Design: https://gist.github.com/klauspost/025c09b48ed4a1293c917cecfabdf21c
Gist of improvements:
* Cross-server caching and listing will use the same data across servers and requests.
* Lists can be arbitrarily resumed at a constant speed.
* Metadata for all files scanned is stored for streaming retrieval.
* The existing bloom filters controlled by the crawler is used for validating caches.
* Concurrent requests for the same data (or parts of it) will not spawn additional walkers.
* Listing a subdirectory of an existing recursive cache will use the cache.
* All listing operations are fully streamable so the number of objects in a bucket no
longer dictates the amount of memory.
* Listings can be handled by any server within the cluster.
* Caches are cleaned up when out of date or superseded by a more recent one.
This PR fixes a hang which occurs quite commonly at higher concurrency
by allowing following changes
- allowing lower connections in time_wait allows faster socket open's
- lower idle connection timeout to ensure that we let kernel
reclaim the time_wait connections quickly
- increase somaxconn to 4096 instead of 2048 to allow larger tcp
syn backlogs.
fixes#10413
Also, revamp the way ListBuckets work make few portions
of the healing logic parallel
- walk objects for healing disks in parallel
- collect the list of buckets in parallel across drives
- provide consistent view for listBuckets()
Healing was not working correctly in the distributed mode because
errFileVersionNotFound was not properly converted in storage rest
client.
Besides, fixing the healing delete marker is not working as expected.
Add context to all (non-trivial) calls to the storage layer.
Contexts are propagated through the REST client.
- `context.TODO()` is left in place for the places where it needs to be added to the caller.
- `endWalkCh` could probably be removed from the walkers, but no changes so far.
The "dangerous" part is that now a caller disconnecting *will* propagate down, so a
"delete" operation will now be interrupted. In some cases we might want to disconnect
this functionality so the operation completes if it has started, leaving the system in a cleaner state.
this is to detect situations of corruption disk
format etc errors quickly and keep the disk online
in such scenarios for requests to fail appropriately.
This PR adds support for healing older
content i.e from 2yrs, 1yr. Also handles
other situations where our config was
not encrypted yet.
This PR also ensures that our Listing
is consistent and quorum friendly,
such that we don't list partial objects
healing was not working properly when drives were
replaced, due to the error check in root disk
calculation this PR fixes this behavior
This PR also adds additional fix for missing
metadata entries from .minio.sys as part of
disk healing as well.
Added code to ignore and print more context
sensitive errors for better debugging.
This PR is continuation of fix in 7b14e9b660
Healing an object which has multiple versions was not working because
the healing code forgot to consider errFileVersionNotFound error as a
use case that needs healing
- Implement a new xl.json 2.0.0 format to support,
this moves the entire marshaling logic to POSIX
layer, top layer always consumes a common FileInfo
construct which simplifies the metadata reads.
- Implement list object versions
- Migrate to siphash from crchash for new deployments
for object placements.
Fixes#2111
Current code was relying on globalEndpoints as
the source of secondary truth to obtain
the missing endpoints list when the disk
is offline, this is problematic
- there is no way to know if the getDisks()
returned endpoints total is same as the
ones list of globalEndpoints and it
belongs to a particular set.
- there is no order guarantee as getDisks()
is ordered as per format.json, globalEndpoints
may not be, so potentially end up including
incorrect endpoints.
To fix this bring getEndpoints() just like getDisks()
to ensure that consistently ordered endpoints are
always available for us to ensure that returned values
are consistent with what each erasure set would observe.
By monitoring PUT/DELETE and heal operations it is possible
to track changed paths and keep a bloom filter for this data.
This can help prioritize paths to scan. The bloom filter can identify
paths that have not changed, and the few collisions will only result
in a marginal extra workload. This can be implemented on either a
bucket+(1 prefix level) with reasonable performance.
The bloom filter is set to have a false positive rate at 1% at 1M
entries. A bloom table of this size is about ~2500 bytes when serialized.
To not force a full scan of all paths that have changed cycle bloom
filters would need to be kept, so we guarantee that dirty paths have
been scanned within cycle runs. Until cycle bloom filters have been
collected all paths are considered dirty.
Too many deployments come up with an odd number
of hosts or drives, to facilitate even distribution
among those setups allow for odd and prime numbers
based packs.
As an optimization of the healing, HealObjects() avoid sending an
object to the background healing subsystem when the object is
present in all disks.
