1 | .. -*- coding: utf-8-with-signature -*- |
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2 | |
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3 | ========================== |
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4 | The Tahoe REST-ful Web API |
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5 | ========================== |
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6 | |
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7 | 1. `Enabling the web-API port`_ |
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8 | 2. `Basic Concepts: GET, PUT, DELETE, POST`_ |
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9 | 3. `URLs`_ |
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10 | |
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11 | 1. `Child Lookup`_ |
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12 | |
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13 | 4. `Slow Operations, Progress, and Cancelling`_ |
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14 | 5. `Programmatic Operations`_ |
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15 | |
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16 | 1. `Reading a file`_ |
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17 | 2. `Writing/Uploading a File`_ |
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18 | 3. `Creating a New Directory`_ |
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19 | 4. `Getting Information About a File Or Directory (as JSON)`_ |
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20 | 5. `Attaching an Existing File or Directory by its read- or write-cap`_ |
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21 | 6. `Adding Multiple Files or Directories to a Parent Directory at Once`_ |
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22 | 7. `Unlinking a File or Directory`_ |
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23 | |
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24 | 6. `Browser Operations: Human-Oriented Interfaces`_ |
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25 | |
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26 | 1. `Viewing a Directory (as HTML)`_ |
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27 | 2. `Viewing/Downloading a File`_ |
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28 | 3. `Getting Information About a File Or Directory (as HTML)`_ |
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29 | 4. `Creating a Directory`_ |
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30 | 5. `Uploading a File`_ |
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31 | 6. `Attaching an Existing File Or Directory (by URI)`_ |
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32 | 7. `Unlinking a Child`_ |
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33 | 8. `Renaming a Child`_ |
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34 | 9. `Relinking ("Moving") a Child`_ |
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35 | 10. `Other Utilities`_ |
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36 | 11. `Debugging and Testing Features`_ |
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37 | |
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38 | 7. `Other Useful Pages`_ |
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39 | 8. `Static Files in /public_html`_ |
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40 | 9. `Safety and Security Issues -- Names vs. URIs`_ |
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41 | 10. `Concurrency Issues`_ |
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42 | 11. `Access Blacklist`_ |
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43 | |
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44 | |
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45 | Enabling the web-API port |
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46 | ========================= |
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47 | |
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48 | Every Tahoe node is capable of running a built-in HTTP server. To enable |
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49 | this, just write a port number into the "[node]web.port" line of your node's |
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50 | tahoe.cfg file. For example, writing "web.port = 3456" into the "[node]" |
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51 | section of $NODEDIR/tahoe.cfg will cause the node to run a webserver on port |
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52 | 3456. |
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53 | |
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54 | This string is actually a Twisted "strports" specification, meaning you can |
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55 | get more control over the interface to which the server binds by supplying |
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56 | additional arguments. For more details, see the documentation on |
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57 | `twisted.application.strports`_. |
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58 | |
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59 | Writing "tcp:3456:interface=127.0.0.1" into the web.port line does the same |
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60 | but binds to the loopback interface, ensuring that only the programs on the |
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61 | local host can connect. Using "ssl:3456:privateKey=mykey.pem:certKey=cert.pem" |
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62 | runs an SSL server. |
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63 | |
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64 | This webport can be set when the node is created by passing a --webport |
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65 | option to the 'tahoe create-node' command. By default, the node listens on |
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66 | port 3456, on the loopback (127.0.0.1) interface. |
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67 | |
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68 | .. _twisted.application.strports: https://twistedmatrix.com/documents/current/api/twisted.application.strports.html |
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69 | |
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70 | |
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71 | Basic Concepts: GET, PUT, DELETE, POST |
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72 | ====================================== |
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73 | |
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74 | As described in :doc:`../architecture`, each file and directory in a |
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75 | Tahoe-LAFS file store is referenced by an identifier that combines the |
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76 | designation of the object with the authority to do something with it (such as |
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77 | read or modify the contents). This identifier is called a "read-cap" or |
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78 | "write-cap", depending upon whether it enables read-only or read-write |
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79 | access. These "caps" are also referred to as URIs (which may be confusing |
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80 | because they are not currently RFC3986_-compliant URIs). |
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81 | |
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82 | The Tahoe web-based API is "REST-ful", meaning it implements the concepts of |
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83 | "REpresentational State Transfer": the original scheme by which the World |
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84 | Wide Web was intended to work. Each object (file or directory) is referenced |
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85 | by a URL that includes the read- or write- cap. HTTP methods (GET, PUT, and |
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86 | DELETE) are used to manipulate these objects. You can think of the URL as a |
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87 | noun, and the method as a verb. |
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88 | |
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89 | In REST, the GET method is used to retrieve information about an object, or |
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90 | to retrieve some representation of the object itself. When the object is a |
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91 | file, the basic GET method will simply return the contents of that file. |
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92 | Other variations (generally implemented by adding query parameters to the |
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93 | URL) will return information about the object, such as metadata. GET |
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94 | operations are required to have no side-effects. |
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95 | |
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96 | PUT is used to upload new objects into the file store, or to replace an |
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97 | existing link or the contents of a mutable file. DELETE is used to unlink |
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98 | objects from directories. Both PUT and DELETE are required to be idempotent: |
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99 | performing the same operation multiple times must have the same side-effects |
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100 | as only performing it once. |
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101 | |
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102 | POST is used for more complicated actions that cannot be expressed as a GET, |
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103 | PUT, or DELETE. POST operations can be thought of as a method call: sending |
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104 | some message to the object referenced by the URL. In Tahoe, POST is also used |
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105 | for operations that must be triggered by an HTML form (including upload and |
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106 | unlinking), because otherwise a regular web browser has no way to accomplish |
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107 | these tasks. In general, everything that can be done with a PUT or DELETE can |
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108 | also be done with a POST. |
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109 | |
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110 | Tahoe-LAFS' web API is designed for two different kinds of consumer. The |
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111 | first is a program that needs to manipulate the file store. Such programs are |
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112 | expected to use the RESTful interface described above. The second is a human |
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113 | using a standard web browser to work with the file store. This user is |
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114 | presented with a series of HTML pages with links to download files, and forms |
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115 | that use POST actions to upload, rename, and unlink files. |
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116 | |
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117 | When an error occurs, the HTTP response code will be set to an appropriate |
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118 | 400-series code (like 404 Not Found for an unknown childname, or 400 Bad Request |
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119 | when the parameters to a web-API operation are invalid), and the HTTP response |
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120 | body will usually contain a few lines of explanation as to the cause of the |
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121 | error and possible responses. Unusual exceptions may result in a 500 Internal |
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122 | Server Error as a catch-all, with a default response body containing |
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123 | a Nevow-generated HTML-ized representation of the Python exception stack trace |
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124 | that caused the problem. CLI programs which want to copy the response body to |
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125 | stderr should provide an "Accept: text/plain" header to their requests to get |
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126 | a plain text stack trace instead. If the Accept header contains ``*/*``, or |
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127 | ``text/*``, or text/html (or if there is no Accept header), HTML tracebacks will |
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128 | be generated. |
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129 | |
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130 | .. _RFC3986: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986 |
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131 | |
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132 | |
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133 | URLs |
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134 | ==== |
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135 | |
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136 | Tahoe uses a variety of read- and write- caps to identify files and |
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137 | directories. The most common of these is the "immutable file read-cap", which |
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138 | is used for most uploaded files. These read-caps look like the following:: |
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139 | |
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140 | URI:CHK:ime6pvkaxuetdfah2p2f35pe54:4btz54xk3tew6nd4y2ojpxj4m6wxjqqlwnztgre6gnjgtucd5r4a:3:10:202 |
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141 | |
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142 | The next most common is a "directory write-cap", which provides both read and |
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143 | write access to a directory, and look like this:: |
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144 | |
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145 | URI:DIR2:djrdkfawoqihigoett4g6auz6a:jx5mplfpwexnoqff7y5e4zjus4lidm76dcuarpct7cckorh2dpgq |
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146 | |
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147 | There are also "directory read-caps", which start with "URI:DIR2-RO:", and |
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148 | give read-only access to a directory. Finally there are also mutable file |
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149 | read- and write- caps, which start with "URI:SSK", and give access to mutable |
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150 | files. |
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151 | |
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152 | (Later versions of Tahoe will make these strings shorter, and will remove the |
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153 | unfortunate colons, which must be escaped when these caps are embedded in |
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154 | URLs.) |
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155 | |
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156 | To refer to any Tahoe object through the web API, you simply need to combine |
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157 | a prefix (which indicates the HTTP server to use) with the cap (which |
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158 | indicates which object inside that server to access). Since the default Tahoe |
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159 | webport is 3456, the most common prefix is one that will use a local node |
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160 | listening on this port:: |
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161 | |
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162 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/ + $CAP |
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163 | |
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164 | So, to access the directory named above, the URL would be:: |
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165 | |
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166 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/URI%3ADIR2%3Adjrdkfawoqihigoett4g6auz6a%3Ajx5mplfpwexnoqff7y5e4zjus4lidm76dcuarpct7cckorh2dpgq/ |
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167 | |
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168 | (note that the colons in the directory-cap are url-encoded into "%3A" |
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169 | sequences). |
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170 | |
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171 | Likewise, to access the file named above, use:: |
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172 | |
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173 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/URI%3ACHK%3Aime6pvkaxuetdfah2p2f35pe54%3A4btz54xk3tew6nd4y2ojpxj4m6wxjqqlwnztgre6gnjgtucd5r4a%3A3%3A10%3A202 |
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174 | |
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175 | In the rest of this document, we'll use "$DIRCAP" as shorthand for a read-cap |
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176 | or write-cap that refers to a directory, and "$FILECAP" to abbreviate a cap |
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177 | that refers to a file (whether mutable or immutable). So those URLs above can |
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178 | be abbreviated as:: |
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179 | |
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180 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/$DIRCAP/ |
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181 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/$FILECAP |
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182 | |
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183 | The operation summaries below will abbreviate these further, by eliding the |
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184 | server prefix. They will be displayed like this:: |
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185 | |
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186 | /uri/$DIRCAP/ |
