Object key validation allowed internal parent-directory segments such as `public/../private.txt`. Bucket policy and auth checks evaluated the raw key, so a policy allowing bucket/public/* could match the request while posix backend later resolved the key with `filepath.Join` and accessed `bucket/private.txt`.
Add backend-specific object key normalization to close that mismatch. The Backend interface now exposes `NormalizeObjectKey` so authorization can evaluate resources using the same key shape a backend will use for storage access.
Backends that do not collapse object paths, including Azure and the S3 proxy, inherit `BackendUnsupported.NormalizeObjectKey`. That implementation returns the input key unchanged, avoiding unnecessary normalization and keeping policy evaluation unpolluted for object stores where ../ is part of the key name.
posix/scoutfs normalize keys with filepath.Join so policy resources and request keys are compared after internal dot segments are collapsed.
Bucket policy evaluation now normalizes both the incoming object key and object resource patterns from the policy before matching. Object lock governance bypass policy checks use the same backend normalizer as well, so retention and legal hold authorization cannot diverge from backend path resolution.
Fixes#1986
When a client includes tagging, legal hold, or retention headers in a PutObject, CopyObject or CreateMultipartUpload request, the corresponding bucket policy permissions must be verified in addition to s3:PutObject:
`X-Amz-Tagging` - `s3:PutObjectTagging`
`X-Amz-Object-Lock-Legal-Hold` - `s3:PutObjectLegalHold`
`X-Amz-Object-Lock-Mode` - `s3:PutObjectRetention`
Previously, only s3:PutObject was checked, allowing users to set tagging, legal hold, and retention without having the required permissions. Now each action permission is check, if user tries to add them.
For CopyObject these permissions are checked on destination object.
All the integration tests used to be in a single file, which had become large, messy, and difficult to maintain. These changes split `tests.go` into multiple files, organized by logical test groups.