Rewrite object versioning as middleware to simplify the PUT method
in the object controller.
The functionality remains basically the
same with the only major difference being the ability to now
version slo manifest files. dlo manifests are still not
supported as part of this patch.
Co-Authored-By: Clay Gerrard <clay.gerrard@gmail.com>
DocImpact
Change-Id: Ie899290b3312e201979eafefb253d1a60b65b837
Signed-off-by: Thiago da Silva <thiago@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Prashanth Pai <ppai@redhat.com>
When rsync pushes to a remote node with an unmounted drive and if
certain steps are not taken, rsync may attempt to write files to
the local drive at the location where the drive was mounted.
There are two suggested solutions for this issue:
1) Set the permissions for all mount points in /srv/node/
to root:root 755
2) Mount the drives elsewhere and symlink the drives to /srv/.../
The first method ensures that only root and not the swift user
can write in the /srv/.../ directories.
The second method will prompt a broken link issue if rsync
attempts to write to an unmounted drive.
Change-Id: I60ce4ed9ef8401768d5f78b6806cbb2e2a65303e
Closes-Bug: #1470576
In this change, there are proposed improvement to Swift documentation aimed at
first-time contributors. They include a simplification of the Getting
Started page and a new page with some basic instructions/commands that the
first-time contributor should know. In addition, it shows some common errors
that the first-time contributor may find when executing git rebase and
information on how to track your changes.
Change-Id: I704202955093736b2f3b4102a649690a0392c6b0
This provides the capability to specify a project_name,
project_domain_name and user_domain_name in /etc/swift/dispersion.conf.
If this values are set in dispersion.conf they get populated to the
swift-client. With this it is possible to have a specific dispersion
project specified, which is not the keystone default domain. Changes
were applied to swift-dispersion-populate and swift-dispersion-report.
Relevant man pages, the example dispersion.conf and the admin guide were
updated accordingly.
DocImpact
Closes-Bug: #1468374
Change-Id: I0e716f8d281b4d0f510bc568bcee4a13fc480ff7
The instructions suggest updating the ownership of the swift.egg-info
directory may be required and provide a cmd to do so. Said cmd assumes user
'swift' exists, but tox will require the current user to have access to the
directory to perform updates, moreover user swift may not exist at all.
Change-Id: I63951970553c086ff4f1ac65a81559ba69166494
The actual server-side changes are simple. The tests are a different
matter. Many changes were needed to the object server tests to
handle the now-async calls to the container server. In an effort to
test this properly, some drive-by changes were made to improve tests.
I tested this patch by doing zero-byte object writes to one container
as fast as possible. Then I did it again while also saturating 2 of the
container replica's disks. The results are linked below.
https://gist.github.com/notmyname/2bb85acfd8fbc7fc312a
DocImpact
Change-Id: I737bd0af3f124a4ce3e0862a155e97c1f0ac3e52
Make the test-requirements install command uniform with the rest of the
setup commands in the page by using the $HOME, instead of hardcoding
the folder path.
Change-Id: I8da7a191a301601e27f894f8268238d77b150ede
Container-sync realm uses cluster_ as a prefix to specify clusters'
names. At use, the prefix should not be included. Fixing the examples
and sample conf to make it clearer that only the name of the cluster
should be passed.
Change-Id: I2e521d86faffb59e1b45d3f039987ee023c5e939
This is a tool to help developers quantify changes to the ring
builder. It takes a scenario (JSON file) describing the builder's
basic parameters (part_power, replicas, etc.) and a number of
"rounds", where each round is a set of operations to perform on the
builder. For each round, the operations are applied, and then the
builder is rebalanced until it reaches a steady state.
The idea is that a developer observes the ring builder behaving
suboptimally, writes a scenario to reproduce the behavior, modifies
the ring builder to fix it, and references the scenario with the
commit so that others can see that things have improved.
I decided to write this after writing my fourth or fifth hacky one-off
script to reproduce some bad behavior in the ring builder.
Change-Id: I114242748368f142304aab90a6d99c1337bced4c
The content about Object Storage HTTP requests constraints seems to
be a table but broken, this patch fixes it into correct rst table format.
