75a6a34528d6f7f3bee64298a829117e9b703835
7 Commits
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75a6a34528 |
dlm: resilient distributed locks via consistent hashing + backup replication (#8860)
* dlm: replace modulo hashing with consistent hash ring Introduce HashRing with virtual nodes (CRC32-based consistent hashing) to replace the modulo-based hashKeyToServer. When a filer node is removed, only keys that hashed to that node are remapped to the next server on the ring, leaving all other mappings stable. This is the foundation for backup replication — the successor on the ring is always the natural takeover node. * dlm: add Generation and IsBackup fields to Lock Lock now carries IsBackup (whether this node holds the lock as a backup replica) and Generation (a monotonic fencing token that increments on each fresh acquisition, stays the same on renewal). Add helper methods: AllLocks, PromoteLock, DemoteLock, InsertBackupLock, RemoveLock, GetLock. * dlm: add ReplicateLock RPC and generation/is_backup proto fields Add generation field to LockResponse for fencing tokens. Add generation and is_backup fields to Lock message. Add ReplicateLock RPC for primary-to-backup lock replication. Add ReplicateLockRequest/ReplicateLockResponse messages. * dlm: add async backup replication to DistributedLockManager Route lock/unlock via consistent hash ring's GetPrimaryAndBackup(). After a successful lock or unlock on the primary, asynchronously replicate the operation to the backup server via ReplicateFunc callback. Single-server deployments skip replication. * dlm: add ReplicateLock handler and backup-aware topology changes Add ReplicateLock gRPC handler for primary-to-backup replication. Revise OnDlmChangeSnapshot to handle three cases on topology change: - Promote backup locks when this node becomes primary - Demote primary locks when this node becomes backup - Transfer locks when this node is neither primary nor backup Wire up SetupDlmReplication during filer server initialization. * dlm: expose generation fencing token in lock client LiveLock now captures the generation from LockResponse and exposes it via Generation() method. Consumers can use this as a fencing token to detect stale lock holders. * dlm: update empty folder cleaner to use consistent hash ring Replace local modulo-based hashKeyToServer with LockRing.GetPrimary() which uses the shared consistent hash ring for folder ownership. * dlm: add unit tests for consistent hash ring Test basic operations, consistency on server removal (only keys from removed server move), backup-is-successor property (backup becomes new primary when primary is removed), and key distribution balance. * dlm: add integration tests for lock replication failure scenarios Test cases: - Primary crash with backup promotion (backup has valid token) - Backup crash with primary continuing - Both primary and backup crash (lock lost, re-acquirable) - Rolling restart across all nodes - Generation fencing token increments on new acquisition - Replication failure (primary still works independently) - Unlock replicates deletion to backup - Lock survives server addition (topology change) - Consistent hashing minimal disruption (only removed server's keys move) * dlm: address PR review findings 1. Causal replication ordering: Add per-lock sequence number (Seq) that increments on every mutation. Backup rejects incoming mutations with seq <= current seq, preventing stale async replications from overwriting newer state. Unlock replication also carries seq and is rejected if stale. 2. Demote-after-handoff: OnDlmChangeSnapshot now transfers the lock to the new primary first and only demotes to backup after a successful TransferLocks RPC. If the transfer fails, the lock stays as primary on this node. 3. SetSnapshot candidateServers leak: Replace the candidateServers map entirely instead of appending, so removed servers don't linger. 4. TransferLocks preserves Generation and Seq: InsertLock now accepts generation and seq parameters. After accepting a transferred lock, the receiving node re-replicates to its backup. 5. Rolling restart test: Add re-replication step after promotion and assert survivedCount > 0. Add TestDLM_StaleReplicationRejected. 