Ref #3229
After review with @abperiasamy we decided to remove all the unnecessary options
- MINIO_BROWSER (Implemented as a security feature but now deemed obsolete
since even if blocking access to MINIO_BROWSER, s3 API port is open)
- MINIO_CACHE_EXPIRY (Defaults to 72h)
- MINIO_MAXCONN (No one used this option and we don't test this)
- MINIO_ENABLE_FSMETA (Enable FSMETA all the time)
Remove --ignore-disks option - this option was implemented when XL layer
would initialize the backend disks and heal them automatically to disallow
XL accidentally using the root partition itself this option was introduced.
This behavior has been changed XL no longer automatically initializes
`format.json` a HEAL is controlled activity, so ignore-disks is not
useful anymore. This change also addresses the problems of our documentation
going forward and keeps things simple. This patch brings in reduction of
options and defaulting them to a valid known inputs. This patch also
serves as a guideline of limiting many ways to do the same thing.
rpcClient should attempt a reconnect if the call fails
with 'rpc.ErrShutdown' this is needed since at times when
the servers are taken down and brought back up.
The hijacked connection from net.Dial is usually closed.
So upon first attempt rpcClient might falsely indicate that
disk to be down, to avoid this state make another dial attempt
to really fail.
Fixes#3206Fixes#3205
- abstract out instrumentation information.
- use separate lockInstance type that encapsulates the nsMutex, volume,
path and opsID as the frontend or top-level lock object.
This is done by not making the methods of the BucketMetaState interface
as methods (via type nesting) on the type implementing
RPCs (s3PeerAPIHandlers).
- Adds an interface to update in-memory bucket metadata state called
BucketMetaState - this interface has functions to:
- update bucket notification configuration,
- bucket listener configuration,
- bucket policy configuration, and
- send bucket event
- This interface is implemented by `localBMS` a type for manipulating
local node in-memory bucket metadata, and by `remoteBMS` a type for
manipulating remote node in-memory bucket metadata.
- The remote node interface, makes an RPC call, but the local node
interface does not - it updates in-memory bucket state directly.
- Rename mkPeersFromEndpoints to makeS3Peers and refactored it.
- Use arrayslice instead of map in s3Peers struct
- `s3Peers.SendUpdate` now receives an arrayslice of peer indexes to
send the request to, with a special nil value slice indicating that
all peers should be sent the update.
- `s3Peers.SendUpdate` now returns an arrayslice of errors, representing
errors from peers when sending an update. The array positions
correspond to peer array s3Peers.peers
Improve globalS3Peers:
- Make isDistXL a global `globalIsDistXL` and remove from s3Peers
- Make globalS3Peers an array of (address, bucket-meta-state) pairs.
- Fix code and tests.
Default golang net.Listen only listens on the first IP when
host resolves to multiple IPs.
This change addresses a problem for example your ``/etc/hosts``
has entries as following
```
127.0.1.1 minio1
192.168.1.10 minio1
```
Trying to start minio as
```
minio server --address "minio1:9001" ~/Photos
```
Causes the minio server to be bound only to "127.0.1.1" which
is an incorrect behavior since we are generally interested in
`192.168.1.10` as well.
This patch addresses this issue if the hostname is resolvable
and gives back list of addresses associated with that hostname
we just bind on all of them as it is the expected behavior.
- The benchmark initialization function was not taking into account the
instance type (FS/XL), was using XL ObjectLayer even for FS
benchmarks.
- This was leading to incorrect benchmark results for FS related
benchmarks.
- The fix takes into account the instance type (FS/XL) and correctly
returns FS backend for FS benchmarks.
Do not attempt to fetch volume/drive information for
each i/o situation. In our case we do this in all calls
`posix.go` this in-turn created a terrible situation for
windows. This issue does not affect the i/o path on Unix
platforms since statvfs calls are in the range of micro
seconds on these platforms.
This verification is only needed during startup and we
let things fail at a later stage on windows.
- Reads and writes of uploads.json in XL now uses quorum for
newMultipart, completeMultipart and abortMultipart operations.
- Each disk's `uploads.json` file is read and updated independently for
adding or removing an upload id from the file. Quorum is used to
decide if the high-level operation actually succeeded.
- Refactor FS code to simplify the flow, and fix a bug while reading
uploads.json.