Fixes#2179
Treat a present but empty `Content-MD5` header as an invalid digest instead of handling it as if the header were absent. This makes PUT operations return `InvalidDigest` for empty `Content-MD5` values while preserving existing behavior for missing headers.
Validate required signed headers for both Authorization-header SigV4 requests and presigned URLs. The required signed header set is now `host` plus every incoming header with the `x-amz-` prefix.
During request reconstruction, signed headers and explicitly ignored headers are copied into the generated request used for signature verification. If an incoming `x-amz-*` header is present but missing from the client-provided `SignedHeaders`, return `AccessDenied` with a `HeadersNotSigned` field. The `host` header remains part of the canonical request and signed header calculation.
Previously, a client could sign a request without an S3 control header and then add that header after signing. For example, a presigned `PUT` URL could be generated with only `host` signed, then the actual request could include an unsigned `X-Amz-Tagging` or `X-Amz-Copy-Source` header. Because the verifier reconstructed the request only from `SignedHeaders`, that extra header was omitted from signature calculation and could pass authentication even though it changed the request semantics. This is now rejected with `AccessDenied`.
Expose v4 helper methods for checking required and ignored headers, and update canonical header signing so ignored headers can still be included when a client explicitly lists them in `SignedHeaders`, while `Authorization` remains excluded from signature calculation.
Fixes#2123Fixes#2120Fixes#2116Fixes#2111Fixes#2108Fixes#2086Fixes#2085Fixes#2083Fixes#2081Fixes#2080Fixes#2073Fixes#2072Fixes#2071Fixes#2069Fixes#2044Fixes#2043Fixes#2042Fixes#2041Fixes#2040Fixes#2039Fixes#2036Fixes#2035Fixes#2034Fixes#2028Fixes#2020Fixes#1842Fixes#1810Fixes#1780Fixes#1775Fixes#1736Fixes#1705Fixes#1663Fixes#1645Fixes#1583Fixes#1526Fixes#1514Fixes#1493Fixes#1487Fixes#959Fixes#779Closes#823Closes#85
Refactor global S3 error handling around structured error types and centralized XML response generation.
All S3 errors now share the common APIError base for the fields every error has: Code, HTTP status code, and Message. Non-traditional errors that need AWS-compatible XML fields now have dedicated typed errors in the s3err package. Each typed error implements the shared S3Error behavior so controllers and middleware can handle errors consistently while still emitting error-specific XML fields.
Add a dedicated InvalidArgumentError type because InvalidArgument is used widely across request validation, auth, copy source handling, object lock validation, multipart validation, and header parsing. The new InvalidArgument path uses explicit InvalidArgErrorCode constants with predefined descriptions and ArgumentName values, keeping call sites readable while preserving the correct InvalidArgument XML shape and optional ArgumentValue.
New structured errors added in s3err:
- `AccessForbiddenError`: Method, ResourceType
- `BadDigestError`: CalculatedDigest, ExpectedDigest
- `BucketError`: BucketName
- `ContentSHA256MismatchError`: ClientComputedContentSHA256, S3ComputedContentSHA256
- `EntityTooLargeError`: ProposedSize, MaxSizeAllowed
- `EntityTooSmallError`: ProposedSize, MinSizeAllowed
- `ExpiredPresignedURLError`: ServerTime, XAmzExpires, Expires
- `InvalidAccessKeyIdError`: AWSAccessKeyId
- `InvalidArgumentError`: Description, ArgumentName, ArgumentValue
- `InvalidChunkSizeError`: Chunk, BadChunkSize
- `InvalidDigestError`: ContentMD5
- `InvalidLocationConstraintError`: LocationConstraint
- `InvalidPartError`: UploadId, PartNumber, ETag
- `InvalidRangeError`: RangeRequested, ActualObjectSize
- `InvalidTagError`: TagKey, TagValue
- `KeyTooLongError`: Size, MaxSizeAllowed
- `MetadataTooLargeError`: Size, MaxSizeAllowed
- `MethodNotAllowedError`: Method, ResourceType, AllowedMethods
- `NoSuchUploadError`: UploadId
- `NoSuchVersionError`: Key, VersionId
- `NotImplementedError`: Header, AdditionalMessage
- `PreconditionFailedError`: Condition
- `RequestTimeTooSkewedError`: RequestTime, ServerTime, MaxAllowedSkewMilliseconds
- `SignatureDoesNotMatchError`: AWSAccessKeyId, StringToSign, SignatureProvided, StringToSignBytes, CanonicalRequest, CanonicalRequestBytes
Fix CompleteMultipartUpload validation in the Azure backend so missing or empty `ETag` values return the appropriate S3 error instead of allowing a gateway panic.
Fix presigned authentication expiration validation to compare server time in `UTC`, matching the `UTC` timestamp used by presigned URL signing.
Add request ID and host ID support across S3 requests. Each request now receives AWS S3-like identifiers, returned in response headers as `x-amz-request-id` and `x-amz-id-2` and included in all XML error responses as RequestId and HostId. The generated ID structure is designed to resemble AWS S3 request IDs and host IDs.
The request signature calculation/validation for streaming uploads was previously delayed until the request body was fully read, both for Authorization header authentication and presigned URLs.
Now, the signature is validated immediately in the authorization middlewares without reading the request body, since the signature calculation itself does not depend on the request body. Instead, only the `x-amz-content-sha256` SHA-256 hash calculation is delayed.
The gateway currently supports only Signature Version 4 (SigV4) authorization. Deprecated AWS SigV2 requests are now rejected with an AWS-specific `InvalidRequest` error for both Authorization-header requests and query-string requests(presigned URLs).
This also fixes SigV4 Authorization-header handling for date headers. SigV4 accepts two date headers: `Date` and `X-Amz-Date`. `X-Amz-Date` takes precedence, but when it is missing, `Date` should be used. The gateway now uses the `Date` header with lower precedence when `X-Amz-Date` is not present. No SDK integration test was added for this case because the SDK always sets `X-Amz-Date`, and this behavior is not configurable.
Closes#1648Fixes#1980Fixes#1981
This PR implements browser-based POST object uploads for S3-compatible form uploads. It adds support for handling `multipart/form-data` object uploads submitted from browsers, including streaming multipart parsing so file content is not buffered in memory, POST policy decoding and evaluation, SigV4-based form authorization, and integration with the existing `PutObject` backend flow. The implementation covers the full browser POST upload path, including validation of required form fields, credential scope and request date checks, signature verification, metadata extraction from `x-amz-meta-*` fields, checksum field parsing, object tagging conversion from XML into the query-string format expected by `PutObject`, and browser-compatible success handling through `success_action_status` and `success_action_redirect`. It also wires the new flow into the router and metrics layer and adds POST-specific error handling and debug logging across policy parsing, multipart parsing, and POST authorization. AWS S3 also accepts the `redirect` form field alongside `success_action_redirect`, but since AWS has marked `redirect` as deprecated and is planning to remove it, this gateway intentionally does not support it.
Fixes#1707
The `Expect` HTTP header is ignored by the AWS SDK SigV4 signer and is omitted during signature calculation. As a result, the signature is computed incorrectly when the `Expect` header is included in the signed headers. This PR removes the `Expect` header from the SigV4 ignored headers list in the SDK-derived source code.
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.