6. Mixed-version upgrade note: Add comment on HashRing documenting that all filer nodes must be upgraded together. * dlm: serve renewals locally during transfer window on node join When a new node joins and steals hash ranges from surviving nodes, there's a window between ring update and lock transfer where the client gets redirected to a node that doesn't have the lock yet. Fix: if the ring says primary != self but we still hold the lock locally (non-backup, matching token), serve the renewal/unlock here rather than redirecting. The lock will be transferred by OnDlmChangeSnapshot, and subsequent requests will go to the new primary once the transfer completes. Add tests: - TestDLM_NodeDropAndJoin_OwnershipDisruption: measures disruption when a node drops and a new one joins (14/100 surviving-node locks disrupted, all handled by transfer logic) - TestDLM_RenewalDuringTransferWindow: verifies renewal succeeds on old primary during the transfer window * dlm: master-managed lock ring with stabilization batching The master now owns the lock ring membership. Instead of filers independently reacting to individual ClusterNodeUpdate add/remove events, the master: 1. Tracks filer membership in LockRingManager 2. Batches rapid changes with a 1-second stabilization timer (e.g., a node drop + join within 1 second → single ring update) 3. Broadcasts the complete ring snapshot atomically via the new LockRingUpdate message in KeepConnectedResponse Filers receive the ring as a complete snapshot and apply it via SetSnapshot, ensuring all filers converge to the same ring state without intermediate churn. This eliminates the double-churn problem where a rapid drop+join would fire two separate ring mutations, each triggering lock transfers and disrupting ownership on surviving nodes. * dlm: track ring version, reject stale updates, remove dead code SetSnapshot now takes a version parameter from the master. Stale updates (version < current) are rejected, preventing reordered messages from overwriting a newer ring state. Version 0 is always accepted for bootstrap. Remove AddServer/RemoveServer from LockRing — the ring is now exclusively managed by the master via SetSnapshot. Remove the candidateServers map that was only used by those methods. * dlm: fix SelectLocks data race, advance generation on backup insert - SelectLocks: change RLock to Lock since the function deletes map entries, which is a write operation and causes a data race under RLock. - InsertBackupLock: advance nextGeneration to at least the incoming generation so that after failover promotion, new lock acquisitions get a generation strictly greater than any replicated lock. - Bump replication failure log from V(1) to Warningf for production visibility. * dlm: fix SetSnapshot race, test reliability, timer edge cases - SetSnapshot: hold LockRing lock through both version update and Ring.SetServers() so they're atomic. Prevents a concurrent caller from seeing the new version but applying stale servers. - Transfer window test: search for a key that actually moves primary when filer4 joins, instead of relying on a fixed key that may not. - renewLock redirect: pass the existing token to the new primary instead of empty string, so redirected renewals work correctly. - scheduleBroadcast: check timer.Stop() return value. If the timer already fired, the callback picks up latest state. - FlushPending: only broadcast if timer.Stop() returns true (timer was still pending). If false, the callback is already running. - Fix test comment: "idempotent" → "accepted, state-changing". * dlm: use wall-clock nanoseconds for lock ring version The lock ring version was an in-memory counter that reset to 0 on master restart. A filer that had seen version 5 would reject version 1 from the restarted master. Fix: use time.Now().UnixNano() as the version. This survives master restarts without persistence — the restarted master produces a version greater than any pre-restart value. * dlm: treat expired lock owners as missing Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> * dlm: reject stale lock transfers Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> * dlm: order replication by generation Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> * dlm: bootstrap lock ring on reconnect Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> --------- Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> |
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0761be58d3 |
fix(s3): preserve explicit directory markers during empty folder cleanup (#8831)
