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137 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
e1c33c9680 put hook in correct place 2022-07-08 15:43:12 +02:00
f6004fe79a Add basic implementation 2022-07-08 15:37:33 +02:00
fe3fa83de7 Publish k2v-client crate to crates.io (#337)
Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#337
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-07-04 18:27:25 +02:00
b6d59ec19a
Fix poll item when item didn't change 2022-07-04 14:00:02 +02:00
0850bac874 Add poll command to k2v-cli (#335)
Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#335
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-07-04 12:45:32 +02:00
b74b533b7b Fix typo 2022-06-29 11:50:51 +02:00
996f2a6d58 Slides for talk at IMT Atlantique / STACK on 2022-06-23 (#333)
Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#333
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-06-23 14:28:40 +02:00
77e3fd6db2 improve internal item counter mechanisms and implement bucket quotas (#326)
- [x] Refactoring of internal counting API
- [x] Repair procedure for counters (it's an offline procedure!!!)
- [x] New counter for objects in buckets
- [x] Add quotas to buckets struct
- [x] Add CLI to manage bucket quotas
- [x] Add admin API to manage bucket quotas
- [x] Apply quotas by adding checks on put operations
- [x] Proof-read

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#326
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-06-15 20:20:28 +02:00
d544a0e0e0
Send CORS headers for all requests 2022-06-13 10:19:52 +02:00
138e13071b
Fix garage_db build on 32-bit systems 2022-06-09 14:55:20 +02:00
b44d3fc796 Abstract database behind generic interface and implement alternative drivers (#322)
- [x] Design interface
- [x] Implement Sled backend
  - [x] Re-implement the SledCountedTree hack ~~on Sled backend~~ on all backends (i.e. over the abstraction)
- [x] Convert Garage code to use generic interface
- [x] Proof-read converted Garage code
- [ ] Test everything well
- [x] Implement sqlite backend
- [x] Implement LMDB backend
- [ ] (Implement Persy backend?)
- [ ] (Implement other backends? (like RocksDB, ...))
- [x] Implement backend choice in config file and garage server module
- [x] Add CLI for converting between DB formats
- Exploit the new interface to put more things in transactions
  - [x] `.updated()` trigger on Garage tables

Fix #284

**Bugs**

- [x] When exporting sqlite, trees iterate empty??
- [x] LMDB doesn't work

**Known issues for various back-ends**

- Sled:
  - Eats all my RAM and also all my disk space
  - `.len()` has to traverse the whole table
  - Is actually quite slow on some operations
  - And is actually pretty bad code...
- Sqlite:
  - Requires a lock to be taken on all operations. The lock is also taken when iterating on a table with `.iter()`, and the lock isn't released until the iterator is dropped. This means that we must be VERY carefull to not do anything else inside a `.iter()` loop or else we will have a deadlock! Most such cases have been eliminated from the Garage codebase, but there might still be some that remain. If your Garage-over-Sqlite seems to hang/freeze, this is the reason.
  - (adapter uses a bunch of unsafe code)
- Heed (LMDB):
  - Not suited for 32-bit machines as it has to map the whole DB in memory.
  - (adpater uses a tiny bit of unsafe code)

**My recommendation:** avoid 32-bit machines and use LMDB as much as possible.

**Converting databases** is actually quite easy. For example from Sled to LMDB:

```bash
cd src/db
cargo run --features cli --bin convert -- -i path/to/garage/meta/db -a sled -o path/to/garage/meta/db.lmdb -b lmdb
```

Then, just add this to your `config.toml`:

```toml
db_engine = "lmdb"
```

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#322
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-06-08 10:01:44 +02:00
Simon C
7eed3ceda9 docs: Add Trafik reverse proxy documentation 2022-06-07 16:16:52 +02:00
Simon C
4b8f48f3c5 docs: Fix title level 2022-06-07 13:32:52 +02:00
Simon C
7d3b5585f1 docs: Add link to facilitate navigation in the documentation 2022-06-07 09:38:59 +02:00
a1abed0378
Remove useless MC_REGION env variable 2022-06-02 12:50:11 +02:00
b54a938724 Fix garage_version() now that GIT_VERSION is read in crate garage_rpc 2022-06-02 12:00:10 +02:00
ff06d3f082
Fix Content-Type headers for {admin,k2v} errors and admin responses
Fix #315
2022-05-25 17:09:33 +02:00
93eab8eaa3 Fixes to S3 compatibility page (#314)
Mention PostObject is implemented, fix english mistakes

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#314
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-05-25 16:54:44 +02:00
43ddc933f9
Update Ceph S3 endpoints compatibility 2022-05-25 15:20:08 +02:00
9f303f6308
Shorter page title 2022-05-24 15:47:42 +02:00
3be43f3372
Add lost content for Restic with Garage
Suggested-by: Quentin <quentin@deuxfleurs.fr>
2022-05-24 15:32:42 +02:00
2da448b43f
Add documentation for new Admin API and a few infos on K2V 2022-05-24 15:28:37 +02:00
b2a2d3859f K2V client improvements (#307)
- [x] Better distinguish error types
- [x] Parse error messages received from server
- [x] Remove `src/` folder layer, we don't have that for other crates

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#307
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-05-24 12:48:05 +02:00
382e74c798 First version of admin API (#298)
**Spec:**

- [x] Start writing
- [x] Specify all layout endpoints
- [x] Specify all endpoints for operations on keys
- [x] Specify all endpoints for operations on key/bucket permissions
- [x] Specify all endpoints for operations on buckets
- [x] Specify all endpoints for operations on bucket aliases

View rendered spec at <https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/src/branch/admin-api/doc/drafts/admin-api.md>

**Code:**

- [x] Refactor code for admin api to use common api code that was created for K2V

**General endpoints:**

- [x] Metrics
- [x] GetClusterStatus
- [x] ConnectClusterNodes
- [x] GetClusterLayout
- [x] UpdateClusterLayout
- [x] ApplyClusterLayout
- [x] RevertClusterLayout

**Key-related endpoints:**

- [x] ListKeys
- [x] CreateKey
- [x] ImportKey
- [x] GetKeyInfo
- [x] UpdateKey
- [x] DeleteKey

**Bucket-related endpoints:**

- [x] ListBuckets
- [x] CreateBucket
- [x] GetBucketInfo
- [x] DeleteBucket
- [x] PutBucketWebsite
- [x] DeleteBucketWebsite

**Operations on key/bucket permissions:**

- [x] BucketAllowKey
- [x] BucketDenyKey

**Operations on bucket aliases:**

- [x] GlobalAliasBucket
- [x] GlobalUnaliasBucket
- [x] LocalAliasBucket
- [x] LocalUnaliasBucket

**And also:**

- [x] Separate error type for the admin API (this PR includes a quite big refactoring of error handling)
- [x] Add management of website access
- [ ] Check that nothing is missing wrt what can be done using the CLI
- [ ] Improve formatting of the spec
- [x] Make sure everyone is cool with the API design

Fix #231
Fix #295

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#298
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-05-24 12:16:39 +02:00
64c193e3db Add a K2V client library and CLI (#303)
lib.rs could use getting split in modules, but I'm not sure how exactly

Co-authored-by: trinity-1686a <trinity@deuxfleurs.fr>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#303
Co-authored-by: trinity-1686a <trinity.pointard@gmail.com>
Co-committed-by: trinity-1686a <trinity.pointard@gmail.com>
2022-05-18 22:24:09 +02:00
c692f55d5c
K2V: Fix end parameter and add tests (fix #305) 2022-05-17 11:50:23 +02:00
7b474855e3
Make background runner terminate correctly 2022-05-17 11:38:31 +02:00
176715c5b2
Fix ReadIndex spec and add JSON5 remark to doc 2022-05-16 11:54:37 +02:00
5768bf3622 First implementation of K2V (#293)
**Specification:**

View spec at [this URL](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/src/branch/k2v/doc/drafts/k2v-spec.md)

- [x] Specify the structure of K2V triples
- [x] Specify the DVVS format used for causality detection
- [x] Specify the K2V index (just a counter of number of values per partition key)
- [x] Specify single-item endpoints: ReadItem, InsertItem, DeleteItem
- [x] Specify index endpoint: ReadIndex
- [x] Specify multi-item endpoints: InsertBatch, ReadBatch, DeleteBatch
- [x] Move to JSON objects instead of tuples
- [x] Specify endpoints for polling for updates on single values (PollItem)

**Implementation:**

- [x] Table for K2V items, causal contexts
- [x] Indexing mechanism and table for K2V index
- [x] Make API handlers a bit more generic
- [x] K2V API endpoint
- [x] K2V API router
- [x] ReadItem
- [x] InsertItem
- [x] DeleteItem
- [x] PollItem
- [x] ReadIndex
- [x] InsertBatch
- [x] ReadBatch
- [x] DeleteBatch

**Testing:**

- [x] Just a simple Python script that does some requests to check visually that things are going right (does not contain parsing of results or assertions on returned values)
- [x] Actual tests:
  - [x] Adapt testing framework
  - [x] Simple test with InsertItem + ReadItem
  - [x] Test with several Insert/Read/DeleteItem + ReadIndex
  - [x] Test all combinations of return formats for ReadItem
  - [x] Test with ReadBatch, InsertBatch, DeleteBatch
  - [x] Test with PollItem
  - [x] Test error codes
- [ ] Fix most broken stuff
  - [x] test PollItem broken randomly
  - [x] when invalid causality tokens are given, errors should be 4xx not 5xx

**Improvements:**

- [x] Descending range queries
  - [x] Specify
  - [x] Implement
  - [x] Add test
- [x] Batch updates to index counter
- [x] Put K2V behind `k2v` feature flag

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#293
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-05-10 13:16:57 +02:00
def78c5e6f
Update netapp to 0.4.4, fix #300 2022-05-09 12:08:47 +02:00
277a20ec44 Fix layout show to not show changes when there are no changes (#297)
fixes #295, partially

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#297
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-05-09 11:14:55 +02:00
c9ef3e461b
fix clippy 2022-04-19 12:50:40 +02:00
c93008d333
Prettier code for defragmentation 2022-04-19 12:50:40 +02:00
e5341ca47b
Defragmentation in UploadPartCopy: first pass (not pretty but it compiles) 2022-04-19 12:50:36 +02:00
a4f9f19ac3 remove size limitation in UploadPartCopy (#280)
This removes the >1mb s3_copy restriction.

This restriction doesn't seem to be documented anywhere (I could be wrong). It also causes some software to fail (such as #248).

Co-authored-by: Rob Landers <landers.robert@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#280
Co-authored-by: withinboredom <landers.robert@gmail.com>
Co-committed-by: withinboredom <landers.robert@gmail.com>
2022-04-19 12:49:43 +02:00
Baptiste Jonglez
47e57518ec Add documentation on running Kopia with Garage 2022-04-10 13:04:07 +02:00
dffcd9f4b1
update Cargo.nix 2022-04-08 14:35:09 +02:00
5d404dcd54
Add missing opentelemetry features 2022-04-08 14:21:04 +02:00
62f0715abe Add/Fix OpenTelemetry 2022-04-07 16:12:35 +02:00
7e1ac51b58 Add files to quickly test k8s 2022-04-07 16:12:35 +02:00
94f1e48fff Update to netapp 0.4.2 (a tiny fix) 2022-04-07 11:50:03 +02:00
cb5836d53c Bring maximum exponential backoff time down from 16h to 1h 2022-04-07 11:49:29 +02:00
8e3ee82c3e Be clearer on what upgrades are (not) supported 2022-04-06 21:45:59 +02:00
a122a8cb46 Add an "upgrading" section, add a guide for 0.7 2022-04-05 10:08:31 +02:00
9fd8ec1dee Add documentation for winscp+sftpgo 2022-03-31 10:25:56 +02:00
0091002ef2
New replication modes and their documentation 2022-03-28 16:26:04 +02:00
8f9cf3a5d1
fix a clippy lint 2022-03-28 15:48:55 +02:00
913f7754bb
Add blocks in errored state to garage stats 2022-03-28 15:47:23 +02:00
42dde54126
Log admin GET requests at debug level instead of info
to reduce noise in logs
2022-03-28 15:46:52 +02:00
dca2ffdf91
document administrative options 2022-03-28 12:26:08 +02:00
0cf4efac89 Compile kuberetes-discovery only when release=true 2022-03-24 16:57:43 +01:00
9d0ed78887 Add feature flag for Kubernetes discovery 2022-03-24 16:57:43 +01:00
509d256c58
Make layout optimization work in relative terms 2022-03-24 15:27:14 +01:00
2814d41842
Allow garage layout assign to assign to several nodes at once 2022-03-24 15:27:13 +01:00
7e0e2ffda2
Slight change and add comment to layout assignation algo 2022-03-24 15:27:13 +01:00
413ab0eaed
Small change to partition assignation algorithm
This change helps ensure that nodes for each partition are spread
over all datacenters, a property that wasn't ensured previously
when going from a 2 DC deployment to a 3 DC deployment
2022-03-24 15:27:10 +01:00
43945234ae
Add missing src/block to toplevel cargo.toml 2022-03-23 10:26:10 +01:00
3dc9214172
Add lots of comments on how the resync queue works
(I don't really want to change/refactor that code though)
2022-03-23 10:25:39 +01:00
077dd1cde9
Clippy 2022-03-23 10:25:39 +01:00
2d13f0aa13
run cargo2nix 2022-03-23 10:25:37 +01:00
e480aaf338
Make background tranquility a configurable parameter 2022-03-23 10:25:19 +01:00
8fd6745745
Move block RC code to separate rc.rs 2022-03-23 10:25:19 +01:00
c3982a90b6
Move DataBlock out of manager.rs 2022-03-23 10:25:19 +01:00
c1d9854d2c
Move block manager to separate module 2022-03-23 10:25:15 +01:00
8565f7dc31 cleanup 2022-03-23 10:22:37 +01:00
8db6b84559 add test for create bucket and put website with streaming signature 2022-03-23 10:22:37 +01:00
1eb7fdb08f add test framework for arbitraty S3 requests
and implement some basic test with it
2022-03-23 10:22:36 +01:00
e934934f14 garage_api: Update streaming payload stream unit tests 2022-03-23 10:22:36 +01:00
98545a16dd garage_api: Handle streaming payload early in request handling 2022-03-23 10:22:36 +01:00
822128e3c8 Talk a bit about capacity balancing between regions 2022-03-22 12:07:13 +01:00
Rune Henriksen
aea8b41728 document request routing logic 2022-03-21 12:03:57 +01:00
Rune Henriksen
71e6645e09 add short tutorial for duplicati usage with garage 2022-03-21 11:58:19 +01:00
15da2156f6 Change position of the node-id argument 2022-03-19 18:03:23 +01:00
0529f3c34d Patch cargo2nix openssl override 2022-03-17 12:17:38 +01:00
db46cdef79
Update netapp to v0.4.1 2022-03-15 17:09:57 +01:00
ba6b56ae68
Fix some new clippy lints 2022-03-14 12:27:49 +01:00
0af314b295
Add comment for fsync 2022-03-14 11:54:00 +01:00
d78bf379fb
Fix resync queue to not drop items 2022-03-14 11:51:37 +01:00
f7e6f4616f
Spawn a single resync worker 2022-03-14 11:51:37 +01:00
dc5ec4ecf9
Add appropriate fsync() calls in write_block
to ensure that data is persisted properly
2022-03-14 11:51:32 +01:00
fe62d01b7e
Implement exponential backoff for resync retries 2022-03-14 11:41:20 +01:00
bfb4353df5
Update Grafana dashboard 2022-03-14 10:55:30 +01:00
9b2b531f4d
Make admin server optional 2022-03-14 10:54:25 +01:00
a19341b188
Add Grafana dashboard for Garage 2022-03-14 10:54:25 +01:00
2377a92f6b
Add wrapper over sled tree to count items (used for big queues) 2022-03-14 10:54:25 +01:00
203e8d2c34
Bump version to 0.7 because of incompatible Netapp 2022-03-14 10:54:24 +01:00
f869ca625d
Add spans to table calls, change span names in RPC 2022-03-14 10:54:12 +01:00
0cc31ee169
add missing netapp telemetry feature 2022-03-14 10:54:11 +01:00
dc8d0496cc
Refactoring: rename config files, make modifications less invasive 2022-03-14 10:53:51 +01:00
d9a35359bf
Add metrics to web endpoint 2022-03-14 10:53:50 +01:00
2a5609b292
Add metrics to API endpoint 2022-03-14 10:53:36 +01:00
818daa5c78
Refactor how durations are measured 2022-03-14 10:53:35 +01:00
f0d0cd9a20
Remove strum crate dependency; add protobuf nix dependency 2022-03-14 10:53:00 +01:00
55d4471599
Remove ... at end of hex IDs 2022-03-14 10:52:31 +01:00
bb04d94fa9
Update to Netapp 0.4 which supports distributed tracing 2022-03-14 10:52:30 +01:00
8c2fb0c066
Add tracing integration with opentelemetry 2022-03-14 10:52:13 +01:00
b6561f6e1b
Add docker-compose for traces & metrics 2022-03-14 10:51:52 +01:00
2cab84b1fe
Add many metrics in table/ and rpc/ 2022-03-14 10:51:50 +01:00
1e2cf26373
Implement basic metrics in table 2022-03-14 10:51:17 +01:00
mricher
e349af13a7
Update dependencies and add admin module with metrics
- Global dependencies updated in Cargo.lock
- New module created in src/admin to host:
  - the (future) admin REST API
  - the metric collection
- add configuration block

No metrics implemented yet
2022-03-14 10:51:12 +01:00
9d44127245
add support for kubernetes service discovery
This commit adds support to discover garage instances running in
kubernetes.

Once enabled by setting `kubernetes_namespace` and
`kubernetes_service_name` garage will create a Custom Resources
`garagenodes.deuxfleurs.fr` with nodes public key as the resource name.
and IP and Port information as spec in the namespace configured by
`kubernetes_namespace`.

For discovering nodes the resources are filtered with the optionally set
`kubernetes_service_name` which sets a label
`garage.deuxfleurs.fr/service` on the resources.

This allows to separate multiple garage deployments in a single
namespace.

the `kubernetes_skip_crd` variable allows to disable the creation of the
CRD by garage itself. The user must deploy this manually.
2022-03-12 13:05:52 +01:00
c00b2c9948 Functional tests for admin commands 2022-03-07 17:32:07 +01:00
8df1e186de Functional tests for website endpoints 2022-03-07 17:32:07 +01:00
2ef60b8417 Functional test for multipart endpoints 2022-03-07 17:32:07 +01:00
1e639ec67c Functional test for ListMultipartUploads 2022-03-07 17:32:07 +01:00
cfea1e0315 Functional tests for bucket endpoints 2022-03-07 17:32:02 +01:00
05eb79929e Functional tests for object operations 2022-03-07 17:05:10 +01:00
0f4e0e8bb9 Move ListObjects tests to Rust 2022-03-07 17:05:10 +01:00
2a3afcaf65 Test WinSCP 2022-03-03 14:29:10 +01:00
8a5bbc3b0b
More permissive OPTIONS on S3 API 2022-03-01 11:15:16 +01:00
97f245f218
Add tracing output to signature calculation 2022-02-28 12:22:39 +01:00
8129a98291
Process CORS earlier in pipeline 2022-02-28 12:22:39 +01:00
54e02b4c3b Force static builds for all platforms 2022-02-24 16:12:37 +01:00
f6f8b7f1ad Support for PostObject (#222)
Add support for [PostObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectPOST.html)

- [x] routing PostObject properly
- [x] parsing multipart body
- [x] validating signature
- [x] validating policy
- [x] validating content length
- [x] actually saving data

Co-authored-by: trinity-1686a <trinity@deuxfleurs.fr>
Co-authored-by: Trinity Pointard <trinity.pointard@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#222
Reviewed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-authored-by: trinity-1686a <trinity.pointard@gmail.com>
Co-committed-by: trinity-1686a <trinity.pointard@gmail.com>
2022-02-21 23:02:30 +01:00
e312ba977e
Add FOSDEM talk and move all .pdf files to Git LFS 2022-02-16 20:01:36 +01:00
2465163e39
documentation: add mention to install build-essential 2022-02-16 12:18:24 +01:00
84613e66a2
garage(tests): Remove RNG stuff 2022-02-11 10:50:55 +01:00
c8b30ebc79
garage(tests): Remove superfluous test 2022-02-10 17:55:51 +01:00
d7decda3f4
garage(tests): Add random suffix to created buckets. 2022-02-10 17:55:50 +01:00
cd13ea461b
garage(tests): Add some unsafe-usage doc and tweaks 2022-02-10 17:55:50 +01:00
5d19f3d2d7
Add integration tests to Drone 2022-02-10 17:55:50 +01:00
084dcdbd3a
Upgrade cargo2nix 2022-02-10 17:55:50 +01:00
3baa841d6f
tests: Fix garage integration test 2022-02-10 17:55:49 +01:00
dd407e7041
tests: Add garage integration tests (base) 2022-02-10 17:55:49 +01:00
af261e1789 Fix a bug when a migration is followed by a rebalance
Nodes would stabilize on different encoding formats for the values,
some having the pre-migration format and some having the post-migration
format. This would be reflected in the Merkle trees never converging
and thus having an infinite resync loop.
2022-02-10 17:38:27 +01:00
4ae03aa774 Small documentation updates (#237)
Fixes #234, among other things

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#237
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-02-10 15:58:09 +01:00
3e1373fafc Add a new S3 comparison Matrix to documentation (#220)
Co-authored-by: Quentin Dufour <quentin@deuxfleurs.fr>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#220
Co-authored-by: Quentin <quentin@dufour.io>
Co-committed-by: Quentin <quentin@dufour.io>
2022-02-07 16:04:52 +01:00
7d68b7060e
Fix anchors in links 2022-02-07 16:01:48 +01:00
99ed67503c
Update quickstart to set endpoints ending in localhost 2022-02-07 16:01:48 +01:00
5a1fb7cce7
Improve integration part of the doc 2022-02-07 16:01:45 +01:00
1c0ba930b8 Reorganize documentation for new website (#213)
This PR should be merged after the new website is deployed.

- [x] Rename files
- [x] Add front matter section to all `.md` files in the book (necessary for Zola)
- [x] Change all internal links to use Zola's linking system that checks broken links
- [x] Some updates to documentation contents and organization

Co-authored-by: Alex Auvolat <alex@adnab.me>
Reviewed-on: Deuxfleurs/garage#213
Co-authored-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
Co-committed-by: Alex <alex@adnab.me>
2022-02-07 11:51:12 +01:00
45d6d377d2
Remove website publishing (new website is now online) 2022-02-06 09:25:04 +01:00
6f7ef11537 Generate and upload a JSON result 2022-02-05 22:09:43 +01:00
241db1e1f5 Add URL field to JSON builds 2022-02-05 22:09:43 +01:00
ecd76977ea Generate JSON build description 2022-02-05 22:09:43 +01:00
935670690f
Probably fix test-smoke 2022-02-02 17:34:19 +01:00
ae2f32baf1
Hide deleted key in bucket info (fix #211) 2022-02-02 17:12:48 +01:00
321 changed files with 42096 additions and 5473 deletions

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@ -95,48 +95,6 @@ trigger:
node:
nix: 1
---
kind: pipeline
name: website
steps:
- name: build
image: hrektts/mdbook
commands:
- cd doc/book
- mdbook build
- name: upload
image: plugins/s3
settings:
bucket: garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr
access_key:
from_secret: garagehq_aws_access_key_id
secret_key:
from_secret: garagehq_aws_secret_access_key
source: doc/book/book/**/*
strip_prefix: doc/book/book/
target: /
path_style: true
endpoint: https://garage.deuxfleurs.fr
region: garage
when:
event:
- push
branch:
- main
repo:
- Deuxfleurs/garage
trigger:
event:
- custom
- push
- pull_request
node:
nix: 1
---
kind: pipeline
type: docker
@ -515,6 +473,6 @@ node:
---
kind: signature
hmac: 0ba1f5febd521c77c4c0ecb6724888a8d3307024fc74feea1d5bf6bb3bce8429
hmac: 3fc19d6f9a3555519c8405e3281b2e74289bb802f644740d5481d53df3a01fa4
...

