No description
Quentin
b4592a00fe
Implement ListMultipartUploads, also refactor ListObjects and ListObjectsV2. It took me some times as I wanted to propose the following things: - Using an iterator instead of the loop+goto pattern. I find it easier to read and it should enable some optimizations. For example, when consuming keys of a common prefix, we do many [redundant checks](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/src/branch/main/src/api/s3_list.rs#L125-L156) while the only thing to do is to [check if the following key is still part of the common prefix](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/src/branch/feature/s3-multipart-compat/src/api/s3_list.rs#L476). - Try to name things (see ExtractionResult and RangeBegin enums) and to separate concerns (see ListQuery and Accumulator) - An IO closure to make unit tests possibles. - Unit tests, to track regressions and document how to interact with the code - Integration tests with `s3api`. In the future, I would like to move them in Rust with the aws rust SDK. Merging of the logic of ListMultipartUploads and ListObjects was not a goal but a consequence of the previous modifications. Some points that we might want to discuss: - ListObjectsV1, when using pagination and delimiters, has a weird behavior (it lists multiple times the same prefix) with `aws s3api` due to the fact that it can not use our optimization to skip the whole prefix. It is independant from my refactor and can be tested with the commented `s3api` tests in `test-smoke.sh`. It probably has the same weird behavior on the official AWS S3 implementation. - Considering ListMultipartUploads, I had to "abuse" upload id marker to support prefix skipping. I send an `upload-id-marker` with the hardcoded value `include` to emulate your "including" token. - Some ways to test ListMultipartUploads with existing software (my tests are limited to s3api for now). Co-authored-by: Quentin Dufour <quentin@deuxfleurs.fr> Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#171 Co-authored-by: Quentin <quentin@dufour.io> Co-committed-by: Quentin <quentin@dufour.io> |
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Garage
[ Website and documentation | Binary releases | Git repository | Matrix channel ]
Garage is a lightweight S3-compatible distributed object store, with the following goals:
- As self-contained as possible
- Easy to set up
- Highly resilient to network failures, network latency, disk failures, sysadmin failures
- Relatively simple
- Made for multi-datacenter deployments
Non-goals include:
- Extremely high performance
- Complete implementation of the S3 API
- Erasure coding (our replication model is simply to copy the data as is on several nodes, in different datacenters if possible)
Our main use case is to provide a distributed storage layer for small-scale self hosted services such as Deuxfleurs.