* fix(s3): preserve explicit directory markers during empty folder cleanup PR #8292 switched empty-folder cleanup from per-folder implicit checks to bucket-level policy, inadvertently dropping the check that preserved explicitly created directories (e.g., PUT /bucket/folder/). This caused user-created folders to be deleted when their last file was removed. Add IsDirectoryKeyObject check in executeCleanup to skip folders that have a MIME type set, matching the canonical pattern used throughout the S3 listing and delete handlers. * fix: handle ErrNotFound in IsDirectoryKeyObject for race safety Entry may be deleted between the emptiness check and the directory marker lookup. Treat not-found as false rather than propagating the error, avoiding unnecessary error logging in the cleanup path. * refactor: consolidate directory marker tests and tidy error handling - Combine two separate test functions into a table-driven test - Nest ErrNotFound check inside the err != nil block |
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94bfa2b340 |
mount: stream all filer mutations over single ordered gRPC stream (#8770)
* filer: add StreamMutateEntry bidi streaming RPC Add a bidirectional streaming RPC that carries all filer mutation types (create, update, delete, rename) over a single ordered stream. This eliminates per-request connection overhead for pipelined operations and guarantees mutation ordering within a stream. The server handler delegates each request to the existing unary handlers (CreateEntry, UpdateEntry, DeleteEntry) and uses a proxy stream adapter for rename operations to reuse StreamRenameEntry logic. The is_last field signals completion for multi-response operations (rename sends multiple events per request; create/update/delete always send exactly one response with is_last=true). * mount: add streaming mutation multiplexer (streamMutateMux) Implement a client-side multiplexer that routes all filer mutation RPCs (create, update, delete, rename) over a single bidirectional gRPC stream. Multiple goroutines submit requests through a send channel; a dedicated sendLoop serializes them on the stream; a recvLoop dispatches responses to waiting callers via per-request channels. Key features: - Lazy stream opening on first use - Automatic reconnection on stream failure - Permanent fallback to unary RPCs if filer returns Unimplemented - Monotonic request_id for response correlation - Multi-response support for rename operations (is_last signaling) The mux is initialized on WFS and closed during unmount cleanup. No call sites use it yet — wiring comes in subsequent commits. * mount: route CreateEntry and UpdateEntry through streaming mux Wire all CreateEntry call sites to use wfs.streamCreateEntry() which routes through the StreamMutateEntry stream when available, falling back to unary RPCs otherwise. Also wire Link's UpdateEntry calls through wfs.streamUpdateEntry(). Updated call sites: - flushMetadataToFiler (file flush after write) - Mkdir (directory creation) - Symlink (symbolic link creation) - createRegularFile non-deferred path (Mknod) - flushFileMetadata (periodic metadata flush) - Link (hard link: update source + create link + rollback) * mount: route UpdateEntry and DeleteEntry through streaming mux Wire remaining mutation call sites through the streaming mux: - saveEntry (Setattr/chmod/chown/utimes) → streamUpdateEntry - Unlink → streamDeleteEntry (replaces RemoveWithResponse) - Rmdir → streamDeleteEntry (replaces RemoveWithResponse) All filer mutations except Rename now go through StreamMutateEntry when the filer supports it, with automatic unary RPC fallback. * mount: route Rename through streaming mux Wire Rename to use streamMutate.Rename() when available, with fallback to the existing StreamRenameEntry unary stream. The streaming mux sends rename as a StreamRenameEntryRequest oneof variant. The server processes it through the existing rename logic and sends multiple StreamRenameEntryResponse events (one per moved entry), with is_last=true on the final response. All filer mutations now go through a single ordered stream. * mount: fix stream mux connection ownership WithGrpcClient(streamingMode=true) closes the gRPC connection when the callback returns, destroying the stream. Own the connection directly via pb.GrpcDial so it stays alive for the stream's lifetime. Close it explicitly in recvLoop on stream failure and in Close on shutdown. * mount: fix rename failure for deferred-create files Three fixes for rename operations over the streaming mux: 1. lookupEntry: fall back to local metadata store when filer returns "not found" for entries in uncached directories. Files created with deferFilerCreate=true exist only in the local leveldb store until flushed; lookupEntry skipped the local store when the parent directory had never been readdir'd, causing rename to fail with ENOENT. 2. Rename: wait for pending async flushes and force synchronous flush of dirty metadata before sending rename to the filer. Covers the writebackCache case where close() defers the flush to a background worker that may not complete before rename fires. 