to ensure that long
running jobs don't get triggered twice.
- make sure to get right lockers for object name
Replaces #11449
Does concurrent healing but limits concurrency to 50 buckets.
Aborts on first error.
`errgroup.Group` is extended to facilitate this in a generic way.
We use multiple libraries in health info, but the returned error does
not indicate exactly what library call is failing, hence adding named
tags to returned errors whenever applicable.
After recent refactor where lifecycle started to rely on ObjectInfo to
make decisions, it turned out there are some issues calculating
Successor Modtime and NumVersions, hence the lifecycle is not working as
expected in a versioning bucket in some cases.
This commit fixes the behavior.
When a directory object is presented as a `prefix`
param our implementation tend to only list objects
present common to the `prefix` than the `prefix` itself,
to mimic AWS S3 like flat key behavior this PR ensures
that if `prefix` is directory object, it should be
automatically considered to be part of the eventual
listing result.
fixes#11370
few places were still using legacy call GetObject()
which was mainly designed for client response writer,
use GetObjectNInfo() for internal calls instead.
for some flaky networks this may be too fast of a value
choose a defensive value, and let this be addressed
properly in a new refactor of dsync with renewal logic.
Also enable faster fallback delay to cater for misconfigured
IPv6 servers
refer
- https://golang.org/pkg/net/#Dialer
- https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6555
- using miniogo.ObjectInfo.UserMetadata is not correct
- using UserTags from Map->String() can change order
- ContentType comparison needs to be removed.
- Compare both lowercase and uppercase key names.
- do not silently error out constructing PutObjectOptions
if tag parsing fails
- avoid notification for empty object info, failed operations
should rely on valid objInfo for notification in all
situations
- optimize copyObject implementation, also introduce a new
replication event
- clone ObjectInfo() before scheduling for replication
- add additional headers for comparison
- remove strings.EqualFold comparison avoid unexpected bugs
- fix pool based proxying with multiple pools
- compare only specific metadata
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poornas@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit refactors the SSE implementation and add
S3-compatible SSE-KMS context handling.
SSE-KMS differs from SSE-S3 in two main aspects:
1. The client can request a particular key and
specify a KMS context as part of the request.
2. The ETag of an SSE-KMS encrypted object is not
the MD5 sum of the object content.
This commit only focuses on the 1st aspect.
A client can send an optional SSE context when using
SSE-KMS. This context is remembered by the S3 server
such that the client does not have to specify the
context again (during multipart PUT / GET / HEAD ...).
The crypto. context also includes the bucket/object
name to prevent renaming objects at the backend.
Now, AWS S3 behaves as following:
- If the user does not provide a SSE-KMS context
it does not store one - resp. does not include
the SSE-KMS context header in the response (e.g. HEAD).
- If the user specifies a SSE-KMS context without
the bucket/object name then AWS stores the exact
context the client provided but adds the bucket/object
name internally. The response contains the KMS context
without the bucket/object name.
- If the user specifies a SSE-KMS context with
the bucket/object name then AWS again stores the exact
context provided by the client. The response contains
the KMS context with the bucket/object name.
This commit implements this behavior w.r.t. SSE-KMS.
However, as of now, no such object can be created since
the server rejects SSE-KMS encryption requests.
This commit is one stepping stone for SSE-KMS support.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
```
minio server /tmp/disk{1...4}
mc mb myminio/testbucket/
mkdir -p /tmp/disk{1..4}/testbucket/test-prefix/
```
This would end up being listed in the current
master, this PR fixes this situation.
If a directory is a leaf dir we should it
being listed, since it cannot be deleted anymore
with DeleteObject, DeleteObjects() API calls
because we natively support directories now.
Avoid listing it and let healing purge this folder
eventually in the background.
MINIO_API_REPLICATION_WORKERS env.var and
`mc admin config set api` allow number of replication
workers to be configurable. Defaults to half the number
of cpus available.
Co-authored-by: Poorna Krishnamoorthy <poorna@minio.io>
This commit fixes a bug in the S3 gateway that causes
GET requests to fail when the object is encrypted by the
gateway itself.
The gateway was not able to GET the object since it always
specified a `If-Match` pre-condition checking that the object
ETag matches an expected ETag - even for encrypted ETags.
The problem is that an encrypted ETag will never match the ETag
computed by the backend causing the `If-Match` pre-condition
to fail.
This commit fixes this by not sending an `If-Match` header when
the ETag is encrypted. This is acceptable because:
1. A gateway-encrypted object consists of two objects at the backend
and there is no way to provide a concurrency-safe implementation
of two consecutive S3 GETs in the deployment model of the S3
gateway.
Ref: S3 gateways are self-contained and isolated - and there may
be multiple instances at the same time (no lock across
instances).
2. Even if the data object changes (concurrent PUT) while gateway
A has download the metadata object (but not issued the GET to
the data object => data race) then we don't return invalid data
to the client since the decryption (of the currently uploaded data)
will fail - given the metadata of the previous object.
Currently, it is not possible to create a delete-marker when xl.meta
does not exist (no version is created for that object yet). This makes a
problem for replication and mc mirroring with versioning enabled.
This also follows S3 specification.
github.com/ncw/directio doesn't support OpenBSD, but OpenBSD has
syscall.Fsync. (It also has fdatasync:
https://man.openbsd.org/fdatasync
but apparently Golang can't call it).
This commit deprecates the native Hashicorp Vault
support and removes the legacy Vault documentation.
The native Hashicorp Vault documentation is marked as
outdated and deprecated for over a year now. We give
another 6 months before we start removing Hashicorp Vault
support and show a deprecation warning when a MinIO server
starts with a native Vault configuration.
currently we had a restriction where older setups would
need to follow previous style of "stripe" count being same
expansion, we can relax that instead newer pools can be
expanded for older setups with newer constraints of
common parity ratio.
In PR #11165 due to incorrect proxying for 2
way replication even when the object was not
yet replicated
Additionally, fix metadata comparisons when
deciding to do full replication vs metadata copy.
fixes#11340