1
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@ -0,0 +1 @@
*.pdf filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text

2182
Cargo.lock generated

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load diff

4044
Cargo.nix

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load diff

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@ -1,14 +1,19 @@
[workspace]
members = [
"src/db",
"src/util",
"src/rpc",
"src/table",
"src/block",
"src/model",
"src/api",
"src/web",
"src/garage",
"src/k2v-client",
]
default-members = ["src/garage"]
[profile.dev]
lto = "off"

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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
.PHONY: doc all release shell
all:
clear; cargo build
clear; cargo build --all-features
doc:
cd doc/book; mdbook build

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@ -11,14 +11,26 @@ with import ./nix/common.nix;
let
crossSystem = { config = target; };
in let
log = v: builtins.trace v v;
pkgs = import pkgsSrc {
inherit system crossSystem;
overlays = [ cargo2nixOverlay ];
};
/*
Rust and Nix triples are not the same. Cargo2nix has a dedicated library
to convert Nix triples to Rust ones. We need this conversion as we want to
set later options linked to our (rust) target in a generic way. Not only
the triple terminology is different, but also the "roles" are named differently.
Nix uses a build/host/target terminology where Nix's "host" maps to Cargo's "target".
*/
rustTarget = log (pkgs.rustBuilder.rustLib.rustTriple pkgs.stdenv.hostPlatform);
/*
Cargo2nix is built for rustOverlay which installs Rust from Mozilla releases.
We want our own Rust to avoir incompatibilities, like we had with musl 1.2.0.
We want our own Rust to avoid incompatibilities, like we had with musl 1.2.0.
rustc was built with musl < 1.2.0 and nix shipped musl >= 1.2.0 which lead to compilation breakage.
So we want a Rust release that is bound to our Nix repository to avoid these problems.
See here for more info: https://musl.libc.org/time64.html
@ -35,53 +47,93 @@ in let
];
};
/*
Cargo2nix provides many overrides by default, you can take inspiration from them:
https://github.com/cargo2nix/cargo2nix/blob/master/overlay/overrides.nix
You can have a complete list of the available options by looking at the overriden object, mkcrate:
https://github.com/cargo2nix/cargo2nix/blob/master/overlay/mkcrate.nix
*/
overrides = pkgs.rustBuilder.overrides.all ++ [
/*
We want to inject the git version while keeping the build deterministic.
[1] We need to alter Nix hardening to be able to statically compile: PIE,
Position Independent Executables seems to be supported only on amd64. Having
this flags set either make our executables crash or compile as dynamic on many platforms.
In the following section codegenOpts, we reactive it for the supported targets
(only amd64 curently) through the `-static-pie` flag. PIE is a feature used
by ASLR, which helps mitigate security issues.
Learn more about Nix Hardening: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/build-support/cc-wrapper/add-hardening.sh
[2] We want to inject the git version while keeping the build deterministic.
As we do not want to consider the .git folder as part of the input source,
we ask the user (the CI often) to pass the value to Nix.
*/
(pkgs.rustBuilder.rustLib.makeOverride {
name = "garage";
overrideAttrs = drv: if git_version != null then {
preConfigure = ''
${drv.preConfigure or ""}
export GIT_VERSION="${git_version}"
'';
} else {};
name = "garage_rpc";
overrideAttrs = drv:
/* [1] */ { hardeningDisable = [ "pie" ]; }
//
/* [2] */ (if git_version != null then {
preConfigure = ''
${drv.preConfigure or ""}
export GIT_VERSION="${git_version}"
'';
} else {});
})
/*
On a sandbox pure NixOS environment, /usr/bin/file is not available.
This is a known problem: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/98440
We simply patch the file as suggested
We ship some parts of the code disabled by default by putting them behind a flag.
It speeds up the compilation (when the feature is not required) and released crates have less dependency by default (less attack surface, disk space, etc.).
But we want to ship these additional features when we release Garage.
In the end, we chose to exclude all features from debug builds while putting (all of) them in the release builds.
Currently, the only feature of Garage is kubernetes-discovery from the garage_rpc crate.
*/
/*(pkgs.rustBuilder.rustLib.makeOverride {
name = "libsodium-sys";
overrideAttrs = drv: {
preConfigure = ''
${drv.preConfigure or ""}
sed -i 's,/usr/bin/file,${file}/bin/file,g' ./configure
'';
}
})*/
(pkgs.rustBuilder.rustLib.makeOverride {
name = "garage_rpc";
overrideArgs = old:
{
features = if release then [ "kubernetes-discovery" ] else [];
};
})
];
packageFun = import ./Cargo.nix;
/*
We compile fully static binaries with musl to simplify deployment on most systems.
When possible, we reactivate PIE hardening (see above).
Also, if you set the RUSTFLAGS environment variable, the following parameters will
be ignored.
For more information on static builds, please refer to Rust's RFC 1721.
https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/1721-crt-static.html#specifying-dynamicstatic-c-runtime-linkage
*/
codegenOpts = {
"armv6l-unknown-linux-musleabihf" = [ "target-feature=+crt-static" "link-arg=-static" ]; /* compile as dynamic with static-pie */
"aarch64-unknown-linux-musl" = [ "target-feature=+crt-static" "link-arg=-static" ]; /* segfault with static-pie */
"i686-unknown-linux-musl" = [ "target-feature=+crt-static" "link-arg=-static" ]; /* segfault with static-pie */
"x86_64-unknown-linux-musl" = [ "target-feature=+crt-static" "link-arg=-static-pie" ];
};
/*
The following definition is not elegant as we use a low level function of Cargo2nix
that enables us to pass our custom rustChannel object
that enables us to pass our custom rustChannel object. We need this low level definition
to pass Nix's Rust toolchains instead of Mozilla's one.
target is mandatory but must be kept to null to allow cargo2nix to set it to the appropriate value
for each crate.
*/
rustPkgs = pkgs.rustBuilder.makePackageSet {
inherit packageFun rustChannel release;
inherit packageFun rustChannel release codegenOpts;
packageOverrides = overrides;
target = null; /* we set target to null because we want that cargo2nix computes it automatically */
target = null;
buildRustPackages = pkgs.buildPackages.rustBuilder.makePackageSet {
inherit rustChannel packageFun;
inherit rustChannel packageFun codegenOpts;
packageOverrides = overrides;
target = null; /* we set target to null because we want that cargo2nix computes it automatically */
target = null;
};
};

3
doc/book/README Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
These are the sources for the documentation but not the whole website.
The website templates and other things are in garage_website, which
uses this as a submodule.

5
doc/book/_index.md Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
+++
template = "documentation.html"
page_template = "documentation.html"
redirect_to = "documentation/quick-start/"
+++

View file

@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
[book]
authors = ["Quentin Dufour"]
language = "en"
multilingual = false
src = "src"
title = "Garage Documentation"

View file

@ -1,14 +1,21 @@
# Integrations
+++
title = "Integrations"
weight = 3
sort_by = "weight"
template = "documentation.html"
+++
Garage implements the Amazon S3 protocol, which makes it compatible with many existing software programs.
In particular, you will find here instructions to connect it with:
- [web applications](./apps.md)
- [website hosting](./websites.md)
- [software repositories](./repositories.md)
- [CLI tools](./cli.md)
- [your own code](./code.md)
- [Browsing tools](@/documentation/connect/cli.md)
- [Applications](@/documentation/connect/apps/index.md)
- [Website hosting](@/documentation/connect/websites.md)
- [Software repositories](@/documentation/connect/repositories.md)
- [Your own code](@/documentation/connect/code.md)
- [FUSE](@/documentation/connect/fs.md)
### Generic instructions
@ -25,14 +32,14 @@ you will need the following parameters:
like this: `GK3515373e4c851ebaad366558` (access key),
`7d37d093435a41f2aab8f13c19ba067d9776c90215f56614adad6ece597dbb34` (secret key).
These keys are created and managed using the `garage` CLI, as explained in the
[quick start](../quick_start/index.md) guide.
[quick start](@/documentation/quick-start/_index.md) guide.
Most S3 clients can be configured easily with these parameters,
provided that you follow the following guidelines:
- **Force path style:** Garage does not support DNS-style buckets, which are now by default
on Amazon S3. Instead, Garage uses the legacy path-style bucket addressing.
Remember to configure your client to acknowledge this fact.
- **Be careful to DNS-style/path-style access:** Garage supports both DNS-style buckets, which are now by default
on Amazon S3, and legacy path-style buckets. If you use a reverse proxy in front of Garage,
make sure that you configured it to support the access-style required by the software you want to use.
- **Configuring the S3 region:** Garage requires your client to talk to the correct "S3 region",
which is set in the configuration file. This is often set just to `garage`.

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@ -1,6 +1,23 @@
# Apps (Nextcloud, Peertube...)
+++
title = "Apps (Nextcloud, Peertube...)"
weight = 5
+++
In this section, we cover the following software: [Nextcloud](#nextcloud), [Peertube](#peertube), [Mastodon](#mastodon), [Matrix](#matrix)
In this section, we cover the following web applications:
| Name | Status | Note |
|------|--------|------|
| [Nextcloud](#nextcloud) | ✅ | Both Primary Storage and External Storage are supported |
| [Peertube](#peertube) | ✅ | Must be configured with the website endpoint |
| [Mastodon](#mastodon) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
| [Matrix](#matrix) | ✅ | Tested with `synapse-s3-storage-provider` |
| [Pixelfed](#pixelfed) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
| [Pleroma](#pleroma) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
| [Lemmy](#lemmy) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
| [Funkwhale](#funkwhale) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
| [Misskey](#misskey) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
| [Prismo](#prismo) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
| [Owncloud OCIS](#owncloud-infinite-scale-ocis) | ❓| Not yet tested |
## Nextcloud
@ -66,7 +83,7 @@ To test your new configuration, just reload your Nextcloud webpage and start sen
**From the GUI.** Activate the "External storage support" app from the "Applications" page (click on your account icon on the top right corner of your screen to display the menu). Go to your parameters page (also located below your account icon). Click on external storage (or the corresponding translation in your language).
[![Screenshot of the External Storage form](./cli-nextcloud-gui.png)](./cli-nextcloud-gui.png)
[![Screenshot of the External Storage form](cli-nextcloud-gui.png)](cli-nextcloud-gui.png)
*Click on the picture to zoom*
Add a new external storage. Put what you want in "folder name" (eg. "shared"). Select "Amazon S3". Keep "Access Key" for the Authentication field.
@ -108,109 +125,8 @@ Do not change the `use_path_style` and `legacy_auth` entries, other configuratio
Peertube proposes a clever integration of S3 by directly exposing its endpoint instead of proxifying requests through the application.
In other words, Peertube is only responsible of the "control plane" and offload the "data plane" to Garage.
In return, this system is a bit harder to configure, especially with Garage that supports less feature than other older S3 backends.
We show that it is still possible to configure Garage with Peertube, allowing you to spread the load and the bandwidth usage on the Garage cluster.
### Enable path-style access by patching Peertube
First, you will need to apply a small patch on Peertube ([#4510](https://github.com/Chocobozzz/PeerTube/pull/4510)):
```diff
From e3b4c641bdf67e07d406a1d49d6aa6b1fbce2ab4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Martin Honermeyer <maze@strahlungsfrei.de>
Date: Sun, 31 Oct 2021 12:34:04 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] Allow setting path-style access for object storage
---
config/default.yaml | 4 ++++
config/production.yaml.example | 4 ++++
server/initializers/config.ts | 1 +
server/lib/object-storage/shared/client.ts | 3 ++-
.../production/config/custom-environment-variables.yaml | 2 ++
5 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/config/default.yaml b/config/default.yaml
index cf9d69a6211..4efd56fb804 100644
--- a/config/default.yaml
+++ b/config/default.yaml
@@ -123,6 +123,10 @@ object_storage:
# You can also use AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY env variable
secret_access_key: ''
+ # Reference buckets via path rather than subdomain
+ # (i.e. "my-endpoint.com/bucket" instead of "bucket.my-endpoint.com")
+ force_path_style: false
+
# Maximum amount to upload in one request to object storage
max_upload_part: 2GB
diff --git a/config/production.yaml.example b/config/production.yaml.example
index 70993bf57a3..9ca2de5f4c9 100644
--- a/config/production.yaml.example
+++ b/config/production.yaml.example
@@ -121,6 +121,10 @@ object_storage:
# You can also use AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY env variable
secret_access_key: ''
+ # Reference buckets via path rather than subdomain
+ # (i.e. "my-endpoint.com/bucket" instead of "bucket.my-endpoint.com")
+ force_path_style: false
+
# Maximum amount to upload in one request to object storage
max_upload_part: 2GB
diff --git a/server/initializers/config.ts b/server/initializers/config.ts
index 8375bf4304c..d726c59a4b6 100644
--- a/server/initializers/config.ts
+++ b/server/initializers/config.ts
@@ -91,6 +91,7 @@ const CONFIG = {
ACCESS_KEY_ID: config.get<string>('object_storage.credentials.access_key_id'),
SECRET_ACCESS_KEY: config.get<string>('object_storage.credentials.secret_access_key')
},
+ FORCE_PATH_STYLE: config.get<boolean>('object_storage.force_path_style'),
VIDEOS: {
BUCKET_NAME: config.get<string>('object_storage.videos.bucket_name'),
PREFIX: config.get<string>('object_storage.videos.prefix'),
diff --git a/server/lib/object-storage/shared/client.ts b/server/lib/object-storage/shared/client.ts
index c9a61459336..eadad02f93f 100644
--- a/server/lib/object-storage/shared/client.ts
+++ b/server/lib/object-storage/shared/client.ts
@@ -26,7 +26,8 @@ function getClient () {
accessKeyId: OBJECT_STORAGE.CREDENTIALS.ACCESS_KEY_ID,
secretAccessKey: OBJECT_STORAGE.CREDENTIALS.SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
}
- : undefined
+ : undefined,
+ forcePathStyle: CONFIG.OBJECT_STORAGE.FORCE_PATH_STYLE
})
logger.info('Initialized S3 client %s with region %s.', getEndpoint(), OBJECT_STORAGE.REGION, lTags())
diff --git a/support/docker/production/config/custom-environment-variables.yaml b/support/docker/production/config/custom-environment-variables.yaml
index c7cd28e6521..a960bab0bc9 100644
--- a/support/docker/production/config/custom-environment-variables.yaml
+++ b/support/docker/production/config/custom-environment-variables.yaml
@@ -54,6 +54,8 @@ object_storage:
region: "PEERTUBE_OBJECT_STORAGE_REGION"
+ force_path_style: "PEERTUBE_OBJECT_STORAGE_FORCE_PATH_STYLE"
+
max_upload_part:
__name: "PEERTUBE_OBJECT_STORAGE_MAX_UPLOAD_PART"
__format: "json"
```
You can then recompile it with:
```
npm run build
```
And it can be started with:
```
NODE_ENV=production NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/srv/peertube/config node dist/server.js
```
In return, this system is a bit harder to configure.
We show how it is still possible to configure Garage with Peertube, allowing you to spread the load and the bandwidth usage on the Garage cluster.
### Create resources in Garage
@ -232,30 +148,32 @@ garage bucket create peertube-playlist
Now we allow our key to read and write on these buckets:
```
garage bucket allow peertube-playlist --read --write --key peertube-key
garage bucket allow peertube-video --read --write --key peertube-key
garage bucket allow peertube-playlists --read --write --owner --key peertube-key
garage bucket allow peertube-videos --read --write --owner --key peertube-key
```
Finally, we need to expose these buckets publicly to serve their content to users:
We also need to expose these buckets publicly to serve their content to users:
```bash
garage bucket website --allow peertube-playlist
garage bucket website --allow peertube-video
garage bucket website --allow peertube-playlists
garage bucket website --allow peertube-videos
```
Finally, we must allow Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS).
CORS are required by your browser to allow requests triggered from the peertube website (eg. peertube.tld) to your bucket's domain (eg. peertube-videos.web.garage.tld)
```bash
export CORS='{"CORSRules":[{"AllowedHeaders":["*"],"AllowedMethods":["GET"],"AllowedOrigins":["*"]}]}'
aws --endpoint http://s3.garage.localhost s3api put-bucket-cors --bucket peertube-playlists --cors-configuration $CORS
aws --endpoint http://s3.garage.localhost s3api put-bucket-cors --bucket peertube-videos --cors-configuration $CORS
```
These buckets are now accessible on the web port (by default 3902) with the following URL: `http://<bucket><root_domain>:<web_port>` where the root domain is defined in your configuration file (by default `.web.garage`). So we have currently the following URLs:
* http://peertube-playlist.web.garage:3902
* http://peertube-video.web.garage:3902
* http://peertube-playlists.web.garage:3902
* http://peertube-videos.web.garage:3902
Make sure you (will) have a corresponding DNS entry for them.
### Configure a Reverse Proxy to serve CORS
Now we will configure a reverse proxy in front of Garage.
This is required as we have no other way to serve CORS headers yet.
Check the [Configuring a reverse proxy](/cookbook/reverse_proxy.html) section to know how.
Now make sure that your 2 dns entries are pointing to your reverse proxy.
### Configure Peertube
@ -268,9 +186,6 @@ object_storage:
# Put localhost only if you have a garage instance running on that node
endpoint: 'http://localhost:3900' # or "garage.example.com" if you have TLS on port 443
# This entry has been added by our patch, must be set to true
force_path_style: true
# Garage supports only one region for now, named garage
region: 'garage'
@ -287,28 +202,23 @@ object_storage:
prefix: ''
# You must fill this field to make Peertube use our reverse proxy/website logic
base_url: 'http://peertube-playlist.web.garage' # Example: 'https://mirror.example.com'
base_url: 'http://peertube-playlists.web.garage.localhost' # Example: 'https://mirror.example.com'
# Same settings but for webtorrent videos
videos:
bucket_name: 'peertube-video'
prefix: ''
# You must fill this field to make Peertube use our reverse proxy/website logic
base_url: 'http://peertube-video.web.garage'
base_url: 'http://peertube-videos.web.garage.localhost'
```
### That's all
Everything must be configured now, simply restart Peertube and try to upload a video.
You must see in your browser console that data are fetched directly from our bucket (through the reverse proxy).
### Miscellaneous
*Known bug:* The playback does not start and some 400 Bad Request Errors appear in your browser console and on Garage.
If the description of the error contains HTTP Invalid Range: InvalidRange, the error is due to a buggy ffmpeg version.
You must avoid the 4.4.0 and use either a newer or older version.
*Associated issues:* [#137](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/137), [#138](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/138), [#140](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/140). These issues are non blocking.
Peertube will start by serving the video from its own domain while it is encoding.
Once the encoding is done, the video is uploaded to Garage.
You can now reload the page and see in your browser console that data are fetched directly from your bucket.
*External link:* [Peertube Documentation > Remote Storage](https://docs.joinpeertube.org/admin-remote-storage)
@ -429,31 +339,34 @@ And add a new line. For example, to run it every 10 minutes:
## Pixelfed
https://docs.pixelfed.org/technical-documentation/env.html#filesystem
[Pixelfed Technical Documentation > Configuration](https://docs.pixelfed.org/technical-documentation/env.html#filesystem)
## Pleroma
https://docs-develop.pleroma.social/backend/configuration/cheatsheet/#pleromauploaderss3
[Pleroma Documentation > Pleroma.Uploaders.S3](https://docs-develop.pleroma.social/backend/configuration/cheatsheet/#pleromauploaderss3)
## Lemmy
via pict-rs
https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs/commit/f9f4fc63d670f357c93f24147c2ee3e1278e2d97
Lemmy uses pict-rs that [supports S3 backends](https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs/commit/f9f4fc63d670f357c93f24147c2ee3e1278e2d97)
## Funkwhale
https://docs.funkwhale.audio/admin/configuration.html#s3-storage
[Funkwhale Documentation > S3 Storage](https://docs.funkwhale.audio/admin/configuration.html#s3-storage)
## Misskey
https://github.com/misskey-dev/misskey/commit/9d944243a3a59e8880a360cbfe30fd5a3ec8d52d
[Misskey Github > commit 9d94424](https://github.com/misskey-dev/misskey/commit/9d944243a3a59e8880a360cbfe30fd5a3ec8d52d)
## Prismo
https://gitlab.com/prismosuite/prismo/-/blob/dev/.env.production.sample#L26-33
[Prismo Gitlab > .env.production.sample](https://gitlab.com/prismosuite/prismo/-/blob/dev/.env.production.sample#L26-33)
## Owncloud Infinite Scale (ocis)
OCIS could be compatible with S3:
- [Deploying OCIS with S3](https://owncloud.dev/ocis/deployment/ocis_s3/)
- [OCIS 1.7 release note](https://central.owncloud.org/t/owncloud-infinite-scale-tech-preview-1-7-enables-s3-storage/32514/3)
## Unsupported
- Mobilizon: No S3 integration

128
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@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
+++
title = "Backups (restic, duplicity...)"
weight = 25
+++
Backups are essential for disaster recovery but they are not trivial to manage.
Using Garage as your backup target will enable you to scale your storage as needed while ensuring high availability.
## Borg Backup
Borg Backup is very popular among the backup tools but it is not yet compatible with the S3 API.
We recommend using any other tool listed in this guide because they are all compatible with the S3 API.
If you still want to use Borg, you can use it with `rclone mount`.
## Restic
Create your key and bucket:
```bash
garage key new my-key
garage bucket create backup
garage bucket allow backup --read --write --key my-key
```
Then register your Key ID and Secret key in your environment:
```bash
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=GKxxx
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxxx
```
Configure restic from environment too:
```bash
export RESTIC_REPOSITORY="s3:http://localhost:3900/backups"
echo "Generated password (save it safely): $(openssl rand -base64 32)"
export RESTIC_PASSWORD=xxx # copy paste your generated password here
```
Do not forget to save your password safely (in your password manager or print it). It will be needed to decrypt your backups.
Now you can use restic:
```bash
# Initialize the bucket, must be run once
restic init
# Backup your PostgreSQL database
# (We suppose your PostgreSQL daemon is stopped for all commands)
restic backup /var/lib/postgresql
# Show backup history
restic snapshots
# Backup again your PostgreSQL database, it will be faster as only changes will be uploaded
restic backup /var/lib/postgresql
# Show backup history (again)
restic snapshots
# Restore a backup
# (79766175 is the ID of the snapshot you want to restore)
mv /var/lib/postgresql /var/lib/postgresql.broken
restic restore 79766175 --target /var/lib/postgresql
```
Restic has way more features than the ones presented here.
You can discover all of them by accessing its documentation from the link below.
*External links:* [Restic Documentation > Amazon S3](https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/stable/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#amazon-s3)
## Duplicity
*External links:* [Duplicity > man](https://duplicity.gitlab.io/duplicity-web/vers8/duplicity.1.html) (scroll to "URL Format" and "A note on Amazon S3")
## Duplicati
*External links:* [Duplicati Documentation > Storage Providers](https://duplicati.readthedocs.io/en/latest/05-storage-providers/#s3-compatible)
The following fields need to be specified:
```
Storage Type: S3 Compatible
Use SSL: [ ] # Only if you have SSL
Server: Custom server url (s3.garage.localhost:3900)
Bucket name: bucket-name
Bucket create region: Custom region value (garage) # Or as you've specified in garage.toml
AWS Access ID: Key ID from "garage key info key-name"
AWS Access Key: Secret key from "garage key info key-name"
Client Library to use: Minio SDK
```
Click `Test connection` and then no when asked `The bucket name should start with your username, prepend automatically?`. Then it should say `Connection worked!`.
## knoxite
*External links:* [Knoxite Documentation > Storage Backends](https://knoxite.com/docs/storage-backends/#amazon-s3)
## kopia
*External links:* [Kopia Documentation > Repositories](https://kopia.io/docs/repositories/#amazon-s3)
To create the Kopia repository, you need to specify the region, the HTTP(S) endpoint, the bucket name and the access keys.
For instance, if you have an instance of garage running on `https://garage.example.com`:
```
kopia repository create s3 --region=garage --bucket=mybackups --access-key=KEY_ID --secret-access-key=SECRET_KEY --endpoint=garage.example.com
```
Or if you have an instance running on localhost, without TLS:
```
kopia repository create s3 --region=garage --bucket=mybackups --access-key=KEY_ID --secret-access-key=SECRET_KEY --endpoint=localhost:3900 --disable-tls
```
After the repository has been created, check that everything works as expected:
```
kopia repository validate-provider
```
You can then run all the standard kopia commands: `kopia snapshot create`, `kopia mount`...
Everything should work out-of-the-box.

340
doc/book/connect/cli.md Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,340 @@
+++
title = "Browsing tools"
weight = 20
+++
Browsing tools allow you to query the S3 API without too many abstractions.
These tools are particularly suitable for debug, backups, website deployments or any scripted task that need to handle data.
| Name | Status | Note |
|------|--------|------|
| [Minio client](#minio-client) | ✅ | Recommended |
| [AWS CLI](#aws-cli) | ✅ | Recommended |
| [rclone](#rclone) | ✅ | |
| [s3cmd](#s3cmd) | ✅ | |
| [(Cyber)duck](#cyberduck) | ✅ | |
| [WinSCP (libs3)](#winscp) | ✅ | CLI instructions only |
| [sftpgo](#sftpgo) | ✅ | |
## Minio client
Use the following command to set an "alias", i.e. define a new S3 server to be
used by the Minio client:
```bash
mc alias set \
garage \
<endpoint> \
<access key> \
<secret key> \
--api S3v4
```
Remember that `mc` is sometimes called `mcli` (such as on Arch Linux), to avoid conflicts
with Midnight Commander.
Some commands:
```bash
# list buckets
mc ls garage/
# list objets in a bucket
mc ls garage/my_files
# copy from your filesystem to garage
mc cp /proc/cpuinfo garage/my_files/cpuinfo.txt
# copy from garage to your filesystem
mc cp garage/my_files/cpuinfo.txt /tmp/cpuinfo.txt
# mirror a folder from your filesystem to garage
mc mirror --overwrite ./book garage/garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr
```
## AWS CLI
Create a file named `~/.aws/credentials` and put:
```toml
[default]
aws_access_key_id=xxxx
aws_secret_access_key=xxxx
```
Then a file named `~/.aws/config` and put:
```toml
[default]
region=garage
```
Now, supposing Garage is listening on `http://127.0.0.1:3900`, you can list your buckets with:
```bash
aws --endpoint-url http://127.0.0.1:3900 s3 ls
```
Passing the `--endpoint-url` parameter to each command is annoying but AWS developers do not provide a corresponding configuration entry.
As a workaround, you can redefine the aws command by editing the file `~/.bashrc`:
```
function aws { command aws --endpoint-url http://127.0.0.1:3900 $@ ; }
```
*Do not forget to run `source ~/.bashrc` or to start a new terminal before running the next commands.*
Now you can simply run:
```bash
# list buckets
aws s3 ls
# list objects of a bucket
aws s3 ls s3://my_files
# copy from your filesystem to garage
aws s3 cp /proc/cpuinfo s3://my_files/cpuinfo.txt
# copy from garage to your filesystem
aws s3 cp s3/my_files/cpuinfo.txt /tmp/cpuinfo.txt
```
## `rclone`
`rclone` can be configured using the interactive assistant invoked using `rclone config`.
You can also configure `rclone` by writing directly its configuration file.
Here is a template `rclone.ini` configuration file (mine is located at `~/.config/rclone/rclone.conf`):
```ini
[garage]
type = s3
provider = Other
env_auth = false
access_key_id = <access key>
secret_access_key = <secret key>
region = <region>
endpoint = <endpoint>
force_path_style = true
acl = private
bucket_acl = private
```
Now you can run:
```bash
# list buckets
rclone lsd garage:
# list objects of a bucket aggregated in directories
rclone lsd garage:my-bucket
# copy from your filesystem to garage
echo hello world > /tmp/hello.txt
rclone copy /tmp/hello.txt garage:my-bucket/
# copy from garage to your filesystem
rclone copy garage:quentin.divers/hello.txt .
# see all available subcommands
rclone help
```
**Advice with rclone:** use the `--fast-list` option when accessing buckets with large amounts of objects.
This will tremendously accelerate operations such as `rclone sync` or `rclone ncdu` by reducing the number
of ListObjects calls that are made.
## `s3cmd`
Here is a template for the `s3cmd.cfg` file to talk with Garage:
```ini
[default]
access_key = <access key>
secret_key = <secret key>
host_base = <endpoint without http(s)://>
host_bucket = <same as host_base>
use_https = <False or True>
```
And use it as follow:
```bash
# List buckets
s3cmd ls
# s3cmd objects inside a bucket
s3cmd ls s3://my-bucket
# copy from your filesystem to garage
echo hello world > /tmp/hello.txt
s3cmd put /tmp/hello.txt s3://my-bucket/
# copy from garage to your filesystem
s3cmd get s3://my-bucket/hello.txt hello.txt
```
## Cyberduck & duck {#cyberduck}
Both Cyberduck (the GUI) and duck (the CLI) have a concept of "Connection Profiles" that contain some presets for a specific provider.
We wrote the following connection profile for Garage:
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>Protocol</key>
<string>s3</string>
<key>Vendor</key>
<string>garage</string>
<key>Scheme</key>
<string>https</string>
<key>Description</key>
<string>GarageS3</string>
<key>Default Hostname</key>
<string>127.0.0.1</string>
<key>Default Port</key>
<string>4443</string>
<key>Hostname Configurable</key>
<false/>
<key>Port Configurable</key>
<false/>
<key>Username Configurable</key>
<true/>
<key>Username Placeholder</key>
<string>Access Key ID (GK...)</string>
<key>Password Placeholder</key>
<string>Secret Key</string>
<key>Properties</key>
<array>
<string>s3service.disable-dns-buckets=true</string>
</array>
<key>Region</key>
<string>garage</string>
<key>Regions</key>
<array>
<string>garage</string>
</array>
</dict>
</plist>
```
*Note: If your garage instance is configured with vhost access style, you can remove `s3service.disable-dns-buckets=true`.*
### Instructions for the GUI
Copy the connection profile, and save it anywhere as `garage.cyberduckprofile`.
Then find this file with your file explorer and double click on it: Cyberduck will open a connection wizard for this profile.
Simply follow the wizard and you should be done!
### Instuctions for the CLI
To configure duck (Cyberduck's CLI tool), start by creating its folder hierarchy:
```
mkdir -p ~/.duck/profiles/
```
Then, save the connection profile for Garage in `~/.duck/profiles/garage.cyberduckprofile`.
To set your credentials in `~/.duck/credentials`, use the following commands to generate the appropriate string:
```bash
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID="GK..."
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="..."
export HOST="s3.garage.localhost"
export PORT="4443"
export PROTOCOL="https"
cat > ~/.duck/credentials <<EOF
$PROTOCOL\://$AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID@$HOST\:$PORT=$AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
EOF
```
And finally, I recommend appending a small wrapper to your `~/.bashrc` to avoid setting the username on each command (do not forget to replace `GK...` by your access key):
```bash
function duck { command duck --username GK... $@ ; }
```
Finally, you can then use `duck` as follow:
```bash
# List buckets
duck --list garage:/
# List objects in a bucket
duck --list garage:/my-files/
# Download an object
duck --download garage:/my-files/an-object.txt /tmp/object.txt
# Upload an object
duck --upload /tmp/object.txt garage:/my-files/another-object.txt
# Delete an object
duck --delete garage:/my-files/an-object.txt
```
## WinSCP (libs3) {#winscp}
*You can find instructions on how to use the GUI in french [in our wiki](https://wiki.deuxfleurs.fr/fr/Guide/Garage/WinSCP).*
How to use `winscp.com`, the CLI interface of WinSCP:
```
open s3://GKxxxxx:yyyyyyy@127.0.0.1:4443 -certificate=* -rawsettings S3DefaultRegion=garage S3UrlStyle=1
ls
ls my-files/
get my-files/an-object.txt Z:\tmp\object.txt
put Z:\tmp\object.txt my-files/another-object.txt
rm my-files/an-object
exit
```
Notes:
- It seems WinSCP supports only TLS connections for S3
- `-certificate=*` allows self-signed certificates, remove it if you have valid certificates
## sftpgo {#sftpgo}
sftpgo needs a database to work, by default it uses sqlite and does not require additional configuration.
You can then directly init it:
```
sftpgo initprovider
```
Then you can directly launch the daemon that will listen by default on `:8080 (http)` and `:2022 (ssh)`:
```
sftpgo serve
```
Go to the admin web interface (http://[::1]:8080/web/admin/), create the required admin account, then create a user account.
Choose a username (eg: `ada`) and a password.
In the filesystem section, choose:
- Storage: AWS S3 (Compatible)
- Bucket: *your bucket name*
- Region: `garage` (or the one you defined in `config.toml`)
- Access key: *your access key*
- Access secret: *your secret key*
- Endpoint: *your endpoint*, eg. `https://garage.example.tld`, note that the protocol (`https` here) must be specified. Non standard ports and `http` have not been tested yet.
- Keep the default values for other fields
- Tick "Use path-style addressing". It should work without ticking it if you have correctly configured your instance to use URL vhost-style.
Now you can access your bucket through SFTP:
```
sftp -P2022 ada@[::1]
ls
```
And through the web interface at http://[::1]:8080/web/client