3. StreamMutateEntry: propagate rename errors from server to client. Add error/errno fields to StreamMutateEntryResponse so the mount can map filer errors to correct FUSE status codes instead of silently returning OK. Also fix the existing Rename error handler which could return fuse.OK on unrecognized errors. * mount: fix streaming mux error handling, sendLoop lifecycle, and fallback Address PR review comments: 1. Server: populate top-level Error/Errno on StreamMutateEntryResponse for create/update/delete errors, not just rename. Previously update errors were silently dropped and create/delete errors were only in nested response fields that the client didn't check. 2. Client: check nested error fields in CreateEntry (ErrorCode, Error) and DeleteEntry (Error) responses, matching CreateEntryWithResponse behavior. 3. Fix sendLoop lifecycle: give each stream generation a stopSend channel. recvLoop closes it on error to stop the paired sendLoop. Previously a reconnect left the old sendLoop draining sendCh, breaking ordering. 4. Transparent fallback: stream helpers and doRename fall back to unary RPCs on transport errors (ErrStreamTransport), including the first Unimplemented from ensureStream. Previously the first call failed instead of degrading. 5. Filer rotation in openStream: try all filer addresses on dial failure, matching WithFilerClient behavior. Stop early on Unimplemented. 6. Pass metadata-bearing context to StreamMutateEntry RPC call so sw-client-id header is actually sent. 7. Gate lookupEntry local-cache fallback on open dirty handle or pending async flush to avoid resurrecting deleted/renamed entries. 8. Remove dead code in flushFileMetadata (err=nil followed by if err!=nil). 9. Use string matching for rename error-to-errno mapping in the mount to stay portable across Linux/macOS (numeric errno values differ). * mount: make failAllPending idempotent with delete-before-close Change failAllPending to collect pending entries into a local slice (deleting from the sync.Map first) before closing channels. This prevents double-close panics if called concurrently. Also remove the unused err parameter. * mount: add stream generation tracking and teardownStream Introduce a generation counter on streamMutateMux that increments each time a new stream is created. Requests carry the generation they were enqueued for so sendLoop can reject stale requests after reconnect. Add teardownStream(gen) which is idempotent (only acts when gen matches current generation and stream is non-nil). Both sendLoop and recvLoop call it on error, replacing the inline cleanup in recvLoop. sendLoop now actively triggers teardown on send errors instead of silently exiting. ensureStream waits for the prior generation's recvDone before creating a new stream, ensuring all old pending waiters are failed before reconnect. recvLoop now takes the stream, generation, and recvDone channel as parameters to avoid accessing shared fields without the lock. * mount: harden Close to prevent races with teardownStream Nil out stream, cancel, and grpcConn under the lock so that any concurrent teardownStream call from recvLoop/sendLoop becomes a no-op. Call failAllPending before closing sendCh to unblock waiters promptly. Guard recvDone with a nil check for the case where Close is called before any stream was ever opened. * mount: make errCh receive ctx-aware in doUnary and Rename Replace the blocking <-sendReq.errCh with a select that also observes ctx.Done(). If sendLoop exits via stopSend without consuming a buffered request, the caller now returns ctx.Err() instead of blocking forever. The buffered errCh (capacity 1) ensures late acknowledgements from sendLoop don't block the sender. * mount: fix sendLoop/Close race and recvLoop/teardown pending channel race Three related fixes: 1. Stop closing sendCh in Close(). Closing the shared producer channel races with callers who passed ensureStream() but haven't sent yet, causing send-on-closed-channel panics. sendCh is now left open; ensureStream checks m.closed to reject new callers. 2. Drain buffered sendCh items on shutdown. sendLoop defers drainSendCh() on exit so buffered requests get an ErrStreamTransport on their errCh instead of blocking forever. Close() drains again for any stragglers enqueued between sendLoop's drain and the final shutdown. 