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187 | /uri/$FILECAP |
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188 | |
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189 | /cap can be used as a synonym for /uri. If interoperability with older web-API |
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190 | servers is required, /uri should be used. |
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191 | |
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192 | Child Lookup |
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193 | ------------ |
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194 | |
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195 | Tahoe directories contain named child entries, just like directories in a |
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196 | regular local filesystem. These child entries, called "dirnodes", consist of |
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197 | a name, metadata, a write slot, and a read slot. The write and read slots |
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198 | normally contain a write-cap and read-cap referring to the same object, which |
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199 | can be either a file or a subdirectory. The write slot may be empty |
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200 | (actually, both may be empty, but that is unusual). |
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201 | |
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202 | If you have a Tahoe URL that refers to a directory, and want to reference a |
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203 | named child inside it, just append the child name to the URL. For example, if |
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204 | our sample directory contains a file named "welcome.txt", we can refer to |
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205 | that file with:: |
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206 | |
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207 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/$DIRCAP/welcome.txt |
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208 | |
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209 | (or http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/URI%3ADIR2%3Adjrdkfawoqihigoett4g6auz6a%3Ajx5mplfpwexnoqff7y5e4zjus4lidm76dcuarpct7cckorh2dpgq/welcome.txt) |
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210 | |
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211 | Multiple levels of subdirectories can be handled this way:: |
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212 | |
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213 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/$DIRCAP/tahoe-source/docs/architecture.rst |
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214 | |
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215 | In this document, when we need to refer to a URL that references a file using |
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216 | this child-of-some-directory format, we'll use the following string:: |
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217 | |
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218 | /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME |
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219 | |
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220 | The "[SUBDIRS../]" part means that there are zero or more (optional) |
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221 | subdirectory names in the middle of the URL. The "FILENAME" at the end means |
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222 | that this whole URL refers to a file of some sort, rather than to a |
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223 | directory. |
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224 | |
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225 | When we need to refer specifically to a directory in this way, we'll write:: |
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226 | |
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227 | /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR |
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228 | |
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229 | |
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230 | Note that all components of pathnames in URLs are required to be UTF-8 |
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231 | encoded, so "resume.doc" (with an acute accent on both E's) would be accessed |
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232 | with:: |
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233 | |
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234 | http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/$DIRCAP/r%C3%A9sum%C3%A9.doc |
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235 | |
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236 | Also note that the filenames inside upload POST forms are interpreted using |
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237 | whatever character set was provided in the conventional '_charset' field, and |
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238 | defaults to UTF-8 if not otherwise specified. The JSON representation of each |
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239 | directory contains native Unicode strings. Tahoe directories are specified to |
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240 | contain Unicode filenames, and cannot contain binary strings that are not |
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241 | representable as such. |
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242 | |
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243 | All Tahoe operations that refer to existing files or directories must include |
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244 | a suitable read- or write- cap in the URL: the web-API server won't add one |
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245 | for you. If you don't know the cap, you can't access the file. This allows |
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246 | the security properties of Tahoe caps to be extended across the web-API |
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247 | interface. |
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248 | |
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249 | |
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250 | Slow Operations, Progress, and Cancelling |
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251 | ========================================= |
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252 | |
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253 | Certain operations can be expected to take a long time. The "t=deep-check", |
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254 | described below, will recursively visit every file and directory reachable |
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255 | from a given starting point, which can take minutes or even hours for |
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256 | extremely large directory structures. A single long-running HTTP request is a |
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257 | fragile thing: proxies, NAT boxes, browsers, and users may all grow impatient |
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258 | with waiting and give up on the connection. |
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259 | |
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260 | For this reason, long-running operations have an "operation handle", which |
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261 | can be used to poll for status/progress messages while the operation |
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262 | proceeds. This handle can also be used to cancel the operation. These handles |
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263 | are created by the client, and passed in as a an "ophandle=" query argument |
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264 | to the POST or PUT request which starts the operation. The following |
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265 | operations can then be used to retrieve status: |
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266 | |
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267 | ``GET /operations/$HANDLE?output=HTML (with or without t=status)`` |
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268 | |
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269 | ``GET /operations/$HANDLE?output=JSON (same)`` |
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270 | |
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271 | These two retrieve the current status of the given operation. Each operation |
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272 | presents a different sort of information, but in general the page retrieved |
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273 | will indicate: |
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274 | |
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275 | * whether the operation is complete, or if it is still running |
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276 | * how much of the operation is complete, and how much is left, if possible |
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277 | |
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278 | Note that the final status output can be quite large: a deep-manifest of a |
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279 | directory structure with 300k directories and 200k unique files is about |
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280 | 275MB of JSON, and might take two minutes to generate. For this reason, the |
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281 | full status is not provided until the operation has completed. |
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282 | |
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283 | The HTML form will include a meta-refresh tag, which will cause a regular |
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284 | web browser to reload the status page about 60 seconds later. This tag will |
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285 | be removed once the operation has completed. |
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286 | |
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287 | There may be more status information available under |
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288 | /operations/$HANDLE/$ETC : i.e., the handle forms the root of a URL space. |
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289 | |
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290 | ``POST /operations/$HANDLE?t=cancel`` |
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291 | |
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292 | This terminates the operation, and returns an HTML page explaining what was |
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293 | cancelled. If the operation handle has already expired (see below), this |
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294 | POST will return a 404, which indicates that the operation is no longer |
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295 | running (either it was completed or terminated). The response body will be |
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296 | the same as a GET /operations/$HANDLE on this operation handle, and the |
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297 | handle will be expired immediately afterwards. |
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298 | |
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299 | The operation handle will eventually expire, to avoid consuming an unbounded |
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300 | amount of memory. The handle's time-to-live can be reset at any time, by |
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301 | passing a retain-for= argument (with a count of seconds) to either the |
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302 | initial POST that starts the operation, or the subsequent GET request which |
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303 | asks about the operation. For example, if a 'GET |
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304 | /operations/$HANDLE?output=JSON&retain-for=600' query is performed, the |
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305 | handle will remain active for 600 seconds (10 minutes) after the GET was |
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306 | received. |
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307 | |
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308 | In addition, if the GET includes a release-after-complete=True argument, and |
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309 | the operation has completed, the operation handle will be released |
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310 | immediately. |
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311 | |
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312 | If a retain-for= argument is not used, the default handle lifetimes are: |
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313 | |
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314 | * handles will remain valid at least until their operation finishes |
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315 | * uncollected handles for finished operations (i.e. handles for |
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316 | operations that have finished but for which the GET page has not been |
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317 | accessed since completion) will remain valid for four days, or for |
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318 | the total time consumed by the operation, whichever is greater. |
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319 | * collected handles (i.e. the GET page has been retrieved at least once |
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320 | since the operation completed) will remain valid for one day. |
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321 | |
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322 | Many "slow" operations can begin to use unacceptable amounts of memory when |
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323 | operating on large directory structures. The memory usage increases when the |
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324 | ophandle is polled, as the results must be copied into a JSON string, sent |
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325 | over the wire, then parsed by a client. So, as an alternative, many "slow" |
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326 | operations have streaming equivalents. These equivalents do not use operation |
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327 | handles. Instead, they emit line-oriented status results immediately. Client |
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328 | code can cancel the operation by simply closing the HTTP connection. |
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329 | |
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330 | |
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331 | Programmatic Operations |
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332 | ======================= |
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333 | |
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334 | Now that we know how to build URLs that refer to files and directories in a |
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335 | Tahoe-LAFS file store, what sorts of operations can we do with those URLs? |
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336 | This section contains a catalog of GET, PUT, DELETE, and POST operations that |
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337 | can be performed on these URLs. This set of operations are aimed at programs |
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338 | that use HTTP to communicate with a Tahoe node. A later section describes |
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339 | operations that are intended for web browsers. |
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340 | |
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341 | |
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342 | Reading a File |
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343 | -------------- |
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344 | |
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345 | ``GET /uri/$FILECAP`` |
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346 | |
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347 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME`` |
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348 | |
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349 | This will retrieve the contents of the given file. The HTTP response body |
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350 | will contain the sequence of bytes that make up the file. |
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351 | |
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352 | The "Range:" header can be used to restrict which portions of the file are |
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353 | returned (see RFC 2616 section 14.35.1 "Byte Ranges"), however Tahoe only |
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354 | supports a single "bytes" range and never provides a |
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355 | ``multipart/byteranges`` response. An attempt to begin a read past the end |
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356 | of the file will provoke a 416 Requested Range Not Satisfiable error, but |
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357 | normal overruns (reads which start at the beginning or middle and go beyond |
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358 | the end) are simply truncated. |
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359 | |
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360 | To view files in a web browser, you may want more control over the |
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361 | Content-Type and Content-Disposition headers. Please see the next section |
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362 | "Browser Operations", for details on how to modify these URLs for that |
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363 | purpose. |
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364 | |
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365 | |
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366 | Writing/Uploading a File |
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367 | ------------------------ |
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368 | |
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369 | ``PUT /uri/$FILECAP`` |
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370 | |
