This change adds `access` format support for notifications to a
Elasticsearch server, and it refactors `namespace` format support.
In the case of `access` format, for each event in Minio, a JSON
document is inserted into Elasticsearch with its timestamp set to the
event's timestamp, and with the ID generated automatically by
elasticsearch. No events are modified or deleted in this mode.
In the case of `namespace` format, for each event in Minio, a JSON
document is keyed together by the bucket and object name is updated in
Elasticsearch. In the case of an object being created or over-written
in Minio, a new document or an existing document is inserted into the
Elasticsearch index. If an object is deleted in Minio, the
corresponding document is deleted from the Elasticsearch index.
Additionally, this change upgrades Elasticsearch support to the 5.x
series. This is a breaking change, and users of previous elasticsearch
versions should upgrade.
Also updates documentation on Elasticsearch notification target usage
and has a link to an elasticsearch upgrade guide.
This is the last patch that finally resolves#3928.
* 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
- 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.