3. Move failAllPending from teardownStream into recvLoop's defer. teardownStream (called from sendLoop on send error) was closing pending response channels while recvLoop could be between pending.Load and the channel send — a send-on-closed-channel panic. recvLoop is now the sole closer of pending channels, eliminating the race. Close() waits on recvDone (with cancel() to guarantee Recv unblocks) so pending cleanup always completes. * filer/mount: add debug logging for hardlink lifecycle Add V(0) logging at every point where a HardLinkId is created, stored, read, or deleted to trace orphaned hardlink references. Logging covers: - gRPC server: CreateEntry/UpdateEntry when request carries HardLinkId - FilerStoreWrapper: InsertEntry/UpdateEntry when entry has HardLinkId - handleUpdateToHardLinks: entry path, HardLinkId, counter, chunk count - setHardLink: KvPut with blob size - maybeReadHardLink: V(1) on read attempt and successful decode - DeleteHardLink: counter decrement/deletion events - Mount Link(): when NewHardLinkId is generated and link is created This helps diagnose how a git pack .rev file ended up with a HardLinkId during a clone (no hard links should be involved). * test: add git clone/pull integration test for FUSE mount Shell script that exercises git operations on a SeaweedFS mount: 1. Creates a bare repo on the mount 2. Clones locally, makes 3 commits, pushes to mount 3. Clones from mount bare repo into an on-mount working dir 4. Verifies clone integrity (files, content, commit hashes) 5. Pushes 2 more commits with renames and deletes 6. Checks out an older revision on the mount clone 7. Returns to branch and pulls with real changes 8. Verifies file content, renames, deletes after pull 9. Checks git log integrity and clean status 27 assertions covering file existence, content, commit hashes, file counts, renames, deletes, and git status. Run against any existing mount: bash test-git-on-mount.sh /path/to/mount * test: add git clone/pull FUSE integration test to CI suite Add TestGitOperations to the existing fuse_integration test framework. The test exercises git's full file operation surface on the mount: 1. Creates a bare repo on the mount (acts as remote) 2. Clones locally, makes 3 commits (files, bulk data, renames), pushes 3. Clones from mount bare repo into an on-mount working dir 4. Verifies clone integrity (content, commit hash, file count) 5. Pushes 2 more commits with new files, renames, and deletes 6. Checks out an older revision on the mount clone 7. Returns to branch and pulls with real fast-forward changes 8. Verifies post-pull state: content, renames, deletes, file counts 9. Checks git log integrity (5 commits) and clean status Runs automatically in the existing fuse-integration.yml CI workflow. * mount: fix permission check with uid/gid mapping The permission checks in createRegularFile() and Access() compared the caller's local uid/gid against the entry's filer-side uid/gid without applying the uid/gid mapper. With -map.uid 501:0, a directory created as uid 0 on the filer would not match the local caller uid 501, causing hasAccess() to fall through to "other" permission bits and reject write access (0755 → other has r-x, no w). Fix: map entry uid/gid from filer-space to local-space before the hasAccess() call so both sides are in the same namespace. This fixes rsync -a failing with "Permission denied" on mkstempat when using uid/gid mapping. * mount: fix Mkdir/Symlink returning filer-side uid/gid to kernel Mkdir and Symlink used `defer wfs.mapPbIdFromFilerToLocal(entry)` to restore local uid/gid, but `outputPbEntry` writes the kernel response before the function returns — so the kernel received filer-side uid/gid (e.g., 0:0). macFUSE then caches these and rejects subsequent child operations (mkdir, create) because the caller uid (501) doesn't match the directory owner (0), and "other" bits (0755 → r-x) lack write permission. Fix: replace the defer with an explicit call to mapPbIdFromFilerToLocal before outputPbEntry, so the kernel gets local uid/gid. Also add nil guards for UidGidMapper in Access and createRegularFile to prevent panics in tests that don't configure a mapper. This fixes rsync -a "Permission denied" on mkpathat for nested directories when using uid/gid mapping. * mount: fix Link outputting filer-side uid/gid to kernel, add nil guards Link had the same defer-before-outputPbEntry bug as Mkdir and Symlink: the kernel received filer-side uid/gid because the defer hadn't run yet when outputPbEntry wrote the response. Also add nil guards for UidGidMapper in Access and createRegularFile so tests without a mapper don't panic. Audit of all outputPbEntry/outputFilerEntry call sites: - Mkdir: fixed in prior commit (explicit map before output) - Symlink: fixed in prior commit (explicit map before output) - Link: fixed here (explicit map before output) - Create (existing file): entry from