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Your code (PHP, JS, Go...)
+++
title = "Your code (PHP, JS, Go...)"
weight = 30
+++
If you are developping a new application, you may want to use Garage to store your user's media.

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# FUSE (s3fs, goofys, s3backer...)
+++
title = "FUSE (s3fs, goofys, s3backer...)"
weight = 25
+++
**WARNING! Garage is not POSIX compatible.
Mounting S3 buckets as filesystems will not provide POSIX compatibility.
@ -11,7 +14,7 @@ Ideally, avoid these solutions at all for any serious or production use.
## rclone mount
rclone uses the same configuration when used [in CLI](/connect/cli.html) and mount mode.
rclone uses the same configuration when used [in CLI](@/documentation/connect/cli.md) and mount mode.
We suppose you have the following entry in your `rclone.ini` (mine is located in `~/.config/rclone/rclone.conf`):
```toml
@ -53,11 +56,11 @@ fusermount -u /tmp/my-bucket
## s3fs
*External link:* [s3fs github > README.md](https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse#examples)
*External link:* [s3fs github > README.md](https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse#user-content-examples)
## goofys
*External link:* [goofys github > README.md](https://github.com/kahing/goofys#usage)
*External link:* [goofys github > README.md](https://github.com/kahing/goofys#user-content-usage)
## s3backer

View file

@ -1,8 +1,20 @@
# Repositories (Docker, Nix, Git...)
+++
title = "Repositories (Docker, Nix, Git...)"
weight = 15
+++
Whether you need to store and serve binary packages or source code, you may want to deploy a tool referred as a repository or registry.
Garage can also help you serve this content.
| Name | Status | Note |
|------|--------|------|
| [Gitea](#gitea) | ✅ | |
| [Docker](#docker) | ✅ | Requires garage >= v0.6.0 |
| [Nix](#nix) | ✅ | |
| [Gitlab](#gitlab) | ❓ | Not yet tested |
## Gitea
You can use Garage with Gitea to store your [git LFS](https://git-lfs.github.com/) data, your users' avatar, and their attachements.
@ -52,18 +64,42 @@ $ aws s3 ls s3://gitea/avatars/
*External link:* [Gitea Documentation > Configuration Cheat Sheet](https://docs.gitea.io/en-us/config-cheat-sheet/)
## Gitlab
*External link:* [Gitlab Documentation > Object storage](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/object_storage.html)
## Private NPM Registry (Verdacio)
*External link:* [Verdaccio Github Repository > aws-storage plugin](https://github.com/verdaccio/verdaccio/tree/master/packages/plugins/aws-storage)
## Docker
Not yet compatible, follow [#103](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/103).
Create a bucket and a key for your docker registry, then create `config.yml` with the following content:
```yml
version: 0.1
http:
addr: 0.0.0.0:5000
secret: asecretforlocaldevelopment
debug:
addr: localhost:5001
storage:
s3:
accesskey: GKxxxx
secretkey: yyyyy
region: garage
regionendpoint: http://localhost:3900
bucket: docker
secure: false
v4auth: true
rootdirectory: /
```
Replace the `accesskey`, `secretkey`, `bucket`, `regionendpoint` and `secure` values by the one fitting your deployment.
Then simply run the docker registry:
```bash
docker run \
--net=host \
-v `pwd`/config.yml:/etc/docker/registry/config.yml \
registry:2
```
*We started a plain text registry but docker clients require encrypted registries. You must either [setup TLS](https://docs.docker.com/registry/deploying/#run-an-externally-accessible-registry) on your registry or add `--insecure-registry=localhost:5000` to your docker daemon parameters.*
*External link:* [Docker Documentation > Registry storage drivers > S3 storage driver](https://docs.docker.com/registry/storage-drivers/s3/)
@ -89,8 +125,8 @@ garage bucket website nix.example.com --allow
```
If you need more information about exposing buckets as websites on Garage,
check [Exposing buckets as websites](/cookbook/exposing_websites.html)
and [Configuring a reverse proxy](/cookbook/reverse_proxy.html).
check [Exposing buckets as websites](@/documentation/cookbook/exposing-websites.md)
and [Configuring a reverse proxy](@/documentation/cookbook/reverse-proxy.md).
Next, we want to check that our bucket works:
@ -167,3 +203,9 @@ on the binary cache, the client will download the result from the cache instead
Channels additionnaly serve Nix definitions, ie. a `.nix` file referencing
all the derivations you want to serve.
## Gitlab
*External link:* [Gitlab Documentation > Object storage](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/object_storage.html)

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@ -0,0 +1,86 @@
+++
title = "Websites (Hugo, Jekyll, Publii...)"
weight = 10
+++
Garage is also suitable [to host static websites](@/documentation/cookbook/exposing-websites.md).
While they can be deployed with traditional CLI tools, some static website generators have integrated options to ease your workflow.
| Name | Status | Note |
|------|--------|------|
| [Hugo](#hugo) | ✅ | Publishing logic is integrated in the tool |
| [Publii](#publii) | ✅ | Require a correctly configured s3 vhost endpoint |
| [Generic Static Site Generator](#generic-static-site-generator) | ✅ | Works for Jekyll, Zola, Gatsby, Pelican, etc. |
## Hugo
Add to your `config.toml` the following section:
```toml
[[deployment.targets]]
URL = "s3://<bucket>?endpoint=<endpoint>&disableSSL=<bool>&s3ForcePathStyle=true&region=garage"
```
For example:
```toml
[[deployment.targets]]
URL = "s3://my-blog?endpoint=localhost:9000&disableSSL=true&s3ForcePathStyle=true&region=garage"
```
Then inform hugo of your credentials:
```bash
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=GKxxx
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxx
```
And finally build and deploy your website:
```bsh
hugo
hugo deploy
```
*External links:*
- [gocloud.dev > aws > Supported URL parameters](https://pkg.go.dev/gocloud.dev/aws?utm_source=godoc#ConfigFromURLParams)
- [Hugo Documentation > hugo deploy](https://gohugo.io/hosting-and-deployment/hugo-deploy/)
## Publii
[![A screenshot of Publii's GUI](./publii.png)](./publii.png)
Deploying a website to Garage from Publii is natively supported.
First, make sure that your Garage administrator allowed and configured Garage to support vhost access style.
We also suppose that your bucket ("my-bucket") and key is already created and configured.
Then, from the left menu, click on server. Choose "S3" as the protocol.
In the configuration window, enter:
- Your finale website URL (eg. "http://my-bucket.web.garage.localhost:3902")
- Tick "Use a custom S3 provider"
- Set the S3 endpoint, (eg. "http://s3.garage.localhost:3900")
- Then put your access key (eg. "GK..."), your secret key, and your bucket (eg. "my-bucket")
- And hit the button "Save settings"
Now, each time you want to publish your website from Publii, just hit the bottom left button "Sync your website"!
## Generic Static Site Generator
Some tools do not support sending to a S3 backend but output a compiled folder on your system.
We can then use any CLI tool to upload this content to our S3 target.
First, start by [configuring minio client](@/documentation/connect/cli.md#minio-client).
Then build your website (example for jekyll):
```bash
jekyll build
```
And copy its output folder (`_site` for Jekyll) on S3:
```bash
mc mirror --overwrite _site garage/my-site
```

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@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
+++
title="Cookbook"
template = "documentation.html"
weight = 2
sort_by = "weight"
+++
A cookbook, when you cook, is a collection of recipes.
Similarly, Garage's cookbook contains a collection of recipes that are known to works well!
This chapter could also be referred as "Tutorials" or "Best practices".
- **[Multi-node deployment](@/documentation/cookbook/real-world.md):** This page will walk you through all of the necessary
steps to deploy Garage in a real-world setting.
- **[Building from source](@/documentation/cookbook/from-source.md):** This page explains how to build Garage from
source in case a binary is not provided for your architecture, or if you want to
hack with us!
- **[Integration with Systemd](@/documentation/cookbook/systemd.md):** This page explains how to run Garage
as a Systemd service (instead of as a Docker container).
- **[Configuring a gateway node](@/documentation/cookbook/gateways.md):** This page explains how to run a gateway node in a Garage cluster, i.e. a Garage node that doesn't store data but accelerates access to data present on the other nodes.
- **[Hosting a website](@/documentation/cookbook/exposing-websites.md):** This page explains how to use Garage
to host a static website.
- **[Configuring a reverse-proxy](@/documentation/cookbook/reverse-proxy.md):** This page explains how to configure a reverse-proxy to add TLS support to your S3 api endpoint.
- **[Recovering from failures](@/documentation/cookbook/recovering.md):** Garage's first selling point is resilience
to hardware failures. This section explains how to recover from such a failure in the
best possible way.

View file

@ -0,0 +1,69 @@
+++
title = "Exposing buckets as websites"
weight = 25
+++
## Configuring a bucket for website access
There are two methods to expose buckets as website:
1. using the PutBucketWebsite S3 API call, which is allowed for access keys that have the owner permission bit set
2. from the Garage CLI, by an adminstrator of the cluster
The `PutBucketWebsite` API endpoint [is documented](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketWebsite.html) in the official AWS docs.
This endpoint can also be called [using `aws s3api`](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/reference/s3api/put-bucket-website.html) on the command line.
The website configuration supported by Garage is only a subset of the possibilities on Amazon S3: redirections are not supported, only the index document and error document can be specified.
If you want to expose your bucket as a website from the CLI, use this simple command:
```bash
garage bucket website --allow my-website
```
Now it will be **publicly** exposed on the web endpoint (by default listening on port 3902).
## How exposed websites work
Our website serving logic is as follow:
- Supports only static websites (no support for PHP or other languages)
- Does not support directory listing
- The index file is defined per-bucket and can be specified in the `PutBucketWebsite` call
or on the CLI using the `--index-document` parameter (default: `index.html`)
- A custom error document for 404 errors can be specified in the `PutBucketWebsite` call
or on the CLI using the `--error-document` parameter
Now we need to infer the URL of your website through your bucket name.
Let assume:
- we set `root_domain = ".web.example.com"` in `garage.toml` ([ref](@/documentation/reference-manual/configuration.md#root_domain))
- our bucket name is `garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr`.
Our bucket will be served if the Host field matches one of these 2 values (the port is ignored):
- `garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr.web.example.com`: you can dedicate a subdomain to your users (here `web.example.com`).
- `garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr`: your users can bring their own domain name, they just need to point them to your Garage cluster.
You can try this logic locally, without configuring any DNS, thanks to `curl`:
```bash
# prepare your test
echo hello world > /tmp/index.html
mc cp /tmp/index.html garage/garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr
curl -H 'Host: garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr' http://localhost:3902
# should print "hello world"
curl -H 'Host: garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr.web.example.com' http://localhost:3902
# should also print "hello world"
```
Now that you understand how website logic works on Garage, you can:
- make the website endpoint listens on port 80 (instead of 3902)
- use iptables to redirect the port 80 to the port 3902:
`iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp -dport 80 -j REDIRECT -to-port 3902`
- or configure a [reverse proxy](@/documentation/cookbook/reverse-proxy.md) in front of Garage to add TLS (HTTPS), CORS support, etc.
You can also take a look at [Website Integration](@/documentation/connect/websites.md) to see how you can add Garage to your workflow.

View file

@ -1,9 +1,10 @@
# Compiling Garage from source
+++
title = "Compiling Garage from source"
weight = 10
+++
Garage is a standard Rust project.
First, you need `rust` and `cargo`.
For instance on Debian:
Garage is a standard Rust project. First, you need `rust` and `cargo`. For instance on Debian:
```bash
sudo apt-get update
@ -12,6 +13,13 @@ sudo apt-get install -y rustc cargo
You can also use [Rustup](https://rustup.rs/) to setup a Rust toolchain easily.
In addition, you will need a full C toolchain. On Debian-based distributions, it can be installed as follows:
```bash
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install build-essential
```
## Using source from `crates.io`
Garage's source code is published on `crates.io`, Rust's official package repository.

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Gateways
+++
title = "Configuring a gateway node"
weight = 20
+++
Gateways allow you to expose Garage endpoints (S3 API and websites) without storing data on the node.
@ -12,9 +15,6 @@ You can configure Garage as a gateway on all nodes that will consume your S3 API
- **It simplifies security.** Instead of having to maintain and renew a TLS certificate, you leverage the Secret Handshake protocol we use for our cluster. The S3 API protocol will be in plain text but limited to your local machine.
## Limitations
Currently it will not work with minio client. Follow issue [#64](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/64) for more information.
## Spawn a Gateway

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@ -1,10 +1,13 @@
# Deploying Garage on a real-world cluster
+++
title = "Deployment on a cluster"
weight = 5
+++
To run Garage in cluster mode, we recommend having at least 3 nodes.
This will allow you to setup Garage for three-way replication of your data,
the safest and most available mode proposed by Garage.
We recommend first following the [quick start guide](../quick_start/index.md) in order
We recommend first following the [quick start guide](@/documentation/quick-start/_index.md) in order
to get familiar with Garage's command line and usage patterns.
@ -20,10 +23,10 @@ To run a real-world deployment, make sure the following conditions are met:
- Ideally, each machine should have a SSD available in addition to the HDD you are dedicating
to Garage. This will allow for faster access to metadata and has the potential
to drastically reduce Garage's response times.
to significantly reduce Garage's response times.
- This guide will assume you are using Docker containers to deploy Garage on each node.
Garage can also be run independently, for instance as a [Systemd service](systemd.md).
Garage can also be run independently, for instance as a [Systemd service](@/documentation/cookbook/systemd.md).
You can also use an orchestrator such as Nomad or Kubernetes to automatically manage
Docker containers on a fleet of nodes.
@ -32,12 +35,19 @@ For our example, we will suppose the following infrastructure with IPv6 connecti
| Location | Name | IP Address | Disk Space |
|----------|---------|------------|------------|
| Paris | Mercury | fc00:1::1 | 1 To |
| Paris | Venus | fc00:1::2 | 2 To |
| London | Earth | fc00:B::1 | 2 To |
| Brussels | Mars | fc00:F::1 | 1.5 To |
| Paris | Mercury | fc00:1::1 | 1 TB |
| Paris | Venus | fc00:1::2 | 2 TB |
| London | Earth | fc00:B::1 | 2 TB |
| Brussels | Mars | fc00:F::1 | 1.5 TB |
Note that Garage will **always** store the three copies of your data on nodes at different
locations. This means that in the case of this small example, the available capacity
of the cluster is in fact only 1.5 TB, because nodes in Brussels can't store more than that.
This also means that nodes in Paris and London will be under-utilized.
To make better use of the available hardware, you should ensure that the capacity
available in the different locations of your cluster is roughly the same.
For instance, here, the Mercury node could be moved to Brussels; this would allow the cluster
to store 2 TB of data in total.
## Get a Docker image
@ -205,10 +215,10 @@ For our example, we will suppose we have the following infrastructure
| Location | Name | Disk Space | `Capacity` | `Identifier` | `Zone` |
|----------|---------|------------|------------|--------------|--------------|
| Paris | Mercury | 1 To | `10` | `563e` | `par1` |
| Paris | Venus | 2 To | `20` | `86f0` | `par1` |
| London | Earth | 2 To | `20` | `6814` | `lon1` |
| Brussels | Mars | 1.5 To | `15` | `212f` | `bru1` |
| Paris | Mercury | 1 TB | `10` | `563e` | `par1` |
| Paris | Venus | 2 TB | `20` | `86f0` | `par1` |
| London | Earth | 2 TB | `20` | `6814` | `lon1` |
| Brussels | Mars | 1.5 TB | `15` | `212f` | `bru1` |
#### Node identifiers
@ -258,10 +268,10 @@ have 66% chance of being stored by Venus and 33% chance of being stored by Mercu
Given the information above, we will configure our cluster as follow:
```bash
garage layout assign -z par1 -c 10 -t mercury 563e
garage layout assign -z par1 -c 20 -t venus 86f0
garage layout assign -z lon1 -c 20 -t earth 6814
garage layout assign -z bru1 -c 15 -t mars 212f
garage layout assign 563e -z par1 -c 10 -t mercury
garage layout assign 86f0 -z par1 -c 20 -t venus
garage layout assign 6814 -z lon1 -c 20 -t earth
garage layout assign 212f -z bru1 -c 15 -t mars
```
At this point, the changes in the cluster layout have not yet been applied.
@ -278,15 +288,15 @@ garage layout apply
```
**WARNING:** if you want to use the layout modification commands in a script,
make sure to read [this page](/reference_manual/layout.html) first.
make sure to read [this page](@/documentation/reference-manual/layout.md) first.
## Using your Garage cluster
Creating buckets and managing keys is done using the `garage` CLI,
and is covered in the [quick start guide](../quick_start/index.md).
and is covered in the [quick start guide](@/documentation/quick-start/_index.md).
Remember also that the CLI is self-documented thanks to the `--help` flag and
the `help` subcommand (e.g. `garage help`, `garage key --help`).
Configuring S3-compatible applicatiosn to interact with Garage
is covered in the [Integrations](/connect/index.html) section.
is covered in the [Integrations](@/documentation/connect/_index.md) section.

