# MinIO: It Works, But It Hates Me *By someone who survived a 150,000-file sync and lived to tell the tale.* --- MinIO is fast. It's lightweight. It's compatible with Amazon S3. It’s everything you want in a self-hosted object storage system. Until you try to **use it like a filesystem**. Then it becomes the most temperamental, moody, selectively mute piece of software you've ever met. --- ## What I Was Trying to Do All I wanted was to migrate ~40GB of Mastodon media from local disk into a MinIO bucket. Nothing fancy. Just a clean `rclone sync` and a pat on the back. --- ## What Actually Happened - **Load average spiked to 33** - `find` froze - `rclone size` hung - `zfs snapshot` stalled so long I thought the server died - The MinIO **UI lied to my face** about how much data was present (5GB when `rclone` said 22GB) - Directory paths that looked like files. Files that were secretly directories. I saw `.meta` and `.part.1` in my dreams. --- ## The Root Problem MinIO is **not** a filesystem. It's a flat key-value object store that's just *pretending* to be a folder tree. And when you throw 150,000+ nested objects at it — especially from a tool like `rclone` — all the lies unravel. It keeps going, but only if: - You feed it one file at a time - You don’t ask it questions (`rclone ls`, `rclone size`, `find`, etc.) - You don’t use the UI expecting it to reflect reality --- ## The Fixes That Kept Me Sane - Switched from `rclone ls` to `rclone size` with `--json` (when it worked) - Cleaned up thousands of broken `.meta`/`.part.*` directories using a targeted script - Paused `rclone` mid-sync with `kill -STOP` to get snapshots to complete - Used `du -sh` instead of `find` to track usage - Lowered `rclone` concurrency with `--transfers=4 --checkers=4` - Drank water. A lot of it. --- ## The Moral of the Story If you're going to use MinIO for massive sync jobs, treat it like: - A **delicate black box** with fast internals but fragile mood - Something that **prefers to be written to, not inspected** - An S3 clone with boundary issues --- ## Final Thought MinIO *does* work. It's powerful. It’s fast. But it also absolutely hates being watched while it works. And you won't realize how much until you're 100,000 files deep, snapshot frozen, and `rclone` is telling you you're doing great — while the UI smirks and says you're at 5 gigs. MinIO: It works. But it hates you. --- **Filed under:** `disaster recovery`, `object storage`, `sync trauma`, `zfs`, `rclone`, `why me`