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371 | ``PUT /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME`` |
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372 | |
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373 | Upload a file, using the data from the HTTP request body, and add whatever |
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374 | child links and subdirectories are necessary to make the file available at |
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375 | the given location. Once this operation succeeds, a GET on the same URL will |
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376 | retrieve the same contents that were just uploaded. This will create any |
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377 | necessary intermediate subdirectories. |
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378 | |
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379 | To use the /uri/$FILECAP form, $FILECAP must be a write-cap for a mutable file. |
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380 | |
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381 | In the /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME form, if the target file is a |
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382 | writeable mutable file, that file's contents will be overwritten |
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383 | in-place. If it is a read-cap for a mutable file, an error will occur. |
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384 | If it is an immutable file, the old file will be discarded, and a new |
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385 | one will be put in its place. If the target file is a writable mutable |
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386 | file, you may also specify an "offset" parameter -- a byte offset that |
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387 | determines where in the mutable file the data from the HTTP request |
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388 | body is placed. This operation is relatively efficient for MDMF mutable |
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389 | files, and is relatively inefficient (but still supported) for SDMF |
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390 | mutable files. If no offset parameter is specified, then the entire |
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391 | file is replaced with the data from the HTTP request body. For an |
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392 | immutable file, the "offset" parameter is not valid. |
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393 | |
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394 | When creating a new file, you can control the type of file created by |
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395 | specifying a format= argument in the query string. format=MDMF creates an |
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396 | MDMF mutable file. format=SDMF creates an SDMF mutable file. format=CHK |
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397 | creates an immutable file. The value of the format argument is |
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398 | case-insensitive. If no format is specified, the newly-created file will be |
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399 | immutable (but see below). |
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400 | |
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401 | For compatibility with previous versions of Tahoe-LAFS, the web-API will |
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402 | also accept a mutable=true argument in the query string. If mutable=true is |
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403 | given, then the new file will be mutable, and its format will be the default |
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404 | mutable file format, as configured by the [client]mutable.format option of |
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405 | tahoe.cfg on the Tahoe-LAFS node hosting the webapi server. Use of |
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406 | mutable=true is discouraged; new code should use format= instead of |
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407 | mutable=true (unless it needs to be compatible with web-API servers older |
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408 | than v1.9.0). If neither format= nor mutable=true are given, the |
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409 | newly-created file will be immutable. |
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410 | |
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411 | This returns the file-cap of the resulting file. If a new file was created |
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412 | by this method, the HTTP response code (as dictated by rfc2616) will be set |
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413 | to 201 CREATED. If an existing file was replaced or modified, the response |
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414 | code will be 200 OK. |
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415 | |
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416 | Note that the 'curl -T localfile http://127.0.0.1:3456/uri/$DIRCAP/foo.txt' |
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417 | command can be used to invoke this operation. |
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418 | |
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419 | ``PUT /uri`` |
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420 | |
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421 | This uploads a file, and produces a file-cap for the contents, but does not |
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422 | attach the file into the file store. No directories will be modified by |
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423 | this operation. The file-cap is returned as the body of the HTTP response. |
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424 | |
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425 | This method accepts format= and mutable=true as query string arguments, and |
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426 | interprets those arguments in the same way as the linked forms of PUT |
---|
427 | described immediately above. |
---|
428 | |
---|
429 | Creating a New Directory |
---|
430 | ------------------------ |
---|
431 | |
---|
432 | ``POST /uri?t=mkdir`` |
---|
433 | |
---|
434 | ``PUT /uri?t=mkdir`` |
---|
435 | |
---|
436 | Create a new empty directory and return its write-cap as the HTTP response |
---|
437 | body. This does not make the newly created directory visible from the |
---|
438 | file store. The "PUT" operation is provided for backwards compatibility: |
---|
439 | new code should use POST. |
---|
440 | |
---|
441 | This supports a format= argument in the query string. The format= |
---|
442 | argument, if specified, controls the format of the directory. format=MDMF |
---|
443 | indicates that the directory should be stored as an MDMF file; format=SDMF |
---|
444 | indicates that the directory should be stored as an SDMF file. The value of |
---|
445 | the format= argument is case-insensitive. If no format= argument is |
---|
446 | given, the directory's format is determined by the default mutable file |
---|
447 | format, as configured on the Tahoe-LAFS node responding to the request. |
---|
448 | |
---|
449 | In addition, an optional "private-key=" argument is supported which, if given, |
---|
450 | specifies the underlying signing key to be used when creating the directory. |
---|
451 | This value must be a DER-encoded 2048-bit RSA private key in urlsafe base64 |
---|
452 | encoding. (To convert an existing PEM-encoded RSA key file into the format |
---|
453 | required, the following commands may be used -- assuming a modern UNIX-like |
---|
454 | environment with common tools already installed: |
---|
455 | ``openssl rsa -in key.pem -outform der | base64 -w 0 -i - | tr '+/' '-_'``) |
---|
456 | |
---|
457 | Because this key can be used to derive the write capability for the |
---|
458 | associated directory, additional care should be taken to ensure that the key is |
---|
459 | unique, that it is kept confidential, and that it was derived from an |
---|
460 | appropriate (high-entropy) source of randomness. If this argument is omitted |
---|
461 | (the default behavior), Tahoe-LAFS will generate an appropriate signing key |
---|
462 | using the underlying operating system's source of entropy. |
---|
463 | |
---|
464 | ``POST /uri?t=mkdir-with-children`` |
---|
465 | |
---|
466 | Create a new directory, populated with a set of child nodes, and return its |
---|
467 | write-cap as the HTTP response body. The new directory is not attached to |
---|
468 | any other directory: the returned write-cap is the only reference to it. |
---|
469 | |
---|
470 | The format of the directory can be controlled with the format= argument in |
---|
471 | the query string and a signing key can be specified with the private-key= |
---|
472 | argument, as described above. |
---|
473 | |
---|
474 | Initial children are provided as the body of the POST form (this is more |
---|
475 | efficient than doing separate mkdir and set_children operations). If the |
---|
476 | body is empty, the new directory will be empty. If not empty, the body will |
---|
477 | be interpreted as a UTF-8 JSON-encoded dictionary of children with which the |
---|
478 | new directory should be populated, using the same format as would be |
---|
479 | returned in the 'children' value of the t=json GET request, described below. |
---|
480 | Each dictionary key should be a child name, and each value should be a list |
---|
481 | of [TYPE, PROPDICT], where PROPDICT contains "rw_uri", "ro_uri", and |
---|
482 | "metadata" keys (all others are ignored). For example, the PUT request body |
---|
483 | could be:: |
---|
484 | |
---|
485 | { |
---|
486 | "Fran\u00e7ais": [ "filenode", { |
---|
487 | "ro_uri": "URI:CHK:...", |
---|
488 | "metadata": { |
---|
489 | "ctime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
490 | "mtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
491 | "tahoe": { |
---|
492 | "linkcrtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
493 | "linkmotime": 1202777696.7564139 |
---|
494 | } } } ], |
---|
495 | "subdir": [ "dirnode", { |
---|
496 | "rw_uri": "URI:DIR2:...", |
---|
497 | "ro_uri": "URI:DIR2-RO:...", |
---|
498 | "metadata": { |
---|
499 | "ctime": 1202778102.7589991, |
---|
500 | "mtime": 1202778111.2160511, |
---|
501 | "tahoe": { |
---|
502 | "linkcrtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
503 | "linkmotime": 1202777696.7564139 |
---|
504 | } } } ] |
---|
505 | } |
---|
506 | |
---|
507 | For forward-compatibility, a mutable directory can also contain caps in |
---|
508 | a format that is unknown to the web-API server. When such caps are retrieved |
---|
509 | from a mutable directory in a "ro_uri" field, they will be prefixed with |
---|
510 | the string "ro.", indicating that they must not be decoded without |
---|
511 | checking that they are read-only. The "ro." prefix must not be stripped |
---|
512 | off without performing this check. (Future versions of the web-API server |
---|
513 | will perform it where necessary.) |
---|
514 | |
---|
515 | If both the "rw_uri" and "ro_uri" fields are present in a given PROPDICT, |
---|
516 | and the web-API server recognizes the rw_uri as a write cap, then it will |
---|
517 | reset the ro_uri to the corresponding read cap and discard the original |
---|
518 | contents of ro_uri (in order to ensure that the two caps correspond to the |
---|
519 | same object and that the ro_uri is in fact read-only). However this may not |
---|
520 | happen for caps in a format unknown to the web-API server. Therefore, when |
---|
521 | writing a directory the web-API client should ensure that the contents |
---|
522 | of "rw_uri" and "ro_uri" for a given PROPDICT are a consistent |
---|
523 | (write cap, read cap) pair if possible. If the web-API client only has |
---|
524 | one cap and does not know whether it is a write cap or read cap, then |
---|
525 | it is acceptable to set "rw_uri" to that cap and omit "ro_uri". The |
---|
526 | client must not put a write cap into a "ro_uri" field. |
---|
527 | |
---|
528 | The metadata may have a "no-write" field. If this is set to true in the |
---|
529 | metadata of a link, it will not be possible to open that link for writing |
---|
530 | via the SFTP frontend; see :doc:`FTP-and-SFTP` for details. Also, if the |
---|
531 | "no-write" field is set to true in the metadata of a link to a mutable |
---|
532 | child, it will cause the link to be diminished to read-only. |
---|
533 | |
---|
534 | Note that the web-API-using client application must not provide the |
---|
535 | "Content-Type: multipart/form-data" header that usually accompanies HTML |
---|
536 | form submissions, since the body is not formatted this way. Doing so will |
---|
537 | cause a server error as the lower-level code misparses the request body. |
---|
538 | |
---|
539 | Child file names should each be expressed as a Unicode string, then used as |
---|
540 | keys of the dictionary. The dictionary should then be converted into JSON, |
---|
541 | and the resulting string encoded into UTF-8. This UTF-8 bytestring should |
---|
542 | then be used as the POST body. |
---|
543 | |
---|
544 | ``POST /uri?t=mkdir-immutable`` |
---|
545 | |
---|
546 | Like t=mkdir-with-children above, but the new directory will be |
---|
547 | deep-immutable. This means that the directory itself is immutable, and that |
---|
548 | it can only contain objects that are treated as being deep-immutable, like |
---|
549 | immutable files, literal files, and deep-immutable directories. |
---|
550 | |
---|
551 | For forward-compatibility, a deep-immutable directory can also contain caps |
---|
552 | in a format that is unknown to the web-API server. When such caps are retrieved |
---|
553 | from a deep-immutable directory in a "ro_uri" field, they will be prefixed |
---|
554 | with the string "imm.", indicating that they must not be decoded without |
---|
555 | checking that they are immutable. The "imm." prefix must not be stripped |
---|
556 | off without performing this check. (Future versions of the web-API server |
---|
557 | will perform it where necessary.) |
---|
558 | |
---|
559 | The cap for each child may be given either in the "rw_uri" or "ro_uri" |
---|
560 | field of the PROPDICT (not both). If a cap is given in the "rw_uri" field, |
---|
561 | then the web-API server will check that it is an immutable read-cap of a |
---|
562 | *known* format, and give an error if it is not. If a cap is given in the |
---|
563 | "ro_uri" field, then the web-API server will still check whether known |
---|
564 | caps are immutable, but for unknown caps it will simply assume that the |
---|
565 | cap can be stored, as described above. Note that an attacker would be |
---|
566 | able to store any cap in an immutable directory, so this check when |
---|
567 | creating the directory is only to help non-malicious clients to avoid |
---|
568 | accidentally giving away more authority than intended. |
---|
569 | |
---|
570 | A non-empty request body is mandatory, since after the directory is created, |
---|
571 | it will not be possible to add more children to it. |
---|
572 | |
---|
573 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=mkdir`` |
---|
574 | |
---|
575 | ``PUT /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=mkdir`` |
---|
576 | |
---|
577 | Create new directories as necessary to make sure that the named target |
---|
578 | ($DIRCAP/SUBDIRS../SUBDIR) is a directory. This will create additional |
---|
579 | intermediate mutable directories as necessary. If the named target directory |
---|
580 | already exists, this will make no changes to it. |
---|
581 | |
---|
582 | If the final directory is created, it will be empty. |
---|
583 | |
---|
584 | This accepts a format= argument in the query string, which controls the |
---|
585 | format of the named target directory, if it does not already exist. format= |
---|
586 | is interpreted in the same way as in the POST /uri?t=mkdir form. Note that |
---|
587 | format= only controls the format of the named target directory; |
---|
588 | intermediate directories, if created, are created based on the default |
---|
589 | mutable type, as configured on the Tahoe-LAFS server responding to the |
---|
590 | request. |
---|
591 | |
---|
592 | This operation will return an error if a blocking file is present at any of |
---|
593 | the parent names, preventing the server from creating the necessary parent |
---|
594 | directory; or if it would require changing an immutable directory. |
---|
595 | |
---|
596 | The write-cap of the new directory will be returned as the HTTP response |
---|
597 | body. |
---|
598 | |
---|
599 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=mkdir-with-children`` |
---|
600 | |
---|
601 | Like /uri?t=mkdir-with-children, but the final directory is created as a |
---|
602 | child of an existing mutable directory. This will create additional |
---|
603 | intermediate mutable directories as necessary. If the final directory is |
---|
604 | created, it will be populated with initial children from the POST request |
---|
605 | body, as described above. |
---|
606 | |
---|
607 | This accepts a format= argument in the query string, which controls the |
---|
608 | format of the target directory, if the target directory is created as part |
---|
609 | of the operation. format= is interpreted in the same way as in the POST/ |
---|
610 | uri?t=mkdir-with-children operation. Note that format= only controls the |
---|
611 | format of the named target directory; intermediate directories, if created, |
---|
612 | are created using the default mutable type setting, as configured on the |
---|
613 | Tahoe-LAFS server responding to the request. |
---|
614 | |
---|
615 | This operation will return an error if a blocking file is present at any of |
---|
616 | the parent names, preventing the server from creating the necessary parent |
---|
617 | directory; or if it would require changing an immutable directory; or if |
---|
618 | the immediate parent directory already has a a child named SUBDIR. |
---|
619 | |
---|
620 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=mkdir-immutable`` |
---|
621 | |
---|
622 | Like /uri?t=mkdir-immutable, but the final directory is created as a child |
---|
623 | of an existing mutable directory. The final directory will be deep-immutable, |
---|
624 | and will be populated with the children specified as a JSON dictionary in |
---|
625 | the POST request body. |
---|
626 | |
---|
627 | In Tahoe 1.6 this operation creates intermediate mutable directories if |
---|
628 | necessary, but that behaviour should not be relied on; see ticket #920. |
---|
629 | |
---|
630 | This operation will return an error if the parent directory is immutable, |
---|
631 | or already has a child named SUBDIR. |
---|
632 | |
---|
633 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir&name=NAME`` |
---|
634 | |
---|
