This PR adds the following items:
1) an in-memory read-only cache thats stores project limit info for projectIDs
This cache is stored in-memory since this is expected to be a small amount of data. In this implementation we are only storing in the cache projects that have been accessed. Currently for the largest Satellite (eu-west) there is about 4500 total projects. So storing the storage limit (int64) and the bandwidth limit (int64), this would end up being about 200kb (including the 32 byte project ID) if all 4500 projectIDs were in the cache. So this all fits in memory for the time being. At some point it may not as usage grows, but that seems years out.
The cache is a read only cache. When requests come in to upload/download a file, we will read from the cache what the current limits are for that project. If the cache does not contain the projectID, it will get the info from the database (satellitedb project table), then add it to the cache.
The only time the values in the cache are modified is when either a) the project ID is not in the cache, or b) the item in the cache has expired (default 10mins), then the data gets refreshed out of the database. This occurs by default every 10 mins. This means that if we update the usage limits in the database, that change might not show up in the cache for 10 mins which mean it will not be reflected to limit end users uploading/downloading files for that time period..
Change-Id: I3fd7056cf963676009834fcbcf9c4a0922ca4a8f
Our current endpoints bail on us, if the column data is null. Thus we need
to take the intermediate step and set the default to a fixed value and
reset those with the following release.
It sets the default column value to our current config values of 50GB
for storage and bandwidth and 100 buckets, while still enabling the field to be nullable.
All 0 values are migrated to be the default as well to ensure they can
keep using their projects, as with the original change, 0 actually means 0.
Change-Id: I797be80ce2d2105091599dc1b3fc76f74336b66b
Sometimes the upload that is supposed to fail due to excess usage
would pass. This looks to be because it's overwriting another object
uploaded earlier in the test and deleting the old pointer. If tally
happened to run after the pointer is deleted but before the current
upload reaches the live accounting check, it might pass through.
The solution is to upload to a different path each time.
Change-Id: Ie6c825b9c6eab9ed53426ae262e7997bcb6beb7f
live accounting used to be a cache to store writes before they are picked up during
the tally iteration, after which the cache is cleared. This created a window in which
users could potentially exceed the storage limit. This PR refactors live accounting to
hold current estimations of space used per project. This should also reduce DB load
since we no longer need to query the satellite DB when checking space used for limiting.
The mechanism by which the new live accounting system works is as follows:
During the upload of any segment, the size of that segment is added to its respective
project total in live accounting. At the beginning of the tally iteration we record
the current values in live accounting as `initialLiveTotals`. At the end of the tally
iteration we again record the current totals in live accounting as `latestLiveTotals`.
The metainfo loop observer in tally allows us to get the project totals from what it
observed in metainfo DB which are stored in `tallyProjectTotals`. However, for any
particular segment uploaded during the metainfo loop, the observer may or may not
have seen it. Thus, we take half of the difference between `latestLiveTotals` and
`initialLiveTotals`, and add that to the total that was found during tally and set that
as the new live accounting total.
Initially, live accounting was storing the total stored amount across all nodes rather than
the segment size, which is inconsistent with how we record amounts stored in the project
accounting DB, so we have refactored live accounting to record segment size
Change-Id: Ie48bfdef453428fcdc180b2d781a69d58fd927fb
all of the packages and tests work with both grpc and
drpc. we'll probably need to do some jenkins pipelines
to run the tests with drpc as well.
most of the changes are really due to a bit of cleanup
of the pkg/transport.Client api into an rpc.Dialer in
the spirit of a net.Dialer. now that we don't need
observers, we can pass around stateless configuration
to everything rather than stateful things that issue
observations. it also adds a DialAddressID for the
case where we don't have a pb.Node, but we do have an
address and want to assert some ID. this happened
pretty frequently, and now there's no more weird
contortions creating custom tls options, etc.
a lot of the other changes are being consistent/using
the abstractions in the rpc package to do rpc style
things like finding peer information, or checking
status codes.
Change-Id: Ief62875e21d80a21b3c56a5a37f45887679f9412
* rename pkg/linksharing to linksharing
* rename pkg/httpserver to linksharing/httpserver
* rename pkg/eestream to uplink/eestream
* rename pkg/stream to uplink/stream
* rename pkg/metainfo/kvmetainfo to uplink/metainfo/kvmetainfo
* rename pkg/auth/signing to pkg/signing
* rename pkg/storage to uplink/storage
* rename pkg/accounting to satellite/accounting
* rename pkg/audit to satellite/audit
* rename pkg/certdb to satellite/certdb
* rename pkg/discovery to satellite/discovery
* rename pkg/overlay to satellite/overlay
* rename pkg/datarepair to satellite/repair