maybeLoadEntry (already mapped) - Create (deferred): entry has local uid/gid (never mapped to filer) - Create (non-deferred): createRegularFile defer runs before return - Mknod: createRegularFile defer runs before return - Lookup: entry from lookupEntry (already mapped) - GetAttr: entry from maybeReadEntry/maybeLoadEntry (already mapped) - readdir: entry from cache (mapIdFromFilerToLocal) or filer (mapped) - saveEntry: no kernel output - flushMetadataToFiler: no kernel output - flushFileMetadata: no kernel output * test: fix git test for same-filesystem FUSE clone When both the bare repo and working clone live on the same FUSE mount, git's local transport uses hardlinks and cross-repo stat calls that fail on FUSE. Fix: - Use --no-local on clone to disable local transport optimizations - Use reset --hard instead of checkout to stay on branch - Use fetch + reset --hard origin/<branch> instead of git pull to avoid local transport stat failures during fetch * adjust logging * test: use plain git clone/pull to exercise real FUSE behavior Remove --no-local and fetch+reset workarounds. The test should use the same git commands users run (clone, reset --hard, pull) so it reveals real FUSE issues rather than hiding them. * test: enable V(1) logging for filer/mount and collect logs on failure - Run filer and mount with -v=1 so hardlink lifecycle logs (V(0): create/delete/insert, V(1): read attempts) are captured - On test failure, automatically dump last 16KB of all process logs (master, volume, filer, mount) to test output - Copy process logs to /tmp/seaweedfs-fuse-logs/ for CI artifact upload - Update CI workflow to upload SeaweedFS process logs alongside test output * mount: clone entry for filer flush to prevent uid/gid race flushMetadataToFiler and flushFileMetadata used entry.GetEntry() which returns the file handle's live proto entry pointer, then mutated it in-place via mapPbIdFromLocalToFiler. During the gRPC call window, a concurrent Lookup (which takes entryLock.RLock but NOT fhLockTable) could observe filer-side uid/gid (e.g., 0:0) on the file handle entry and return it to the kernel. The kernel caches these attributes, so subsequent opens by the local user (uid 501) fail with EACCES. Fix: proto.Clone the entry before mapping uid/gid for the filer request. The file handle's live entry is never mutated, so concurrent Lookup always sees local uid/gid. This fixes the intermittent "Permission denied" on .git/FETCH_HEAD after the first git pull on a mount with uid/gid mapping. * mount: add debug logging for stale lock file investigation Add V(0) logging to trace the HEAD.lock recreation issue: - Create: log when O_EXCL fails (file already exists) with uid/gid/mode - completeAsyncFlush: log resolved path, saved path, dirtyMetadata, isDeleted at entry to trace whether async flush fires after rename - flushMetadataToFiler: log the dir/name/fullpath being flushed This will show whether the async flush is recreating the lock file after git renames HEAD.lock → HEAD. * mount: prevent async flush from recreating renamed .lock files When git renames HEAD.lock → HEAD, the async flush from the prior close() can run AFTER the rename and re-insert HEAD.lock into the meta cache via its CreateEntryRequest response event. The next git pull then sees HEAD.lock and fails with "File exists". Fix: add isRenamed flag on FileHandle, set by Rename before waiting for the pending async flush. The async flush checks this flag and skips the metadata flush for renamed files (same pattern as isDeleted for unlinked files). The data pages still flush normally. The Rename handler flushes deferred metadata synchronously (Case 1) before setting isRenamed, ensuring the entry exists on the filer for the rename to proceed. For already-released handles (Case 2), the entry was created by a prior flush. * mount: also mark renamed inodes via entry.Attributes.Inode fallback When GetInode fails (Forget already removed the inode mapping), the Rename handler couldn't find the pending async flush to set isRenamed. The async flush then recreated the .lock file on the filer. Fix: fall back to oldEntry.Attributes.Inode to find the pending async flush when the inode-to-path mapping is gone. Also extract MarkInodeRenamed into a method on FileHandleToInode for clarity. * mount: skip async metadata flush when saved path no longer maps to inode The isRenamed flag approach failed for refs/remotes/origin/HEAD.lock because neither GetInode nor oldEntry.Attributes.Inode could find the inode (Forget already evicted the mapping, and the entry's stored inode was 0). Add a direct check in completeAsyncFlush: before