If a connection has not been established earlier, it stores `nil` in LRU
cache. Cache eviction tries to close every connection (even a `nil` one) and
panics but not crash the app because we are using pools.
That ugly bug also leads to a deadlock where `Unlock` is not called via
`defer` func (and that is the way I found it).
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
After 75d7891ca1
`neo-go` does claim that an empty invocation script is the only way to
fill missing signature for unsigned notary requests. The new notary actor
does it that way and, therefore, breaks notary request parsing by the
Alphabet because of skipping any request that is not filled with a dummy (64
zeros) invocation script. Support both way. The "Dummy" approach will be
dropped later.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
That's the reason #2230 and #2263 were not detected earlier, we actually had
Global scope being used before reconnection to RPC node.
Signed-off-by: Roman Khimov <roman@nspcc.ru>
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <e.stratonikov@yadro.com>
Fixes#2230, fixes#2263. CustomGroups are nice while we're only calling NeoFS
contracts, but it doesn't work at all for standard ones like GAS or Notary.
Signed-off-by: Roman Khimov <roman@nspcc.ru>
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <e.stratonikov@yadro.com>
It led to a neo-go dead-lock in the `subscriber` component. Subscribing to
notifications is the same RPC as any others, so it could also be blocked
forever if no async listening (reading the notification channel) routine
exists. If a number of subscriptions is big enough (or a caller is lucky
enough) subscribing loop might have not finished subscribing before the
first notification is received and then: subscribing RPC is blocked by
received notification (non)handling and listening notifications routine is
blocked by not finished subscription loop.
That commit starts listening notification channel _before_ any subscription
actions.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
That will prevent part/link object from being removed by both an external
`DELETE` call and the object expiration procedure.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
A directory is read and files are saved to a local variable. The iteration
over such files may lead to a non-existing files reading due to a normal SN
operation cycle and, therefore, may lead to a returning the OS error to a
caller. Skip just removed (or lost) files as the golang std library does in
similar situations:
5f1a0320b9/src/os/dir_unix.go (L128-L133).
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
In previous implementation pretty-printer of basic ACL in NeoFS CLI had
mistakes:
* F-bit was set to `Extendable()` property instead of its inversion
* B-bits were set to `acl.RoleInnerRing` rights
Make `PrettyPrintTableBACL` to correctly render mentioned bits.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <ctulhurider@gmail.com>
In case we have many small objects in the write-cache, `indices` should
not be reused between iterations.
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <e.stratonikov@yadro.com>
Previously, node could get an "infinite" small object: it could be expired
and thus could not be flushed (update its storage ID) to metabase => could
not be marked as flushed => node never removes such object and repeat all
the cycle one more time. If object exists and is not marked with GC (meta
returns `ErrObjectIsExpired`, not `ObjectNotFound` and not
`ObjectAlreadyRemoved`), its ID is safe to update _in the same_ bbolt
transaction.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
Currently, DELETE service sets tombstone expiration epoch to
`current epoch + 5`. This works less than ideal in private networks
where an epoch can be e.g. 10 minutes. In this case, after a node is
unavailable for more than 1 hour, already deleted objects have a chance
to reappear.
After this commit tombstone lifetime can be configured.
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <e.stratonikov@yadro.com>