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Recovering from failures
+++
title = "Recovering from failures"
weight = 35
+++
Garage is meant to work on old, second-hand hardware.
In particular, this makes it likely that some of your drives will fail, and some manual intervention will be needed.
@ -91,7 +94,7 @@ might be faster but most of the pieces will be deleted anyway from the disk and
First, set up a new drive to store the metadata directory for the replacement node (a SSD is recommended),
and for the data directory if necessary. You can then start Garage on the new node.
The restarted node should generate a new node ID, and it should be shown as `NOT CONFIGURED` in `garage status`.
The restarted node should generate a new node ID, and it should be shown with `NO ROLE ASSIGNED` in `garage status`.
The ID of the lost node should be shown in `garage status` in the section for disconnected/unavailable nodes.
Then, replace the broken node by the new one, using:

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@ -0,0 +1,282 @@
+++
title = "Configuring a reverse proxy"
weight = 30
+++
The main reason to add a reverse proxy in front of Garage is to provide TLS to your users and serve multiple web services on port 443.
In production you will likely need your certificates signed by a certificate authority.
The most automated way is to use a provider supporting the [ACME protocol](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8555)
such as [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/), [ZeroSSL](https://zerossl.com/) or [Buypass Go SSL](https://www.buypass.com/ssl/products/acme).
If you are only testing Garage, you can generate a self-signed certificate to follow the documentation:
```bash
openssl req \
-new \
-x509 \
-keyout /tmp/garage.key \
-out /tmp/garage.crt \
-nodes \
-subj "/C=XX/ST=XX/L=XX/O=XX/OU=XX/CN=localhost/emailAddress=X@X.XX" \
-addext "subjectAltName = DNS:localhost, IP:127.0.0.1"
cat /tmp/garage.key /tmp/garage.crt > /tmp/garage.pem
```
Be careful as you will need to allow self signed certificates in your client.
For example, with minio, you must add the `--insecure` flag.
An example:
```bash
mc ls --insecure garage/
```
## socat (only for testing purposes)
If you want to test Garage with a TLS frontend, socat can do it for you in a single command:
```bash
socat \
"openssl-listen:443,\
reuseaddr,\
fork,\
verify=0,\
cert=/tmp/garage.pem" \
tcp4-connect:localhost:3900
```
## Nginx
Nginx is a well-known reverse proxy suitable for production.
We do the configuration in 3 steps: first we define the upstream blocks ("the backends")
then we define the server blocks ("the frontends") for the S3 endpoint and finally for the web endpoint.
The following configuration blocks can be all put in the same `/etc/nginx/sites-available/garage.conf`.
To make your configuration active, run `ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/garage.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/`.
If you directly put the instructions in the root `nginx.conf`, keep in mind that these configurations must be enclosed inside a `http { }` block.
And do not forget to reload nginx with `systemctl reload nginx` or `nginx -s reload`.
### Exposing the S3 endpoints
First, we need to tell to nginx how to access our Garage cluster.
Because we have multiple nodes, we want to leverage all of them by spreading the load.
In nginx, we can do that with the `upstream` directive.
Then in a `server` directive, we define the vhosts, the TLS certificates and the proxy rule.
A possible configuration:
```nginx
upstream s3_backend {
# if you have a garage instance locally
server 127.0.0.1:3900;
# you can also put your other instances
server 192.168.1.3:3900;
# domain names also work
server garage1.example.com:3900;
# you can assign weights if you have some servers
# that are more powerful than others
server garage2.example.com:3900 weight=2;
}
server {
listen [::]:443 http2 ssl;
ssl_certificate /tmp/garage.crt;
ssl_certificate_key /tmp/garage.key;
# You need multiple server names here:
# - s3.garage.tld is used for path-based s3 requests
# - *.s3.garage.tld is used for vhost-based s3 requests
server_name s3.garage.tld *.s3.garage.tld;
location / {
proxy_pass http://s3_backend;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
}
}
```
### Exposing the web endpoint
To better understand the logic involved, you can refer to the [Exposing buckets as websites](/cookbook/exposing_websites.html) section.
Otherwise, the configuration is very similar to the S3 endpoint.
You must only adapt `upstream` with the web port instead of the s3 port and change the `server_name` and `proxy_pass` entry
A possible configuration:
```nginx
upstream web_backend {
server 127.0.0.1:3902;
server 192.168.1.3:3902;
server garage1.example.com:3902;
server garage2.example.com:3902 weight=2;
}
server {
listen [::]:443 http2 ssl;
ssl_certificate /tmp/garage.crt;
ssl_certificate_key /tmp/garage.key;
# You need multiple server names here:
# - *.web.garage.tld is used for your users wanting a website without reserving a domain name
# - example.com, my-site.tld, etc. are reserved domain name by your users that chose to host their website as a garage's bucket
server_name *.web.garage.tld example.com my-site.tld;
location / {
proxy_pass http://web_backend;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
}
}
```
## Apache httpd
@TODO
## Traefik v2
We will see in this part how to set up a reverse proxy with [Traefik](https://docs.traefik.io/).
Here is [a basic configuration file](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/https/acme/#configuration-examples):
```toml
[entryPoints]
[entryPoints.web]
address = ":80"
[entryPoints.websecure]
address = ":443"
[certificatesResolvers.myresolver.acme]
email = "your-email@example.com"
storage = "acme.json"
[certificatesResolvers.myresolver.acme.httpChallenge]
# used during the challenge
entryPoint = "web"
```
### Add Garage service
To add Garage on Traefik you should declare a new service using its IP address (or hostname) and port:
```toml
[http.services]
[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer]
[[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.servers]]
url = "http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx"
port = 3900
```
It's possible to declare multiple Garage servers as back-ends:
```toml
[http.services]
[[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.servers]]
url = "http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx"
port = 3900
[[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.servers]]
url = "http://yyy.yyy.yyy.yyy"
port = 3900
[[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.servers]]
url = "http://zzz.zzz.zzz.zzz"
port = 3900
```
Traefik can remove unhealthy servers automatically with [a health check configuration](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/routing/services/#health-check):
```
[http.services]
[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer]
[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.healthCheck]
path = "/"
interval = "60s"
timeout = "5s"
```
### Adding a website
To add a new website, add the following declaration to your Traefik configuration file:
```toml
[http.routers]
[http.routers.my_website]
rule = "Host(`yoururl.example.org`)"
service = "my_garage_service"
entryPoints = ["web"]
```
Enable HTTPS access to your website with the following configuration section ([documentation](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/https/overview/)):
```toml
...
entryPoints = ["websecure"]
[http.routers.my_website.tls]
certResolver = "myresolver"
...
```
### Adding gzip compression
Add the following configuration section [to compress response](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/middlewares/http/compress/) using [gzip](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Glossary/GZip_compression) before sending them to the client:
```toml
[http.routers]
[http.routers.my_website]
...
middlewares = ["gzip_compress"]
...
[http.middlewares]
[http.middlewares.gzip_compress.compress]
```
### Add caching response
Traefik's caching middleware is only available on [entreprise version](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik-enterprise/middlewares/http-cache/), however the freely-available [Souin plugin](https://github.com/darkweak/souin#tr%C3%A6fik-container) can also do the job. (section to be completed)
### Complete example
```toml
[entryPoints]
[entryPoints.web]
address = ":80"
[entryPoints.websecure]
address = ":443"
[certificatesResolvers.myresolver.acme]
email = "your-email@example.com"
storage = "acme.json"
[certificatesResolvers.myresolver.acme.httpChallenge]
# used during the challenge
entryPoint = "web"
[http.routers]
[http.routers.my_website]
rule = "Host(`yoururl.example.org`)"
service = "my_garage_service"
middlewares = ["gzip_compress"]
entryPoints = ["websecure"]
[http.services]
[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer]
[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.healthCheck]
path = "/"
interval = "60s"
timeout = "5s"
[[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.servers]]
url = "http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx"
[[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.servers]]
url = "http://yyy.yyy.yyy.yyy"
[[http.services.my_garage_service.loadBalancer.servers]]
url = "http://zzz.zzz.zzz.zzz"
[http.middlewares]
[http.middlewares.gzip_compress.compress]
```

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Starting Garage with systemd
+++
title = "Starting Garage with systemd"
weight = 15
+++
We make some assumptions for this systemd deployment.

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@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
+++
title = "Upgrading Garage"
weight = 40
+++
Garage is a stateful clustered application, where all nodes are communicating together and share data structures.
It makes upgrade more difficult than stateless applications so you must be more careful when upgrading.
On a new version release, there is 2 possibilities:
- protocols and data structures remained the same ➡️ this is a **straightforward upgrade**
- protocols or data structures changed ➡️ this is an **advanced upgrade**
You can quickly now what type of update you will have to operate by looking at the version identifier.
Following the [SemVer ](https://semver.org/) terminology, if only the *patch* number changed, it will only need a straightforward upgrade.
Example: an upgrade from v0.6.0 from v0.6.1 is a straightforward upgrade.
If the *minor* or *major* number changed however, you will have to do an advanced upgrade. Example: from v0.6.1 to v0.7.0.
Migrations are designed to be run only between contiguous versions (from a *major*.*minor* perspective, *patches* can be skipped).
Example: migrations from v0.6.1 to v0.7.0 and from v0.6.0 to v0.7.0 are supported but migrations from v0.5.0 to v0.7.0 are not supported.
## Straightforward upgrades
Straightforward upgrades do not imply cluster downtime.
Before upgrading, you should still read [the changelog](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/releases) and ideally test your deployment on a staging cluster before.
When you are ready, start by checking the health of your cluster.
You can force some checks with `garage repair`, we recommend at least running `garage repair --all-nodes --yes` that is very quick to run (less than a minute).
You will see that the command correctly terminated in the logs of your daemon.
Finally, you can simply upgrades nodes one by one.
For each node: stop it, install the new binary, edit the configuration if needed, restart it.
## Advanced upgrades
Advanced upgrades will imply cluster downtime.
Before upgrading, you must read [the changelog](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/releases) and you must test your deployment on a staging cluster before.
From a high level perspective, an advanced upgrade looks like this:
1. Make sure the health of your cluster is good (see `garage repair`)
2. Disable API access (comment the configuration in your reverse proxy)
3. Check that your cluster is idle
4. Stop the whole cluster
5. Backup the metadata folder of all your nodes, so that you will be able to restore it quickly if the upgrade fails (blocks being immutable, they should not be impacted)
6. Install the new binary, update the configuration
7. Start the whole cluster
8. If needed, run the corresponding migration from `garage migrate`
9. Make sure the health of your cluster is good
10. Enable API access (uncomment the configuration in your reverse proxy)
11. Monitor your cluster while load comes back, check that all your applications are happy with this new version
We write guides for each advanced upgrade, they are stored under the "Working Documents" section of this documentation.

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@ -1,15 +1,20 @@
# Design
+++
title = "Design"
weight = 5
sort_by = "weight"
template = "documentation.html"
+++
The design section helps you to see Garage from a "big picture"
perspective. It will allow you to understand if Garage is a good fit for
you, how to better use it, how to contribute to it, what can Garage could
and could not do, etc.
- **[Goals and use cases](goals.md):** This page explains why Garage was concieved and what practical use cases it targets.
- **[Goals and use cases](@/documentation/design/goals.md):** This page explains why Garage was concieved and what practical use cases it targets.
- **[Related work](related_work.md):** This pages presents the theoretical background on which Garage is built, and describes other software storage solutions and why they didn't work for us.
- **[Related work](@/documentation/design/related-work.md):** This pages presents the theoretical background on which Garage is built, and describes other software storage solutions and why they didn't work for us.
- **[Internals](internals.md):** This page enters into more details on how Garage manages data internally.
- **[Internals](@/documentation/design/internals.md):** This page enters into more details on how Garage manages data internally.
## Talks

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Benchmarks
+++
title = "Benchmarks"
weight = 10
+++
With Garage, we wanted to build a software defined storage service that follow the [KISS principle](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KISS_principle),
that is suitable for geo-distributed deployments and more generally that would work well for community hosting (like a Mastodon instance).
@ -25,7 +28,7 @@ We selected 5 standard endpoints that are often in the critical path: ListBucket
In this first benchmark, we consider 5 instances that are located in a different place each. To simulate the distance, we configure mknet with a RTT between each node of 100 ms +/- 20 ms of jitter. We get the following graph, where the colored bars represent the mean latency while the error bars the minimum and maximum one:
![Comparison of endpoints latency for minio and garage](./img/endpoint-latency.png)
![Comparison of endpoints latency for minio and garage](./endpoint-latency.png)
Compared to garage, minio latency drastically increases on 3 endpoints: GetObject, PutObject, RemoveObject.
@ -43,7 +46,7 @@ We consider that intra-DC communications are now very cheap with a latency of 0.
The inter-DC remains costly with the same value as before (100ms +/- 20ms of jitter).
We plot a similar graph as before:
![Comparison of endpoints latency for minio and garage with 6 nodes in 3 DC](./img/endpoint-latency-dc.png)
![Comparison of endpoints latency for minio and garage with 6 nodes in 3 DC](./endpoint-latency-dc.png)
This new graph is very similar to the one before, neither minio or garage seems to benefit from this new topology, but they also do not suffer from it.

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Goals and use cases
+++
title = "Goals and use cases"
weight = 5
+++
## Goals and non-goals

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Internals
+++
title = "Internals"
weight = 20
+++
## Overview
@ -14,7 +17,7 @@ In the meantime, you can find some information at the following links:
- [this presentation (in French)](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/src/branch/main/doc/talks/2020-12-02_wide-team/talk.pdf)
- [an old design draft](/working_documents/design_draft.md)
- [an old design draft](@/documentation/working-documents/design-draft.md)
## Garbage collection

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Related work
+++
title = "Related work"
weight = 15
+++
## Context
@ -21,7 +24,7 @@ Openstack Cinder proxy previous solution to provide an uniform API.
File storage provides a higher abstraction, they are one filesystem among others, which means they don't necessarily have all the exotic features of every filesystem.
Often, they relax some POSIX constraints while many applications will still be compatible without any modification.
As an example, we are able to run MariaDB (very slowly) over GlusterFS...
We can also mention CephFS (read [RADOS](https://ceph.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/weil-rados-pdsw07.pdf) whitepaper), Lustre, LizardFS, MooseFS, etc.
We can also mention CephFS (read [RADOS](https://doi.org/10.1145/1374596.1374606) whitepaper [[pdf](https://ceph.com/assets/pdfs/weil-rados-pdsw07.pdf)]), Lustre, LizardFS, MooseFS, etc.
OpenStack Manila proxy previous solutions to provide an uniform API.
Finally object storages provide the highest level abstraction.

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@ -1,4 +1,9 @@
# Development
+++
title = "Development"
weight = 6
sort_by = "weight"
template = "documentation.html"
+++
Now that you are a Garage expert, you want to enhance it, you are in the right place!
We discuss here how to hack on Garage, how we manage its development, etc.

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Setup your development environment
+++
title = "Setup your environment"
weight = 5
+++
Depending on your tastes, you can bootstrap your development environment in a traditional Rust way or through Nix.

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Miscellaneous Notes
+++
title = "Miscellaneous notes"
weight = 20
+++
## Quirks about cargo2nix/rust in Nix

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Release process
+++
title = "Release process"
weight = 15
+++
Before releasing a new version of Garage, our code pass through a succession of checks and transformations.
We define them as our release process.
@ -29,9 +32,10 @@ We generate the following binary artifacts for now:
- **os**: linux
- **format**: static binary, docker container
Additionnaly we also build two web pages:
Additionnaly we also build two web pages and one JSON document:
- the documentation (this website)
- [the release page](https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/releases.html)
- [the release page](https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/_releases.html)
- [the release list in JSON format](https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/_releases.json)
We publish the static binaries on our own garage cluster (you can access them through the releases page)
and the docker containers on Docker Hub.

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@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Development scripts
+++
title = "Development scripts"
weight = 10
+++
We maintain a `script/` folder that contains some useful script to ease testing on Garage.
@ -31,7 +34,7 @@ You can inspect the detailed configuration, including ports, by inspecting `/tmp
This script also spawns a simple HTTPS reverse proxy through `socat` for the S3 endpoint that listens on port `4443`.
Some libraries might require a TLS endpoint to work, refer to our issue [#64](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/64) for more detailed information on this subject.
This script covers the [Launching the garage server](/quick_start/index.html#launching-the-garage-server) section of our Quick start page.
This script covers the [Launching the garage server](@/documentation/quick-start/_index.md#launching-the-garage-server) section of our Quick start page.
### 2. Make them join the cluster
@ -41,7 +44,7 @@ This script covers the [Launching the garage server](/quick_start/index.html#lau
This script will configure each instance by assigning them a zone (`dc1`) and a weight (`1`).
This script covers the [Configuring your Garage node](/quick_start/index.html#configuring-your-garage-node) section of our Quick start page.
This script covers the [Creating a cluster layout](@/documentation/quick-start/_index.md#creating-a-cluster-layout) section of our Quick start page.
### 3. Create a key and a bucket
@ -52,7 +55,7 @@ This script covers the [Configuring your Garage node](/quick_start/index.html#co
This script will create a bucket named `eprouvette` with a key having read and write rights on this bucket.
The key is stored in a filed named `/tmp/garage.s3` and can be used by the following tools to pre-configure them.
This script covers the [Creating buckets and keys](/quick_start/index.html#creating-buckets-and-keys) section of our Quick start page.
This script covers the [Creating buckets and keys](@/documentation/quick-start/_index.md#creating-buckets-and-keys) section of our Quick start page.
## Handlers for generic tools

