Documentation

Transition Objects from MinIO to S3

The procedure on this page creates a new object lifecycle management rule that transition objects from a MinIO bucket to a remote storage tier on the Amazon Web Services S3 storage backend or an S3-compatible service. This procedure supports use cases such as tiering objects to low-cost or archival storage after a certain time period or calendar date.

Requirements

Install and Configure mc

This procedure uses mc for performing operations on the MinIO cluster. Install mc on a machine with network access to both source and destination clusters. See the mc Installation Quickstart for instructions on downloading and installing mc.

Use the mc alias set command to create an alias for the source MinIO cluster. Alias creation requires specifying an access key for a user on the source and destination clusters. The specified users must have permissions for configuring and applying transition operations.

Required MinIO Permissions

MinIO requires the following permissions scoped to the bucket or buckets for which you are creating lifecycle management rules.

MinIO also requires the following administrative permissions on the cluster in which you are creating remote tiers for object transition lifecycle management rules:

For example, the following policy provides permission for configuring object transition lifecycle management rules on any bucket in the cluster:.

{
   "Version": "2012-10-17",
   "Statement": [
      {
            "Action": [
               "admin:SetTier",
               "admin:ListTier"
            ],
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Sid": "EnableRemoteTierManagement"
      },
      {
            "Action": [
               "s3:PutLifecycleConfiguration",
               "s3:GetLifecycleConfiguration"
            ],
            "Resource": [
                        "arn:aws:s3:::*"
            ],
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Sid": "EnableLifecycleManagementRules"
      }
   ]
}

Required S3 Permissions

Object transition lifecycle management rules require additional permissions on the remote storage tier. Specifically, MinIO requires the remote tier credentials provide read, write, list, and delete permissions for the remote bucket.

For example, the following policy provides the necessary permission for transitioning objects into and out of the remote tier:

{
   "Version": "2012-10-17",
   "Statement": [
      {
            "Action": [
               "s3:ListBucket"
            ],
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Resource": [
               "arn:aws:s3:::MyDestinationBucket"
            ],
            "Sid": ""
      },
      {
            "Action": [
               "s3:GetObject",
               "s3:PutObject",
               "s3:DeleteObject"
            ],
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Resource": [
               "arn:aws:s3:::MyDestinationBucket/*"
            ],
            "Sid": ""
      }
   ]
}

Modify the Resource for the bucket into which MinIO tiers objects.

Refer to the Amazon S3 Permissions documentation for more complete guidance on configuring the required permissions.

Remote Bucket Must Exist

Create the remote S3 bucket prior to configuring lifecycle management tiers or rules using that bucket as the target.

Considerations

Lifecycle Management Object Scanner

MinIO uses a scanner process to check objects against all configured lifecycle management rules. Slow scanning due to high IO workloads or limited system resources may delay application of lifecycle management rules. See Lifecycle Management Object Scanner for more information.

Exclusive Access to Remote Data

MinIO requires exclusive access to the transitioned data on the remote storage tier. Object metadata on the “hot” MinIO source is strongly linked to the object data on the “warm/cold” remote tier. MinIO cannot retrieve object data without access to the remote, nor can the remote be used to restore lost metadata on the source.

All access to the transitioned objects must occur through MinIO via S3 API operations only. Manually modifying a transitioned object - whether the metadata on the “hot” MinIO tier or the object data on the remote “warm/cold” tier - may result in loss of that object data.

MinIO ignores any objects in the remote bucket or bucket prefix not explicitly managed by the MinIO deployment. Automatic transition and transparent object retrieval depend on the following assumptions:

  • No external mutation, migration, or deletion of objects on the remote storage.

  • No lifecycle management rules (e.g. transition or expiration) on the remote storage bucket.

MinIO stores all transitioned objects in the remote storage bucket or resource under a unique per-deployment prefix value. This value is not intended to support identifying the source deployment from the backend. MinIO supports an additional optional human-readable prefix when configuring the remote target, which may facilitate operations related to diagnostics, maintenance, or disaster recovery.

MinIO recommends specifying this optional prefix for remote storage tiers which contain other data, including transitioned objects from other MinIO deployments. This tutorial includes the necessary syntax for setting this prefix.

Availability of Remote Data

MinIO tiering behavior depends on the remote storage returning objects immediately (milliseconds to seconds) upon request. MinIO therefore cannot support remote storage which requires rehydration, wait periods, or manual intervention.

MinIO creates metadata for each transitioned object that identifies its location on the remote storage. Applications cannot trivially identify and access a transitioned object independent of MinIO. Availability of the transitioned data therefore depends on the same core protections that erasure coding and distributed deployment topologies provide for all objects on the MinIO deployment. Using object transition does not provide any additional business continuity or disaster recovery benefits.

Workloads that require BC/DR protections should implement MinIO Server-Side replication. Replication ensures objects remains preserved on the remote replication site, such that you can resynchronize from the remote in the event of partial or total data loss. See Resynchronization (Disaster Recovery) for more complete documentation on using replication to recover after partial or total data loss.

