Commit graph

3 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Aditya Manthramurthy a2a8d54bb6 Add access format support for Elasticsearch notification target (#4006)
This change adds `access` format support for notifications to a
Elasticsearch server, and it refactors `namespace` format support.

In the case of `access` format, for each event in Minio, a JSON
document is inserted into Elasticsearch with its timestamp set to the
event's timestamp, and with the ID generated automatically by
elasticsearch. No events are modified or deleted in this mode.

In the case of `namespace` format, for each event in Minio, a JSON
document is keyed together by the bucket and object name is updated in
Elasticsearch. In the case of an object being created or over-written
in Minio, a new document or an existing document is inserted into the
Elasticsearch index. If an object is deleted in Minio, the
corresponding document is deleted from the Elasticsearch index.

Additionally, this change upgrades Elasticsearch support to the 5.x
series. This is a breaking change, and users of previous elasticsearch
versions should upgrade.

Also updates documentation on Elasticsearch notification target usage
and has a link to an elasticsearch upgrade guide.

This is the last patch that finally resolves #3928.
2017-03-31 14:11:27 -07:00
Aditya Manthramurthy a099319e66 Support access format for database notification targets (#3953)
* Add configuration parameter "format" for db targets and perform
  configuration migration.
* Add PostgreSQL `access` format: This causes Minio to append all events
  to the configured table. Prefix, suffix and event filters continue
  to be supported for this mode too.
* Update documentation for PostgreSQL notification target.
* Add MySQL `access` format: It is very similar to the same format for
  PostgreSQL.
* Update MySQL notification documentation.
2017-03-27 11:27:25 -07:00
Aditya Manthramurthy 2463ae243a Add support for MySQL notifications (fixes #3818) (#3907)
As a new configuration parameter is added, configuration version is
bumped up from 14 to 15.

The MySQL target's behaviour is identical to the PostgreSQL: rows are
deleted from the MySQL table on delete-object events, and are
created/updated on create/over-write events.
2017-03-17 09:29:17 -07:00