- Instrumentation for locks.
- Detailed test coverage.
- Adding RPC control handler to fetch lock instrumentation.
- RPC control handlers suite tests with a test RPC server.
This API is precursor before implementing `minio lambda` and `mc` continous replication.
This new api is an extention to BucketNofication APIs.
// Request
```
GET /bucket?notificationARN=arn:minio:lambda:us-east-1:10:minio HTTP/1.1
...
...
```
// Response
```
{"Records": ...}
...
...
...
{"Records": ...}
```
* Implement basic S3 notifications through queues
Supports multiple queues and three basic queue types:
1. NilQueue -- messages don't get sent anywhere
2. LogQueue -- messages get logged
3. AmqpQueue -- messages are sent to an AMQP queue
* api: Implement bucket notification.
Supports two different queue types
- AMQP
- ElasticSearch.
* Add support for redis
The object cache implementation is XL cache, which defaults
to 8GB worth of read cache. Currently GetObject() transparently
writes to this cache upon first client read and then subsequently
serves reads from the same cache.
Currently expiration is not implemented.
This patch brings in the removal of debug logging altogether, instead
we bring in the functionality of being able to trace the errors properly
pointing back to the origination of the problem.
To enable tracing you need to enable "MINIO_TRACE" set to "1" or "true"
environment variable which would print back traces whenever there is an
error which is unhandled or at the handler layer.
By default this tracing is turned off and only user level logging is
provided.
When server is run with multiple disks which uses xl interface where
order and count of disks are important, this patch saves such disks
configuration and compares in next run if there is a mismatch.
Fixes#1458
Golang 1.6 is default version for the build now.
Additionally set 'GODEBUG=cgocheck=0' for now, until
we fix the erasure coding package.
Readmore here https://tip.golang.org/doc/go1.6#cgo
- over the course of a project history every maintainer needs to update
its dependency packages, the problem essentially with godep is manipulating
GOPATH - this manipulation leads to static objects created at different locations
which end up conflicting with the overall functionality of golang.
This also leads to broken builds. There is no easier way out of this other than
asking developers to do 'godep restore' all the time. Which perhaps as a practice
doesn't sound like a clean solution. On the other hand 'godep restore' has its own
set of problems.
- govendor is a right tool but a stop gap tool until we wait for golangs official
1.5 version which fixes this vendoring issue once and for all.
- govendor provides consistency in terms of how import paths should be handled unlike
manipulation GOPATH.
This has advantages
- no more compiled objects being referenced in GOPATH and build time GOPATH
manging which leads to conflicts.
- proper import paths referencing the exact package a project is dependent on.
govendor is simple and provides the minimal necessary tooling to achieve this.
For now this is the right solution.
- All test files have been renamed to their respective <package>_test name,
this is done in accordance with
- https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#import-dot
imports are largely used in testing, but to avoid namespace collision
and circular dependencies
- Never use _* in package names other than "_test" change fragment_v1 to expose
fragment just like 'gopkg.in/check.v1'