However, HealObjects() should have checked the scan type, if this
deep, always pass the object to the healing subsystem.
This is a precursor change before versioning,
removes/deprecates the requirement of remembering
partName and partETag which are not useful after
a multipart transaction has finished.
This PR reduces the overall size of the backend
JSON for large file uploads.
This PR adds support below metrics
- Cache Hit Count
- Cache Miss Count
- Data served from Cache (in Bytes)
- Bytes received from AWS S3
- Bytes sent to AWS S3
- Number of requests sent to AWS S3
Fixes#8549
This PR implements locking from a global entity into
a more localized set level entity, allowing for locks
to be held only on the resources which are writing
to a collection of disks rather than a global level.
In this process this PR also removes the top-level
limit of 32 nodes to an unlimited number of nodes. This
is a precursor change before bring in bucket expansion.
- Heal if the part.1 is truncated from its original size
- Heal if the part.1 fails while being verified in between
- Heal if the part.1 fails while being at a certain offset
Other cleanups include make sure to flush the HTTP responses
properly from storage-rest-server, avoid using 'defer' to
improve call latency. 'defer' incurs latency avoid them
in our hot-paths such as storage-rest handlers.
Fixes#8319
After some extensive refactors, it turned out empty directories
are not healed and heal status is also not reported correctly.
This commit fixes it and adds the appropriate unit tests
posix.VerifyFile() doesn't know how to check if a file
is corrupted if that file is empty. We do have the part
size in xl.json so we pass it to VerifyFile to return
an error so healing empty parts can work properly.
One user has seen this following error log:
API: CompleteMultipartUpload(bucket=vertica, object=perf-dss-v03/cc2/02596813aecd4e476d810148586c2a3300d00000013557ef_0.gt)
Time: 15:44:07 UTC 04/11/2019
RequestID: 159475EFF4DEDFFB
RemoteHost: 172.26.87.184
UserAgent: vertica-v9.1.1-5
Error: open /data/.minio.sys/tmp/100bb3ec-6c0d-4a37-8b36-65241050eb02/xl.json: file exists
1: cmd/xl-v1-metadata.go:448:cmd.writeXLMetadata()
2: cmd/xl-v1-metadata.go:501:cmd.writeUniqueXLMetadata.func1()
This can happen when CompleteMultipartUpload fails with write quorum,
the S3 client will retry (since write quorum is 500 http response),
however the second call of CompleteMultipartUpload will fail because
this latter doesn't truly use a random uuid under .minio.sys/tmp/
directory but pick the upload id.
This commit fixes the behavior to choose a random uuid for generating
xl.json
Other listing optimizations include
- remove double sorting while filtering object entries
- improve error message when upload-id is not in quorum
- use jsoniter for full unmarshal json, instead of gjson
- remove unused code
This commit fixes a privilege escalation issue against
the S3 and web handlers. An authenticated IAM user
can:
- Read from or write to the internal '.minio.sys'
bucket by simply sending a properly signed
S3 GET or PUT request. Further, the user can
- Read from or write to the internal '.minio.sys'
bucket using the 'Upload'/'Download'/'DownloadZIP'
API by sending a "browser" request authenticated
with its JWT token.
Healing scan used to read all objects parts to check for bitrot
checksum. This commit will add a quicker way of healing scan
by only checking if parts are actually present in disks or not.
Bucket metadata healing in the current code was executed multiple
times each time for a given set. Bucket metadata just like
objects are hashed in accordance with its name on any given set,
to allow hashing to play a role we should let the top level
code decide where to navigate.
Current code also had 3 bucket metadata files hardcoded, whereas
we should make it generic by listing and navigating the .minio.sys
to heal such objects.
We also had another bug where due to isObjectDangling changes
without pre-existing bucket metadata files, we were erroneously
reporting it as grey/corrupted objects.
This PR fixes all of the above items.
foo.CORRUPTED should never be created because when
multiple sets are involved we would hash the file
to wrong a location, this PR removes the code.
But allows DeleteBucket() to work properly to delete
dangling buckets/objects. Also adds another option
to Healing where a user needs to specify `--remove`
such that all dangling objects will be deleted with
user confirmation.
This commit fixes the computation of Before/After healing state
for empty directories.
Issues before the commit:
- Before state doesn't reflect the real status (no StatVol() called)
- For any MakeVol() error, healObjectDir is exited directly, which is
wrong.