635 | Create a new empty mutable directory and attach it to the given existing |
---|
636 | directory. This will create additional intermediate directories as necessary. |
---|
637 | |
---|
638 | This accepts a format= argument in the query string, which controls the |
---|
639 | format of the named target directory, if it does not already exist. format= |
---|
640 | is interpreted in the same way as in the POST /uri?t=mkdir form. Note that |
---|
641 | format= only controls the format of the named target directory; |
---|
642 | intermediate directories, if created, are created based on the default |
---|
643 | mutable type, as configured on the Tahoe-LAFS server responding to the |
---|
644 | request. |
---|
645 | |
---|
646 | This operation will return an error if a blocking file is present at any of |
---|
647 | the parent names, preventing the server from creating the necessary parent |
---|
648 | directory, or if it would require changing any immutable directory. |
---|
649 | |
---|
650 | The URL of this operation points to the parent of the bottommost new directory, |
---|
651 | whereas the /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=mkdir operation above has a URL |
---|
652 | that points directly to the bottommost new directory. |
---|
653 | |
---|
654 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir-with-children&name=NAME`` |
---|
655 | |
---|
656 | Like /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir&name=NAME, but the new directory will |
---|
657 | be populated with initial children via the POST request body. This command |
---|
658 | will create additional intermediate mutable directories as necessary. |
---|
659 | |
---|
660 | This accepts a format= argument in the query string, which controls the |
---|
661 | format of the target directory, if the target directory is created as part |
---|
662 | of the operation. format= is interpreted in the same way as in the POST/ |
---|
663 | uri?t=mkdir-with-children operation. Note that format= only controls the |
---|
664 | format of the named target directory; intermediate directories, if created, |
---|
665 | are created using the default mutable type setting, as configured on the |
---|
666 | Tahoe-LAFS server responding to the request. |
---|
667 | |
---|
668 | This operation will return an error if a blocking file is present at any of |
---|
669 | the parent names, preventing the server from creating the necessary parent |
---|
670 | directory; or if it would require changing an immutable directory; or if |
---|
671 | the immediate parent directory already has a a child named NAME. |
---|
672 | |
---|
673 | Note that the name= argument must be passed as a queryarg, because the POST |
---|
674 | request body is used for the initial children JSON. |
---|
675 | |
---|
676 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir-immutable&name=NAME`` |
---|
677 | |
---|
678 | Like /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir-with-children&name=NAME, but the |
---|
679 | final directory will be deep-immutable. The children are specified as a |
---|
680 | JSON dictionary in the POST request body. Again, the name= argument must be |
---|
681 | passed as a queryarg. |
---|
682 | |
---|
683 | In Tahoe 1.6 this operation creates intermediate mutable directories if |
---|
684 | necessary, but that behaviour should not be relied on; see ticket #920. |
---|
685 | |
---|
686 | This operation will return an error if the parent directory is immutable, |
---|
687 | or already has a child named NAME. |
---|
688 | |
---|
689 | |
---|
690 | Getting Information About a File Or Directory (as JSON) |
---|
691 | ------------------------------------------------------- |
---|
692 | |
---|
693 | ``GET /uri/$FILECAP?t=json`` |
---|
694 | |
---|
695 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP?t=json`` |
---|
696 | |
---|
697 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=json`` |
---|
698 | |
---|
699 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME?t=json`` |
---|
700 | |
---|
701 | This returns a machine-parseable JSON-encoded description of the given |
---|
702 | object. The JSON always contains a list, and the first element of the list is |
---|
703 | always a flag that indicates whether the referenced object is a file or a |
---|
704 | directory. If it is a capability to a file, then the information includes |
---|
705 | file size and URI, like this:: |
---|
706 | |
---|
707 | GET /uri/$FILECAP?t=json : |
---|
708 | |
---|
709 | [ "filenode", { |
---|
710 | "ro_uri": file_uri, |
---|
711 | "verify_uri": verify_uri, |
---|
712 | "size": bytes, |
---|
713 | "mutable": false, |
---|
714 | "format": "CHK" |
---|
715 | } ] |
---|
716 | |
---|
717 | If it is a capability to a directory followed by a path from that directory |
---|
718 | to a file, then the information also includes metadata from the link to the |
---|
719 | file in the parent directory, like this:: |
---|
720 | |
---|
721 | GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME?t=json |
---|
722 | |
---|
723 | [ "filenode", { |
---|
724 | "ro_uri": file_uri, |
---|
725 | "verify_uri": verify_uri, |
---|
726 | "size": bytes, |
---|
727 | "mutable": false, |
---|
728 | "format": "CHK", |
---|
729 | "metadata": { |
---|
730 | "ctime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
731 | "mtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
732 | "tahoe": { |
---|
733 | "linkcrtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
734 | "linkmotime": 1202777696.7564139 |
---|
735 | } } } ] |
---|
736 | |
---|
737 | If it is a directory, then it includes information about the children of |
---|
738 | this directory, as a mapping from child name to a set of data about the |
---|
739 | child (the same data that would appear in a corresponding GET?t=json of the |
---|
740 | child itself). The child entries also include metadata about each child, |
---|
741 | including link-creation- and link-change- timestamps. The output looks like |
---|
742 | this:: |
---|
743 | |
---|
744 | GET /uri/$DIRCAP?t=json : |
---|
745 | GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=json : |
---|
746 | |
---|
747 | [ "dirnode", { |
---|
748 | "rw_uri": read_write_uri, |
---|
749 | "ro_uri": read_only_uri, |
---|
750 | "verify_uri": verify_uri, |
---|
751 | "mutable": true, |
---|
752 | "format": "SDMF", |
---|
753 | "children": { |
---|
754 | "foo.txt": [ "filenode", |
---|
755 | { |
---|
756 | "ro_uri": uri, |
---|
757 | "size": bytes, |
---|
758 | "metadata": { |
---|
759 | "ctime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
760 | "mtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
761 | "tahoe": { |
---|
762 | "linkcrtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
763 | "linkmotime": 1202777696.7564139 |
---|
764 | } } } ], |
---|
765 | "subdir": [ "dirnode", |
---|
766 | { |
---|
767 | "rw_uri": rwuri, |
---|
768 | "ro_uri": rouri, |
---|
769 | "metadata": { |
---|
770 | "ctime": 1202778102.7589991, |
---|
771 | "mtime": 1202778111.2160511, |
---|
772 | "tahoe": { |
---|
773 | "linkcrtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
774 | "linkmotime": 1202777696.7564139 |
---|
775 | } } } ] |
---|
776 | } } ] |
---|
777 | |
---|
778 | In the above example, note how 'children' is a dictionary in which the keys |
---|
779 | are child names and the values depend upon whether the child is a file or a |
---|
780 | directory. The value is mostly the same as the JSON representation of the |
---|
781 | child object (except that directories do not recurse -- the "children" |
---|
782 | entry of the child is omitted, and the directory view includes the metadata |
---|
783 | that is stored on the directory edge). |
---|
784 | |
---|
785 | The rw_uri field will be present in the information about a directory |
---|
786 | if and only if you have read-write access to that directory. The verify_uri |
---|
787 | field will be present if and only if the object has a verify-cap |
---|
788 | (non-distributed LIT files do not have verify-caps). |
---|
789 | |
---|
790 | If the cap is of an unknown format, then the file size and verify_uri will |
---|
791 | not be available:: |
---|
792 | |
---|
793 | GET /uri/$UNKNOWNCAP?t=json : |
---|
794 | |
---|
795 | [ "unknown", { |
---|
796 | "ro_uri": unknown_read_uri |
---|
797 | } ] |
---|
798 | |
---|
799 | GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]UNKNOWNCHILDNAME?t=json : |
---|
800 | |
---|
801 | [ "unknown", { |
---|
802 | "rw_uri": unknown_write_uri, |
---|
803 | "ro_uri": unknown_read_uri, |
---|
804 | "mutable": true, |
---|
805 | "metadata": { |
---|
806 | "ctime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
807 | "mtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
808 | "tahoe": { |
---|
809 | "linkcrtime": 1202777696.7564139, |
---|
810 | "linkmotime": 1202777696.7564139 |
---|
811 | } } } ] |
---|
812 | |
---|
813 | As in the case of file nodes, the metadata will only be present when the |
---|
814 | capability is to a directory followed by a path. The "mutable" field is also |
---|
815 | not always present; when it is absent, the mutability of the object is not |
---|
816 | known. |
---|
817 | |
---|
818 | About the metadata |
---|
819 | `````````````````` |
---|
820 | |
---|
821 | The value of the 'tahoe':'linkmotime' key is updated whenever a link to a |
---|
822 | child is set. The value of the 'tahoe':'linkcrtime' key is updated whenever |
---|
823 | a link to a child is created -- i.e. when there was not previously a link |
---|
824 | under that name. |
---|
825 | |
---|
826 | Note however, that if the edge in the Tahoe-LAFS file store points to a |
---|
827 | mutable file and the contents of that mutable file is changed, then the |
---|
828 | 'tahoe':'linkmotime' value on that edge will *not* be updated, since the |
---|
829 | edge itself wasn't updated -- only the mutable file was. |
---|
830 | |
---|
831 | The timestamps are represented as a number of seconds since the UNIX epoch |
---|
832 | (1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC), with leap seconds not being counted in the long |
---|
833 | term. |
---|
834 | |
---|
835 | In Tahoe earlier than v1.4.0, 'mtime' and 'ctime' keys were populated |
---|
836 | instead of the 'tahoe':'linkmotime' and 'tahoe':'linkcrtime' keys. Starting |
---|
837 | in Tahoe v1.4.0, the 'linkmotime'/'linkcrtime' keys in the 'tahoe' sub-dict |
---|
838 | are populated. However, prior to Tahoe v1.7beta, a bug caused the 'tahoe' |
---|
839 | sub-dict to be deleted by web-API requests in which new metadata is |
---|
840 | specified, and not to be added to existing child links that lack it. |
---|
841 | |
---|
842 | From Tahoe v1.7.0 onward, the 'mtime' and 'ctime' fields are no longer |
---|
843 | populated or updated (see ticket #924), except by "tahoe backup" as |
---|
844 | explained below. For backward compatibility, when an existing link is |
---|
845 | updated and 'tahoe':'linkcrtime' is not present in the previous metadata |
---|
846 | but 'ctime' is, the old value of 'ctime' is used as the new value of |
---|
847 | 'tahoe':'linkcrtime'. |
---|
848 | |
---|
849 | The reason we added the new fields in Tahoe v1.4.0 is that there is a |
---|
850 | "set_children" API (described below) which you can use to overwrite the |
---|
851 | values of the 'mtime'/'ctime' pair, and this API is used by the |
---|
852 | "tahoe backup" command (in Tahoe v1.3.0 and later) to set the 'mtime' and |
---|
853 | 'ctime' values when backing up files from a local filesystem into the |
---|
854 | Tahoe-LAFS file store. As of Tahoe v1.4.0, the set_children API cannot be |
---|
855 | used to set anything under the 'tahoe' key of the metadata dict -- if you |
---|
856 | include 'tahoe' keys in your 'metadata' arguments then it will silently |
---|
857 | ignore those keys. |
---|
858 | |
---|
859 | Therefore, if the 'tahoe' sub-dict is present, you can rely on the |
---|
860 | 'linkcrtime' and 'linkmotime' values therein to have the semantics described |
---|
861 | above. (This is assuming that only official Tahoe clients have been used to |
---|
862 | write those links, and that their system clocks were set to what you expected |
---|
863 | -- there is nothing preventing someone from editing their Tahoe client or |
---|
864 | writing their own Tahoe client which would overwrite those values however |
---|
865 | they like, and there is nothing to constrain their system clock from taking |
---|
866 | any value.) |
---|
867 | |
---|
868 | When an edge is created or updated by "tahoe backup", the 'mtime' and |
---|
869 | 'ctime' keys on that edge are set as follows: |
---|
870 | |
---|
871 | * 'mtime' is set to the timestamp read from the local filesystem for the |
---|
872 | "mtime" of the local file in question, which means the last time the |
---|
873 | contents of that file were changed. |
---|
874 | |
---|
875 | * On Windows, 'ctime' is set to the creation timestamp for the file |
---|
876 | read from the local filesystem. On other platforms, 'ctime' is set to |
---|
877 | the UNIX "ctime" of the local file, which means the last time that |
---|
878 | either the contents or the metadata of the local file was changed. |
---|
879 | |
---|
880 | There are several ways that the 'ctime' field could be confusing: |
---|
881 | |
---|
882 | 1. You might be confused about whether it reflects the time of the creation |
---|
883 | of a link in the Tahoe-LAFS file store (by a version of Tahoe < v1.7.0) |
---|
884 | or a timestamp copied in by "tahoe backup" from a local filesystem. |
---|
885 | |
---|
886 | 2. You might be confused about whether it is a copy of the file creation |
---|
887 | time (if "tahoe backup" was run on a Windows system) or of the last |
---|
888 | contents-or-metadata change (if "tahoe backup" was run on a different |
---|
889 | operating system). |
---|
890 | |
---|
891 | 3. You might be confused by the fact that changing the contents of a |
---|
892 | mutable file in Tahoe doesn't have any effect on any links pointing at |
---|
893 | that file in any directories, although "tahoe backup" sets the link |
---|
894 | 'ctime'/'mtime' to reflect timestamps about the local file corresponding |
---|
895 | to the Tahoe file to which the link points. |
---|
896 | |
---|
897 | 4. Also, quite apart from Tahoe, you might be confused about the meaning |
---|
898 | of the "ctime" in UNIX local filesystems, which people sometimes think |
---|
899 | means file creation time, but which actually means, in UNIX local |
---|
900 | filesystems, the most recent time that the file contents or the file |
---|
901 | metadata (such as owner, permission bits, extended attributes, etc.) |
---|
902 | has changed. Note that although "ctime" does not mean file creation time |
---|
903 | in UNIX, links created by a version of Tahoe prior to v1.7.0, and never |
---|
904 | written by "tahoe backup", will have 'ctime' set to the link creation |
---|
905 | time. |
---|
906 | |
---|
907 | |
---|
908 | Attaching an Existing File or Directory by its read- or write-cap |
---|
909 | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
---|
910 | |
---|
911 | ``PUT /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME?t=uri`` |
---|
912 | |
---|
913 | This attaches a child object (either a file or directory) to a specified |
---|
914 | location in the Tahoe-LAFS file store. The child object is referenced by its |
---|
915 | read- or write- cap, as provided in the HTTP request body. This will create |
---|
916 | intermediate directories as necessary. |
---|
917 | |
---|
918 | This is similar to a UNIX hardlink: by referencing a previously-uploaded file |
---|
919 | (or previously-created directory) instead of uploading/creating a new one, |
---|
920 | you can create two references to the same object. |
---|
921 | |
---|
922 | The read- or write- cap of the child is provided in the body of the HTTP |
---|
923 | request, and this same cap is returned in the response body. |
---|
924 | |
---|
925 | The default behavior is to overwrite any existing object at the same |
---|
926 | location. To prevent this (and make the operation return an error instead |
---|
927 | of overwriting), add a "replace=false" argument, as "?t=uri&replace=false". |
---|
928 | With replace=false, this operation will return an HTTP 409 "Conflict" error |
---|
929 | if there is already an object at the given location, rather than |
---|
930 | overwriting the existing object. To allow the operation to overwrite a |
---|
931 | file, but return an error when trying to overwrite a directory, use |
---|
932 | "replace=only-files" (this behavior is closer to the traditional UNIX "mv" |
---|
933 | command). Note that "true", "t", and "1" are all synonyms for "True", and |
---|
934 | "false", "f", and "0" are synonyms for "False", and the parameter is |
---|
935 | case-insensitive. |
---|
936 | |
---|
937 | Note that this operation does not take its child cap in the form of |
---|
938 | separate "rw_uri" and "ro_uri" fields. Therefore, it cannot accept a |
---|
939 | child cap in a format unknown to the web-API server, unless its URI |
---|
940 | starts with "ro." or "imm.". This restriction is necessary because the |
---|
941 | server is not able to attenuate an unknown write cap to a read cap. |
---|
942 | Unknown URIs starting with "ro." or "imm.", on the other hand, are |
---|
943 | assumed to represent read caps. The client should not prefix a write |
---|
944 | cap with "ro." or "imm." and pass it to this operation, since that |
---|
945 | would result in granting the cap's write authority to holders of the |
---|
946 | directory read cap. |
---|
947 | |
---|
948 | |
---|
949 | Adding Multiple Files or Directories to a Parent Directory at Once |
---|
950 | ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
---|
951 | |
---|
952 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS..]?t=set_children`` |
---|
953 | |
---|
954 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS..]?t=set-children`` (Tahoe >= v1.6) |
---|
955 | |
---|
956 | This command adds multiple children to a directory in a single operation. |
---|
957 | It reads the request body and interprets it as a JSON-encoded description |
---|
958 | of the child names and read/write-caps that should be added. |
---|
959 | |
---|
960 | The body should be a JSON-encoded dictionary, in the same format as the |
---|
961 | "children" value returned by the "GET /uri/$DIRCAP?t=json" operation |
---|
962 | described above. In this format, each key is a child names, and the |
---|
963 | corresponding value is a tuple of (type, childinfo). "type" is ignored, and |
---|
964 | "childinfo" is a dictionary that contains "rw_uri", "ro_uri", and |
---|
965 | "metadata" keys. You can take the output of "GET /uri/$DIRCAP1?t=json" and |
---|
966 | use it as the input to "POST /uri/$DIRCAP2?t=set_children" to make DIR2 |
---|
967 | look very much like DIR1 (except for any existing children of DIR2 that |
---|
968 | were not overwritten, and any existing "tahoe" metadata keys as described |
---|
969 | below). |
---|
970 | |
---|
971 | When the set_children request contains a child name that already exists in |
---|
972 | the target directory, this command defaults to overwriting that child with |
---|
973 | the new value (both child cap and metadata, but if the JSON data does not |
---|
974 | contain a "metadata" key, the old child's metadata is preserved). The |
---|