View file

@ -1,4 +1,9 @@
# Quick Start
+++
title = "Quick Start"
weight = 0
sort_by = "weight"
template = "documentation.html"
+++
Let's start your Garage journey!
In this chapter, we explain how to deploy Garage as a single-node server
@ -6,7 +11,7 @@ and how to interact with it.
Our goal is to introduce you to Garage's workflows.
Following this guide is recommended before moving on to
[configuring a multi-node cluster](../cookbook/real_world.md).
[configuring a multi-node cluster](@/documentation/cookbook/real-world.md).
Note that this kind of deployment should not be used in production,
as it provides no redundancy for your data!
@ -15,7 +20,7 @@ as it provides no redundancy for your data!
Download the latest Garage binary from the release pages on our repository:
<https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/_releases.html>
<https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/download/>
Place this binary somewhere in your `$PATH` so that you can invoke the `garage`
command directly (for instance you can copy the binary in `/usr/local/bin`
@ -23,10 +28,12 @@ or in `~/.local/bin`).
If a binary of the last version is not available for your architecture,
or if you want a build customized for your system,
you can [build Garage from source](../cookbook/from_source.md).
you can [build Garage from source](@/documentation/cookbook/from-source.md).
## Writing a first configuration file
## Configuring and starting Garage
### Writing a first configuration file
This first configuration file should allow you to get started easily with the simplest
possible Garage deployment.
@ -49,11 +56,11 @@ bootstrap_peers = []
[s3_api]
s3_region = "garage"
api_bind_addr = "[::]:3900"
root_domain = ".s3.garage"
root_domain = ".s3.garage.localhost"
[s3_web]
bind_addr = "[::]:3902"
root_domain = ".web.garage"
root_domain = ".web.garage.localhost"
index = "index.html"
```
@ -68,12 +75,12 @@ Garage server will not be persistent. Change these to locations on your local di
your data to be persisted properly.
## Launching the Garage server
### Launching the Garage server
Use the following command to launch the Garage server with our configuration file:
```
RUST_LOG=garage=info garage server
garage server
```
You can tune Garage's verbosity as follows (from less verbose to more verbose):
@ -84,11 +91,11 @@ RUST_LOG=garage=debug garage server
RUST_LOG=garage=trace garage server
```
Log level `info` is recommended for most use cases.
Log level `info` is the default value and is recommended for most use cases.
Log level `debug` can help you check why your S3 API calls are not working.
## Checking that Garage runs correctly
### Checking that Garage runs correctly
The `garage` utility is also used as a CLI tool to configure your Garage deployment.
It uses values from the TOML configuration file to find the Garage daemon running on the
@ -147,7 +154,7 @@ garage help
garage bucket allow --help
```
#### Create a bucket
### Create a bucket
Let's take an example where we want to deploy NextCloud using Garage as the
main data storage.
@ -165,7 +172,7 @@ garage bucket list
garage bucket info nextcloud-bucket
```
#### Create an API key
### Create an API key
The `nextcloud-bucket` bucket now exists on the Garage server,
however it cannot be accessed until we add an API key with the proper access rights.
@ -195,7 +202,7 @@ garage key list
garage key info nextcloud-app-key
```
#### Allow a key to access a bucket
### Allow a key to access a bucket
Now that we have a bucket and a key, we need to give permissions to the key on the bucket:
@ -224,7 +231,7 @@ Before reading the following, you need a working `mc` command on your path.
Note that on certain Linux distributions such as Arch Linux, the Minio client binary
is called `mcli` instead of `mc` (to avoid name clashes with the Midnight Commander).
#### Configure `mc`
### Configure `mc`
You need your access key and secret key created above.
We will assume you are invoking `mc` on the same machine as the Garage server,
@ -242,17 +249,7 @@ mc alias set \
--api S3v4
```
You must also add an environment variable to your configuration to
inform MinIO of our region (`garage` by default, corresponding to the `s3_region` parameter
in the configuration file).
The best way is to add the following snippet to your `$HOME/.bash_profile`
or `$HOME/.bashrc` file:
```bash
export MC_REGION=garage
```
#### Use `mc`
### Use `mc`
You can not list buckets from `mc` currently.
@ -266,7 +263,7 @@ mc mirror localdir/ my-garage/another-bucket
```
#### Other tools for interacting with Garage
### Other tools for interacting with Garage
The following tools can also be used to send and recieve files from/to Garage:
@ -275,5 +272,5 @@ The following tools can also be used to send and recieve files from/to Garage:
- [Cyberduck](https://cyberduck.io/)
- [`s3cmd`](https://s3tools.org/s3cmd)
Refer to the ["Integrations" section](../connect/index.md) to learn how to
Refer to the ["Integrations" section](@/documentation/connect/_index.md) to learn how to
configure application and command line utilities to integrate with Garage.

View file

@ -1,4 +1,9 @@
# Reference Manual
+++
title = "Reference Manual"
weight = 4
sort_by = "weight"
template = "documentation.html"
+++
A reference manual contains some extensive descriptions about the features and the behaviour of the software.
Reading of this chapter is recommended once you have a good knowledge/understanding of Garage.

View file

@ -0,0 +1,644 @@
+++
title = "Administration API"
weight = 16
+++
The Garage administration API is accessible through a dedicated server whose
listen address is specified in the `[admin]` section of the configuration
file (see [configuration file
reference](@/documentation/reference-manual/configuration.md))
**WARNING.** At this point, there is no comittement to stability of the APIs described in this document.
We will bump the version numbers prefixed to each API endpoint at each time the syntax
or semantics change, meaning that code that relies on these endpoint will break
when changes are introduced.
The Garage administration API was introduced in version 0.7.2, this document
does not apply to older versions of Garage.
## Access control
The admin API uses two different tokens for acces control, that are specified in the config file's `[admin]` section:
- `metrics_token`: the token for accessing the Metrics endpoint (if this token
is not set in the config file, the Metrics endpoint can be accessed without
access control);
- `admin_token`: the token for accessing all of the other administration
endpoints (if this token is not set in the config file, access to these
endpoints is disabled entirely).
These tokens are used as simple HTTP bearer tokens. In other words, to
authenticate access to an admin API endpoint, add the following HTTP header
to your request:
```
Authorization: Bearer <token>
```
## Administration API endpoints
### Metrics-related endpoints
#### Metrics `GET /metrics`
Returns internal Garage metrics in Prometheus format.
### Cluster operations
#### GetClusterStatus `GET /v0/status`
Returns the cluster's current status in JSON, including:
- ID of the node being queried and its version of the Garage daemon
- Live nodes
- Currently configured cluster layout
- Staged changes to the cluster layout
Example response body:
```json
{
"node": "ec79480e0ce52ae26fd00c9da684e4fa56658d9c64cdcecb094e936de0bfe71f",
"garage_version": "git:v0.8.0",
"knownNodes": {
"ec79480e0ce52ae26fd00c9da684e4fa56658d9c64cdcecb094e936de0bfe71f": {
"addr": "10.0.0.11:3901",
"is_up": true,
"last_seen_secs_ago": 9,
"hostname": "node1"
},
"4a6ae5a1d0d33bf895f5bb4f0a418b7dc94c47c0dd2eb108d1158f3c8f60b0ff": {
"addr": "10.0.0.12:3901",
"is_up": true,
"last_seen_secs_ago": 1,
"hostname": "node2"
},
"23ffd0cdd375ebff573b20cc5cef38996b51c1a7d6dbcf2c6e619876e507cf27": {
"addr": "10.0.0.21:3901",
"is_up": true,
"last_seen_secs_ago": 7,
"hostname": "node3"
},
"e2ee7984ee65b260682086ec70026165903c86e601a4a5a501c1900afe28d84b": {
"addr": "10.0.0.22:3901",
"is_up": true,
"last_seen_secs_ago": 1,
"hostname": "node4"
}
},
"layout": {
"version": 12,
"roles": {
"ec79480e0ce52ae26fd00c9da684e4fa56658d9c64cdcecb094e936de0bfe71f": {
"zone": "dc1",
"capacity": 4,
"tags": [
"node1"
]
},
"4a6ae5a1d0d33bf895f5bb4f0a418b7dc94c47c0dd2eb108d1158f3c8f60b0ff": {
"zone": "dc1",
"capacity": 6,
"tags": [
"node2"
]
},
"23ffd0cdd375ebff573b20cc5cef38996b51c1a7d6dbcf2c6e619876e507cf27": {
"zone": "dc2",
"capacity": 10,
"tags": [
"node3"
]
}
},
"stagedRoleChanges": {
"e2ee7984ee65b260682086ec70026165903c86e601a4a5a501c1900afe28d84b": {
"zone": "dc2",
"capacity": 5,
"tags": [
"node4"
]
}
}
}
}
```
#### ConnectClusterNodes `POST /v0/connect`
Instructs this Garage node to connect to other Garage nodes at specified addresses.
Example request body:
```json
[
"ec79480e0ce52ae26fd00c9da684e4fa56658d9c64cdcecb094e936de0bfe71f@10.0.0.11:3901",
"4a6ae5a1d0d33bf895f5bb4f0a418b7dc94c47c0dd2eb108d1158f3c8f60b0ff@10.0.0.12:3901"
]
```
The format of the string for a node to connect to is: `<node ID>@<ip address>:<port>`, same as in the `garage node connect` CLI call.
Example response:
```json
[
{
"success": true,
"error": null
},
{
"success": false,
"error": "Handshake error"
}
]
```
#### GetClusterLayout `GET /v0/layout`
Returns the cluster's current layout in JSON, including:
- Currently configured cluster layout
- Staged changes to the cluster layout
(the info returned by this endpoint is a subset of the info returned by GetClusterStatus)
Example response body:
```json
{
"version": 12,
"roles": {
"ec79480e0ce52ae26fd00c9da684e4fa56658d9c64cdcecb094e936de0bfe71f": {
"zone": "dc1",
"capacity": 4,
"tags": [
"node1"
]
},
"4a6ae5a1d0d33bf895f5bb4f0a418b7dc94c47c0dd2eb108d1158f3c8f60b0ff": {
"zone": "dc1",
"capacity": 6,
"tags": [
"node2"
]
},
"23ffd0cdd375ebff573b20cc5cef38996b51c1a7d6dbcf2c6e619876e507cf27": {
"zone": "dc2",
"capacity": 10,
"tags": [
"node3"
]
}
},
"stagedRoleChanges": {
"e2ee7984ee65b260682086ec70026165903c86e601a4a5a501c1900afe28d84b": {
"zone": "dc2",
"capacity": 5,
"tags": [
"node4"
]
}
}
}
```
#### UpdateClusterLayout `POST /v0/layout`
Send modifications to the cluster layout. These modifications will
be included in the staged role changes, visible in subsequent calls
of `GetClusterLayout`. Once the set of staged changes is satisfactory,
the user may call `ApplyClusterLayout` to apply the changed changes,
or `Revert ClusterLayout` to clear all of the staged changes in
the layout.
Request body format:
```json
{
<node_id>: {
"capacity": <new_capacity>,
"zone": <new_zone>,
"tags": [
<new_tag>,
...
]
},
<node_id_to_remove>: null,
...
}
```
Contrary to the CLI that may update only a subset of the fields
`capacity`, `zone` and `tags`, when calling this API all of these
values must be specified.
#### ApplyClusterLayout `POST /v0/layout/apply`
Applies to the cluster the layout changes currently registered as
staged layout changes.
Request body format:
```json
{
"version": 13
}
```
Similarly to the CLI, the body must include the version of the new layout
that will be created, which MUST be 1 + the value of the currently
existing layout in the cluster.
#### RevertClusterLayout `POST /v0/layout/revert`
Clears all of the staged layout changes.
Request body format:
```json
{
"version": 13
}
```
Reverting the staged changes is done by incrementing the version number
and clearing the contents of the staged change list.
Similarly to the CLI, the body must include the incremented
version number, which MUST be 1 + the value of the currently
existing layout in the cluster.
### Access key operations
#### ListKeys `GET /v0/key`
Returns all API access keys in the cluster.
Example response:
```json
[
{
"id": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"name": "test"
},
{
"id": "GKe10061ac9c2921f09e4c5540",
"name": "test2"
}
]
```
#### CreateKey `POST /v0/key`
Creates a new API access key.
Request body format:
```json
{
"name": "NameOfMyKey"
}
```
#### ImportKey `POST /v0/key/import`
Imports an existing API key.
Request body format:
```json
{
"accessKeyId": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"secretAccessKey": "b892c0665f0ada8a4755dae98baa3b133590e11dae3bcc1f9d769d67f16c3835",
"name": "NameOfMyKey"
}
```
#### GetKeyInfo `GET /v0/key?id=<acces key id>`
#### GetKeyInfo `GET /v0/key?search=<pattern>`
Returns information about the requested API access key.
If `id` is set, the key is looked up using its exact identifier (faster).
If `search` is set, the key is looked up using its name or prefix
of identifier (slower, all keys are enumerated to do this).
Example response:
```json
{
"name": "test",
"accessKeyId": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"secretAccessKey": "b892c0665f0ada8a4755dae98baa3b133590e11dae3bcc1f9d769d67f16c3835",
"permissions": {
"createBucket": false
},
"buckets": [
{
"id": "70dc3bed7fe83a75e46b66e7ddef7d56e65f3c02f9f80b6749fb97eccb5e1033",
"globalAliases": [
"test2"
],
"localAliases": [],
"permissions": {
"read": true,
"write": true,
"owner": false
}
},
{
"id": "d7452a935e663fc1914f3a5515163a6d3724010ce8dfd9e4743ca8be5974f995",
"globalAliases": [
"test3"
],
"localAliases": [],
"permissions": {
"read": true,
"write": true,
"owner": false
}
},
{
"id": "e6a14cd6a27f48684579ec6b381c078ab11697e6bc8513b72b2f5307e25fff9b",
"globalAliases": [],
"localAliases": [
"test"
],
"permissions": {
"read": true,
"write": true,
"owner": true
}
},
{
"id": "96470e0df00ec28807138daf01915cfda2bee8eccc91dea9558c0b4855b5bf95",
"globalAliases": [
"alex"
],
"localAliases": [],
"permissions": {
"read": true,
"write": true,
"owner": true
}
}
]
}
```
#### DeleteKey `DELETE /v0/key?id=<acces key id>`
Deletes an API access key.
#### UpdateKey `POST /v0/key?id=<acces key id>`
Updates information about the specified API access key.
Request body format:
```json
{
"name": "NameOfMyKey",
"allow": {
"createBucket": true,
},
"deny": {}
}
```
All fields (`name`, `allow` and `deny`) are optionnal.
If they are present, the corresponding modifications are applied to the key, otherwise nothing is changed.
The possible flags in `allow` and `deny` are: `createBucket`.
### Bucket operations
#### ListBuckets `GET /v0/bucket`
Returns all storage buckets in the cluster.
Example response:
```json
[
{
"id": "70dc3bed7fe83a75e46b66e7ddef7d56e65f3c02f9f80b6749fb97eccb5e1033",
"globalAliases": [
"test2"
],
"localAliases": []
},
{
"id": "96470e0df00ec28807138daf01915cfda2bee8eccc91dea9558c0b4855b5bf95",
"globalAliases": [
"alex"
],
"localAliases": []
},
{
"id": "d7452a935e663fc1914f3a5515163a6d3724010ce8dfd9e4743ca8be5974f995",
"globalAliases": [
"test3"
],
"localAliases": []
},
{
"id": "e6a14cd6a27f48684579ec6b381c078ab11697e6bc8513b72b2f5307e25fff9b",
"globalAliases": [],
"localAliases": [
{
"accessKeyId": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"alias": "test"
}
]
}
]
```
#### GetBucketInfo `GET /v0/bucket?id=<bucket id>`
#### GetBucketInfo `GET /v0/bucket?globalAlias=<alias>`
Returns information about the requested storage bucket.
If `id` is set, the bucket is looked up using its exact identifier.
If `globalAlias` is set, the bucket is looked up using its global alias.
(both are fast)
Example response:
```json
{
"id": "afa8f0a22b40b1247ccd0affb869b0af5cff980924a20e4b5e0720a44deb8d39",
"globalAliases": [],
"websiteAccess": false,
"websiteConfig": null,
"keys": [
{
"accessKeyId": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"name": "Imported key",
"permissions": {
"read": true,
"write": true,
"owner": true
},
"bucketLocalAliases": [
"debug"
]
}
],
"objects": 14827,
"bytes": 13189855625,
"unfinshedUploads": 0,
"quotas": {
"maxSize": null,
"maxObjects": null
}
}
```
#### CreateBucket `POST /v0/bucket`
Creates a new storage bucket.
Request body format:
```json
{
"globalAlias": "NameOfMyBucket"
}
```
OR
```json
{
"localAlias": {
"accessKeyId": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"alias": "NameOfMyBucket",
"allow": {
"read": true,
"write": true,
"owner": false
}
}
}
```
OR
```json
{}
```
Creates a new bucket, either with a global alias, a local one,
or no alias at all.
Technically, you can also specify both `globalAlias` and `localAlias` and that would create
two aliases, but I don't see why you would want to do that.
#### DeleteBucket `DELETE /v0/bucket?id=<bucket id>`
Deletes a storage bucket. A bucket cannot be deleted if it is not empty.
Warning: this will delete all aliases associated with the bucket!
#### UpdateBucket `PUT /v0/bucket?id=<bucket id>`
Updates configuration of the given bucket.
Request body format:
```json
{
"websiteAccess": {
"enabled": true,
"indexDocument": "index.html",
"errorDocument": "404.html"
},
"quotas": {
"maxSize": 19029801,
"maxObjects": null,
}
}
```
All fields (`websiteAccess` and `quotas`) are optionnal.
If they are present, the corresponding modifications are applied to the bucket, otherwise nothing is changed.
In `websiteAccess`: if `enabled` is `true`, `indexDocument` must be specified.
The field `errorDocument` is optional, if no error document is set a generic
error message is displayed when errors happen. Conversely, if `enabled` is
`false`, neither `indexDocument` nor `errorDocument` must be specified.
In `quotas`: new values of `maxSize` and `maxObjects` must both be specified, or set to `null`
to remove the quotas. An absent value will be considered the same as a `null`. It is not possible
to change only one of the two quotas.
### Operations on permissions for keys on buckets
#### BucketAllowKey `POST /v0/bucket/allow`
Allows a key to do read/write/owner operations on a bucket.
Request body format:
```json
{
"bucketId": "e6a14cd6a27f48684579ec6b381c078ab11697e6bc8513b72b2f5307e25fff9b",
"accessKeyId": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"permissions": {
"read": true,
"write": true,
"owner": true
},
}
```
Flags in `permissions` which have the value `true` will be activated.
Other flags will remain unchanged.
#### BucketDenyKey `POST /v0/bucket/deny`
Denies a key from doing read/write/owner operations on a bucket.
Request body format:
```json
{
"bucketId": "e6a14cd6a27f48684579ec6b381c078ab11697e6bc8513b72b2f5307e25fff9b",
"accessKeyId": "GK31c2f218a2e44f485b94239e",
"permissions": {
"read": false,
"write": false,
"owner": true
},
}
```
Flags in `permissions` which have the value `true` will be deactivated.
Other flags will remain unchanged.
### Operations on bucket aliases
#### GlobalAliasBucket `PUT /v0/bucket/alias/global?id=<bucket id>&alias=<global alias>`
Empty body. Creates a global alias for a bucket.
#### GlobalUnaliasBucket `DELETE /v0/bucket/alias/global?id=<bucket id>&alias=<global alias>`
Removes a global alias for a bucket.
#### LocalAliasBucket `PUT /v0/bucket/alias/local?id=<bucket id>&accessKeyId=<access key ID>&alias=<local alias>`
Empty body. Creates a local alias for a bucket in the namespace of a specific access key.
#### LocalUnaliasBucket `DELETE /v0/bucket/alias/local?id=<bucket id>&accessKeyId<access key ID>&alias=<local alias>`
Removes a local alias for a bucket in the namespace of a specific access key.

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Garage CLI
+++
title = "Garage CLI"
weight = 15
+++
The Garage CLI is mostly self-documented. Make use of the `help` subcommand
and the `--help` flag to discover all available options.

View file

@ -0,0 +1,366 @@
+++
title = "Configuration file format"
weight = 5
+++
Here is an example `garage.toml` configuration file that illustrates all of the possible options:
```toml
metadata_dir = "/var/lib/garage/meta"
data_dir = "/var/lib/garage/data"
block_size = 1048576
block_manager_background_tranquility = 2
replication_mode = "3"
compression_level = 1
rpc_secret = "4425f5c26c5e11581d3223904324dcb5b5d5dfb14e5e7f35e38c595424f5f1e6"
rpc_bind_addr = "[::]:3901"
rpc_public_addr = "[fc00:1::1]:3901"
bootstrap_peers = [
"563e1ac825ee3323aa441e72c26d1030d6d4414aeb3dd25287c531e7fc2bc95d@[fc00:1::1]:3901",
"86f0f26ae4afbd59aaf9cfb059eefac844951efd5b8caeec0d53f4ed6c85f332[fc00:1::2]:3901",
"681456ab91350f92242e80a531a3ec9392cb7c974f72640112f90a600d7921a4@[fc00:B::1]:3901",
"212fd62eeaca72c122b45a7f4fa0f55e012aa5e24ac384a72a3016413fa724ff@[fc00:F::1]:3901",
]
consul_host = "consul.service"
consul_service_name = "garage-daemon"
kubernetes_namespace = "garage"
kubernetes_service_name = "garage-daemon"
kubernetes_skip_crd = false
sled_cache_capacity = 134217728
sled_flush_every_ms = 2000
[s3_api]
api_bind_addr = "[::]:3900"
s3_region = "garage"
root_domain = ".s3.garage"
[s3_web]
bind_addr = "[::]:3902"
root_domain = ".web.garage"
[admin]
api_bind_addr = "0.0.0.0:3903"
metrics_token = "cacce0b2de4bc2d9f5b5fdff551e01ac1496055aed248202d415398987e35f81"
admin_token = "ae8cb40ea7368bbdbb6430af11cca7da833d3458a5f52086f4e805a570fb5c2a"
trace_sink = "http://localhost:4317"
```
The following gives details about each available configuration option.
## Available configuration options
### `metadata_dir`
The directory in which Garage will store its metadata. This contains the node identifier,
the network configuration and the peer list, the list of buckets and keys as well
as the index of all objects, object version and object blocks.
Store this folder on a fast SSD drive if possible to maximize Garage's performance.
### `data_dir`
The directory in which Garage will store the data blocks of objects.
This folder can be placed on an HDD. The space available for `data_dir`
should be counted to determine a node's capacity
when [adding it to the cluster layout](@/documentation/cookbook/real-world.md).
### `block_size`
Garage splits stored objects in consecutive chunks of size `block_size`
(except the last one which might be smaller). The default size is 1MB and
should work in most cases. We recommend increasing it to e.g. 10MB if
you are using Garage to store large files and have fast network connections
between all nodes (e.g. 1gbps).
If you are interested in tuning this, feel free to do so (and remember to
report your findings to us!). When this value is changed for a running Garage
installation, only files newly uploaded will be affected. Previously uploaded
files will remain available. This however means that chunks from existing files
will not be deduplicated with chunks from newly uploaded files, meaning you
might use more storage space that is optimally possible.
### `block_manager_background_tranquility`
This parameter tunes the activity of the background worker responsible for
resyncing data blocks between nodes. The higher the tranquility value is set,
the more the background worker will wait between iterations, meaning the load
on the system (including network usage between nodes) will be reduced. The
minimal value for this parameter is `0`, where the background worker will
allways work at maximal throughput to resynchronize blocks. The default value
is `2`, where the background worker will try to spend at most 1/3 of its time
working, and 2/3 sleeping in order to reduce system load.
### `replication_mode`
Garage supports the following replication modes:
- `none` or `1`: data stored on Garage is stored on a single node. There is no
redundancy, and data will be unavailable as soon as one node fails or its
network is disconnected. Do not use this for anything else than test
deployments.
- `2`: data stored on Garage will be stored on two different nodes, if possible
in different zones. Garage tolerates one node failure, or several nodes
failing but all in a single zone (in a deployment with at least two zones),
before losing data. Data remains available in read-only mode when one node is
down, but write operations will fail.
- `2-dangerous`: a variant of mode `2`, where written objects are written to
the second replica asynchronously. This means that Garage will return `200
OK` to a PutObject request before the second copy is fully written (or even
before it even starts being written). This means that data can more easily
be lost if the node crashes before a second copy can be completed. This
also means that written objects might not be visible immediately in read
operations. In other words, this mode severely breaks the consistency and
durability guarantees of standard Garage cluster operation. Benefits of
this mode: you can still write to your cluster when one node is
unavailable.
- `3`: data stored on Garage will be stored on three different nodes, if
possible each in a different zones. Garage tolerates two node failure, or
several node failures but in no more than two zones (in a deployment with at
least three zones), before losing data. As long as only a single node fails,
or node failures are only in a single zone, reading and writing data to
Garage can continue normally.
- `3-degraded`: a variant of replication mode `3`, that lowers the read
quorum to `1`, to allow you to read data from your cluster when several
nodes (or nodes in several zones) are unavailable. In this mode, Garage
does not provide read-after-write consistency anymore. The write quorum is
still 2, ensuring that data successfully written to Garage is stored on at
least two nodes.
- `3-dangerous`: a variant of replication mode `3` that lowers both the read
and write quorums to `1`, to allow you to both read and write to your
cluster when several nodes (or nodes in several zones) are unavailable. It
is the least consistent mode of operation proposed by Garage, and also one
that should probably never be used.
Note that in modes `2` and `3`,
if at least the same number of zones are available, an arbitrary number of failures in
any given zone is tolerated as copies of data will be spread over several zones.
**Make sure `replication_mode` is the same in the configuration files of all nodes.
Never run a Garage cluster where that is not the case.**
The quorums associated with each replication mode are described below:
| `replication_mode` | Number of replicas | Write quorum | Read quorum | Read-after-write consistency? |
| ------------------ | ------------------ | ------------ | ----------- | ----------------------------- |
| `none` or `1` | 1 | 1 | 1 | yes |
| `2` | 2 | 2 | 1 | yes |
| `2-dangerous` | 2 | 1 | 1 | NO |
| `3` | 3 | 2 | 2 | yes |
| `3-degraded` | 3 | 2 | 1 | NO |
| `3-dangerous` | 3 | 1 | 1 | NO |
Changing the `replication_mode` between modes with the same number of replicas
(e.g. from `3` to `3-degraded`, or from `2-dangerous` to `2`), can be done easily by
just changing the `replication_mode` parameter in your config files and restarting all your
Garage nodes.
It is also technically possible to change the replication mode to a mode with a
different numbers of replicas, although it's a dangerous operation that is not
officially supported. This requires you to delete the existing cluster layout
and create a new layout from scratch, meaning that a full rebalancing of your
cluster's data will be needed. To do it, shut down your cluster entirely,
delete the `custer_layout` files in the meta directories of all your nodes,
update all your configuration files with the new `replication_mode` parameter,
restart your cluster, and then create a new layout with all the nodes you want
to keep. Rebalancing data will take some time, and data might temporarily
appear unavailable to your users. It is recommended to shut down public access
to the cluster while rebalancing is in progress. In theory, no data should be
lost as rebalancing is a routine operation for Garage, although we cannot
guarantee you that everything will go right in such an extreme scenario.
### `compression_level`
Zstd compression level to use for storing blocks.
Values between `1` (faster compression) and `19` (smaller file) are standard compression
levels for zstd. From `20` to `22`, compression levels are referred as "ultra" and must be
used with extra care as it will use lot of memory. A value of `0` will let zstd choose a
default value (currently `3`). Finally, zstd has also compression designed to be faster
than default compression levels, they range from `-1` (smaller file) to `-99` (faster
compression).
If you do not specify a `compression_level` entry, Garage will set it to `1` for you. With
this parameters, zstd consumes low amount of cpu and should work faster than line speed in
most situations, while saving some space and intra-cluster
bandwidth.
If you want to totally deactivate zstd in Garage, you can pass the special value `'none'`. No
zstd related code will be called, your chunks will be stored on disk without any processing.
Compression is done synchronously, setting a value too high will add latency to write queries.
This value can be different between nodes, compression is done by the node which receive the
API call.
### `rpc_secret`
Garage uses a secret key that is shared between all nodes of the cluster
in order to identify these nodes and allow them to communicate together.
This key should be specified here in the form of a 32-byte hex-encoded
random string. Such a string can be generated with a command
such as `openssl rand -hex 32`.
### `rpc_bind_addr`
The address and port on which to bind for inter-cluster communcations
(reffered to as RPC for remote procedure calls).
The port specified here should be the same one that other nodes will used to contact
the node, even in the case of a NAT: the NAT should be configured to forward the external
port number to the same internal port nubmer. This means that if you have several nodes running
behind a NAT, they should each use a different RPC port number.
### `rpc_public_addr`
The address and port that other nodes need to use to contact this node for
RPC calls. **This parameter is optional but recommended.** In case you have
a NAT that binds the RPC port to a port that is different on your public IP,
this field might help making it work.
### `bootstrap_peers`
A list of peer identifiers on which to contact other Garage peers of this cluster.
These peer identifiers have the following syntax:
```
<node public key>@<node public IP or hostname>:<port>
```
In the case where `rpc_public_addr` is correctly specified in the
configuration file, the full identifier of a node including IP and port can
be obtained by running `garage node id` and then included directly in the
`bootstrap_peers` list of other nodes. Otherwise, only the node's public
key will be returned by `garage node id` and you will have to add the IP
yourself.
### `consul_host` and `consul_service_name`
Garage supports discovering other nodes of the cluster using Consul. For this
to work correctly, nodes need to know their IP address by which they can be
reached by other nodes of the cluster, which should be set in `rpc_public_addr`.
The `consul_host` parameter should be set to the hostname of the Consul server,
and `consul_service_name` should be set to the service name under which Garage's
RPC ports are announced.
Garage does not yet support talking to Consul over TLS.
### `kubernetes_namespace`, `kubernetes_service_name` and `kubernetes_skip_crd`
Garage supports discovering other nodes of the cluster using kubernetes custom