flushing metadata, verify that the saved path still maps to this inode in the inode-to-path table. If the path was renamed or removed (inode mismatch or not found), skip the metadata flush to avoid recreating a stale entry. This catches all rename cases regardless of whether the Rename handler could set the isRenamed flag. * mount: wait for pending async flush in Unlink before filer delete Unlink was deleting the filer entry first, then marking the draining async-flush handle as deleted. The async flush worker could race between these two operations and recreate the just-unlinked entry on the filer. This caused git's .lock files (e.g. refs/remotes/origin/HEAD.lock) to persist after git pull, breaking subsequent git operations. Move the isDeleted marking and add waitForPendingAsyncFlush() before the filer delete so any in-flight flush completes first. Even if the worker raced past the isDeleted check, the wait ensures it finishes before the filer delete cleans up any recreated entry. * mount: reduce async flush and metadata flush log verbosity Raise completeAsyncFlush entry log, saved-path-mismatch skip log, and flushMetadataToFiler entry log from V(0) to V(3)/V(4). These fire for every file close with writebackCache and are too noisy for normal use. * filer: reduce hardlink debug log verbosity from V(0) to V(4) HardLinkId logs in filerstore_wrapper, filerstore_hardlink, and filer_grpc_server fire on every hardlinked file operation (git pack files use hardlinks extensively) and produce excessive noise. * mount/filer: reduce noisy V(0) logs for link, rmdir, and empty folder check - weedfs_link.go: hardlink creation logs V(0) → V(4) - weedfs_dir_mkrm.go: non-empty folder rmdir error V(0) → V(1) - empty_folder_cleaner.go: "not empty" check log V(0) → V(4) * filer: handle missing hardlink KV as expected, not error A "kv: not found" on hardlink read is normal when the link blob was already cleaned up but a stale entry still references it. Log at V(1) for not-found; keep Error level for actual KV failures. * test: add waitForDir before git pull in FUSE git operations test After git reset --hard, the FUSE mount's metadata cache may need a moment to settle on slow CI. The git pull subprocess (unpack-objects) could fail to stat the working directory. Poll for up to 5s. * Update git_operations_test.go * wait * test: simplify FUSE test framework to use weed mini Replace the 4-process setup (master + volume + filer + mount) with 2 processes: "weed mini" (all-in-one) + "weed mount". This simplifies startup, reduces port allocation, and is faster on CI. * test: fix mini flag -admin → -admin.ui |
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b57429ef2e |
Switch empty-folder cleanup to bucket policy (#8292)
* Fix Spark _temporary cleanup and add issue #8285 regression test * Generalize empty folder cleanup for Spark temp artifacts * Revert synchronous folder pruning and add cleanup diagnostics * Add actionable empty-folder cleanup diagnostics * Fix Spark temp marker cleanup in async folder cleaner * Fix Spark temp cleanup with implicit directory markers * Keep explicit directory markers non-implicit * logging * more logs * Switch empty-folder cleanup to bucket policy * Seaweed-X-Amz-Allow-Empty-Folders * less logs * go vet * less logs * refactoring |
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8880f9932f |
filer: auto clean empty implicit s3 folders (#8051)
* filer: auto clean empty s3 implicit folders Explicitly tag implicitly created S3 folders (parent directories from object uploads) with 'Seaweed-X-Amz-Implicit-Dir'. Update EmptyFolderCleaner to check for this attribute and cache the result efficiently. * filer: correctly handle nil attributes in empty folder cleaner cache * filer: refine implicit tagging logic Prevent tagging buckets as implicit directories. Reduce code duplication. * filer: safeguard GetEntryAttributes against nil entry and not found error * filer: move ErrNotFound handling to EmptyFolderCleaner * filer: add comment to explain level > 3 check for implicit directories |
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9012069bd7 |
chore: execute goimports to format the code (#7983)
* chore: execute goimports to format the code Signed-off-by: promalert <promalert@outlook.com> * goimports -w . --------- Signed-off-by: promalert <promalert@outlook.com> Co-authored-by: Chris Lu <chris.lu@gmail.com> |
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39ba19eea6 |
filer: async empty folder cleanup via metadata events (#7614)