975 | command takes a boolean "overwrite=" query argument to control this |
---|
976 | behavior. If you use "?t=set_children&overwrite=false", then an attempt to |
---|
977 | replace an existing child will instead cause an error. |
---|
978 | |
---|
979 | Any "tahoe" key in the new child's "metadata" value is ignored. Any |
---|
980 | existing "tahoe" metadata is preserved. The metadata["tahoe"] value is |
---|
981 | reserved for metadata generated by the tahoe node itself. The only two keys |
---|
982 | currently placed here are "linkcrtime" and "linkmotime". For details, see |
---|
983 | the section above entitled "Getting Information About a File Or Directory (as |
---|
984 | JSON)", in the "About the metadata" subsection. |
---|
985 | |
---|
986 | Note that this command was introduced with the name "set_children", which |
---|
987 | uses an underscore rather than a hyphen as other multi-word command names |
---|
988 | do. The variant with a hyphen is now accepted, but clients that desire |
---|
989 | backward compatibility should continue to use "set_children". |
---|
990 | |
---|
991 | |
---|
992 | Unlinking a File or Directory |
---|
993 | ----------------------------- |
---|
994 | |
---|
995 | ``DELETE /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME`` |
---|
996 | |
---|
997 | This removes the given name from its parent directory. CHILDNAME is the |
---|
998 | name to be removed, and $DIRCAP/SUBDIRS.. indicates the directory that will |
---|
999 | be modified. |
---|
1000 | |
---|
1001 | Note that this does not actually delete the file or directory that the name |
---|
1002 | points to from the tahoe grid -- it only unlinks the named reference from |
---|
1003 | this directory. If there are other names in this directory or in other |
---|
1004 | directories that point to the resource, then it will remain accessible |
---|
1005 | through those paths. Even if all names pointing to this object are removed |
---|
1006 | from their parent directories, then someone with possession of its read-cap |
---|
1007 | can continue to access the object through that cap. |
---|
1008 | |
---|
1009 | The object will only become completely unreachable once 1: there are no |
---|
1010 | reachable directories that reference it, and 2: nobody is holding a read- |
---|
1011 | or write- cap to the object. (This behavior is very similar to the way |
---|
1012 | hardlinks and anonymous files work in traditional UNIX filesystems). |
---|
1013 | |
---|
1014 | This operation will not modify more than a single directory. Intermediate |
---|
1015 | directories which were implicitly created by PUT or POST methods will *not* |
---|
1016 | be automatically removed by DELETE. |
---|
1017 | |
---|
1018 | This method returns the file- or directory- cap of the object that was just |
---|
1019 | removed. |
---|
1020 | |
---|
1021 | |
---|
1022 | Browser Operations: Human-oriented interfaces |
---|
1023 | ============================================= |
---|
1024 | |
---|
1025 | This section describes the HTTP operations that provide support for humans |
---|
1026 | running a web browser. Most of these operations use HTML forms that use POST |
---|
1027 | to drive the Tahoe-LAFS node. This section is intended for HTML authors who |
---|
1028 | want to write web pages containing user interfaces for manipulating the |
---|
1029 | Tahoe-LAFS file store. |
---|
1030 | |
---|
1031 | Note that for all POST operations, the arguments listed can be provided |
---|
1032 | either as URL query arguments or as form body fields. URL query arguments are |
---|
1033 | separated from the main URL by "?", and from each other by "&". For example, |
---|
1034 | "POST /uri/$DIRCAP?t=upload&mutable=true". Form body fields are usually |
---|
1035 | specified by using <input type="hidden"> elements. For clarity, the |
---|
1036 | descriptions below display the most significant arguments as URL query args. |
---|
1037 | |
---|
1038 | |
---|
1039 | Viewing a Directory (as HTML) |
---|
1040 | ----------------------------- |
---|
1041 | |
---|
1042 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]`` |
---|
1043 | |
---|
1044 | This returns an HTML page, intended to be displayed to a human by a web |
---|
1045 | browser, which contains HREF links to all files and directories reachable |
---|
1046 | from this directory. These HREF links do not have a t= argument, meaning |
---|
1047 | that a human who follows them will get pages also meant for a human. It also |
---|
1048 | contains forms to upload new files, and to unlink files and directories |
---|
1049 | from their parent directory. Those forms use POST methods to do their job. |
---|
1050 | |
---|
1051 | |
---|
1052 | Viewing/Downloading a File |
---|
1053 | -------------------------- |
---|
1054 | |
---|
1055 | ``GET /uri/$FILECAP`` |
---|
1056 | |
---|
1057 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME`` |
---|
1058 | |
---|
1059 | ``GET /named/$FILECAP/FILENAME`` |
---|
1060 | |
---|
1061 | These will retrieve the contents of the given file. The HTTP response body |
---|
1062 | will contain the sequence of bytes that make up the file. |
---|
1063 | |
---|
1064 | The ``/named/`` form is an alternative to ``/uri/$FILECAP`` which makes it |
---|
1065 | easier to get the correct filename. The Tahoe server will provide the |
---|
1066 | contents of the given file, with a Content-Type header derived from the |
---|
1067 | given filename. This form is used to get browsers to use the "Save Link As" |
---|
1068 | feature correctly, and also helps command-line tools like "wget" and "curl" |
---|
1069 | use the right filename. Note that this form can *only* be used with file |
---|
1070 | caps; it is an error to use a directory cap after the /named/ prefix. |
---|
1071 | |
---|
1072 | URLs may also use /file/$FILECAP/FILENAME as a synonym for |
---|
1073 | /named/$FILECAP/FILENAME. The use of "/file/" is deprecated in favor of |
---|
1074 | "/named/" and support for "/file/" will be removed in a future release of |
---|
1075 | Tahoe-LAFS. |
---|
1076 | |
---|
1077 | If you use the first form (``/uri/$FILECAP``) and want the HTTP response to |
---|
1078 | include a useful Content-Type header, add a "filename=foo" query argument, |
---|
1079 | like "GET /uri/$FILECAP?filename=foo.jpg". The bare "GET /uri/$FILECAP" does |
---|
1080 | not give the Tahoe node enough information to determine a Content-Type |
---|
1081 | (since LAFS immutable files are merely sequences of bytes, not typed and |
---|
1082 | named file objects). |
---|
1083 | |
---|
1084 | If the URL has both filename= and "save=true" in the query arguments, then |
---|
1085 | the server to add a "Content-Disposition: attachment" header, along with a |
---|
1086 | filename= parameter. When a user clicks on such a link, most browsers will |
---|
1087 | offer to let the user save the file instead of displaying it inline (indeed, |
---|
1088 | most browsers will refuse to display it inline). "true", "t", "1", and other |
---|
1089 | case-insensitive equivalents are all treated the same. |
---|
1090 | |
---|
1091 | Character-set handling in URLs and HTTP headers is a :ref:`dubious |
---|
1092 | art<urls-and-utf8>`. For maximum compatibility, Tahoe simply copies the |
---|
1093 | bytes from the filename= argument into the Content-Disposition header's |
---|
1094 | filename= parameter, without trying to interpret them in any particular way. |
---|
1095 | |
---|
1096 | |
---|
1097 | Getting Information About a File Or Directory (as HTML) |
---|
1098 | ------------------------------------------------------- |
---|
1099 | |
---|
1100 | ``GET /uri/$FILECAP?t=info`` |
---|
1101 | |
---|
1102 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/?t=info`` |
---|
1103 | |
---|
1104 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR/?t=info`` |
---|
1105 | |
---|
1106 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME?t=info`` |
---|
1107 | |
---|
1108 | This returns a human-oriented HTML page with more detail about the selected |
---|
1109 | file or directory object. This page contains the following items: |
---|
1110 | |
---|
1111 | * object size |
---|
1112 | * storage index |
---|
1113 | * JSON representation |
---|
1114 | * raw contents (text/plain) |
---|
1115 | * access caps (URIs): verify-cap, read-cap, write-cap (for mutable objects) |
---|
1116 | * check/verify/repair form |
---|
1117 | * deep-check/deep-size/deep-stats/manifest (for directories) |
---|
1118 | * replace-contents form (for mutable files) |
---|
1119 | |
---|
1120 | |
---|
1121 | Creating a Directory |
---|
1122 | -------------------- |
---|
1123 | |
---|
1124 | ``POST /uri?t=mkdir`` |
---|
1125 | |
---|
1126 | This creates a new empty directory, but does not attach it to any other |
---|
1127 | directory in the Tahoe-LAFS file store. |
---|
1128 | |
---|
1129 | If a "redirect_to_result=true" argument is provided, then the HTTP response |
---|
1130 | will cause the web browser to be redirected to a /uri/$DIRCAP page that |
---|
1131 | gives access to the newly-created directory. If you bookmark this page, |
---|
1132 | you'll be able to get back to the directory again in the future. This is the |
---|
1133 | recommended way to start working with a Tahoe server: create a new unlinked |
---|
1134 | directory (using redirect_to_result=true), then bookmark the resulting |
---|
1135 | /uri/$DIRCAP page. There is a "create directory" button on the Welcome page |
---|
1136 | to invoke this action. |
---|
1137 | |
---|
1138 | This accepts a format= argument in the query string. Refer to the |
---|
1139 | documentation of the PUT /uri?t=mkdir operation in `Creating A |
---|
1140 | New Directory`_ for information on the behavior of the format= argument. |
---|
1141 | |
---|
1142 | If "redirect_to_result=true" is not provided (or is given a value of |
---|
1143 | "false"), then the HTTP response body will simply be the write-cap of the |
---|
1144 | new directory. |
---|
1145 | |
---|
1146 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir&name=CHILDNAME`` |
---|
1147 | |
---|
1148 | This creates a new empty directory as a child of the designated SUBDIR. This |
---|
1149 | will create additional intermediate directories as necessary. |
---|
1150 | |
---|
1151 | This accepts a format= argument in the query string. Refer to the |
---|
1152 | documentation of POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir&name=CHILDNAME in |
---|
1153 | `Creating a New Directory`_ for information on the behavior of the format= |
---|
1154 | argument. |
---|
1155 | |
---|
1156 | If a "when_done=URL" argument is provided, the HTTP response will cause the |
---|
1157 | web browser to redirect to the given URL. This provides a convenient way to |
---|
1158 | return the browser to the directory that was just modified. Without a |
---|
1159 | when_done= argument, the HTTP response will simply contain the write-cap of |
---|
1160 | the directory that was just created. |
---|
1161 | |
---|
1162 | |
---|
1163 | Uploading a File |
---|
1164 | ---------------- |
---|
1165 | |
---|
1166 | ``POST /uri?t=upload`` |
---|
1167 | |
---|
1168 | This uploads a file, and produces a file-cap for the contents, but does not |
---|
1169 | attach the file to any directory in the Tahoe-LAFS file store. That is, no |
---|
1170 | directories will be modified by this operation. |
---|
1171 | |
---|
1172 | The file must be provided as the "file" field of an HTML encoded form body, |
---|
1173 | produced in response to an HTML form like this:: |
---|
1174 | |
---|
1175 | <form action="/uri" method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data"> |
---|
1176 | <input type="hidden" name="t" value="upload" /> |
---|
1177 | <input type="file" name="file" /> |
---|
1178 | <input type="submit" value="Upload Unlinked" /> |
---|
1179 | </form> |
---|
1180 | |
---|
1181 | If a "when_done=URL" argument is provided, the response body will cause the |
---|
1182 | browser to redirect to the given URL. If the when_done= URL has the string |
---|
1183 | "%(uri)s" in it, that string will be replaced by a URL-escaped form of the |
---|
1184 | newly created file-cap. (Note that without this substitution, there is no |
---|
1185 | way to access the file that was just uploaded). |
---|
1186 | |
---|
1187 | The default (in the absence of when_done=) is to return an HTML page that |
---|
1188 | describes the results of the upload. This page will contain information |
---|
1189 | about which storage servers were used for the upload, how long each |
---|
1190 | operation took, etc. |
---|
1191 | |
---|
1192 | This accepts format= and mutable=true query string arguments. Refer to |
---|
1193 | `Writing/Uploading a File`_ for information on the behavior of format= and |
---|
1194 | mutable=true. |
---|
1195 | |
---|
1196 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=upload`` |
---|
1197 | |
---|
1198 | This uploads a file, and attaches it as a new child of the given directory, |
---|
1199 | which must be mutable. The file must be provided as the "file" field of an |
---|
1200 | HTML-encoded form body, produced in response to an HTML form like this:: |
---|
1201 | |
---|
1202 | <form action="." method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data"> |
---|
1203 | <input type="hidden" name="t" value="upload" /> |
---|
1204 | <input type="file" name="file" /> |
---|
1205 | <input type="submit" value="Upload" /> |
---|
1206 | </form> |
---|
1207 | |
---|
1208 | A "name=" argument can be provided to specify the new child's name, |
---|
1209 | otherwise it will be taken from the "filename" field of the upload form |
---|
1210 | (most web browsers will copy the last component of the original file's |
---|
1211 | pathname into this field). To avoid confusion, name= is not allowed to |
---|
1212 | contain a slash. |
---|
1213 | |
---|
1214 | If there is already a child with that name, and it is a mutable file, then |
---|
1215 | its contents are replaced with the data being uploaded. If it is not a |
---|
1216 | mutable file, the default behavior is to remove the existing child before |
---|
1217 | creating a new one. To prevent this (and make the operation return an error |
---|
1218 | instead of overwriting the old child), add a "replace=false" argument, as |
---|
1219 | "?t=upload&replace=false". With replace=false, this operation will return an |
---|
1220 | HTTP 409 "Conflict" error if there is already an object at the given |
---|
1221 | location, rather than overwriting the existing object. Note that "true", |
---|
1222 | "t", and "1" are all synonyms for "True", and "false", "f", and "0" are |
---|
1223 | synonyms for "False". the parameter is case-insensitive. |
---|
1224 | |
---|
1225 | This will create additional intermediate directories as necessary, although |
---|
1226 | since it is expected to be triggered by a form that was retrieved by "GET |
---|
1227 | /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]", it is likely that the parent directory will |
---|
1228 | already exist. |
---|
1229 | |
---|
1230 | This accepts format= and mutable=true query string arguments. Refer to |
---|
1231 | `Writing/Uploading a File`_ for information on the behavior of format= and |
---|
1232 | mutable=true. |
---|
1233 | |
---|
1234 | If a "when_done=URL" argument is provided, the HTTP response will cause the |
---|
1235 | web browser to redirect to the given URL. This provides a convenient way to |
---|
1236 | return the browser to the directory that was just modified. Without a |
---|
1237 | when_done= argument, the HTTP response will simply contain the file-cap of |
---|
1238 | the file that was just uploaded (a write-cap for mutable files, or a |
---|
1239 | read-cap for immutable files). |
---|
1240 | |
---|
1241 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME?t=upload`` |
---|
1242 | |
---|
1243 | This also uploads a file and attaches it as a new child of the given |
---|
1244 | directory, which must be mutable. It is a slight variant of the previous |
---|
1245 | operation, as the URL refers to the target file rather than the parent |
---|
1246 | directory. It is otherwise identical: this accepts mutable= and when_done= |
---|
1247 | arguments too. |
---|
1248 | |
---|
1249 | ``POST /uri/$FILECAP?t=upload`` |
---|
1250 | |
---|
1251 | This modifies the contents of an existing mutable file in-place. An error is |
---|
1252 | signalled if $FILECAP does not refer to a mutable file. It behaves just like |
---|
1253 | the "PUT /uri/$FILECAP" form, but uses a POST for the benefit of HTML forms |
---|
1254 | in a web browser. |
---|
1255 | |
---|
1256 | |
---|
1257 | Attaching An Existing File Or Directory (by URI) |
---|
1258 | ------------------------------------------------ |
---|
1259 | |
---|
1260 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=uri&name=CHILDNAME&uri=CHILDCAP`` |
---|
1261 | |
---|
1262 | This attaches a given read- or write- cap "CHILDCAP" to the designated |
---|
1263 | directory, with a specified child name. This behaves much like the PUT t=uri |
---|
1264 | operation, and is a lot like a UNIX hardlink. It is subject to the same |
---|
1265 | restrictions as that operation on the use of cap formats unknown to the |
---|
1266 | web-API server. |
---|
1267 | |
---|
1268 | This will create additional intermediate directories as necessary, although |
---|
1269 | since it is expected to be triggered by a form that was retrieved by "GET |
---|
1270 | /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]", it is likely that the parent directory will |
---|
1271 | already exist. |
---|
1272 | |
---|
1273 | This accepts the same replace= argument as POST t=upload. |
---|
1274 | |
---|
1275 | |
---|
1276 | Unlinking a Child |
---|
1277 | ----------------- |
---|
1278 | |
---|
1279 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=delete&name=CHILDNAME`` |
---|
1280 | |
---|
1281 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=unlink&name=CHILDNAME`` (Tahoe >= v1.9) |
---|
1282 | |
---|
1283 | This instructs the node to remove a child object (file or subdirectory) from |
---|
1284 | the given directory, which must be mutable. Note that the entire subtree is |
---|
1285 | unlinked from the parent. Unlike deleting a subdirectory in a UNIX local |
---|
1286 | filesystem, the subtree need not be empty; if it isn't, then other references |
---|
1287 | into the subtree will see that the child subdirectories are not modified by |
---|
1288 | this operation. Only the link from the given directory to its child is severed. |
---|
1289 | |
---|
1290 | In Tahoe-LAFS v1.9.0 and later, t=unlink can be used as a synonym for t=delete. |
---|
1291 | If interoperability with older web-API servers is required, t=delete should |
---|
1292 | be used. |
---|
1293 | |
---|
1294 | |
---|
1295 | Renaming a Child |
---|
1296 | ---------------- |
---|
1297 | |
---|
1298 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=rename&from_name=OLD&to_name=NEW`` |
---|
1299 | |
---|
1300 | This instructs the node to rename a child of the given directory, which must |
---|
1301 | be mutable. This has a similar effect to removing the child, then adding the |
---|
1302 | same child-cap under the new name, except that it preserves metadata. This |
---|
1303 | operation cannot move the child to a different directory. |
---|
1304 | |
---|
1305 | The default behavior is to overwrite any existing link at the destination |
---|
1306 | (replace=true). To prevent this (and make the operation return an error |