resources. For this to work `kubernetes_namespace` and `kubernetes_service_name`
need to be configured.
`kubernetes_namespace` sets the namespace in which the custom resources are
configured. `kubernetes_service_name` is added as a label to these resources to
filter them, to allow for multiple deployments in a single namespace.
`kubernetes_skip_crd` can be set to true to disable the automatic creation and
patching of the `garagenodes.deuxfleurs.fr` CRD. You will need to create the CRD
manually.
### `sled_cache_capacity`
This parameter can be used to tune the capacity of the cache used by
[sled](https://sled.rs), the database Garage uses internally to store metadata.
Tune this to fit the RAM you wish to make available to your Garage instance.
This value has a conservative default (128MB) so that Garage doesn't use too much
RAM by default, but feel free to increase this for higher performance.
### `sled_flush_every_ms`
This parameters can be used to tune the flushing interval of sled.
Increase this if sled is thrashing your SSD, at the risk of losing more data in case
of a power outage (though this should not matter much as data is replicated on other
nodes). The default value, 2000ms, should be appropriate for most use cases.
## The `[s3_api]` section
### `api_bind_addr`
The IP and port on which to bind for accepting S3 API calls.
This endpoint does not suport TLS: a reverse proxy should be used to provide it.
### `s3_region`
Garage will accept S3 API calls that are targetted to the S3 region defined here.
API calls targetted to other regions will fail with a AuthorizationHeaderMalformed error
message that redirects the client to the correct region.
### `root_domain` {#root_domain}
The optionnal suffix to access bucket using vhost-style in addition to path-style request.
Note path-style requests are always enabled, whether or not vhost-style is configured.
Configuring vhost-style S3 required a wildcard DNS entry, and possibly a wildcard TLS certificate,
but might be required by softwares not supporting path-style requests.
If `root_domain` is `s3.garage.eu`, a bucket called `my-bucket` can be interacted with
using the hostname `my-bucket.s3.garage.eu`.
## The `[s3_web]` section
Garage allows to publish content of buckets as websites. This section configures the
behaviour of this module.
### `bind_addr`
The IP and port on which to bind for accepting HTTP requests to buckets configured
for website access.
This endpoint does not suport TLS: a reverse proxy should be used to provide it.
### `root_domain`
The optionnal suffix appended to bucket names for the corresponding HTTP Host.
For instance, if `root_domain` is `web.garage.eu`, a bucket called `deuxfleurs.fr`
will be accessible either with hostname `deuxfleurs.fr.web.garage.eu`
or with hostname `deuxfleurs.fr`.
## The `[admin]` section
Garage has a few administration capabilities, in particular to allow remote monitoring. These features are detailed below.
### `api_bind_addr`
If specified, Garage will bind an HTTP server to this port and address, on
which it will listen to requests for administration features.
See [administration API reference](@/documentation/reference-manual/admin-api.md) to learn more about these features.
### `metrics_token` (since version 0.7.2)
The token for accessing the Metrics endpoint. If this token is not set in
the config file, the Metrics endpoint can be accessed without access
control.
You can use any random string for this value. We recommend generating a random token with `openssl rand -hex 32`.
### `admin_token` (since version 0.7.2)
The token for accessing all of the other administration endpoints. If this
token is not set in the config file, access to these endpoints is disabled
entirely.
You can use any random string for this value. We recommend generating a random token with `openssl rand -hex 32`.
### `trace_sink`
Optionnally, the address of an Opentelemetry collector. If specified,
Garage will send traces in the Opentelemetry format to this endpoint. These
trace allow to inspect Garage's operation when it handles S3 API requests.

View file

@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
+++
title = "K2V"
weight = 30
+++
Starting with version 0.7.2, Garage introduces an optionnal feature, K2V,
which is an alternative storage API designed to help efficiently store
many small values in buckets (in opposition to S3 which is more designed
to store large blobs).
K2V is currently disabled at compile time in all builds, as the
specification is still subject to changes. To build a Garage version with
K2V, the Cargo feature flag `k2v` must be activated. Special builds with
the `k2v` feature flag enabled can be obtained from our download page under
"Extra builds": such builds can be identified easily as their tag name ends
with `-k2v` (example: `v0.7.2-k2v`).
The specification of the K2V API can be found
[here](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/src/branch/k2v/doc/drafts/k2v-spec.md).
This document also includes a high-level overview of K2V's design.
The K2V API uses AWSv4 signatures for authentification, same as the S3 API.
The AWS region used for signature calculation is always the same as the one
defined for the S3 API in the config file.
## Enabling and using K2V
To enable K2V, download and run a build that has the `k2v` feature flag
enabled, or produce one yourself. Then, add the following section to your
configuration file:
```toml
[k2v_api]
api_bind_addr = "<ip>:<port>"
```
Please select a port number that is not already in use by another API
endpoint (S3 api, admin API) or by the RPC server.
We provide an early-stage K2V client library for Rust which can be imported by adding the following to your `Cargo.toml` file:
```toml
k2v-client = { git = "https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage.git" }
```
There is also a simple CLI utility which can be built from source in the
following way:
```sh
git clone https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage.git
cd garage/src/k2v-client
cargo build --features cli --bin k2v-cli
```
The CLI utility is self-documented, run `k2v-cli --help` to learn how to use
it. There is also a short README.md in the `src/k2v-client` folder with some
instructions.

View file

@ -1,10 +1,13 @@
# Creating and updating a cluster layout
+++
title = "Cluster layout management"
weight = 10
+++
The cluster layout in Garage is a table that assigns to each node a role in
the cluster. The role of a node in Garage can either be a storage node with
a certain capacity, or a gateway node that does not store data and is only
used as an API entry point for faster cluster access.
An introduction to building cluster layouts can be found in the [production deployment](/cookbook/real_world.md) page.
An introduction to building cluster layouts can be found in the [production deployment](@/documentation/cookbook/real-world.md) page.
## How cluster layouts work in Garage

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@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
+++
title = "Request routing logic"
weight = 10
+++
Data retrieval requests to Garage endpoints (S3 API and websites) are resolved
to an individual object in a bucket. Since objects are replicated to multiple nodes
Garage must ensure consistency before answering the request.
## Using quorum to ensure consistency
Garage ensures consistency by attempting to establish a quorum with the
data nodes responsible for the object. When a majority of the data nodes
have provided metadata on a object Garage can then answer the request.
When a request arrives Garage will, assuming the recommended 3 replicas, perform the following actions:
- Make a request to the two preferred nodes for object metadata
- Try the third node if one of the two initial requests fail
- Check that the metadata from at least 2 nodes match
- Check that the object hasn't been marked deleted
- Answer the request with inline data from metadata if object is small enough
- Or get data blocks from the preferred nodes and answer using the assembled object
Garage dynamically determines which nodes to query based on health, preference, and
which nodes actually host a given data. Garage has no concept of "primary" so any
healthy node with the data can be used as long as a quorum is reached for the metadata.
## Node health
Garage keeps a TCP session open to each node in the cluster and periodically pings them. If a connection
cannot be established, or a node fails to answer a number of pings, the target node is marked as failed.
Failed nodes are not used for quorum or other internal requests.
## Node preference
Garage prioritizes which nodes to query according to a few criteria:
- A node always prefers itself if it can answer the request
- Then the node prioritizes nodes in the same zone
- Finally the nodes with the lowest latency are prioritized
For further reading on the cluster structure look at the [gateway](@/documentation/cookbook/gateways.md)
and [cluster layout management](@/documentation/reference-manual/layout.md) pages.

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@ -0,0 +1,232 @@
+++
title = "S3 Compatibility status"
weight = 20
+++
## DISCLAIMER
**The compatibility list for other platforms is given only for informational
purposes and based on available documentation.** They are sometimes completed,
in a best effort approach, with the source code and inputs from maintainers
when documentation is lacking. We are not proactively monitoring new versions
of each software: check the modification history to know when the page has been
updated for the last time. Some entries will be inexact or outdated. For any
serious decision, you must make your own tests.
**The official documentation of each project can be accessed by clicking on the
project name in the column header.**
Feel free to open a PR to suggest fixes this table. Minio is missing because they do not provide a public S3 compatibility list.
## Update history
- 2022-02-07 - First version of this page
- 2022-05-25 - Many Ceph S3 endpoints are not documented but implemented. Following a notification from the Ceph community, we added them.
## High-level features
| Feature | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [signature v2](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/signature-version-2.html) (deprecated) | ❌ Missing | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [signature v4](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/sig-v4-authenticating-requests.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ |
| [URL path-style](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/VirtualHosting.html#path-style-access) (eg. `host.tld/bucket/key`) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ❓| ✅ |
| [URL vhost-style](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/VirtualHosting.html#virtual-hosted-style-access) URL (eg. `bucket.host.tld/key`) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ✅| ✅ | ✅ |
| [Presigned URLs](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/ShareObjectPreSignedURL.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ✅ | ✅ | ✅(❓) |
*Note:* OpenIO does not says if it supports presigned URLs. Because it is part
of signature v4 and they claim they support it without additional precisions,
we suppose that OpenIO supports presigned URLs.
## Endpoint implementation
All endpoints that are missing on Garage will return a 501 Not Implemented.
Some `x-amz-` headers are not implemented.
### Core endoints
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [CreateBucket](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_CreateBucket.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [DeleteBucket](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucket.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [GetBucketLocation](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketLocation.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ |
| [HeadBucket](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_HeadBucket.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [ListBuckets](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListBuckets.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [HeadObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_HeadObject.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [CopyObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_CopyObject.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [DeleteObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteObject.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [DeleteObjects](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteObjects.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [GetObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObject.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [ListObjects](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListObjects.html) | ✅ Implemented (see details below) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌|
| [ListObjectsV2](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListObjectsV2.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [PostObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectPOST.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutObject.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
**ListObjects:** Implemented, but there isn't a very good specification of what
`encoding-type=url` covers so there might be some encoding bugs. In our
implementation the url-encoded fields are in the same in ListObjects as they
are in ListObjectsV2.
*Note: Ceph API documentation is incomplete and lacks at least HeadBucket and UploadPartCopy,
but these endpoints are documented in [Red Hat Ceph Storage - Chapter 2. Ceph Object Gateway and the S3 API](https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_ceph_storage/4/html/developer_guide/ceph-object-gateway-and-the-s3-api)*
### Multipart Upload endpoints
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [AbortMultipartUpload](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_AbortMultipartUpload.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [CompleteMultipartUpload](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_CompleteMultipartUpload.html) | ✅ Implemented (see details below) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [CreateMultipartUpload](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_CreateMultipartUpload.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅| ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [ListMultipartUpload](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListMultipartUpload.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [ListParts](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListParts.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [UploadPart](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_UploadPart.html) | ✅ Implemented (see details below) | ✅ | ✅| ✅ | ✅ |
| [UploadPartCopy](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_UploadPartCopy.html) | ✅ Implemented | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Our implementation of Multipart Upload is currently a bit more restrictive than Amazon's one in some edge cases.
For more information, please refer to our [issue tracker](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/204).
### Website endpoints
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [DeleteBucketWebsite](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketWebsite.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketWebsite](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketWebsite.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌ | ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketWebsite](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketWebsite.html) | ⚠ Partially implemented (see below)| ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [DeleteBucketCors](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketCors.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [GetBucketCors](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketCors.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌ | ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [PutBucketCors](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketCors.html) | ✅ Implemented | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
**PutBucketWebsite:** Implemented, but only stores the index document suffix and the error document path. Redirects are not supported.
*Note: Ceph radosgw has some support for static websites but it is different from the Amazon one. It also does not implement its configuration endpoints.*
### ACL, Policies endpoints
Amazon has 2 access control mechanisms in S3: ACL (legacy) and policies (new one).
Garage implements none of them, and has its own system instead, built around a per-access-key-per-bucket logic.
See Garage CLI reference manual to learn how to use Garage's permission system.
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [DeleteBucketPolicy](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketPolicy.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ✅ | ❌|
| [GetBucketPolicy](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketPolicy.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ⚠ | ❌|
| [GetBucketPolicyStatus](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketPolicyStatus.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketPolicy](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketPolicy.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ⚠ | ❌|
| [GetBucketAcl](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketAcl.html) | ❌ Missing | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [PutBucketAcl](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketAcl.html) | ❌ Missing | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [GetObjectAcl](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObjectAcl.html) | ❌ Missing | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| [PutObjectAcl](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutObjectAcl.html) | ❌ Missing | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
*Notes:* Riak CS only supports a subset of the policy configuration.
### Versioning, Lifecycle endpoints
Garage does not (yet) support object versioning.
If you need this feature, please [share your use case in our dedicated issue](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/166).
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [DeleteBucketLifecycle](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketLifecycle.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅| ❌| ✅|
| [GetBucketLifecycleConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketLifecycleConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅|
| [PutBucketLifecycleConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketLifecycleConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅|
| [GetBucketVersioning](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketVersioning.html) | ❌ Stub (see below) | ✅| ✅ | ❌| ✅|
| [ListObjectVersions](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListObjectVersions.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅|
| [PutBucketVersioning](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketVersioning.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅| ❌| ✅|
**GetBucketVersioning:** Stub implementation (Garage does not yet support versionning so this always returns "versionning not enabled").
### Replication endpoints
Please open an issue if you have a use case for replication.
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [DeleteBucketReplication](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketReplication.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketReplication](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketReplication.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketReplication](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketReplication.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ⚠ | ❌| ❌|
*Note: Ceph documentation briefly says that Ceph supports
[replication through the S3 API](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/multisite-sync-policy/#s3-replication-api)
but with some limitations.
Additionaly, replication endpoints are not documented in the S3 compatibility page so I don't know what kind of support we can expect.*
### Locking objects
Amazon defines a concept of [object locking](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/object-lock.html) that can be achieved either through a Retention period or a Legal hold.
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [GetObjectLegalHold](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObjectLegalHold.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutObjectLegalHold](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutObjectLegalHold.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [GetObjectRetention](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObjectRetention.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutObjectRetention](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutObjectRetention.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [GetObjectLockConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObjectLockConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutObjectLockConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutObjectLockConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
### (Server-side) encryption
We think that you can either encrypt your server partition or do client-side encryption, so we did not implement server-side encryption for Garage.
Please open an issue if you have a use case.
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [DeleteBucketEncryption](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketEncryption.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketEncryption](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketEncryption.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketEncryption](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketEncryption.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
### Misc endpoints
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [GetBucketNotificationConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketNotificationConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketNotificationConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketNotificationConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
| [DeleteBucketTagging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketTagging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [GetBucketTagging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketTagging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [PutBucketTagging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketTagging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [DeleteObjectTagging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteObjectTagging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [GetObjectTagging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObjectTagging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [PutObjectTagging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutObjectTagging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ✅ |
| [GetObjectTorrent](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObjectTorrent.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ✅ | ❌| ❌|
### Vendor specific endpoints
<details><summary>Display Amazon specifc endpoints</summary>
| Endpoint | Garage | [Openstack Swift](https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/s3_compat.html) | [Ceph Object Gateway](https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/radosgw/s3/) | [Riak CS](https://docs.riak.com/riak/cs/2.1.1/references/apis/storage/s3/index.html) | [OpenIO](https://docs.openio.io/latest/source/arch-design/s3_compliancy.html) |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------|---------------|---------|-----|
| [DeleteBucketAnalyticsConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketAnalyticsConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [DeleteBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [DeleteBucketInventoryConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketInventoryConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [DeleteBucketMetricsConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketMetricsConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [DeleteBucketOwnershipControls](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeleteBucketOwnershipControls.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [DeletePublicAccessBlock](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_DeletePublicAccessBlock.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketAccelerateConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketAccelerateConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketAnalyticsConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketAnalyticsConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketInventoryConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketInventoryConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketLogging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketLogging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketMetricsConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketMetricsConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketOwnershipControls](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketOwnershipControls.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetBucketRequestPayment](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetBucketRequestPayment.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [GetPublicAccessBlock](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetPublicAccessBlock.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [ListBucketAnalyticsConfigurations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListBucketAnalyticsConfigurations.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [ListBucketIntelligentTieringConfigurations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListBucketIntelligentTieringConfigurations.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [ListBucketInventoryConfigurations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListBucketInventoryConfigurations.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [ListBucketMetricsConfigurations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListBucketMetricsConfigurations.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketAccelerateConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketAccelerateConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketAnalyticsConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketAnalyticsConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketInventoryConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketInventoryConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketLogging](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketLogging.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketMetricsConfiguration](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketMetricsConfiguration.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketOwnershipControls](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketOwnershipControls.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutBucketRequestPayment](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutBucketRequestPayment.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [PutPublicAccessBlock](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_PutPublicAccessBlock.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [RestoreObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_RestoreObject.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
| [SelectObjectContent](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_SelectObjectContent.html) | ❌ Missing | ❌| ❌| ❌| ❌|
</details>

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# Summary
[The Garage Data Store](./intro.md)
- [Quick start](./quick_start/index.md)
- [Cookbook](./cookbook/index.md)
- [Multi-node deployment](./cookbook/real_world.md)
- [Building from source](./cookbook/from_source.md)
- [Integration with systemd](./cookbook/systemd.md)
- [Configuring a gateway node](./cookbook/gateways.md)
- [Exposing buckets as websites](./cookbook/exposing_websites.md)
- [Configuring a reverse proxy](./cookbook/reverse_proxy.md)
- [Recovering from failures](./cookbook/recovering.md)
- [Integrations](./connect/index.md)
- [Apps (Nextcloud, Peertube...)](./connect/apps.md)
- [Websites (Hugo, Jekyll, Publii...)](./connect/websites.md)
- [Repositories (Docker, Nix, Git...)](./connect/repositories.md)
- [CLI tools (rclone, awscli, mc...)](./connect/cli.md)
- [Backups (restic, duplicity...)](./connect/backup.md)
- [Your code (PHP, JS, Go...)](./connect/code.md)
- [FUSE (s3fs, goofys, s3backer...)](./connect/fs.md)
- [Reference Manual](./reference_manual/index.md)
- [Garage configuration file](./reference_manual/configuration.md)
- [Cluster layout management](./reference_manual/layout.md)
- [Garage CLI](./reference_manual/cli.md)
- [S3 compatibility status](./reference_manual/s3_compatibility.md)
- [Design](./design/index.md)
- [Goals and use Cases](./design/goals.md)
- [Benchmarks](./design/benchmarks.md)
- [Related work](./design/related_work.md)
- [Internals](./design/internals.md)
- [Development](./development/index.md)
- [Setup your environment](./development/devenv.md)
- [Development scripts](./development/scripts.md)
- [Release process](./development/release_process.md)
- [Miscellaneous notes](./development/miscellaneous_notes.md)
- [Working Documents](./working_documents/index.md)
- [S3 compatibility target](./working_documents/compatibility_target.md)
- [Load balancing data](./working_documents/load_balancing.md)
- [Migrating from 0.5 to 0.6](./working_documents/migration_06.md)
- [Migrating from 0.3 to 0.4](./working_documents/migration_04.md)
- [Design draft](./working_documents/design_draft.md)

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# Backups (restic, duplicity...)
Backups are essential for disaster recovery but they are not trivial to manage.
Using Garage as your backup target will enable you to scale your storage as needed while ensuring high availability.
## Borg Backup
Borg Backup is very popular among the backup tools but it is not yet compatible with the S3 API.
We recommend using any other tool listed in this guide because they are all compatible with the S3 API.