Change-Id: I1b4c62da3e6d91add3ee0218707c1628c8f04b33
Inline markup cannot be nested in RST.
Fixing markups by using a single option for the whole line and making
some minor error corrections.
Change-Id: I42bfd7dfe5c93a69436ecc5d154f2e61ca83fa82
Doesn't work for anything other than policy 0. updated to allow user
to specify policy name on cmd line (as with object-info) which
then makes populate/report work with 3x, 2x, or EC style policies
Change-Id: Ib7c298f0f6d666b1ecca25315b88539f45cf9f95
Closes-Bug: 1458688
Enabled by a new > 0 integer config value, "servers_per_port" in the
[DEFAULT] config section for object-server and/or replication server
configs. The setting's integer value determines how many different
object-server workers handle requests for any single unique local port
in the ring. In this mode, the parent swift-object-server process
continues to run as the original user (i.e. root if low-port binding
is required), binds to all ports as defined in the ring, and forks off
the specified number of workers per listen socket. The child, per-port
servers drop privileges and behave pretty much how object-server workers
always have, except that because the ring has unique ports per disk, the
object-servers will only be handling requests for a single disk. The
parent process detects dead servers and restarts them (with the correct
listen socket), starts missing servers when an updated ring file is
found with a device on the server with a new port, and kills extraneous
servers when their port is found to no longer be in the ring. The ring
files are stat'ed at most every "ring_check_interval" seconds, as
configured in the object-server config (same default of 15s).
Immediately stopping all swift-object-worker processes still works by
sending the parent a SIGTERM. Likewise, a SIGHUP to the parent process
still causes the parent process to close all listen sockets and exit,
allowing existing children to finish serving their existing requests.
The drop_privileges helper function now has an optional param to
suppress the setsid() call, which otherwise screws up the child workers'
process management.
The class method RingData.load() can be told to only load the ring
metadata (i.e. everything except replica2part2dev_id) with the optional
kwarg, header_only=True. This is used to keep the parent and all
forked off workers from unnecessarily having full copies of all storage
policy rings in memory.
A new helper class, swift.common.storage_policy.BindPortsCache,
provides a method to return a set of all device ports in all rings for
the server on which it is instantiated (identified by its set of IP
addresses). The BindPortsCache instance will track mtimes of ring
files, so they are not opened more frequently than necessary.
This patch includes enhancements to the probe tests and
object-replicator/object-reconstructor config plumbing to allow the
probe tests to work correctly both in the "normal" config (same IP but
unique ports for each SAIO "server") and a server-per-port setup where
each SAIO "server" must have a unique IP address and unique port per
disk within each "server". The main probe tests only work with 4
servers and 4 disks, but you can see the difference in the rings for the
EC probe tests where there are 2 disks per server for a total of 8
disks. Specifically, swift.common.ring.utils.is_local_device() will
ignore the ports when the "my_port" argument is None. Then,
object-replicator and object-reconstructor both set self.bind_port to
None if server_per_port is enabled. Bonus improvement for IPv6
addresses in is_local_device().
This PR for vagrant-swift-all-in-one will aid in testing this patch:
https://github.com/swiftstack/vagrant-swift-all-in-one/pull/16/
Also allow SAIO to answer is_local_device() better; common SAIO setups
have multiple "servers" all on the same host with different ports for
the different "servers" (which happen to match the IPs specified in the
rings for the devices on each of those "servers").
However, you can configure the SAIO to have different localhost IP
addresses (e.g. 127.0.0.1, 127.0.0.2, etc.) in the ring and in the
servers' config files' bind_ip setting.
This new whataremyips() implementation combined with a little plumbing
allows is_local_device() to accurately answer, even on an SAIO.
In the default case (an unspecified bind_ip defaults to '0.0.0.0') as
well as an explict "bind to everything" like '0.0.0.0' or '::',
whataremyips() behaves as it always has, returning all IP addresses for
the server.
Also updated probe tests to handle each "server" in the SAIO having a
unique IP address.
