fresh drive setups when one of the drive is
a root drive, we should ignore such a root
drive and not proceed to format.
This PR handles this properly by marking
the disks which are root disk and they are
taken offline.
I have built a fuzz test and it crashes heavily in seconds and will OOM shortly after.
It seems like supporting Parquet is basically a completely open way to crash the
server if you can upload a file and run s3 select on it.
Until Parquet is more hardened it is DISABLED by default since hostile
crafted input can easily crash the server.
If you are in a controlled environment where it is safe to assume no hostile
content can be uploaded to your cluster you can safely enable Parquet.
To enable Parquet set the environment variable `MINIO_API_SELECT_PARQUET=on`
while starting the MinIO server.
Furthermore, we guard parquet by recover functions.
newDynamicTimeout should be allocated once, in-case
of temporary locks in config and IAM we should
have allocated timeout once before the `for loop`
This PR doesn't fix any issue as such, but provides
enough dynamism for the timeout as per expectation.
Based on our previous conversations I assume we should send the version
id when healing an object.
Maybe we should even list object versions and heal all?
In a non recursive mode, issuing a list request where prefix
is an existing object with a slash and delimiter is a slash will
return entries in the object directory (data dir IDs)
```
$ aws s3api --profile minioadmin --endpoint-url http://localhost:9000 \
list-objects-v2 --bucket testbucket --prefix code_of_conduct.md/ --delimiter '/'
{
"CommonPrefixes": [
{
"Prefix":
"code_of_conduct.md/ec750fe0-ea7e-4b87-bbec-1e32407e5e47/"
}
]
}
```
This commit adds a fast exit track in Walk() in this specific case.
use `/etc/hosts` instead of `/` to check for common
device id, if the device is same for `/etc/hosts`
and the --bind mount to detect root disks.
Bonus enhance healthcheck logging by adding maintenance
tags, for all messages.