If you still want to use Borg, you can use it with `rclone mount`.
## Restic
*External links:* [Restic Documentation > Amazon S3](https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/stable/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#amazon-s3)
## Duplicity
*External links:* [Duplicity > man](https://duplicity.gitlab.io/duplicity-web/vers8/duplicity.1.html) (scroll to "URL Format" and "A note on Amazon S3")
## Duplicati
*External links:* [Duplicati Documentation > Storage Providers](https://github.com/kees-z/DuplicatiDocs/blob/master/docs/05-storage-providers.md#s3-compatible)
## knoxite
*External links:* [Knoxite Documentation > Storage Backends](https://knoxite.com/docs/storage-backends/#amazon-s3)
## kopia
*External links:* [Kopia Documentation > Repositories](https://kopia.io/docs/repositories/#amazon-s3)

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# CLI tools
CLI tools allow you to query the S3 API without too many abstractions.
These tools are particularly suitable for debug, backups, website deployments or any scripted task that need to handle data.
## Minio client (recommended)
Use the following command to set an "alias", i.e. define a new S3 server to be
used by the Minio client:
```bash
mc alias set \
garage \
<endpoint> \
<access key> \
<secret key> \
--api S3v4
```
Remember that `mc` is sometimes called `mcli` (such as on Arch Linux), to avoid conflicts
with Midnight Commander.
Some commands:
```bash
# list buckets
mc ls garage/
# list objets in a bucket
mc ls garage/my_files
# copy from your filesystem to garage
mc cp /proc/cpuinfo garage/my_files/cpuinfo.txt
# copy from garage to your filesystem
mc cp garage/my_files/cpuinfo.txt /tmp/cpuinfo.txt
# mirror a folder from your filesystem to garage
mc mirror --overwrite ./book garage/garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr
```
## AWS CLI
Create a file named `~/.aws/credentials` and put:
```toml
[default]
aws_access_key_id=xxxx
aws_secret_access_key=xxxx
```
Then a file named `~/.aws/config` and put:
```toml
[default]
region=garage
```
Now, supposing Garage is listening on `http://127.0.0.1:3900`, you can list your buckets with:
```bash
aws --endpoint-url http://127.0.0.1:3900 s3 ls
```
Passing the `--endpoint-url` parameter to each command is annoying but AWS developers do not provide a corresponding configuration entry.
As a workaround, you can redefine the aws command by editing the file `~/.bashrc`:
```
function aws { command aws --endpoint-url http://127.0.0.1:3900 $@ ; }
```
*Do not forget to run `source ~/.bashrc` or to start a new terminal before running the next commands.*
Now you can simply run:
```bash
# list buckets
aws s3 ls
# list objects of a bucket
aws s3 ls s3://my_files
# copy from your filesystem to garage
aws s3 cp /proc/cpuinfo s3://my_files/cpuinfo.txt
# copy from garage to your filesystem
aws s3 cp s3/my_files/cpuinfo.txt /tmp/cpuinfo.txt
```
## `rclone`
`rclone` can be configured using the interactive assistant invoked using `rclone config`.
You can also configure `rclone` by writing directly its configuration file.
Here is a template `rclone.ini` configuration file (mine is located at `~/.config/rclone/rclone.conf`):
```ini
[garage]
type = s3
provider = Other
env_auth = false
access_key_id = <access key>
secret_access_key = <secret key>
region = <region>
endpoint = <endpoint>
force_path_style = true
acl = private
bucket_acl = private
```
Now you can run:
```bash
# list buckets
rclone lsd garage:
# list objects of a bucket aggregated in directories
rclone lsd garage:my-bucket
# copy from your filesystem to garage
echo hello world > /tmp/hello.txt
rclone copy /tmp/hello.txt garage:my-bucket/
# copy from garage to your filesystem
rclone copy garage:quentin.divers/hello.txt .
# see all available subcommands
rclone help
```
**Advice with rclone:** use the `--fast-list` option when accessing buckets with large amounts of objects.
This will tremendously accelerate operations such as `rclone sync` or `rclone ncdu` by reducing the number
of ListObjects calls that are made.
## `s3cmd`
Here is a template for the `s3cmd.cfg` file to talk with Garage:
```ini
[default]
access_key = <access key>
secret_key = <secret key>
host_base = <endpoint without http(s)://>
host_bucket = <same as host_base>
use_https = <False or True>
```
And use it as follow:
```bash
# List buckets
s3cmd ls
# s3cmd objects inside a bucket
s3cmd ls s3://my-bucket
# copy from your filesystem to garage
echo hello world > /tmp/hello.txt
s3cmd put /tmp/hello.txt s3://my-bucket/
# copy from garage to your filesystem
s3cmd get s3://my-bucket/hello.txt hello.txt
```
## Cyberduck & duck
TODO

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# Websites (Hugo, Jekyll, Publii...)
Garage is also suitable to host static websites.
While they can be deployed with traditional CLI tools, some static website generators have integrated options to ease your workflow.
## Hugo
Add to your `config.toml` the following section:
```toml
[[deployment.targets]]
URL = "s3://<bucket>?endpoint=<endpoint>&disableSSL=<bool>&s3ForcePathStyle=true&region=garage"
```
For example:
```toml
[[deployment.targets]]
URL = "s3://my-blog?endpoint=localhost:9000&disableSSL=true&s3ForcePathStyle=true&region=garage"
```
Then inform hugo of your credentials:
```bash
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=GKxxx
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxx
```
And finally build and deploy your website:
```bsh
hugo
hugo deploy
```
*External links:*
- [gocloud.dev > aws > Supported URL parameters](https://pkg.go.dev/gocloud.dev/aws?utm_source=godoc#ConfigFromURLParams)
- [Hugo Documentation > hugo deploy](https://gohugo.io/hosting-and-deployment/hugo-deploy/)
## Publii
It would require a patch either on Garage or on Publii to make both systems work.
Currently, the proposed workaround is to deploy your website manually:
- On the left menu, click on Server, choose Manual Deployment (the logo looks like a compressed file)
- Set your website URL, keep Output type as "Non-compressed catalog"
- Click on Save changes
- Click on Sync your website (bottom left of the app)
- On the new page, click again on Sync your website
- Click on Get website files
- You need to synchronize the output folder you see in your file explorer, we will use minio client.
Be sure that you [configured minio client](cli.html#minio-client-recommended).
Then copy this output folder
```bash
mc mirror --overwrite output garage/my-site
```
## Generic (eg. Jekyll)
Some tools do not support sending to a S3 backend but output a compiled folder on your system.
We can then use any CLI tool to upload this content to our S3 target.
First, start by [configuring minio client](cli.html#minio-client-recommended).
Then build your website:
```bash
jekyll build
```
And copy jekyll's output folder on S3:
```bash
mc mirror --overwrite _site garage/my-site
```

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@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
# Exposing buckets as websites
You can expose your bucket as a website with this simple command:
```bash
garage bucket website --allow my-website
```
Now it will be **publicly** exposed on the web endpoint (by default listening on port 3902).
Our website serving logic is as follow:
- Supports only static websites (no support for PHP or other languages)
- Does not support directory listing
- The index is defined in your `garage.toml`. ([ref](/reference_manual/configuration.html#index))
Now we need to infer the URL of your website through your bucket name.
Let assume:
- we set `root_domain = ".web.example.com"` in `garage.toml` ([ref](/reference_manual/configuration.html#root_domain))
- our bucket name is `garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr`.
Our bucket will be served if the Host field matches one of these 2 values (the port is ignored):
- `garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr.web.example.com`: you can dedicate a subdomain to your users (here `web.example.com`).
- `garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr`: your users can bring their own domain name, they just need to point them to your Garage cluster.
You can try this logic locally, without configuring any DNS, thanks to `curl`:
```bash
# prepare your test
echo hello world > /tmp/index.html
mc cp /tmp/index.html garage/garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr
curl -H 'Host: garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr' http://localhost:3902
# should print "hello world"
curl -H 'Host: garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr.web.example.com' http://localhost:3902
# should also print "hello world"
```
Now that you understand how website logic works on Garage, you can:
- make the website endpoint listens on port 80 (instead of 3902)
- use iptables to redirect the port 80 to the port 3902:
`iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp -dport 80 -j REDIRECT -to-port 3902`
- or configure a [reverse proxy](reverse_proxy.html) in front of Garage to add TLS (HTTPS), CORS support, etc.
You can also take a look at [Website Integration](/connect/websites.html) to see how you can add Garage to your workflow.

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@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
# Cookbook
A cookbook, when you cook, is a collection of recipes.
Similarly, Garage's cookbook contains a collection of recipes that are known to works well!
This chapter could also be referred as "Tutorials" or "Best practices".
- **[Multi-node deployment](real_world.md):** This page will walk you through all of the necessary
steps to deploy Garage in a real-world setting.
- **[Building from source](from_source.md):** This page explains how to build Garage from
source in case a binary is not provided for your architecture, or if you want to
hack with us!
- **[Integration with Systemd](systemd.md):** This page explains how to run Garage
as a Systemd service (instead of as a Docker container).
- **[Configuring a gateway node](gateways.md):** This page explains how to run a gateway node in a Garage cluster, i.e. a Garage node that doesn't store data but accelerates access to data present on the other nodes.
- **[Hosting a website](exposing_websites.md):** This page explains how to use Garage
to host a static website.
- **[Configuring a reverse-proxy](reverse_proxy.md):** This page explains how to configure a reverse-proxy to add TLS support to your S3 api endpoint.
- **[Recovering from failures](recovering.md):** Garage's first selling point is resilience
to hardware failures. This section explains how to recover from such a failure in the
best possible way.

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@ -1,165 +0,0 @@
# Configuring a reverse proxy
The main reason to add a reverse proxy in front of Garage is to provide TLS to your users.
In production you will likely need your certificates signed by a certificate authority.
The most automated way is to use a provider supporting the [ACME protocol](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8555)
such as [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/), [ZeroSSL](https://zerossl.com/) or [Buypass Go SSL](https://www.buypass.com/ssl/products/acme).
If you are only testing Garage, you can generate a self-signed certificate to follow the documentation:
```bash
openssl req \
-new \
-x509 \
-keyout /tmp/garage.key \
-out /tmp/garage.crt \
-nodes \
-subj "/C=XX/ST=XX/L=XX/O=XX/OU=XX/CN=localhost/emailAddress=X@X.XX" \
-addext "subjectAltName = DNS:localhost, IP:127.0.0.1"
cat /tmp/garage.key /tmp/garage.crt > /tmp/garage.pem
```
Be careful as you will need to allow self signed certificates in your client.
For example, with minio, you must add the `--insecure` flag.
An example:
```bash
mc ls --insecure garage/
```
## socat (only for testing purposes)
If you want to test Garage with a TLS frontend, socat can do it for you in a single command:
```bash
socat \
"openssl-listen:443,\
reuseaddr,\
fork,\
verify=0,\
cert=/tmp/garage.pem" \
tcp4-connect:localhost:3900
```
## Nginx
Nginx is a well-known reverse proxy suitable for production.
We do the configuration in 3 steps: first we define the upstream blocks ("the backends")
then we define the server blocks ("the frontends") for the S3 endpoint and finally for the web endpoint.
The following configuration blocks can be all put in the same `/etc/nginx/sites-available/garage.conf`.
To make your configuration active, run `ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/garage.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/`.
If you directly put the instructions in the root `nginx.conf`, keep in mind that these configurations must be enclosed inside a `http { }` block.
And do not forget to reload nginx with `systemctl reload nginx` or `nginx -s reload`.
### Defining backends
First, we need to tell to nginx how to access our Garage cluster.
Because we have multiple nodes, we want to leverage all of them by spreading the load.
In nginx, we can do that with the upstream directive.
Because we have 2 endpoints: one for the S3 API and one to serve websites,
we create 2 backends named respectively `s3_backend` and `web_backend`.
A documented example for the `s3_backend` assuming you chose port 3900:
```nginx
upstream s3_backend {
# if you have a garage instance locally
server 127.0.0.1:3900;
# you can also put your other instances
server 192.168.1.3:3900;
# domain names also work
server garage1.example.com:3900;
# you can assign weights if you have some servers
# that are more powerful than others
server garage2.example.com:3900 weight=2;
}
```
A similar example for the `web_backend` assuming you chose port 3902:
```nginx
upstream web_backend {
server 127.0.0.1:3902;
server 192.168.1.3:3902;
server garage1.example.com:3902;
server garage2.example.com:3902 weight=2;
}
```
### Exposing the S3 API
The configuration section for the S3 API is simple as we only support path-access style yet.
We simply configure the TLS parameters and forward all the requests to the backend:
```nginx
server {
listen [::]:443 http2 ssl;
ssl_certificate /tmp/garage.crt;
ssl_certificate_key /tmp/garage.key;
# should be the endpoint you want
# aws uses s3.amazonaws.com for example
server_name garage.example.com;
location / {
proxy_pass http://s3_backend;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
}
}
```
### Exposing the web endpoint
The web endpoint is a bit more complicated to configure as it listens on many different `Host` fields.
To better understand the logic involved, you can refer to the [Exposing buckets as websites](/cookbook/exposing_websites.html) section.
Also, for some applications, you may need to serve CORS headers: Garage can not serve them directly but we show how we can use nginx to serve them.
You can use the following example as your starting point:
```nginx
server {
listen [::]:443 http2 ssl;
ssl_certificate /tmp/garage.crt;
ssl_certificate_key /tmp/garage.key;
# We list all the Hosts fields that can access our buckets
server_name *.web.garage
example.com
my-site.tld
;
location / {
# Add these headers only if you want to allow CORS requests
# For production use, more specific rules would be better for your security
add_header Access-Control-Allow-Origin *;
add_header Access-Control-Max-Age 3600;
add_header Access-Control-Expose-Headers Content-Length;
add_header Access-Control-Allow-Headers Range;
# We do not forward OPTIONS requests to Garage
# as it does not support them but they are needed for CORS.
if ($request_method = OPTIONS) {
return 200;
}
proxy_pass http://web_backend;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
}
}
```
## Apache httpd
@TODO
## Traefik
@TODO

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@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
# Hosting a website
TODO

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<p align="center" style="text-align:center;">
<a href="https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr">
<img alt="Garage's Logo" src="img/logo.svg" height="200" />
</a>
</p>
<p align="center" style="text-align:center;">
[ <a href="https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/_releases.html">Download</a>
| <a href="https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage">Git repository</a>
| <a href="https://matrix.to/#/%23garage:deuxfleurs.fr">Matrix channel</a>
| <a href="https://drone.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage">Drone CI</a>
]
</p>
# Data resiliency for everyone
Garage is an **open-source** distributed **storage service** you can **self-host** to fullfill many needs:
<p align="center" style="text-align:center; margin-bottom: 5rem;">
<img alt="Summary of the possible usages with a related icon: host a website, store media and backup target" src="img/usage.svg" />
</p>
<p align="center" style="text-align:center; margin-bottom: 5rem;">
<a href="/design/goals.html#use-cases">⮞ learn more about use cases ⮜</a>
</p>
Garage implements the **[Amazon S3 API](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/Welcome.html)** and thus is already **compatible** with many applications:
<p align="center" style="text-align:center; margin-bottom: 8rem;">
<img alt="Garage is already compatible with Nextcloud, Mastodon, Matrix Synapse, Cyberduck, RClone and Peertube" src="img/software.svg" />
</p>
<p align="center" style="text-align:center; margin-bottom: 5rem;">
<a href="/connect/index.html">⮞ learn more about integrations ⮜</a>
</p>
Garage provides **data resiliency** by **replicating** data 3x over **distant** servers:
<p align="center" style="text-align:center; margin-bottom: 5rem;">
<img alt="An example deployment on a map with servers in 5 zones: UK, France, Belgium, Germany and Switzerland. Each chunk of data is replicated in 3 of these 5 zones." src="img/map.svg" />
</p>
<p align="center" style="text-align:center; margin-bottom: 5rem;">
<a href="/design/index.html">⮞ learn more about our design ⮜</a>
</p>
Did you notice that *this website* is hosted and served by Garage?
## Keeping requirements low
We worked hard to keep requirements as low as possible as we target the largest possible public.
* **CPU:** any x86\_64 CPU from the last 10 years, ARMv7 or ARMv8.
* **RAM:** 1GB
* **Disk Space:** at least 16GB
* **Network:** 200ms or less, 50 Mbps or more
* **Heterogeneous hardware:** build a cluster with whatever second-hand machines are available
*For the network, as we do not use consensus algorithms like Paxos or Raft, Garage is not as latency sensitive.*
*Thanks to Rust and its zero-cost abstractions, we keep CPU and memory low.*
## Built on the shoulder of giants
- [Dynamo: Amazons Highly Available Key-value Store ](https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/1323293.1294281) by DeCandia et al.
- [Conflict-Free Replicated Data Types](https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-24550-3_29) by Shapiro et al.
- [Maglev: A Fast and Reliable Software Network Load Balancer](https://www.usenix.org/conference/nsdi16/technical-sessions/presentation/eisenbud) by Eisenbud et al.
## Talks
- [(fr, 2021-11-13, video) Garage : Mille et une façons de stocker vos données](https://video.tedomum.net/w/moYKcv198dyMrT8hCS5jz9) and [slides (html)](https://rfid.deuxfleurs.fr/presentations/2021-11-13/garage/) - during [RFID#1](https://rfid.deuxfleurs.fr/programme/2021-11-13/) event
- [(en, 2021-04-28, pdf) Distributed object storage is centralised](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/raw/commit/b1f60579a13d3c5eba7f74b1775c84639ea9b51a/doc/talks/2021-04-28_spirals-team/talk.pdf)
- [(fr, 2020-12-02, pdf) Garage : jouer dans la cour des grands quand on est un hébergeur associatif](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/raw/commit/b1f60579a13d3c5eba7f74b1775c84639ea9b51a/doc/talks/2020-12-02_wide-team/talk.pdf)
## Community
If you want to discuss with us, you can join our Matrix channel at [#garage:deuxfleurs.fr](https://matrix.to/#/#garage:deuxfleurs.fr).
Our code repository and issue tracker, which is the place where you should report bugs, is managed on [Deuxfleurs' Gitea](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage).
## License
Garage's source code, is released under the [AGPL v3 License](https://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.en.html).
Please note that if you patch Garage and then use it to provide any service over a network, you must share your code!
# Sponsors and funding
The Deuxfleurs association has received a grant from [NGI POINTER](https://pointer.ngi.eu/), to fund 3 people working on Garage full-time for a year: from October 2021 to September 2022.
<div style="display: flex; justify-content: space-around">
<a href="https://pointer.ngi.eu/">
<img style="height:100px" src="img/ngi-logo.png" alt="NGI Pointer logo">
</a>
<a href="https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/what-horizon-2020">
<img style="height:100px" src="img/eu-flag-logo.png" alt="EU flag logo">
</a>
</div>
_This project has received funding from the European Unions Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme within the framework of the NGI-POINTER Project funded under grant agreement N° 871528._

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# Garage configuration file format reference
Here is an example `garage.toml` configuration file that illustrates all of the possible options:
```toml
metadata_dir = "/var/lib/garage/meta"
data_dir = "/var/lib/garage/data"
block_size = 1048576
replication_mode = "3"
compression_level = 1
rpc_secret = "4425f5c26c5e11581d3223904324dcb5b5d5dfb14e5e7f35e38c595424f5f1e6"
rpc_bind_addr = "[::]:3901"
rpc_public_addr = "[fc00:1::1]:3901"
bootstrap_peers = [
"563e1ac825ee3323aa441e72c26d1030d6d4414aeb3dd25287c531e7fc2bc95d@[fc00:1::1]:3901",
"86f0f26ae4afbd59aaf9cfb059eefac844951efd5b8caeec0d53f4ed6c85f332[fc00:1::2]:3901",
"681456ab91350f92242e80a531a3ec9392cb7c974f72640112f90a600d7921a4@[fc00:B::1]:3901",
"212fd62eeaca72c122b45a7f4fa0f55e012aa5e24ac384a72a3016413fa724ff@[fc00:F::1]:3901",
]
consul_host = "consul.service"
consul_service_name = "garage-daemon"
sled_cache_capacity = 134217728
sled_flush_every_ms = 2000
[s3_api]
api_bind_addr = "[::]:3900"
s3_region = "garage"
root_domain = ".s3.garage"
[s3_web]
bind_addr = "[::]:3902"
root_domain = ".web.garage"
index = "index.html"
```
The following gives details about each available configuration option.
## Available configuration options
#### `metadata_dir`
The directory in which Garage will store its metadata. This contains the node identifier,
the network configuration and the peer list, the list of buckets and keys as well
as the index of all objects, object version and object blocks.
Store this folder on a fast SSD drive if possible to maximize Garage's performance.
#### `data_dir`
The directory in which Garage will store the data blocks of objects.
This folder can be placed on an HDD. The space available for `data_dir`
should be counted to determine a node's capacity
when [configuring it](../getting_started/05_cluster.md).
#### `block_size`
Garage splits stored objects in consecutive chunks of size `block_size`
(except the last one which might be smaller). The default size is 1MB and
should work in most cases. If you are interested in tuning this, feel free
to do so (and remember to report your findings to us!). If this value is
changed for a running Garage installation, only files newly uploaded will be
affected. Previously uploaded files will remain available. This however
means that chunks from existing files will not be deduplicated with chunks
from newly uploaded files, meaning you might use more storage space that is
optimally possible.
#### `replication_mode`
Garage supports the following replication modes:
- `none` or `1`: data stored on Garage is stored on a single node. There is no redundancy,
and data will be unavailable as soon as one node fails or its network is disconnected.
Do not use this for anything else than test deployments.
- `2`: data stored on Garage will be stored on two different nodes, if possible in different
zones. Garage tolerates one node failure before losing data. Data should be available
read-only when one node is down, but write operations will fail.
Use this only if you really have to.
- `3`: data stored on Garage will be stored on three different nodes, if possible each in
a different zones.
Garage tolerates two node failure before losing data. Data should be available
read-only when two nodes are down, and writes should be possible if only a single node
is down.
Note that in modes `2` and `3`,
if at least the same number of zones are available, an arbitrary number of failures in
any given zone is tolerated as copies of data will be spread over several zones.
**Make sure `replication_mode` is the same in the configuration files of all nodes.
Never run a Garage cluster where that is not the case.**
Changing the `replication_mode` of a cluster might work (make sure to shut down all nodes
and changing it everywhere at the time), but is not officially supported.
### `compression_level`
Zstd compression level to use for storing blocks.
Values between `1` (faster compression) and `19` (smaller file) are standard compression
levels for zstd. From `20` to `22`, compression levels are referred as "ultra" and must be
used with extra care as it will use lot of memory. A value of `0` will let zstd choose a
default value (currently `3`). Finally, zstd has also compression designed to be faster
than default compression levels, they range from `-1` (smaller file) to `-99` (faster
compression).
If you do not specify a `compression_level` entry, garage will set it to `1` for you. With
this parameters, zstd consumes low amount of cpu and should work faster than line speed in
most situations, while saving some space and intra-cluster
bandwidth.
If you want to totally deactivate zstd in garage, you can pass the special value `'none'`. No
zstd related code will be called, your chunks will be stored on disk without any processing.
Compression is done synchronously, setting a value too high will add latency to write queries.
This value can be different between nodes, compression is done by the node which receive the
API call.
#### `rpc_secret`
Garage uses a secret key that is shared between all nodes of the cluster
in order to identify these nodes and allow them to communicate together.
This key should be specified here in the form of a 32-byte hex-encoded
random string. Such a string can be generated with a command
such as `openssl rand -hex 32`.
#### `rpc_bind_addr`
The address and port on which to bind for inter-cluster communcations
(reffered to as RPC for remote procedure calls).
The port specified here should be the same one that other nodes will used to contact
the node, even in the case of a NAT: the NAT should be configured to forward the external
port number to the same internal port nubmer. This means that if you have several nodes running
behind a NAT, they should each use a different RPC port number.
#### `rpc_public_addr`
The address and port that other nodes need to use to contact this node for
RPC calls. **This parameter is optional but recommended.** In case you have
a NAT that binds the RPC port to a port that is different on your public IP,
this field might help making it work.
#### `bootstrap_peers`
A list of peer identifiers on which to contact other Garage peers of this cluster.
These peer identifiers have the following syntax:
```
<node public key>@<node public IP or hostname>:<port>
```
In the case where `rpc_public_addr` is correctly specified in the
configuration file, the full identifier of a node including IP and port can
be obtained by running `garage node id` and then included directly in the
`bootstrap_peers` list of other nodes. Otherwise, only the node's public
key will be returned by `garage node id` and you will have to add the IP
yourself.
#### `consul_host` and `consul_service_name`
Garage supports discovering other nodes of the cluster using Consul.
This works only when nodes are announced in Consul by an orchestrator such as Nomad,
as Garage is not able to announce itself.
The `consul_host` parameter should be set to the hostname of the Consul server,
and `consul_service_name` should be set to the service name under which Garage's
RPC ports are announced.
#### `sled_cache_capacity`
This parameter can be used to tune the capacity of the cache used by
[sled](https://sled.rs), the database Garage uses internally to store metadata.
Tune this to fit the RAM you wish to make available to your Garage instance.
More cache means faster Garage, but the default value (128MB) should be plenty
for most use cases.
#### `sled_flush_every_ms`
This parameters can be used to tune the flushing interval of sled.
Increase this if sled is thrashing your SSD, at the risk of losing more data in case
of a power outage (though this should not matter much as data is replicated on other
nodes). The default value, 2000ms, should be appropriate for most use cases.
## The `[s3_api]` section
#### `api_bind_addr`
The IP and port on which to bind for accepting S3 API calls.
This endpoint does not suport TLS: a reverse proxy should be used to provide it.
#### `s3_region`
Garage will accept S3 API calls that are targetted to the S3 region defined here.
API calls targetted to other regions will fail with a AuthorizationHeaderMalformed error
message that redirects the client to the correct region.
#### `root_domain`
The optionnal suffix to access bucket using vhost-style in addition to path-style request.
Note path-style requests are always enabled, whether or not vhost-style is configured.
Configuring vhost-style S3 required a wildcard DNS entry, and possibly a wildcard TLS certificate,
but might be required by softwares not supporting path-style requests.
If `root_domain` is `s3.garage.eu`, a bucket called `my-bucket` can be interacted with
using the hostname `my-bucket.s3.garage.eu`.
## The `[s3_web]` section
Garage allows to publish content of buckets as websites. This section configures the
behaviour of this module.
#### `bind_addr`
The IP and port on which to bind for accepting HTTP requests to buckets configured
for website access.
This endpoint does not suport TLS: a reverse proxy should be used to provide it.
#### `root_domain`
The optionnal suffix appended to bucket names for the corresponding HTTP Host.
For instance, if `root_domain` is `web.garage.eu`, a bucket called `deuxfleurs.fr`
will be accessible either with hostname `deuxfleurs.fr.web.garage.eu`
or with hostname `deuxfleurs.fr`.
#### `index`
The name of the index file to return for requests ending with `/` (usually `index.html`).

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@ -1,64 +0,0 @@
# S3 Compatibility status
## Global S3 features
Implemented:
- path-style URLs (`garage.tld/bucket/key`)
- vhost-style URLs (`bucket.garage.tld/key`)
