In the previous implementation of the metabase, there was no possibility of
reinitializing the metabase: clearing information about existing objects and
bringing it back to its initial state. This operation can be useful in
cases when the stored metadata about objects has lost (or possibly lost)
relevance, and you need to generate data from scratch. Also at the
initialization stage, static resources of the base were not created -
container-independent buckets.
Make `Metabase.Init` method to allocate graveyard, container-size and
to-move-it buckets in underlying BoltDB instance. Implement `Metabase.Reset`
method: it works like `Init` but clean up all static buckets and removes
other ones. Due to the logical similarity, the methods share a single piece
of code.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
Implement `DB.IterateExpired` method that iterates over the objects in
metabase that are expired at particular epoch.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
Implement `DB.IterateOverGraveyard` method that iterates over all graves and
passes passes their descriptors (new type `Grave`) to handler (new type
`GraveHandler`). `Grave` currently have buried object address and garbage
flag.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
Storage nodes keep container size estimation so they
can announce this info and hope for some basic income
settlements. This is also useful for monitoring.
Container size does not include non regular or inhumed
object sizes.
Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <alexey@nspcc.ru>
In previous implementation DB.Containers method could return an error about
invalid container ID string format. This could happen if some of top-level
buckets had name w/o "_" substring.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>