For some (noisy) benchmarks that show servers_per_port=X is at least as
good as the same number of "normal" workers:
https://gist.github.com/dbishop/c214f89ca708a6b1624a#file-summary-md
Benchmarks showing the benefits of I/O isolation with a small number of
slow disks:
https://gist.github.com/dbishop/fd0ab067babdecfb07ca#file-results-md
If you were wondering what the overhead of threads_per_disk looks like:
https://gist.github.com/dbishop/1d14755fedc86a161718#file-tabular_results-md
DocImpact
Change-Id: I2239a4000b41a7e7cc53465ce794af49d44796c6
Modified values in example in decimal to be more precise,
added a small description on Object are sorted and concatenated
by swift in cardinal order as a small phrase would be sufficient.
Change-Id: I914ded4e5726e50bb93b05759c3bfb76edda53ab
backport: none
Closes-Bug: #1383893
When functional tests are run in tox and an exception is raised when connecting
to Swift (for example: Swift not running, missing python-keystoneclient package
used by python-swiftclient) 0 tests are executed, but tox returns a success.
An exception is raised during tests, caused by a missing python-keystoneclient
in python-swiftclient. Instead of adding python-keystoneclient as a dependency
in python-swiftclient the package is added to the test-requirements.txt in Swift
itself. Note that adding python-keystoneclient to the test-requirements in
python-swiftclient is not sufficient (it's already in there).
The exception in setup_package() is catched by the openstack.nose_plugin, thus
disabling this plugin for now as well.
Also fixing two test errors seen on the gate regarding the tempurl middleware.
There was also an update to tox, environment variables were no longer passed
with versions >= 2.0 (http://tox.readthedocs.org/en/latest/changelog.html).
Swift test environment variables have been added to the passenv to re-enable the
former behavior, as well as environment variables required to pass proxy
settings.
This also led to skipped tempauth tests, and together with the missing
python-keystoneclient no tests were executed.
Related-Bug: 1461440
Related-Bug: 1455102
Co-Authored-By: Alistair Coles <alistair.coles@hp.com>
Change-Id: Ideea071017d04912c60ed0bc76532adbb446c31d
The deprecated directive `run_pause` should be replaced with the more
standard one `interval`. The `run_pause` should be still supported for
backward compatibility. This patch updates object replicator to use
`interval` and support `run_pause`. It also updates its sample config
and documentation.
Co-Authored-By: Joanna H. Huang <joanna.huitzu.huang@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Kamil Rykowski <kamil.rykowski@intel.com>
Change-Id: Ie2a3414a96a94efb9273ff53a80b9d90c74fff09
Closes-Bug: #1364735
This commits add a line (link and small doc) for
swift-durability-calculator which provides a browser based
durability calculation tool to docs as an associated project.
Change-Id: I4ea8015f512616dc25072080bef79b8734971ccf
Add ability to select a storage policy when running
the functional tests by defining the environment variable
SWIFT_TEST_POLICY.
This patch was first introduced by Janie Richling in
feature/ec: https://review.openstack.org/#/c/166097
Co-Authored-By: Janie Richling <jrichli@us.ibm.com>
Co-Authored-By: Christian Schwede <christian.schwede@enovance.com>
Co-Authored-By: Kota Tsuyuzaki <tsuyuzaki.kota@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Co-Authored-By: Alistair Coles <alistair.coles@hp.com>
Change-Id: Id96354546088df137def0ae7fd434baf64ed0c51
Signed-off-by: Thiago da Silva <thiago@redhat.com>
Sometimes, I get handed a builder file in a support ticket and a
question of the form "why is the balance [not] doing $thing?". When
that happens, I add a bunch of print statements to my local
swift/common/ring/builder.py, figure things out, and then delete the
print statements. This time, instead of deleting the print statements,
I turned them into debug() calls and added a "--debug" flag to the
rebalance command in hopes that someone else will find it useful.
Change-Id: I697af90984fa5b314ddf570280b4585ba0ba363c
Wikipedia's list of common misspellings [1] has a machine-readable
version. This patch fixes those misspellings mentioned in the list
which don't have multiple right variants (as e.g. "accension", which can
be both "accession" and "ascension"), such misspellings are left
untouched. The list of changes was manually re-checked for false
positives.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Lists_of_common_misspellings/For_machines
Change-Id: Ic9a5438629664f7cea216413a28acc0e8992da05
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>