---|
1307 | instead of overwriting), add a "replace=false" argument. With replace=false, |
---|
1308 | this operation will return an HTTP 409 "Conflict" error if the destination |
---|
1309 | is not the same link as the source and there is already a link at the |
---|
1310 | destination, rather than overwriting the existing link. To allow the |
---|
1311 | operation to overwrite a link to a file, but return an HTTP 409 error when |
---|
1312 | trying to overwrite a link to a directory, use "replace=only-files" (this |
---|
1313 | behavior is closer to the traditional UNIX "mv" command). Note that "true", |
---|
1314 | "t", and "1" are all synonyms for "True"; "false", "f", and "0" are synonyms |
---|
1315 | for "False"; and the parameter is case-insensitive. |
---|
1316 | |
---|
1317 | |
---|
1318 | Relinking ("Moving") a Child |
---|
1319 | ---------------------------- |
---|
1320 | |
---|
1321 | ``POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=relink&from_name=OLD&to_dir=$NEWDIRCAP/[NEWSUBDIRS../]&to_name=NEW`` |
---|
1322 | ``[&replace=true|false|only-files]`` (Tahoe >= v1.10) |
---|
1323 | |
---|
1324 | This instructs the node to move a child of the given source directory, into |
---|
1325 | a different directory and/or to a different name. The command is named |
---|
1326 | ``relink`` because what it does is add a new link to the child from the new |
---|
1327 | location, then remove the old link. Nothing is actually "moved": the child |
---|
1328 | is still reachable through any path from which it was formerly reachable, |
---|
1329 | and the storage space occupied by its ciphertext is not affected. |
---|
1330 | |
---|
1331 | The source and destination directories must be writeable. If ``to_dir`` is |
---|
1332 | not present, the child link is renamed within the same directory. If |
---|
1333 | ``to_name`` is not present then it defaults to ``from_name``. If the |
---|
1334 | destination link (directory and name) is the same as the source link, the |
---|
1335 | operation has no effect. |
---|
1336 | |
---|
1337 | Metadata from the source directory entry is preserved. Multiple levels of |
---|
1338 | descent in the source and destination paths are supported. |
---|
1339 | |
---|
1340 | This operation will return an HTTP 404 "Not Found" error if |
---|
1341 | ``$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]``, the child being moved, or the destination |
---|
1342 | directory does not exist. It will return an HTTP 400 "Bad Request" error |
---|
1343 | if any entry in the source or destination paths is not a directory. |
---|
1344 | |
---|
1345 | The default behavior is to overwrite any existing link at the destination |
---|
1346 | (replace=true). To prevent this (and make the operation return an error |
---|
1347 | instead of overwriting), add a "replace=false" argument. With replace=false, |
---|
1348 | this operation will return an HTTP 409 "Conflict" error if the destination |
---|
1349 | is not the same link as the source and there is already a link at the |
---|
1350 | destination, rather than overwriting the existing link. To allow the |
---|
1351 | operation to overwrite a link to a file, but return an HTTP 409 error when |
---|
1352 | trying to overwrite a link to a directory, use "replace=only-files" (this |
---|
1353 | behavior is closer to the traditional UNIX "mv" command). Note that "true", |
---|
1354 | "t", and "1" are all synonyms for "True"; "false", "f", and "0" are synonyms |
---|
1355 | for "False"; and the parameter is case-insensitive. |
---|
1356 | |
---|
1357 | When relinking into a different directory, for safety, the child link is |
---|
1358 | not removed from the old directory until it has been successfully added to |
---|
1359 | the new directory. This implies that in case of a crash or failure, the |
---|
1360 | link to the child will not be lost, but it could be linked at both the old |
---|
1361 | and new locations. |
---|
1362 | |
---|
1363 | The source link should not be the same as any link (directory and child name) |
---|
1364 | in the ``to_dir`` path. This restriction is not enforced, but it may be |
---|
1365 | enforced in a future version. If it were violated then the result would be |
---|
1366 | to create a cycle in the directory structure that is not necessarily reachable |
---|
1367 | from the root of the destination path (``$NEWDIRCAP``), which could result in |
---|
1368 | data loss, as described in ticket `#943`_. |
---|
1369 | |
---|
1370 | .. _`#943`: https://tahoe-lafs.org/trac/tahoe-lafs/ticket/943 |
---|
1371 | |
---|
1372 | |
---|
1373 | Other Utilities |
---|
1374 | --------------- |
---|
1375 | |
---|
1376 | ``GET /uri?uri=$CAP`` |
---|
1377 | |
---|
1378 | This causes a redirect to /uri/$CAP, and retains any additional query |
---|
1379 | arguments (like filename= or save=). This is for the convenience of web |
---|
1380 | forms which allow the user to paste in a read- or write- cap (obtained |
---|
1381 | through some out-of-band channel, like IM or email). |
---|
1382 | |
---|
1383 | Note that this form merely redirects to the specific file or directory |
---|
1384 | indicated by the $CAP: unlike the GET /uri/$DIRCAP form, you cannot |
---|
1385 | traverse to children by appending additional path segments to the URL. |
---|
1386 | |
---|
1387 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=rename-form&name=$CHILDNAME`` |
---|
1388 | |
---|
1389 | This provides a useful facility to browser-based user interfaces. It |
---|
1390 | returns a page containing a form targetting the "POST $DIRCAP t=rename" |
---|
1391 | functionality described above, with the provided $CHILDNAME present in the |
---|
1392 | 'from_name' field of that form. I.e. this presents a form offering to |
---|
1393 | rename $CHILDNAME, requesting the new name, and submitting POST rename. |
---|
1394 | This same URL format can also be used with "move-form" with the expected |
---|
1395 | results. |
---|
1396 | |
---|
1397 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME?t=uri`` |
---|
1398 | |
---|
1399 | This returns the file- or directory- cap for the specified object. |
---|
1400 | |
---|
1401 | ``GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME?t=readonly-uri`` |
---|
1402 | |
---|
1403 | This returns a read-only file- or directory- cap for the specified object. |
---|
1404 | If the object is an immutable file, this will return the same value as |
---|
1405 | t=uri. |
---|
1406 | |
---|
1407 | |
---|
1408 | Debugging and Testing Features |
---|
1409 | ------------------------------ |
---|
1410 | |
---|
1411 | These URLs are less-likely to be helpful to the casual Tahoe user, and are |
---|
1412 | mainly intended for developers. |
---|
1413 | |
---|
1414 | ``POST $URL?t=check`` |
---|
1415 | |
---|
1416 | This triggers the FileChecker to determine the current "health" of the |
---|
1417 | given file or directory, by counting how many shares are available. The |
---|
1418 | page that is returned will display the results. This can be used as a "show |
---|
1419 | me detailed information about this file" page. |
---|
1420 | |
---|
1421 | If a verify=true argument is provided, the node will perform a more |
---|
1422 | intensive check, downloading and verifying every single bit of every share. |
---|
1423 | |
---|
1424 | If an add-lease=true argument is provided, the node will also add (or |
---|
1425 | renew) a lease to every share it encounters. Each lease will keep the share |
---|
1426 | alive for a certain period of time (one month by default). Once the last |
---|
1427 | lease expires or is explicitly cancelled, the storage server is allowed to |
---|
1428 | delete the share. |
---|
1429 | |
---|
1430 | If an output=JSON argument is provided, the response will be |
---|
1431 | machine-readable JSON instead of human-oriented HTML. The data is a |
---|
1432 | dictionary with the following keys:: |
---|
1433 | |
---|
1434 | storage-index: a base32-encoded string with the objects's storage index, |
---|
1435 | or an empty string for LIT files |
---|
1436 | summary: a string, with a one-line summary of the stats of the file |
---|
1437 | results: a dictionary that describes the state of the file. For LIT files, |
---|
1438 | this dictionary has only the 'healthy' key, which will always be |
---|
1439 | True. For distributed files, this dictionary has the following |
---|
1440 | keys: |
---|
1441 | count-happiness: the servers-of-happiness level of the file, as |
---|
1442 | defined in doc/specifications/servers-of-happiness. |
---|
1443 | count-shares-good: the number of good shares that were found |
---|
1444 | count-shares-needed: 'k', the number of shares required for recovery |
---|
1445 | count-shares-expected: 'N', the number of total shares generated |
---|
1446 | count-good-share-hosts: the number of distinct storage servers with |
---|
1447 | good shares. Note that a high value does not |
---|
1448 | necessarily imply good share distribution, |
---|
1449 | because some of these servers may only hold |
---|
1450 | duplicate shares. |
---|
1451 | count-wrong-shares: for mutable files, the number of shares for |
---|
1452 | versions other than the 'best' one (highest |
---|
1453 | sequence number, highest roothash). These are |
---|
1454 | either old, or created by an uncoordinated or |
---|
1455 | not fully successful write. |
---|
1456 | count-recoverable-versions: for mutable files, the number of |
---|
1457 | recoverable versions of the file. For |
---|
1458 | a healthy file, this will equal 1. |
---|
1459 | count-unrecoverable-versions: for mutable files, the number of |
---|
1460 | unrecoverable versions of the file. |
---|
1461 | For a healthy file, this will be 0. |
---|
1462 | count-corrupt-shares: the number of shares with integrity failures |
---|
1463 | list-corrupt-shares: a list of "share locators", one for each share |
---|
1464 | that was found to be corrupt. Each share locator |
---|
1465 | is a list of (serverid, storage_index, sharenum). |
---|
1466 | servers-responding: list of base32-encoded storage server identifiers, |
---|
1467 | one for each server which responded to the share |
---|
1468 | query. |
---|
1469 | healthy: (bool) True if the file is completely healthy, False otherwise. |
---|
1470 | Healthy files have at least N good shares. Overlapping shares |
---|
1471 | do not currently cause a file to be marked unhealthy. If there |
---|
1472 | are at least N good shares, then corrupt shares do not cause the |
---|
1473 | file to be marked unhealthy, although the corrupt shares will be |
---|
1474 | listed in the results (list-corrupt-shares) and should be manually |
---|
1475 | removed to wasting time in subsequent downloads (as the |
---|
1476 | downloader rediscovers the corruption and uses alternate shares). |
---|
1477 | Future compatibility: the meaning of this field may change to |
---|
1478 | reflect whether the servers-of-happiness criterion is met |
---|
1479 | (see ticket #614). |
---|
1480 | sharemap: dict mapping share identifier to list of serverids |
---|
1481 | (base32-encoded strings). This indicates which servers are |
---|
1482 | holding which shares. For immutable files, the shareid is |
---|
1483 | an integer (the share number, from 0 to N-1). For |
---|
1484 | immutable files, it is a string of the form |
---|
1485 | 'seq%d-%s-sh%d', containing the sequence number, the |
---|
1486 | roothash, and the share number. |
---|
1487 | |
---|
1488 | Before Tahoe-LAFS v1.11, the ``results`` dictionary also had a |
---|
1489 | ``needs-rebalancing`` field, but that has been removed since it was computed |
---|
1490 | incorrectly. |
---|
1491 | |
---|
1492 | |
---|
1493 | ``POST $URL?t=start-deep-check`` (must add &ophandle=XYZ) |
---|
1494 | |
---|
1495 | This initiates a recursive walk of all files and directories reachable from |
---|
1496 | the target, performing a check on each one just like t=check. The result |
---|
1497 | page will contain a summary of the results, including details on any |
---|
1498 | file/directory that was not fully healthy. |
---|
1499 | |
---|
1500 | t=start-deep-check can only be invoked on a directory. An error (400 |
---|
1501 | BAD_REQUEST) will be signalled if it is invoked on a file. The recursive |
---|
1502 | walker will deal with loops safely. |
---|
1503 | |
---|
1504 | This accepts the same verify= and add-lease= arguments as t=check. |
---|
1505 | |
---|
1506 | Since this operation can take a long time (perhaps a second per object), |
---|
1507 | the ophandle= argument is required (see "Slow Operations, Progress, and |
---|
1508 | Cancelling" above). The response to this POST will be a redirect to the |
---|
1509 | corresponding /operations/$HANDLE page (with output=HTML or output=JSON to |
---|
1510 | match the output= argument given to the POST). The deep-check operation |
---|
1511 | will continue to run in the background, and the /operations page should be |
---|
1512 | used to find out when the operation is done. |
---|
1513 | |
---|
1514 | Detailed check results for non-healthy files and directories will be |
---|
1515 | available under /operations/$HANDLE/$STORAGEINDEX, and the HTML status will |
---|
1516 | contain links to these detailed results. |
---|
1517 | |
---|
1518 | The HTML /operations/$HANDLE page for incomplete operations will contain a |
---|
1519 | meta-refresh tag, set to 60 seconds, so that a browser which uses |
---|
1520 | deep-check will automatically poll until the operation has completed. |
---|
1521 | |
---|
1522 | The JSON page (/options/$HANDLE?output=JSON) will contain a |
---|
1523 | machine-readable JSON dictionary with the following keys:: |
---|
1524 | |
---|
1525 | finished: a boolean, True if the operation is complete, else False. Some |
---|
1526 | of the remaining keys may not be present until the operation |
---|
1527 | is complete. |
---|
1528 | root-storage-index: a base32-encoded string with the storage index of the |
---|
1529 | starting point of the deep-check operation |
---|
1530 | count-objects-checked: count of how many objects were checked. Note that |
---|
1531 | non-distributed objects (i.e. small immutable LIT |
---|
1532 | files) are not checked, since for these objects, |
---|
1533 | the data is contained entirely in the URI. |
---|
1534 | count-objects-healthy: how many of those objects were completely healthy |
---|
1535 | count-objects-unhealthy: how many were damaged in some way |
---|
1536 | count-corrupt-shares: how many shares were found to have corruption, |
---|
1537 | summed over all objects examined |
---|
1538 | list-corrupt-shares: a list of "share identifiers", one for each share |
---|
1539 | that was found to be corrupt. Each share identifier |
---|
1540 | is a list of (serverid, storage_index, sharenum). |
---|
1541 | list-unhealthy-files: a list of (pathname, check-results) tuples, for |
---|
1542 | each file that was not fully healthy. 'pathname' is |
---|
1543 | a list of strings (which can be joined by "/" |
---|
1544 | characters to turn it into a single string), |
---|
1545 | relative to the directory on which deep-check was |
---|
1546 | invoked. The 'check-results' field is the same as |
---|
1547 | that returned by t=check&output=JSON, described |
---|
1548 | above. |
---|
1549 | stats: a dictionary with the same keys as the t=start-deep-stats command |
---|
1550 | (described below) |
---|
1551 | |
---|
1552 | ``POST $URL?t=stream-deep-check`` |
---|
1553 | |
---|
1554 | This initiates a recursive walk of all files and directories reachable from |
---|
1555 | the target, performing a check on each one just like t=check. For each |
---|
1556 | unique object (duplicates are skipped), a single line of JSON is emitted to |
---|
1557 | the HTTP response channel (or an error indication, see below). When the walk |
---|
1558 | is complete, a final line of JSON is emitted which contains the accumulated |
---|
1559 | file-size/count "deep-stats" data. |
---|
1560 | |
---|
1561 | This command takes the same arguments as t=start-deep-check. |
---|
1562 | |
---|
1563 | A CLI tool can split the response stream on newlines into "response units", |
---|
1564 | and parse each response unit as JSON. Each such parsed unit will be a |
---|
1565 | dictionary, and will contain at least the "type" key: a string, one of |
---|
1566 | "file", "directory", or "stats". |
---|
1567 | |
---|
1568 | For all units that have a type of "file" or "directory", the dictionary will |
---|
1569 | contain the following keys:: |
---|
1570 | |
---|
1571 | "path": a list of strings, with the path that is traversed to reach the |
---|
1572 | object |
---|
1573 | "cap": a write-cap URI for the file or directory, if available, else a |
---|
1574 | read-cap URI |
---|
1575 | "verifycap": a verify-cap URI for the file or directory |
---|
1576 | "repaircap": an URI for the weakest cap that can still be used to repair |
---|
1577 | the object |
---|
1578 | "storage-index": a base32 storage index for the object |
---|
1579 | "check-results": a copy of the dictionary which would be returned by |
---|
1580 | t=check&output=json, with three top-level keys: |
---|
1581 | "storage-index", "summary", and "results", and a variety |
---|
1582 | of counts and sharemaps in the "results" value. |
---|
1583 | |
---|
1584 | Note that non-distributed files (i.e. LIT files) will have values of None |
---|
1585 | for verifycap, repaircap, and storage-index, since these files can neither |
---|
1586 | be verified nor repaired, and are not stored on the storage servers. |
---|
1587 | Likewise the check-results dictionary will be limited: an empty string for |
---|
1588 | storage-index, and a results dictionary with only the "healthy" key. |
---|
1589 | |
---|
1590 | The last unit in the stream will have a type of "stats", and will contain |
---|
1591 | the keys described in the "start-deep-stats" operation, below. |
---|
1592 | |
---|
1593 | If any errors occur during the traversal (specifically if a directory is |
---|
1594 | unrecoverable, such that further traversal is not possible), an error |
---|
1595 | indication is written to the response body, instead of the usual line of |
---|
1596 | JSON. This error indication line will begin with the string "ERROR:" (in all |
---|
1597 | caps), and contain a summary of the error on the rest of the line. The |
---|
1598 | remaining lines of the response body will be a python exception. The client |
---|
1599 | application should look for the ERROR: and stop processing JSON as soon as |
---|
1600 | it is seen. Note that neither a file being unrecoverable nor a directory |
---|
1601 | merely being unhealthy will cause traversal to stop. The line just before |
---|
1602 | the ERROR: will describe the directory that was untraversable, since the |
---|
1603 | unit is emitted to the HTTP response body before the child is traversed. |
---|
1604 | |
---|
1605 | |
---|
1606 | ``POST $URL?t=check&repair=true`` |
---|
1607 | |
---|
1608 | This performs a health check of the given file or directory, and if the |
---|
1609 | checker determines that the object is not healthy (some shares are missing |
---|
1610 | or corrupted), it will perform a "repair". During repair, any missing |
---|
1611 | shares will be regenerated and uploaded to new servers. |
---|
1612 | |
---|
1613 | This accepts the same verify=true and add-lease= arguments as t=check. When |
---|
1614 | an output=JSON argument is provided, the machine-readable JSON response |