Procedure

1) Configure User Accounts and Policies for Lifecycle Management

This step creates users and policies on the MinIO deployment for supporting lifecycle management operations. You can skip this step if the deployment already has users with the necessary permissions.

The following example uses Alpha as a placeholder alias for the MinIO deployment. Replace this value with the appropriate alias for the MinIO deployment on which you are configuring lifecycle management rules. Replace the password LongRandomSecretKey with a long, random, and secure secret key as per your organizations best practices for password generation.

wget -O - https://min.io/docs/minio/linux/examples/LifecycleManagementAdmin.json | \
mc admin policy create Alpha LifecycleAdminPolicy /dev/stdin
mc admin user add Alpha alphaLifecycleAdmin LongRandomSecretKey
mc admin policy attach Alpha LifecycleAdminPolicy --user=alphaLifecycleAdmin

This example assumes that the specified aliases have the necessary permissions for creating policies and users on the deployment. See User Management and MinIO Policy Based Access Control for more complete documentation on MinIO users and policies respectively.

2) Configure the Remote Storage Tier

Use the mc ilm tier add command to add an Amazon S3 service as the new remote storage tier:

mc ilm tier add s3 TARGET TIER_NAME  \
   --endpoint https://HOSTNAME       \
   --access-key ACCESS_KEY           \
   --secret-key SECRET_KEY           \
   --bucket BUCKET                   \
   --prefix PREFIX                   \
   --storage-class STORAGE_CLASS     \
   --region REGION

The example above uses the following arguments:

Argument

Description

TARGET

The alias of the MinIO deployment on which to configure the S3 remote tier.

TIER_NAME

The name to associate with the new S3 remote storage tier. Specify the name in all-caps, e.g. S3_TIER. This value is required in the next step.

HOSTNAME

The URL endpoint for the S3 storage backend.

ACCESS_KEY

The S3 access key MinIO uses to access the bucket. The access key must correspond to an IAM user with the required permissions.

SECRET_KEY

The corresponding secret key for the specified ACCESS_KEY.

BUCKET

The name of the bucket on the S3 storage backend to which MinIO transitions objects.

PREFIX

The optional bucket prefix within which MinIO transitions objects.

MinIO stores all transitioned objects in the specified BUCKET under a unique per-deployment prefix value. Omit this argument to use only that value for isolating and organizing data within the remote storage.

MinIO recommends specifying this optional prefix for remote storage tiers which contain other data, including transitioned objects from other MinIO deployments. This prefix should provide a clear reference back to the source MinIO deployment to facilitate ease of operations related to diagnostics, maintenance, or disaster recovery.

STORAGE_CLASS

The S3 storage class to which MinIO transitions objects.

MinIO tiering behavior depends on the remote storage returning objects immediately (milliseconds to seconds) upon request. MinIO therefore cannot support remote storage which requires rehydration, wait periods, or manual intervention.

The following S3 storage classes meet MinIO’s requirements as a remote tier:

  • STANDARD

  • STANDARD-IA

  • STANDARD-ONEZONE

Omit this value to use the default storage class for the bucket. Specifying this value overrides the bucket storage class.

For more information, see Using Amazon S3 storage classes.

REGION

The AWS S3 region of the specified BUCKET. You can safely omit this option if the HOSTNAME includes the region.

3) Create and Apply the Transition Rule

Use the mc ilm rule add command to create a new transition rule for the bucket. The following example configures transition after the specified number of calendar days:

mc ilm rule add ALIAS/BUCKET \
--transition-tier TIERNAME \
--transition-days DAYS \
--noncurrent-transition-days NONCURRENT_DAYS
--noncurrent-transition-tier TIERNAME

The example above specifies the following arguments:

Argument

Description

ALIAS

Specify the alias of the MinIO deployment for which you are creating the lifecycle management rule.

BUCKET

Specify the full path to the bucket for which you are creating the lifecycle management rule.

TIERNAME

The remote storage tier to which MinIO transitions objects. Specify the remote storage tier name created in the previous step.

If you want to transition noncurrent object versions to a distinct remote tier, specify a different tier name for --noncurrent-transition-tier.

DAYS

The number of calendar days after which MinIO marks an object as eligible for transition. Specify the number of days as an integer, e.g. 30 for 30 days.

NONCURRENT_DAYS

The number of calendar days after which MinIO marks a noncurrent object version as eligible for transition. MinIO specifically measures the time since an object became non-current instead of the object creation time. Specify the number of days as an integer, e.g. 90 for 90 days.

Omit this value to ignore noncurrent object versions.

This option has no effect on non-versioned buckets.

4) Verify the Transition Rule

Use the mc ilm rule ls command to review the configured transition rules:

mc ilm rule ls ALIAS/PATH --transition
  • Replace ALIAS with the alias of the MinIO deployment.

  • Replace PATH with the name of the bucket for which to retrieve the configured lifecycle management rules.