- putting and getting objects in buckets
- multipart uploads
- listing objects
- access control on a per-access-key-per-bucket basis
- CORS headers on web endpoint
Not implemented:
- object-level ACL
- [object versioning](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/166)
- encryption
- most `x-amz-` headers
## Endpoint implementation
All APIs that are not mentionned are not implemented and will return a 501 Not Implemented.
| Endpoint | Status |
|------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| AbortMultipartUpload | Implemented |
| CompleteMultipartUpload | Implemented |
| CopyObject | Implemented |
| CreateBucket | Implemented |
| CreateMultipartUpload | Implemented |
| DeleteBucket | Implemented |
| DeleteBucketCors | Implemented |
| DeleteBucketWebsite | Implemented |
| DeleteObject | Implemented |
| DeleteObjects | Implemented |
| GetBucketCors | Implemented |
| GetBucketLocation | Implemented |
| GetBucketVersioning | Stub (see below) |
| GetBucketWebsite | Implemented |
| GetObject | Implemented |
| HeadBucket | Implemented |
| HeadObject | Implemented |
| ListBuckets | Implemented |
| ListObjects | Implemented, bugs? (see below) |
| ListObjectsV2 | Implemented |
| ListMultipartUpload | Implemented |
| ListParts | Implemented |
| PutObject | Implemented |
| PutBucketCors | Implemented |
| PutBucketWebsite | Partially implemented (see below)|
| UploadPart | Implemented |
| UploadPartCopy | Implemented |
- **GetBucketVersioning:** Stub implementation (Garage does not yet support versionning so this always returns
"versionning not enabled").
- **ListObjects:** Implemented, but there isn't a very good specification of what `encoding-type=url` covers so there might be some encoding bugs. In our implementation the url-encoded fields are in the same in ListObjects as they are in ListObjectsV2.
- **PutBucketWebsite:** Implemented, but only stores the index document suffix and the error document path. Redirects are not supported.

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@ -1,4 +1,9 @@
# Working Documents
+++
title = "Working Documents"
weight = 7
sort_by = "weight"
template = "documentation.html"
+++
Working documents are documents that reflect the fact that Garage is a software that evolves quickly.
They are a way to communicate our ideas, our changes, and so on before or while we are implementing them in Garage.

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# S3 compatibility target
+++
title = "S3 compatibility target"
weight = 5
+++
If there is a specific S3 functionnality you have a need for, feel free to open
a PR to put the corresponding endpoints higher in the list. Please explain
@ -24,8 +27,8 @@ your motivations for doing so in the PR message.
| | CompleteMultipartUpload |
| | AbortMultipartUpload |
| | UploadPart |
| | [*ListMultipartUploads*](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/103) |
| | [*ListParts*](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/103) |
| | ListMultipartUploads |
| | ListParts |
| **A-tier** | |
| | GetBucketCors |
| | PutBucketCors |
@ -34,6 +37,7 @@ your motivations for doing so in the PR message.
| | GetBucketWebsite |
| | PutBucketWebsite |
| | DeleteBucketWebsite |
| | [PostObject](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectPOST.html) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| **B-tier** | |
| | GetBucketAcl |

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Design draft
+++
title = "Design draft"
weight = 25
+++
**WARNING: this documentation is a design draft which was written before Garage's actual implementation.
The general principle are similar, but details have not been updated.**
@ -159,4 +162,4 @@ Number K of tokens per node: decided by the operator & stored in the operator's
- CDC: <https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/atc16/atc16-paper-xia.pdf>
- Erasure coding: <http://web.eecs.utk.edu/~jplank/plank/papers/CS-08-627.html>
- [Openstack Storage Concepts](https://docs.openstack.org/arch-design/design-storage/design-storage-concepts.html)
- [RADOS](https://ceph.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/weil-rados-pdsw07.pdf)
- [RADOS](https://doi.org/10.1145/1374596.1374606) [[pdf](https://ceph.com/assets/pdfs/weil-rados-pdsw07.pdf)]

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Load Balancing Data (planned for version 0.2)
+++
title = "Load balancing data"
weight = 10
+++
**This is being yet improved in release 0.5. The working document has not been updated yet, it still only applies to Garage 0.2 through 0.4.**

View file

@ -1,4 +1,7 @@
# Migrating from 0.3 to 0.4
+++
title = "Migrating from 0.3 to 0.4"
weight = 20
+++
**Migrating from 0.3 to 0.4 is unsupported. This document is only intended to
document the process internally for the Deuxfleurs cluster where we have to do

View file

@ -1,12 +1,15 @@
# Migrating from 0.5 to 0.6
+++
title = "Migrating from 0.5 to 0.6"
weight = 15
+++
**This guide explains how to migrate to 0.6 if you have an existing 0.5 cluster.
We don't recommend trying to migrate directly from 0.4 or older to 0.6.**
We don't recommend trying to migrate to 0.6 directly from 0.4 or older.**
**We make no guarantee that this migration will work perfectly:
back up all your data before attempting it!**
Garage v0.6 (not yet released) introduces a new data model for buckets,
Garage v0.6 introduces a new data model for buckets,
that allows buckets to have many names (aliases).
Buckets can also have "private" aliases (called local aliases),
which are only visible when using a certain access key.

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@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
+++
title = "Migrating from 0.6 to 0.7"
weight = 14
+++
**This guide explains how to migrate to 0.7 if you have an existing 0.6 cluster.
We don't recommend trying to migrate to 0.7 directly from 0.5 or older.**
**We make no guarantee that this migration will work perfectly:
back up all your data before attempting it!**
Garage v0.7 introduces a cluster protocol change to support request tracing through OpenTelemetry.
No data structure is changed, so no data migration is required.
The migration steps are as follows:
1. Do `garage repair --all-nodes --yes tables` and `garage repair --all-nodes --yes blocks`,
check the logs and check that all data seems to be synced correctly between
nodes. If you have time, do additional checks (`scrub`, `block_refs`, etc.)
2. Disable api and web access. Garage does not support disabling
these endpoints but you can change the port number or stop your reverse
proxy for instance.
3. Check once again that your cluster is healty. Run again `garage repair --all-nodes --yes tables` which is quick.
Also check your queues are empty, run `garage stats` to query them.
4. Turn off Garage v0.6
5. Backup the metadata folder of all your nodes: `cd /var/lib/garage ; tar -acf meta-v0.6.tar.zst meta/`
6. Install Garage v0.7, edit the configuration if you plan to use OpenTelemetry or the Kubernetes integration
7. Turn on Garage v0.7
8. Do `garage repair --all-nodes --yes tables` and `garage repair --all-nodes --yes blocks`
9. Your upgraded cluster should be in a working state. Re-enable API and Web
access and check that everything went well.
10. Monitor your cluster in the next hours to see if it works well under your production load, report any issue.

717
doc/drafts/k2v-spec.md Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,717 @@
# Specification of the Garage K2V API (K2V = Key/Key/Value)
- We are storing triplets of the form `(partition key, sort key, value)` -> no
user-defined fields, the client is responsible of writing whatever he wants
in the value (typically an encrypted blob). Values are binary blobs, which
are always represented as their base64 encoding in the JSON API. Partition
keys and sort keys are utf8 strings.
- Triplets are stored in buckets; each bucket stores a separate set of triplets
- Bucket names and access keys are the same as for accessing the S3 API
- K2V triplets exist separately from S3 objects. K2V triplets don't exist for
the S3 API, and S3 objects don't exist for the K2V API.
- Values stored for triplets have associated causality information, that enables
Garage to detect concurrent writes. In case of concurrent writes, Garage
keeps the concurrent values until a further write supersedes the concurrent
values. This is the same method as Riak KV implements. The method used is
based on DVVS (dotted version vector sets), described in the paper "Scalable
and Accurate Causality Tracking for Eventually Consistent Data Stores", as
well as [here](https://github.com/ricardobcl/Dotted-Version-Vectors)
## Data format
### Triple format
Triples in K2V are constituted of three fields:
- a partition key (`pk`), an utf8 string that defines in what partition the
triplet is stored; triplets in different partitions cannot be listed together
in a ReadBatch command, or deleted together in a DeleteBatch command: a
separate command must be included in the ReadBatch/DeleteBatch call for each
partition key in which the client wants to read/delete lists of items
- a sort key (`sk`), an utf8 string that defines the index of the triplet inside its
partition; triplets are uniquely idendified by their partition key + sort key
- a value (`v`), an opaque binary blob associated to the partition key + sort key;
they are transmitted as binary when possible but in most case in the JSON API
they will be represented as strings using base64 encoding; a value can also
be `null` to indicate a deleted triplet (a `null` value is called a tombstone)
### Causality information
K2V supports storing several concurrent values associated to a pk+sk, in the
case where insertion or deletion operations are detected to be concurrent (i.e.
there is not one that was aware of the other, they are not causally dependant
one on the other). In practice, it even looks more like the opposite: to
overwrite a previously existing value, the client must give a "causality token"
that "proves" (not in a cryptographic sense) that it had seen a previous value.
Otherwise, the value written will not overwrite an existing value, it will just
create a new concurrent value.
The causality token is a binary/b64-encoded representation of a context,
specified below.
A set of concurrent values looks like this:
```
(node1, tdiscard1, (v1, t1), (v2, t2)) ; tdiscard1 < t1 < t2
(node2, tdiscard2, (v3, t3) ; tdiscard2 < t3
```
`tdiscard` for a node `i` means that all values inserted by node `i` with times
`<= tdiscard` are obsoleted, i.e. have been read by a client that overwrote it
afterwards.
The associated context would be the following: `[(node1, t2), (node2, t3)]`,
i.e. if a node reads this set of values and inserts a new values, we will now
have `tdiscard1 = t2` and `tdiscard2 = t3`, to indicate that values v1, v2 and v3
are obsoleted by the new write.
**Basic insertion.** To insert a new value `v4` with context `[(node1, t2), (node2, t3)]`, in a
simple case where there was no insertion in-between reading the value
mentionned above and writing `v4`, and supposing that node2 receives the
InsertItem query:
- `node2` generates a timestamp `t4` such that `t4 > t3`.
- the new state is as follows:
```
(node1, tdiscard1', ()) ; tdiscard1' = t2
(node2, tdiscard2', (v4, t4)) ; tdiscard2' = t3
```
**A more complex insertion example.** In the general case, other intermediate values could have
been written before `v4` with context `[(node1, t2), (node2, t3)]` is sent to the system.
For instance, here is a possible sequence of events:
1. First we have the set of values v1, v2 and v3 described above.
A node reads it, it obtains values v1, v2 and v3 with context `[(node1, t2), (node2, t3)]`.
2. A node writes a value `v5` with context `[(node1, t1)]`, i.e. `v5` is only a
successor of v1 but not of v2 or v3. Suppose node1 receives the write, it
will generate a new timestamp `t5` larger than all of the timestamps it
knows of, i.e. `t5 > t2`. We will now have:
```
(node1, tdiscard1'', (v2, t2), (v5, t5)) ; tdiscard1'' = t1 < t2 < t5
(node2, tdiscard2, (v3, t3) ; tdiscard2 < t3
```
3. Now `v4` is written with context `[(node1, t2), (node2, t3)]`, and node2
processes the query. It will generate `t4 > t3` and the state will become:
```
(node1, tdiscard1', (v5, t5)) ; tdiscard1' = t2 < t5
(node2, tdiscard2', (v4, t4)) ; tdiscard2' = t3
```
**Generic algorithm for handling insertions:** A certain node n handles the
InsertItem and is responsible for the correctness of this procedure.
1. Lock the key (or the whole table?) at this node to prevent concurrent updates of the value that would mess things up
2. Read current set of values
3. Generate a new timestamp that is larger than the largest timestamp for node n
4. Add the inserted value in the list of values of node n
5. Update the discard times to be the times set in the context, and accordingly discard overwritten values
6. Release lock
7. Propagate updated value to other nodes
8. Return to user when propagation achieved the write quorum (propagation to other nodes continues asynchronously)
**Encoding of contexts:**
Contexts consist in a list of (node id, timestamp) pairs.
They are encoded in binary as follows:
```
checksum: u64, [ node: u64, timestamp: u64 ]*
```
The checksum is just the XOR of all of the node IDs and timestamps.
Once encoded in binary, contexts are written and transmitted in base64.
### Indexing
K2V keeps an index, a secondary data structure that is updated asynchronously,
that keeps tracks of the number of triplets stored for each partition key.
This allows easy listing of all of the partition keys for which triplets exist
in a bucket, as the partition key becomes the sort key in the index.
How indexing works:
- Each node keeps a local count of how many items it stores for each partition,
in a local Sled tree that is updated atomically when an item is modified.
- These local counters are asynchronously stored in the index table which is
a regular Garage table spread in the network. Counters are stored as LWW values,
so basically the final table will have the following structure:
```
- pk: bucket
- sk: partition key for which we are counting
- v: lwwmap (node id -> number of items)
```
The final number of items present in the partition can be estimated by taking
the maximum of the values (i.e. the value for the node that announces having
the most items for that partition). In most cases the values for different node
IDs should all be the same; more precisely, three node IDs should map to the
same non-zero value, and all other node IDs that are present are tombstones
that map to zeroes. Note that we need to filter out values from nodes that are
no longer part of the cluster layout, as when nodes are removed they won't
necessarily have had the time to set their counters to zero.
## Important details
**THIS SECTION CONTAINS A FEW WARNINGS ON THE K2V API WHICH ARE IMPORTANT
TO UNDERSTAND IN ORDER TO USE IT CORRECTLY.**
- **Internal server errors on updates do not mean that the update isn't stored.**
K2V will return an internal server error when it cannot reach a quorum of nodes on
which to save an updated value. However the value may still be stored on just one
node, which will then propagate it to other nodes asynchronously via anti-entropy.
- **Batch operations are not transactions.** When calling InsertBatch or DeleteBatch,
items may appear partially inserted/deleted while the operation is being processed.
More importantly, if InsertBatch or DeleteBatch returns an internal server error,
some of the items to be inserted/deleted might end up inserted/deleted on the server,
while others may still have their old value.
- **Concurrent values are deduplicated.** When inserting a value for a key,
Garage might internally end up
storing the value several times if there are network errors. These values will end up as
concurrent values for a key, with the same byte string (or `null` for a deletion).
Garage fixes this by deduplicating concurrent values when they are returned to the
user on read operations. Importantly, *Garage does not differentiate between duplicate
concurrent values due to the user making the same call twice, or Garage having to
do an internal retry*. This means that all duplicate concurrent values are deduplicated
when an item is read: if the user inserts twice concurrently the same value, they will
only read it once.
## API Endpoints
**Remark.** Example queries and responses here are given in JSON5 format
for clarity. However the actual K2V API uses basic JSON so all examples
and responses need to be translated.
### Operations on single items
**ReadItem: `GET /<bucket>/<partition key>?sort_key=<sort key>`**
Query parameters:
| name | default value | meaning |
| - | - | - |
| `sort_key` | **mandatory** | The sort key of the item to read |
Returns the item with specified partition key and sort key. Values can be
returned in either of two ways:
1. a JSON array of base64-encoded values, or `null`'s for tombstones, with
header `Content-Type: application/json`
2. in the case where there are no concurrent values, the single present value
can be returned directly as the response body (or an HTTP 204 NO CONTENT for
a tombstone), with header `Content-Type: application/octet-stream`
The choice between return formats 1 and 2 is directed by the `Accept` HTTP header:
- if the `Accept` header is not present, format 1 is always used
- if `Accept` contains `application/json` but not `application/octet-stream`,
format 1 is always used
- if `Accept` contains `application/octet-stream` but not `application/json`,
format 2 is used when there is a single value, and an HTTP error 409 (HTTP
409 CONFLICT) is returned in the case of multiple concurrent values
(including concurrent tombstones)
- if `Accept` contains both, format 2 is used when there is a single value, and
format 1 is used as a fallback in case of concurrent values
- if `Accept` contains none, HTTP 406 NOT ACCEPTABLE is raised
Example query:
```
GET /my_bucket/mailboxes?sort_key=INBOX HTTP/1.1
```
Example response:
```json
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
X-Garage-Causality-Token: opaquetoken123
Content-Type: application/json
[
"b64cryptoblob123",
"b64cryptoblob'123"
]
```
Example response in case the item is a tombstone:
```
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
X-Garage-Causality-Token: opaquetoken999
Content-Type: application/json
[
null
]
```
Example query 2:
```
GET /my_bucket/mailboxes?sort_key=INBOX HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/octet-stream
```
Example response if multiple concurrent versions exist:
```
HTTP/1.1 409 CONFLICT
X-Garage-Causality-Token: opaquetoken123
Content-Type: application/octet-stream
```
Example response in case of single value:
```
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
X-Garage-Causality-Token: opaquetoken123
Content-Type: application/octet-stream
cryptoblob123
```
Example response in case of a single value that is a tombstone:
```
HTTP/1.1 204 NO CONTENT
X-Garage-Causality-Token: opaquetoken123
Content-Type: application/octet-stream
```
**PollItem: `GET /<bucket>/<partition key>?sort_key=<sort key>&causality_token=<causality token>`**
This endpoint will block until a new value is written to a key.
The GET parameter `causality_token` should be set to the causality
token returned with the last read of the key, so that K2V knows
what values are concurrent or newer than the ones that the
client previously knew.
This endpoint returns the new value in the same format as ReadItem.
If no new value is written and the timeout elapses,
an HTTP 304 NOT MODIFIED is returned.
Query parameters:
| name | default value | meaning |
| - | - | - |
| `sort_key` | **mandatory** | The sort key of the item to read |
| `causality_token` | **mandatory** | The causality token of the last known value or set of values |
| `timeout` | 300 | The timeout before 304 NOT MODIFIED is returned if the value isn't updated |
The timeout can be set to any number of seconds, with a maximum of 600 seconds (10 minutes).
**InsertItem: `PUT /<bucket>/<partition key>?sort_key=<sort_key>`**
Inserts a single item. This request does not use JSON, the body is sent directly as a binary blob.
To supersede previous values, the HTTP header `X-Garage-Causality-Token` should
be set to the causality token returned by a previous read on this key. This
header can be ommitted for the first writes to the key.
Example query:
```
PUT /my_bucket/mailboxes?sort_key=INBOX HTTP/1.1
X-Garage-Causality-Token: opaquetoken123
myblobblahblahblah
```
Example response:
```
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
```
**DeleteItem: `DELETE /<bucket>/<partition key>?sort_key=<sort_key>`**
Deletes a single item. The HTTP header `X-Garage-Causality-Token` must be set
to the causality token returned by a previous read on this key, to indicate
which versions of the value should be deleted. The request will not process if
`X-Garage-Causality-Token` is not set.
Example query:
```
DELETE /my_bucket/mailboxes?sort_key=INBOX HTTP/1.1
X-Garage-Causality-Token: opaquetoken123
```
Example response:
```
HTTP/1.1 204 NO CONTENT
```
### Operations on index
**ReadIndex: `GET /<bucket>?start=<start>&end=<end>&limit=<limit>`**
Lists all partition keys in the bucket for which some triplets exist, and gives
for each the number of triplets, total number of values (which might be bigger
than the number of triplets in case of conflicts), total number of bytes of
these values, and number of triplets that are in a state of conflict.
The values returned are an approximation of the true counts in the bucket,
as these values are asynchronously updated, and thus eventually consistent.
Query parameters:
| name | default value | meaning |
| - | - | - |
| `prefix` | `null` | Restrict listing to partition keys that start with this prefix |
| `start` | `null` | First partition key to list, in lexicographical order |
| `end` | `null` | Last partition key to list (excluded) |
| `limit` | `null` | Maximum number of partition keys to list |
| `reverse` | `false` | Iterate in reverse lexicographical order |
The response consists in a JSON object that repeats the parameters of the query and gives the result (see below).
The listing starts at partition key `start`, or if not specified at the
smallest partition key that exists. It returns partition keys in increasing
order, or decreasing order if `reverse` is set to `true`,
and stops when either of the following conditions is met:
1. if `end` is specfied, the partition key `end` is reached or surpassed (if it
is reached exactly, it is not included in the result)
2. if `limit` is specified, `limit` partition keys have been listed
3. no more partition keys are available to list
In case 2, and if there are more partition keys to list before condition 1
triggers, then in the result `more` is set to `true` and `nextStart` is set to
the first partition key that couldn't be listed due to the limit. In the first
case (if the listing stopped because of the `end` parameter), `more` is not set
and the `nextStart` key is not specified.
Note that if `reverse` is set to `true`, `start` is the highest key
(in lexicographical order) for which values are returned.
This means that if an `end` is specified, it must be smaller than `start`,
otherwise no values will be returned.
Example query:
```
GET /my_bucket HTTP/1.1
```
Example response:
```json
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
{
prefix: null,
start: null,
end: null,
limit: null,
reverse: false,
partitionKeys: [
{
pk: "keys",
entries: 3043,
conflicts: 0,
values: 3043,
bytes: 121720,
},
{
pk: "mailbox:INBOX",
entries: 42,
conflicts: 1,
values: 43,
bytes: 142029,
},
{
pk: "mailbox:Junk",
entries: 2991
conflicts: 0,
values: 2991,
bytes: 12019322,
},
{
pk: "mailbox:Trash",
entries: 10,
conflicts: 0,
values: 10,
bytes: 32401,
},
{
pk: "mailboxes",
entries: 3,
conflicts: 0,
values: 3,
bytes: 3019,
},
],
more: false,
nextStart: null,
}
```
### Operations on batches of items
**InsertBatch: `POST /<bucket>`**
Simple insertion and deletion of triplets. The body is just a list of items to
insert in the following format:
`{ pk: "<partition key>", sk: "<sort key>", ct: "<causality token>"|null, v: "<value>"|null }`.
The causality token should be the one returned in a previous read request (e.g.
by ReadItem or ReadBatch), to indicate that this write takes into account the
values that were returned from these reads, and supersedes them causally. If
the triplet is inserted for the first time, the causality token should be set to
`null`.
The value is expected to be a base64-encoded binary blob. The value `null` can
also be used to delete the triplet while preserving causality information: this
allows to know if a delete has happenned concurrently with an insert, in which
case both are preserved and returned on reads (see below).
Partition keys and sort keys are utf8 strings which are stored sorted by
lexicographical ordering of their binary representation.
Example query:
```json
POST /my_bucket HTTP/1.1
[
{ pk: "mailbox:INBOX", sk: "001892831", ct: "opaquetoken321", v: "b64cryptoblob321updated" },
{ pk: "mailbox:INBOX", sk: "001892912", ct: null, v: "b64cryptoblob444" },
{ pk: "mailbox:INBOX", sk: "001892932", ct: "opaquetoken654", v: null },
]
```
Example response:
```
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
```
**ReadBatch: `POST /<bucket>?search`**, or alternatively<br/>
**ReadBatch: `SEARCH /<bucket>`**
Batch read of triplets in a bucket.
The request body is a JSON list of searches, that each specify a range of
items to get (to get single items, set `singleItem` to `true`). A search is a
JSON struct with the following fields:
| name | default value | meaning |
| - | - | - |
| `partitionKey` | **mandatory** | The partition key in which to search |
| `prefix` | `null` | Restrict items to list to those whose sort keys start with this prefix |
| `start` | `null` | The sort key of the first item to read |
| `end` | `null` | The sort key of the last item to read (excluded) |
| `limit` | `null` | The maximum number of items to return |
| `reverse` | `false` | Iterate in reverse lexicographical order on sort keys |
| `singleItem` | `false` | Whether to return only the item with sort key `start` |
| `conflictsOnly` | `false` | Whether to return only items that have several concurrent values |
| `tombstones` | `false` | Whether or not to return tombstone lines to indicate the presence of old deleted items |
For each of the searches, triplets are listed and returned separately. The
semantics of `prefix`, `start`, `end`, `limit` and `reverse` are the same as for ReadIndex. The
additionnal parameter `singleItem` allows to get a single item, whose sort key
is the one given in `start`. Parameters `conflictsOnly` and `tombstones`
control additional filters on the items that are returned.
The result is a list of length the number of searches, that consists in for
each search a JSON object specified similarly to the result of ReadIndex, but
that lists triplets within a partition key.
The format of returned tuples is as follows: `{ sk: "<sort key>", ct: "<causality
token>", v: ["<value1>", ...] }`, with the following fields:
- `sk` (sort key): any unicode string used as a sort key
- `ct` (causality token): an opaque token served by the server (generally
base64-encoded) to be used in subsequent writes to this key
- `v` (list of values): each value is a binary blob, always base64-encoded;
contains multiple items when concurrent values exists
- in case of concurrent update and deletion, a `null` is added to the list of concurrent values
- if the `tombstones` query parameter is set to `true`, tombstones are returned
for items that have been deleted (this can be usefull for inserting after an
item that has been deleted, so that the insert is not considered
concurrent with the delete). Tombstones are returned as tuples in the
same format with only `null` values
Example query:
```json
POST /my_bucket?search HTTP/1.1
[
{
partitionKey: "mailboxes",
},
{
partitionKey: "mailbox:INBOX",
start: "001892831",
limit: 3,
},
{
partitionKey: "keys",
start: "0",
singleItem: true,
},
]
```
Example associated response body:
```json
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
[
{
partitionKey: "mailboxes",
prefix: null,
start: null,
end: null,
limit: null,
reverse: false,
conflictsOnly: false,
tombstones: false,
singleItem: false,
items: [
{ sk: "INBOX", ct: "opaquetoken123", v: ["b64cryptoblob123", "b64cryptoblob'123"] },
{ sk: "Trash", ct: "opaquetoken456", v: ["b64cryptoblob456"] },
{ sk: "Junk", ct: "opaquetoken789", v: ["b64cryptoblob789"] },
],
more: false,
nextStart: null,
},
{
partitionKey: "mailbox::INBOX",
prefix: null,
start: "001892831",
end: null,
limit: 3,
reverse: false,
conflictsOnly: false,
tombstones: false,
singleItem: false,
items: [
{ sk: "001892831", ct: "opaquetoken321", v: ["b64cryptoblob321"] },
{ sk: "001892832", ct: "opaquetoken654", v: ["b64cryptoblob654"] },
{ sk: "001892874", ct: "opaquetoken987", v: ["b64cryptoblob987"] },
],
more: true,
nextStart: "001892898",
},
{
partitionKey: "keys",
prefix: null,
start: "0",
end: null,
conflictsOnly: false,
tombstones: false,
limit: null,
reverse: false,
singleItem: true,
items: [
{ sk: "0", ct: "opaquetoken999", v: ["b64binarystuff999"] },
],
more: false,
nextStart: null,
},
]
```
**DeleteBatch: `POST /<bucket>?delete`**
Batch deletion of triplets. The request format is the same for `POST
/<bucket>?search` to indicate items or range of items, except that here they
are deleted instead of returned, but only the fields `partitionKey`, `prefix`, `start`,
`end`, and `singleItem` are supported. Causality information is not given by
the user: this request will internally list all triplets and write deletion
markers that supersede all of the versions that have been read.
This request returns for each series of items to be deleted, the number of
matching items that have been found and deleted.
Example query:
```json
POST /my_bucket?delete HTTP/1.1
[
{
partitionKey: "mailbox:OldMailbox",
},
{
partitionKey: "mailbox:INBOX",
start: "0018928321",
singleItem: true,
},
]
```
Example response:
```
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
[
{
partitionKey: "mailbox:OldMailbox",
prefix: null,
start: null,
end: null,
singleItem: false,
deletedItems: 35,
},
{
partitionKey: "mailbox:INBOX",
prefix: null,
start: "0018928321",
end: null,
singleItem: true,
deletedItems: 1,
},
]
```
## Internals: causality tokens
The method used is based on DVVS (dotted version vector sets). See:
- the paper "Scalable and Accurate Causality Tracking for Eventually Consistent Data Stores"
- <https://github.com/ricardobcl/Dotted-Version-Vectors>
For DVVS to work, write operations (at each node) must take a lock on the data table.

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