---|
1615 | will contain the following keys:: |
---|
1616 | |
---|
1617 | storage-index: a base32-encoded string with the objects's storage index, |
---|
1618 | or an empty string for LIT files |
---|
1619 | repair-attempted: (bool) True if repair was attempted |
---|
1620 | repair-successful: (bool) True if repair was attempted and the file was |
---|
1621 | fully healthy afterwards. False if no repair was |
---|
1622 | attempted, or if a repair attempt failed. |
---|
1623 | pre-repair-results: a dictionary that describes the state of the file |
---|
1624 | before any repair was performed. This contains exactly |
---|
1625 | the same keys as the 'results' value of the t=check |
---|
1626 | response, described above. |
---|
1627 | post-repair-results: a dictionary that describes the state of the file |
---|
1628 | after any repair was performed. If no repair was |
---|
1629 | performed, post-repair-results and pre-repair-results |
---|
1630 | will be the same. This contains exactly the same keys |
---|
1631 | as the 'results' value of the t=check response, |
---|
1632 | described above. |
---|
1633 | |
---|
1634 | ``POST $URL?t=start-deep-check&repair=true`` (must add &ophandle=XYZ) |
---|
1635 | |
---|
1636 | This triggers a recursive walk of all files and directories, performing a |
---|
1637 | t=check&repair=true on each one. |
---|
1638 | |
---|
1639 | Like t=start-deep-check without the repair= argument, this can only be |
---|
1640 | invoked on a directory. An error (400 BAD_REQUEST) will be signalled if it |
---|
1641 | is invoked on a file. The recursive walker will deal with loops safely. |
---|
1642 | |
---|
1643 | This accepts the same verify= and add-lease= arguments as |
---|
1644 | t=start-deep-check. It uses the same ophandle= mechanism as |
---|
1645 | start-deep-check. When an output=JSON argument is provided, the response |
---|
1646 | will contain the following keys:: |
---|
1647 | |
---|
1648 | finished: (bool) True if the operation has completed, else False |
---|
1649 | root-storage-index: a base32-encoded string with the storage index of the |
---|
1650 | starting point of the deep-check operation |
---|
1651 | count-objects-checked: count of how many objects were checked |
---|
1652 | |
---|
1653 | count-objects-healthy-pre-repair: how many of those objects were completely |
---|
1654 | healthy, before any repair |
---|
1655 | count-objects-unhealthy-pre-repair: how many were damaged in some way |
---|
1656 | count-objects-healthy-post-repair: how many of those objects were completely |
---|
1657 | healthy, after any repair |
---|
1658 | count-objects-unhealthy-post-repair: how many were damaged in some way |
---|
1659 | |
---|
1660 | count-repairs-attempted: repairs were attempted on this many objects. |
---|
1661 | count-repairs-successful: how many repairs resulted in healthy objects |
---|
1662 | count-repairs-unsuccessful: how many repairs resulted did not results in |
---|
1663 | completely healthy objects |
---|
1664 | count-corrupt-shares-pre-repair: how many shares were found to have |
---|
1665 | corruption, summed over all objects |
---|
1666 | examined, before any repair |
---|
1667 | count-corrupt-shares-post-repair: how many shares were found to have |
---|
1668 | corruption, summed over all objects |
---|
1669 | examined, after any repair |
---|
1670 | list-corrupt-shares: a list of "share identifiers", one for each share |
---|
1671 | that was found to be corrupt (before any repair). |
---|
1672 | Each share identifier is a list of (serverid, |
---|
1673 | storage_index, sharenum). |
---|
1674 | list-remaining-corrupt-shares: like list-corrupt-shares, but mutable shares |
---|
1675 | that were successfully repaired are not |
---|
1676 | included. These are shares that need |
---|
1677 | manual processing. Since immutable shares |
---|
1678 | cannot be modified by clients, all corruption |
---|
1679 | in immutable shares will be listed here. |
---|
1680 | list-unhealthy-files: a list of (pathname, check-results) tuples, for |
---|
1681 | each file that was not fully healthy. 'pathname' is |
---|
1682 | relative to the directory on which deep-check was |
---|
1683 | invoked. The 'check-results' field is the same as |
---|
1684 | that returned by t=check&repair=true&output=JSON, |
---|
1685 | described above. |
---|
1686 | stats: a dictionary with the same keys as the t=start-deep-stats command |
---|
1687 | (described below) |
---|
1688 | |
---|
1689 | ``POST $URL?t=stream-deep-check&repair=true`` |
---|
1690 | |
---|
1691 | This triggers a recursive walk of all files and directories, performing a |
---|
1692 | t=check&repair=true on each one. For each unique object (duplicates are |
---|
1693 | skipped), a single line of JSON is emitted to the HTTP response channel (or |
---|
1694 | an error indication). When the walk is complete, a final line of JSON is |
---|
1695 | emitted which contains the accumulated file-size/count "deep-stats" data. |
---|
1696 | |
---|
1697 | This emits the same data as t=stream-deep-check (without the repair=true), |
---|
1698 | except that the "check-results" field is replaced with a |
---|
1699 | "check-and-repair-results" field, which contains the keys returned by |
---|
1700 | t=check&repair=true&output=json (i.e. repair-attempted, repair-successful, |
---|
1701 | pre-repair-results, and post-repair-results). The output does not contain |
---|
1702 | the summary dictionary that is provied by t=start-deep-check&repair=true |
---|
1703 | (the one with count-objects-checked and list-unhealthy-files), since the |
---|
1704 | receiving client is expected to calculate those values itself from the |
---|
1705 | stream of per-object check-and-repair-results. |
---|
1706 | |
---|
1707 | Note that the "ERROR:" indication will only be emitted if traversal stops, |
---|
1708 | which will only occur if an unrecoverable directory is encountered. If a |
---|
1709 | file or directory repair fails, the traversal will continue, and the repair |
---|
1710 | failure will be indicated in the JSON data (in the "repair-successful" key). |
---|
1711 | |
---|
1712 | ``POST $DIRURL?t=start-manifest`` (must add &ophandle=XYZ) |
---|
1713 | |
---|
1714 | This operation generates a "manfest" of the given directory tree, mostly |
---|
1715 | for debugging. This is a table of (path, filecap/dircap), for every object |
---|
1716 | reachable from the starting directory. The path will be slash-joined, and |
---|
1717 | the filecap/dircap will contain a link to the object in question. This page |
---|
1718 | gives immediate access to every object in the file store subtree. |
---|
1719 | |
---|
1720 | This operation uses the same ophandle= mechanism as deep-check. The |
---|
1721 | corresponding /operations/$HANDLE page has three different forms. The |
---|
1722 | default is output=HTML. |
---|
1723 | |
---|
1724 | If output=text is added to the query args, the results will be a text/plain |
---|
1725 | list. The first line is special: it is either "finished: yes" or "finished: |
---|
1726 | no"; if the operation is not finished, you must periodically reload the |
---|
1727 | page until it completes. The rest of the results are a plaintext list, with |
---|
1728 | one file/dir per line, slash-separated, with the filecap/dircap separated |
---|
1729 | by a space. |
---|
1730 | |
---|
1731 | If output=JSON is added to the queryargs, then the results will be a |
---|
1732 | JSON-formatted dictionary with six keys. Note that because large directory |
---|
1733 | structures can result in very large JSON results, the full results will not |
---|
1734 | be available until the operation is complete (i.e. until output["finished"] |
---|
1735 | is True):: |
---|
1736 | |
---|
1737 | finished (bool): if False then you must reload the page until True |
---|
1738 | origin_si (base32 str): the storage index of the starting point |
---|
1739 | manifest: list of (path, cap) tuples, where path is a list of strings. |
---|
1740 | verifycaps: list of (printable) verify cap strings |
---|
1741 | storage-index: list of (base32) storage index strings |
---|
1742 | stats: a dictionary with the same keys as the t=start-deep-stats command |
---|
1743 | (described below) |
---|
1744 | |
---|
1745 | ``POST $DIRURL?t=start-deep-size`` (must add &ophandle=XYZ) |
---|
1746 | |
---|
1747 | This operation generates a number (in bytes) containing the sum of the |
---|
1748 | filesize of all directories and immutable files reachable from the given |
---|
1749 | directory. This is a rough lower bound of the total space consumed by this |
---|
1750 | subtree. It does not include space consumed by mutable files, nor does it |
---|
1751 | take expansion or encoding overhead into account. Later versions of the |
---|
1752 | code may improve this estimate upwards. |
---|
1753 | |
---|
1754 | The /operations/$HANDLE status output consists of two lines of text:: |
---|
1755 | |
---|
1756 | finished: yes |
---|
1757 | size: 1234 |
---|
1758 | |
---|
1759 | ``POST $DIRURL?t=start-deep-stats`` (must add &ophandle=XYZ) |
---|
1760 | |
---|
1761 | This operation performs a recursive walk of all files and directories |
---|
1762 | reachable from the given directory, and generates a collection of |
---|
1763 | statistics about those objects. |
---|
1764 | |
---|
1765 | The result (obtained from the /operations/$OPHANDLE page) is a |
---|
1766 | JSON-serialized dictionary with the following keys (note that some of these |
---|
1767 | keys may be missing until 'finished' is True):: |
---|
1768 | |
---|
1769 | finished: (bool) True if the operation has finished, else False |
---|
1770 | api-version: (int), number of deep-stats API version. Will be increased every |
---|
1771 | time backwards-incompatible change is introduced. |
---|
1772 | Current version is 1. |
---|
1773 | count-immutable-files: count of how many CHK files are in the set |
---|
1774 | count-mutable-files: same, for mutable files (does not include directories) |
---|
1775 | count-literal-files: same, for LIT files (data contained inside the URI) |
---|
1776 | count-files: sum of the above three |
---|
1777 | count-directories: count of directories |
---|
1778 | count-unknown: count of unrecognized objects (perhaps from the future) |
---|
1779 | size-immutable-files: total bytes for all CHK files in the set, =deep-size |
---|
1780 | size-mutable-files (TODO): same, for current version of all mutable files |
---|
1781 | size-literal-files: same, for LIT files |
---|
1782 | size-directories: size of directories (includes size-literal-files) |
---|
1783 | size-files-histogram: list of (minsize, maxsize, count) buckets, |
---|
1784 | with a histogram of filesizes, 5dB/bucket, |
---|
1785 | for both literal and immutable files |
---|
1786 | largest-directory: number of children in the largest directory |
---|
1787 | largest-immutable-file: number of bytes in the largest CHK file |
---|
1788 | |
---|
1789 | size-mutable-files is not implemented, because it would require extra |
---|
1790 | queries to each mutable file to get their size. This may be implemented in |
---|
1791 | the future. |
---|
1792 | |
---|
1793 | Assuming no sharing, the basic space consumed by a single root directory is |
---|
1794 | the sum of size-immutable-files, size-mutable-files, and size-directories. |
---|
1795 | The actual disk space used by the shares is larger, because of the |
---|
1796 | following sources of overhead:: |
---|
1797 | |
---|
1798 | integrity data |
---|
1799 | expansion due to erasure coding |
---|
1800 | share management data (leases) |
---|
1801 | backend (ext3) minimum block size |
---|
1802 | |
---|
1803 | ``POST $URL?t=stream-manifest`` |
---|
1804 | |
---|
1805 | This operation performs a recursive walk of all files and directories |
---|
1806 | reachable from the given starting point. For each such unique object |
---|
1807 | (duplicates are skipped), a single line of JSON is emitted to the HTTP |
---|
1808 | response channel (or an error indication, see below). When the walk is |
---|
1809 | complete, a final line of JSON is emitted which contains the accumulated |
---|
1810 | file-size/count "deep-stats" data. |
---|
1811 | |
---|
1812 | A CLI tool can split the response stream on newlines into "response units", |
---|
1813 | and parse each response unit as JSON. Each such parsed unit will be a |
---|
1814 | dictionary, and will contain at least the "type" key: a string, one of |
---|
1815 | "file", "directory", or "stats". |
---|
1816 | |
---|
1817 | For all units that have a type of "file" or "directory", the dictionary will |
---|
1818 | contain the following keys:: |
---|
1819 | |
---|
1820 | "path": a list of strings, with the path that is traversed to reach the |
---|
1821 | object |
---|
1822 | "cap": a write-cap URI for the file or directory, if available, else a |
---|
1823 | read-cap URI |
---|
1824 | "verifycap": a verify-cap URI for the file or directory |
---|
1825 | "repaircap": an URI for the weakest cap that can still be used to repair |
---|
1826 | the object |
---|
1827 | "storage-index": a base32 storage index for the object |
---|
1828 | |
---|
1829 | Note that non-distributed files (i.e. LIT files) will have values of None |
---|
1830 | for verifycap, repaircap, and storage-index, since these files can neither |
---|
1831 | be verified nor repaired, and are not stored on the storage servers. |
---|
1832 | |
---|
1833 | The last unit in the stream will have a type of "stats", and will contain |
---|
1834 | the keys described in the "start-deep-stats" operation, below. |
---|
1835 | |
---|
1836 | If any errors occur during the traversal (specifically if a directory is |
---|
1837 | unrecoverable, such that further traversal is not possible), an error |
---|
1838 | indication is written to the response body, instead of the usual line of |
---|
1839 | JSON. This error indication line will begin with the string "ERROR:" (in all |
---|
1840 | caps), and contain a summary of the error on the rest of the line. The |
---|
1841 | remaining lines of the response body will be a python exception. The client |
---|
1842 | application should look for the ERROR: and stop processing JSON as soon as |
---|
1843 | it is seen. The line just before the ERROR: will describe the directory that |
---|
1844 | was untraversable, since the manifest entry is emitted to the HTTP response |
---|
1845 | body before the child is traversed. |
---|
1846 | |
---|
1847 | |
---|
1848 | Other Useful Pages |
---|
1849 | ================== |
---|
1850 | |
---|
1851 | The portion of the web namespace that begins with "/uri" (and "/named") is |
---|
1852 | dedicated to giving users (both humans and programs) access to the Tahoe-LAFS |
---|
1853 | file store. The rest of the namespace provides status information about the |
---|
1854 | state of the Tahoe-LAFS node. |
---|
1855 | |
---|
1856 | ``GET /`` (the root page) |
---|
1857 | |
---|
1858 | This is the "Welcome Page", and contains a few distinct sections:: |
---|
1859 | |
---|
1860 | Node information: library versions, local nodeid, services being provided. |
---|
1861 | |
---|
1862 | File store access forms: create a new directory, view a file/directory by |
---|
1863 | URI, upload a file (unlinked), download a file by |
---|
1864 | URI. |
---|
1865 | |
---|
1866 | Grid status: introducer information, helper information, connected storage |
---|
1867 | servers. |
---|
1868 | |
---|
1869 | ``GET /?t=json`` (the json welcome page) |
---|
1870 | |
---|
1871 | This is the "json Welcome Page", and contains connectivity status |
---|
1872 | of the introducer(s) and storage server(s), here's an example:: |
---|
1873 | |
---|
1874 | { |
---|
1875 | "introducers": { |
---|
1876 | "statuses": [] |
---|
1877 | }, |
---|
1878 | "servers": [{ |
---|
1879 | "nodeid": "other_nodeid", |
---|
1880 | "available_space": 123456, |
---|
1881 | "nickname": "George \u263b", |
---|
1882 | "version": "1.0", |
---|
1883 | "connection_status": "summary", |
---|
1884 | "last_received_data": 1487811257 |
---|
1885 | }] |
---|
1886 | } |
---|
1887 | |
---|
1888 | |
---|
1889 | The above json ``introducers`` section includes a list of |
---|
1890 | introducer connectivity status messages. |
---|
1891 | |
---|
1892 | The above json ``servers`` section is an array with map elements. Each map |
---|
1893 | has the following properties: |
---|
1894 | |
---|
1895 | 1. ``nodeid`` - an identifier derived from the node's public key |
---|
1896 | 2. ``available_space`` - the available space in bytes expressed as an integer |
---|
1897 | 3. ``nickname`` - the storage server nickname |
---|
1898 | 4. ``version`` - the storage server Tahoe-LAFS version |
---|
1899 | 5. ``connection_status`` - connectivity status |
---|
1900 | 6. ``last_received_data`` - the time when data was last received, |
---|
1901 | expressed in seconds since epoch |
---|
1902 | |
---|
1903 | ``GET /status/`` |
---|
1904 | |
---|
1905 | This page lists all active uploads and downloads, and contains a short list |
---|
1906 | of recent upload/download operations. Each operation has a link to a page |
---|
1907 | that describes file sizes, servers that were involved, and the time consumed |
---|
1908 | in each phase of the operation. |
---|
1909 | |
---|
1910 | A GET of /status/?t=json will contain a machine-readable subset of the same |
---|
1911 | data. It returns a JSON-encoded dictionary. The only key defined at this |
---|
1912 | time is "active", with a value that is a list of operation dictionaries, one |
---|
1913 | for each active operation. Once an operation is completed, it will no longer |
---|
1914 | appear in data["active"] . |
---|
1915 | |
---|
1916 | Each op-dict contains a "type" key, one of "upload", "download", |
---|
1917 | "mapupdate", "publish", or "retrieve" (the first two are for immutable |
---|
1918 | files, while the latter three are for mutable files and directories). |
---|
1919 | |
---|
1920 | The "upload" op-dict will contain the following keys:: |
---|
1921 | |
---|
1922 | type (string): "upload" |
---|
1923 | storage-index-string (string): a base32-encoded storage index |
---|
1924 | total-size (int): total size of the file |
---|
1925 | status (string): current status of the operation |
---|
1926 | progress-hash (float): 1.0 when the file has been hashed |
---|
1927 | progress-ciphertext (float): 1.0 when the file has been encrypted. |
---|
1928 | progress-encode-push (float): 1.0 when the file has been encoded and |
---|
1929 | pushed to the storage servers. For helper |
---|
1930 | uploads, the ciphertext value climbs to 1.0 |
---|
1931 | first, then encoding starts. For unassisted |
---|
1932 | uploads, ciphertext and encode-push progress |
---|
1933 | will climb at the same pace. |
---|
1934 | |
---|
1935 | The "download" op-dict will contain the following keys:: |
---|
1936 | |
---|
1937 | type (string): "download" |
---|
1938 | storage-index-string (string): a base32-encoded storage index |
---|
1939 | total-size (int): total size of the file |
---|
1940 | status (string): current status of the operation |
---|
1941 | progress (float): 1.0 when the file has been fully downloaded |
---|
1942 | |
---|
1943 | Front-ends which want to report progress information are advised to simply |
---|
1944 | average together all the progress-* indicators. A slightly more accurate |
---|
1945 | value can be found by ignoring the progress-hash value (since the current |
---|