* filer: async empty folder cleanup via metadata events Implements asynchronous empty folder cleanup when files are deleted in S3. Key changes: 1. EmptyFolderCleaner - New component that handles folder cleanup: - Uses consistent hashing (LockRing) to determine folder ownership - Each filer owns specific folders, avoiding duplicate cleanup work - Debounces delete events (10s delay) to batch multiple deletes - Caches rough folder counts to skip unnecessary checks - Cancels pending cleanup when new files are created - Handles both file and subdirectory deletions 2. Integration with metadata events: - Listens to both local and remote filer metadata events - Processes create/delete/rename events to track folder state - Only processes folders under /buckets/<bucket>/... 3. Removed synchronous empty folder cleanup from S3 handlers: - DeleteObjectHandler no longer calls DoDeleteEmptyParentDirectories - DeleteMultipleObjectsHandler no longer tracks/cleans directories - Cleanup now happens asynchronously via metadata events Benefits: - Non-blocking: S3 delete requests return immediately - Coordinated: Only one filer (the owner) cleans each folder - Efficient: Batching and caching reduce unnecessary checks - Event-driven: Folder deletion triggers parent folder check automatically * filer: add CleanupQueue data structure for deduplicated folder cleanup CleanupQueue uses a linked list for FIFO ordering and a hashmap for O(1) deduplication. Processing is triggered when: - Queue size reaches maxSize (default 1000), OR - Oldest item exceeds maxAge (default 10 minutes) Key features: - O(1) Add, Remove, Pop, Contains operations - Duplicate folders are ignored (keeps original position/time) - Testable with injectable time function - Thread-safe with mutex protection * filer: use CleanupQueue for empty folder cleanup Replace timer-per-folder approach with queue-based processing: - Use CleanupQueue for deduplication and ordered processing - Process queue when full (1000 items) or oldest item exceeds 10 minutes - Background processor checks queue every 10 seconds - Remove from queue on create events to cancel pending cleanup Benefits: - Bounded memory: queue has max size, not unlimited timers - Efficient: O(1) add/remove/contains operations - Batch processing: handle many folders efficiently - Better for high-volume delete scenarios * filer: CleanupQueue.Add moves duplicate to back with updated time When adding a folder that already exists in the queue: - Remove it from its current position - Add it to the back of the queue - Update the queue time to current time This ensures that folders with recent delete activity are processed later, giving more time for additional deletes to occur. * filer: CleanupQueue uses event time and inserts in sorted order Changes: - Add() now takes eventTime parameter instead of using current time - Insert items in time-sorted order (oldest at front) to handle out-of-order events - When updating duplicate with newer time, reposition to maintain sort order - Ignore updates with older time (keep existing later time) This ensures proper ordering when processing events from distributed filers where event arrival order may not match event occurrence order. * filer: remove unused CleanupQueue functions (SetNowFunc, GetAll) Removed test-only functions: - SetNowFunc: tests now use real time with past event times - GetAll: tests now use Pop() to verify order Kept functions used in production: - Peek: used in filer_notify_read.go - OldestAge: used in empty_folder_cleaner.go logging * filer: initialize cache entry on first delete/create event Previously, roughCount was only updated if the cache entry already existed, but entries were only created during executeCleanup. This meant delete/create events before the first cleanup didn't track the count. Now create the cache entry on first event, so roughCount properly tracks all changes from the start. * filer: skip adding to cleanup queue if roughCount > 0 If the cached roughCount indicates there are still items in the folder, don't bother adding it to the cleanup queue. This avoids unnecessary queue entries and reduces wasted cleanup checks. * filer: don't create cache entry on create event Only update roughCount if the folder is already being tracked. New folders don't need tracking until we see a delete event. * filer: move empty folder cleanup to its own package - Created weed/filer/empty_folder_cleanup package - Defined FilerOperations interface to break circular dependency - Added CountDirectoryEntries method to Filer - Exported IsUnderPath and IsUnderBucketPath helper functions * filer: make isUnderPath and isUnderBucketPath private These helpers are only used within the empty_folder_cleanup package. |