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@ -63,13 +63,13 @@ Seaweed-FS uses HTTP REST operations to write, read, delete. The return results |
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Here is a simple usage on how to save a file: |
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``` |
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> curl http://localhost:9333/dir/assign |
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> curl -X POST http://localhost:9333/dir/assign |
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{"count":1,"fid":"3,01637037d6","url":"127.0.0.1:8080","publicUrl":"localhost:8080"} |
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``` |
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First, send a HTTP request to get an fid and a volume server url. |
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``` |
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> curl -F file=@/home/chris/myphoto.jpg http://127.0.0.1:8080/3,01637037d6 |
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> curl -X PUT -F file=@/home/chris/myphoto.jpg http://127.0.0.1:8080/3,01637037d6 |
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{"size": 43234} |
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``` |
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Second, send a HTTP multipart POST request to the volume server url+'/'+fid, to really store the file content. |
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@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ If you want a nicer URL, you can use one of these alternative URL formats: |
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### Rack-Aware and Data Center-Aware Replication ### |
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Seaweed-FS apply the replication strategy on a volume level. So when you are getting a file id, you can specify the replication strategy. For example: |
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``` |
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curl http://localhost:9333/dir/assign?replication=001 |
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curl -X POST http://localhost:9333/dir/assign?replication=001 |
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``` |
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Here is the meaning of the replication parameter |
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