It is not used for testing, its absence does not break build. The only one
implementation is placed in the same package.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
1. Remove in-memory cache. It doesn't persist objects and if we want
more speed, `NoSync` option can be used for the bolt DB.
2. Put to the metabase in a synchronous fashion. This considerably
simplifies overall logic and plays nicely with the metabase bolt DB
batch settings.
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
If an object is found in the Write-cache and is placed at the end of
the in-memory cache, the memory counter update operation tries to
dereference the index that is out of the sliced array. Moreover, even if
panic does not appear, the counter is updated with the wrong value.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <carpawell@nspcc.ru>
Core changes:
* avoid package-colliding variable naming
* avoid using pointers to IDs where unnecessary
* avoid using `idSDK` import alias pattern
* use `EncodeToString` for protocol string calculation and `String` for
printing
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
`Degraded` mode is set automatically after error counter is over the
threshold. `ReadOnly` mode can still be set by an administrator.
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
`apistatus` package provides types which implement build-in `error`
interface. Add `error of type` pattern when documenting these errors in
order to clarify how these errors should be handled (e.g. `errors.Is` is
not good).
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
Replace `ErrNotFound`/`ErrAlreadyRemoved` error from
`pkg/core/object` package with `ObjectNotFound`/`ObjectAlreadyRemoved`
one from `apistatus` package. These errors are returned by storage
node's server as NeoFS API statuses.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
In read-only mode modifying operations are immediately returned with
error and all background operations are suspended.
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
a1696a8 introduced some logic which in some situations prevented big objects
to be persisted in FSTree. In this commit a refactoring is done with the
goal of simplifying the code and also checking #866 issue.
1. Split a monstrous function into multiple simple ones: memory objects
can only be small and for writing through the cache we can do a dispatch
in `Put` itself.
2. Determine objects to be put in database before the actual update
as setting up a transaction has non-zero overhead.
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
There is a need to limit disk space used by write-cache. It is almost
impossible to calculate the value exactly. It is proposed to estimate the
size of the cache by the number of objects stored in it.
Track amounts of objects saved in DB and FSTree separately. To do this,
`ObjectCounters` interface is defined. It is generalized to a store of
numbers that can be made persistent (new option `WithObjectCounters`). By
default DB number is calculated as key number in default bucket, and FS
number is set same to DB since it is currently hard to read the actual value
from `FSTree` instance. Each PUT/DELETE operation to DB or FS
increases/decreases corresponding counter. Before each PUT op an overflow
check is performed with the following formula for evaluating the occupied
space: `NumDB * MaxDBSize + NumFS * MaxFSSize`. If next PUT can cause
write-cache overflow, object is written to the main storage.
By default maximum write-cache size is set to 1GB.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>