Added a implementation for the listOmapVals
which list the object keys and values from
the rados omap.
Signed-off-by: Madhu Rajanna <madhupr007@gmail.com>
Moving the log functions into its own internal/util/log package makes it
possible to split out the humongous internal/util packages in further
smaller pieces. This reduces the inter-dependencies between utility
functions and components, preventing circular dependencies which are not
allowed in Go.
Updates: #852
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
nlreturn linter requires a new line before return
and branch statements except when the return is alone
inside a statement group (such as an if statement) to
increase code clarity. This commit addresses such issues.
Updates: #1586
Signed-off-by: Rakshith R <rar@redhat.com>
The implementation of getOMapValues assumed that the number of key-value
pairs assigned to the object would be close to the number of keys
being requested. When the number of keys on the object exceeded the
"listExcess" value the function would fail to read additional keys
even if they existed in the omap.
This change sets a large fixed "chunk size" value and keeps reading
key-value pairs as long as the callback gets called and increments
the numKeys counter.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
The sentinel error code had additional fields in the errors, that are
used nowhere. This leads to unneccesarily complicated code. This
change replaces the sentinel errors in utils with standard errors
created with errors.New() and adds a simple JoinErrors() function to
be able to combine sentinel errors from different code tiers.
Related: #1203
Signed-off-by: Sven Anderson <sven@redhat.com>
Several places in the code compared errors directly with the go-ceph
sentinel errors. This change uses the errors.Is() function of go
1.13 instead. The err113 linter reported this issue as:
err113: do not compare errors directly, use errors.Is() instead
Signed-off-by: Sven Anderson <sven@redhat.com>
The previous function used to remove omap keys apparently did not
return errors when removing omap keys from a missing omap (oid).
Mimic that behavior when using the api.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
For any function that sets more than one key on a single oid setting
them as a batch will be more efficient.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
For any function that removes more than one key on a single oid removing
them as a batch will be more efficient.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
Taking this appraoch means that any function that must get more than one
key's value from the same oid can be more efficient by calling out to
ceph only once.
To be cautious and avoid missing things we always request ceph return
more keys than we actually expect to be set on the oid. If there are
unexpected keys there, we will not miss the keys we want if we first hit
an unexpected key if we were to limit ourselves to iterating only over
the number of keys we're expecting to be on the object.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
These new omap manipulation functions (get/set/remove) are roughly
equivalent to the previous command-line based approach but rely
on direct api calls to ceph.
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>