1946 | implementation hashes synchronously, so clients will probably never see |
---|
1947 | progress-hash!=1.0). |
---|
1948 | |
---|
1949 | ``GET /helper_status/`` |
---|
1950 | |
---|
1951 | If the node is running a helper (i.e. if [helper]enabled is set to True in |
---|
1952 | tahoe.cfg), then this page will provide a list of all the helper operations |
---|
1953 | currently in progress. If "?t=json" is added to the URL, it will return a |
---|
1954 | JSON-formatted list of helper statistics, which can then be used to produce |
---|
1955 | graphs to indicate how busy the helper is. |
---|
1956 | |
---|
1957 | ``GET /statistics/`` |
---|
1958 | |
---|
1959 | This page provides "node statistics", which are collected from a variety of |
---|
1960 | sources:: |
---|
1961 | |
---|
1962 | load_monitor: every second, the node schedules a timer for one second in |
---|
1963 | the future, then measures how late the subsequent callback |
---|
1964 | is. The "load_average" is this tardiness, measured in |
---|
1965 | seconds, averaged over the last minute. It is an indication |
---|
1966 | of a busy node, one which is doing more work than can be |
---|
1967 | completed in a timely fashion. The "max_load" value is the |
---|
1968 | highest value that has been seen in the last 60 seconds. |
---|
1969 | |
---|
1970 | cpu_monitor: every minute, the node uses time.clock() to measure how much |
---|
1971 | CPU time it has used, and it uses this value to produce |
---|
1972 | 1min/5min/15min moving averages. These values range from 0% |
---|
1973 | (0.0) to 100% (1.0), and indicate what fraction of the CPU |
---|
1974 | has been used by the Tahoe node. Not all operating systems |
---|
1975 | provide meaningful data to time.clock(): they may report 100% |
---|
1976 | CPU usage at all times. |
---|
1977 | |
---|
1978 | uploader: this counts how many immutable files (and bytes) have been |
---|
1979 | uploaded since the node was started |
---|
1980 | |
---|
1981 | downloader: this counts how many immutable files have been downloaded |
---|
1982 | since the node was started |
---|
1983 | |
---|
1984 | publishes: this counts how many mutable files (including directories) have |
---|
1985 | been modified since the node was started |
---|
1986 | |
---|
1987 | retrieves: this counts how many mutable files (including directories) have |
---|
1988 | been read since the node was started |
---|
1989 | |
---|
1990 | There are other statistics that are tracked by the node. The "raw stats" |
---|
1991 | section shows a formatted dump of all of them. |
---|
1992 | |
---|
1993 | By adding "?t=json" to the URL, the node will return a JSON-formatted |
---|
1994 | dictionary of stats values, which can be used by other tools to produce |
---|
1995 | graphs of node behavior. The misc/munin/ directory in the source |
---|
1996 | distribution provides some tools to produce these graphs. |
---|
1997 | |
---|
1998 | ``GET /`` (introducer status) |
---|
1999 | |
---|
2000 | For Introducer nodes, the welcome page displays information about both |
---|
2001 | clients and servers which are connected to the introducer. Servers make |
---|
2002 | "service announcements", and these are listed in a table. Clients will |
---|
2003 | subscribe to hear about service announcements, and these subscriptions are |
---|
2004 | listed in a separate table. Both tables contain information about what |
---|
2005 | version of Tahoe is being run by the remote node, their advertised and |
---|
2006 | outbound IP addresses, their nodeid and nickname, and how long they have |
---|
2007 | been available. |
---|
2008 | |
---|
2009 | By adding "?t=json" to the URL, the node will return a JSON-formatted |
---|
2010 | dictionary of stats values, which can be used to produce graphs of connected |
---|
2011 | clients over time. This dictionary has the following keys:: |
---|
2012 | |
---|
2013 | ["subscription_summary"] : a dictionary mapping service name (like |
---|
2014 | "storage") to an integer with the number of |
---|
2015 | clients that have subscribed to hear about that |
---|
2016 | service |
---|
2017 | ["announcement_summary"] : a dictionary mapping service name to an integer |
---|
2018 | with the number of servers which are announcing |
---|
2019 | that service |
---|
2020 | ["announcement_distinct_hosts"] : a dictionary mapping service name to an |
---|
2021 | integer which represents the number of |
---|
2022 | distinct hosts that are providing that |
---|
2023 | service. If two servers have announced |
---|
2024 | FURLs which use the same hostnames (but |
---|
2025 | different ports and tubids), they are |
---|
2026 | considered to be on the same host. |
---|
2027 | |
---|
2028 | |
---|
2029 | Static Files in /public_html |
---|
2030 | ============================ |
---|
2031 | |
---|
2032 | The web-API server will take any request for a URL that starts with /static |
---|
2033 | and serve it from a configurable directory which defaults to |
---|
2034 | $BASEDIR/public_html . This is configured by setting the "[node]web.static" |
---|
2035 | value in $BASEDIR/tahoe.cfg . If this is left at the default value of |
---|
2036 | "public_html", then http://127.0.0.1:3456/static/subdir/foo.html will be |
---|
2037 | served with the contents of the file $BASEDIR/public_html/subdir/foo.html . |
---|
2038 | |
---|
2039 | This can be useful to serve a javascript application which provides a |
---|
2040 | prettier front-end to the rest of the Tahoe web-API. |
---|
2041 | |
---|
2042 | |
---|
2043 | Safety and Security Issues -- Names vs. URIs |
---|
2044 | ============================================ |
---|
2045 | |
---|
2046 | Summary: use explicit file- and dir- caps whenever possible, to reduce the |
---|
2047 | potential for surprises when the file store structure is changed. |
---|
2048 | |
---|
2049 | Tahoe-LAFS provides a mutable file store, but the ways that the store can |
---|
2050 | change are limited. The only things that can change are: |
---|
2051 | |
---|
2052 | * the mapping from child names to child objects inside mutable directories |
---|
2053 | (by adding a new child, removing an existing child, or changing an |
---|
2054 | existing child to point to a different object) |
---|
2055 | * the contents of mutable files |
---|
2056 | |
---|
2057 | Obviously if you query for information about the file store and then act |
---|
2058 | to change it (such as by getting a listing of the contents of a mutable |
---|
2059 | directory and then adding a file to the directory), then the store might |
---|
2060 | have been changed after you queried it and before you acted upon it. |
---|
2061 | However, if you use the URI instead of the pathname of an object when you |
---|
2062 | act upon the object, then it will be the same object; only its contents |
---|
2063 | can change (if it is mutable). If, on the other hand, you act upon the |
---|
2064 | object using its pathname, then a different object might be in that place, |
---|
2065 | which can result in more kinds of surprises. |
---|
2066 | |
---|
2067 | For example, suppose you are writing code which recursively downloads the |
---|
2068 | contents of a directory. The first thing your code does is fetch the listing |
---|
2069 | of the contents of the directory. For each child that it fetched, if that |
---|
2070 | child is a file then it downloads the file, and if that child is a directory |
---|
2071 | then it recurses into that directory. Now, if the download and the recurse |
---|
2072 | actions are performed using the child's name, then the results might be |
---|
2073 | wrong, because for example a child name that pointed to a subdirectory when |
---|
2074 | you listed the directory might have been changed to point to a file (in which |
---|
2075 | case your attempt to recurse into it would result in an error), or a child |
---|
2076 | name that pointed to a file when you listed the directory might now point to |
---|
2077 | a subdirectory (in which case your attempt to download the child would result |
---|
2078 | in a file containing HTML text describing the subdirectory!). |
---|
2079 | |
---|
2080 | If your recursive algorithm uses the URI of the child instead of the name of |
---|
2081 | the child, then those kinds of mistakes just can't happen. Note that both the |
---|
2082 | child's name and the child's URI are included in the results of listing the |
---|
2083 | parent directory, so it isn't any harder to use the URI for this purpose. |
---|
2084 | |
---|
2085 | The read and write caps in a given directory node are separate URIs, and |
---|
2086 | can't be assumed to point to the same object even if they were retrieved in |
---|
2087 | the same operation (although the web-API server attempts to ensure this |
---|
2088 | in most cases). If you need to rely on that property, you should explicitly |
---|
2089 | verify it. More generally, you should not make assumptions about the |
---|
2090 | internal consistency of the contents of mutable directories. As a result |
---|
2091 | of the signatures on mutable object versions, it is guaranteed that a given |
---|
2092 | version was written in a single update, but -- as in the case of a file -- |
---|
2093 | the contents may have been chosen by a malicious writer in a way that is |
---|
2094 | designed to confuse applications that rely on their consistency. |
---|
2095 | |
---|
2096 | In general, use names if you want "whatever object (whether file or |
---|
2097 | directory) is found by following this name (or sequence of names) when my |
---|
2098 | request reaches the server". Use URIs if you want "this particular object". |
---|
2099 | |
---|
2100 | |
---|
2101 | Concurrency Issues |
---|
2102 | ================== |
---|
2103 | |
---|
2104 | Tahoe uses both mutable and immutable files. Mutable files can be created |
---|
2105 | explicitly by doing an upload with ?mutable=true added, or implicitly by |
---|
2106 | creating a new directory (since a directory is just a special way to |
---|
2107 | interpret a given mutable file). |
---|
2108 | |
---|
2109 | Mutable files suffer from the same consistency-vs-availability tradeoff that |
---|
2110 | all distributed data storage systems face. It is not possible to |
---|
2111 | simultaneously achieve perfect consistency and perfect availability in the |
---|
2112 | face of network partitions (servers being unreachable or faulty). |
---|
2113 | |
---|
2114 | Tahoe tries to achieve a reasonable compromise, but there is a basic rule in |
---|
2115 | place, known as the Prime Coordination Directive: "Don't Do That". What this |
---|
2116 | means is that if write-access to a mutable file is available to several |
---|
2117 | parties, then those parties are responsible for coordinating their activities |
---|
2118 | to avoid multiple simultaneous updates. This could be achieved by having |
---|
2119 | these parties talk to each other and using some sort of locking mechanism, or |
---|
2120 | by serializing all changes through a single writer. |
---|
2121 | |
---|
2122 | The consequences of performing uncoordinated writes can vary. Some of the |
---|
2123 | writers may lose their changes, as somebody else wins the race condition. In |
---|
2124 | many cases the file will be left in an "unhealthy" state, meaning that there |
---|
2125 | are not as many redundant shares as we would like (reducing the reliability |
---|
2126 | of the file against server failures). In the worst case, the file can be left |
---|
2127 | in such an unhealthy state that no version is recoverable, even the old ones. |
---|
2128 | It is this small possibility of data loss that prompts us to issue the Prime |
---|
2129 | Coordination Directive. |
---|
2130 | |
---|
2131 | Tahoe nodes implement internal serialization to make sure that a single Tahoe |
---|
2132 | node cannot conflict with itself. For example, it is safe to issue two |
---|
2133 | directory modification requests to a single tahoe node's web-API server at the |
---|
2134 | same time, because the Tahoe node will internally delay one of them until |
---|
2135 | after the other has finished being applied. (This feature was introduced in |
---|
2136 | Tahoe-1.1; back with Tahoe-1.0 the web client was responsible for serializing |
---|
2137 | web requests themselves). |
---|
2138 | |
---|
2139 | For more details, please see the "Consistency vs Availability" and "The Prime |
---|
2140 | Coordination Directive" sections of :doc:`../specifications/mutable`. |
---|
2141 | |
---|
2142 | |
---|
2143 | Access Blacklist |
---|
2144 | ================ |
---|
2145 | |
---|
2146 | Gateway nodes may find it necessary to prohibit access to certain files. The |
---|
2147 | web-API has a facility to block access to filecaps by their storage index, |
---|
2148 | returning a 403 "Forbidden" error instead of the original file. |
---|
2149 | |
---|
2150 | This blacklist is recorded in $NODEDIR/access.blacklist, and contains one |
---|
2151 | blocked file per line. Comment lines (starting with ``#``) are ignored. Each |
---|
2152 | line consists of the storage-index (in the usual base32 format as displayed |
---|
2153 | by the "More Info" page, or by the "tahoe debug dump-cap" command), followed |
---|
2154 | by whitespace, followed by a reason string, which will be included in the 403 |
---|
2155 | error message. This could hold a URL to a page that explains why the file is |
---|
2156 | blocked, for example. |
---|
2157 | |
---|
2158 | So for example, if you found a need to block access to a file with filecap |
---|
2159 | ``URI:CHK:n7r3m6wmomelk4sep3kw5cvduq:os7ijw5c3maek7pg65e5254k2fzjflavtpejjyhshpsxuqzhcwwq:3:20:14861``, |
---|
2160 | you could do the following:: |
---|
2161 | |
---|
2162 | tahoe debug dump-cap URI:CHK:n7r3m6wmomelk4sep3kw5cvduq:os7ijw5c3maek7pg65e5254k2fzjflavtpejjyhshpsxuqzhcwwq:3:20:14861 |
---|
2163 | -> storage index: whpepioyrnff7orecjolvbudeu |
---|
2164 | echo "whpepioyrnff7orecjolvbudeu my puppy told me to" >>$NODEDIR/access.blacklist |
---|
2165 | # ... restart the node to re-read configuration ... |
---|
2166 | tahoe get URI:CHK:n7r3m6wmomelk4sep3kw5cvduq:os7ijw5c3maek7pg65e5254k2fzjflavtpejjyhshpsxuqzhcwwq:3:20:14861 |
---|
2167 | -> error, 403 Access Prohibited: my puppy told me to |
---|
2168 | |
---|
2169 | The ``access.blacklist`` file will be checked each time a file or directory |
---|
2170 | is accessed: the file's ``mtime`` is used to decide whether it need to be |
---|
2171 | reloaded. Therefore no node restart is necessary when creating the initial |
---|
2172 | blacklist, nor when adding second, third, or additional entries to the list. |
---|
2173 | When modifying the file, be careful to update it atomically, otherwise a |
---|
2174 | request may arrive while the file is only halfway written, and the partial |
---|
2175 | file may be incorrectly parsed. |
---|
2176 | |
---|
2177 | The blacklist is applied to all access paths (including SFTP and CLI |
---|
2178 | operations), not just the web-API. The blacklist also applies to directories. |
---|
2179 | If a directory is blacklisted, the gateway will refuse access to both that |
---|
2180 | directory and any child files/directories underneath it, when accessed via |
---|
2181 | "DIRCAP/SUBDIR/FILENAME" -style URLs. Users who go directly to the child |
---|
2182 | file/dir will bypass the blacklist. |
---|
2183 | |
---|
2184 | The node will log the SI of the file being blocked, and the reason code, into |
---|
2185 | the ``logs/twistd.log`` file. |
---|
2186 | |
---|
2187 | URLs and HTTP and UTF-8 |
---|
2188 | ======================= |
---|
2189 | |
---|
2190 | .. _urls-and-utf8: |
---|
2191 | |
---|
2192 | HTTP does not provide a mechanism to specify the character set used to |
---|
2193 | encode non-ASCII names in URLs (`RFC3986#2.1`_). We prefer the convention |
---|
2194 | that the ``filename=`` argument shall be a URL-escaped UTF-8 encoded Unicode |
---|
2195 | string. For example, suppose we want to provoke the server into using a |
---|
2196 | filename of "f i a n c e-acute e" (i.e. f i a n c U+00E9 e). The UTF-8 |
---|
2197 | encoding of this is 0x66 0x69 0x61 0x6e 0x63 0xc3 0xa9 0x65 (or |
---|
2198 | "fianc\\xC3\\xA9e", as python's ``repr()`` function would show). To encode |
---|
2199 | this into a URL, the non-printable characters must be escaped with the |
---|
2200 | urlencode ``%XX`` mechanism, giving us "fianc%C3%A9e". Thus, the first line |
---|
2201 | of the HTTP request will be "``GET |
---|
2202 | /uri/CAP...?save=true&filename=fianc%C3%A9e HTTP/1.1``". Not all browsers |
---|
2203 | provide this: IE7 by default uses the Latin-1 encoding, which is "fianc%E9e" |
---|
2204 | (although it has a configuration option to send URLs as UTF-8). |
---|
2205 | |
---|
2206 | The response header will need to indicate a non-ASCII filename. The actual |
---|
2207 | mechanism to do this is not clear. For ASCII filenames, the response header |
---|
2208 | would look like:: |
---|
2209 | |
---|
2210 | Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="english.txt" |
---|
2211 | |
---|
2212 | If Tahoe were to enforce the UTF-8 convention, it would need to decode the |
---|
2213 | URL argument into a Unicode string, and then encode it back into a sequence |
---|
2214 | of bytes when creating the response header. One possibility would be to use |
---|
2215 | unencoded UTF-8. Developers suggest that IE7 might accept this:: |
---|
2216 | |
---|
2217 | #1: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="fianc\xC3\xA9e" |
---|
2218 | (note, the last four bytes of that line, not including the newline, are |
---|
2219 | 0xC3 0xA9 0x65 0x22) |
---|
2220 | |
---|
2221 | `RFC2231#4`_ (dated 1997): suggests that the following might work, and `some |
---|
2222 | developers have reported`_ that it is supported by Firefox (but not IE7):: |
---|
2223 | |
---|
2224 | #2: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename*=utf-8''fianc%C3%A9e |
---|
2225 | |
---|
2226 | My reading of `RFC2616#19.5.1`_ (which defines Content-Disposition) says |
---|
2227 | that the filename= parameter is defined to be wrapped in quotes (presumably |
---|
2228 | to allow spaces without breaking the parsing of subsequent parameters), |
---|
2229 | which would give us:: |
---|
2230 | |
---|
2231 | #3: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename*=utf-8''"fianc%C3%A9e" |
---|
2232 | |
---|
2233 | However this is contrary to the examples in the email thread listed above. |
---|
2234 | |
---|
2235 | Developers report that IE7 (when it is configured for UTF-8 URL encoding, |
---|
2236 | which is not the default in Asian countries), will accept:: |
---|
2237 | |
---|
2238 | #4: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=fianc%C3%A9e |
---|
2239 | |
---|
2240 | However, for maximum compatibility, Tahoe simply copies bytes from the URL |
---|
2241 | into the response header, rather than enforcing the UTF-8 convention. This |
---|
2242 | means it does not try to decode the filename from the URL argument, nor does |
---|
2243 | it encode the filename into the response header. |
---|
2244 | |
---|
2245 | .. _RFC3986#2.1: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-2.1 |
---|
2246 | .. _RFC2231#4: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2231#section-4 |
---|
2247 | .. _some developers have reported: http://markmail.org/message/dsjyokgl7hv64ig3 |
---|
2248 | .. _RFC2616#19.5.1: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616#section-19.5.1 |
---|