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6b78bfdf4b
1) Man file has wrong permissions for passwd file(Issue 291) Fixes man page for wrong permissions of passwd file. 2) Fixes a bug and Strictly checks passwd file permission. * Fixes a bug about checking passwd file permission. A bug is that s3fs continues to run after s3fs finds invalid passwd file permission. * Checks passwd file strictly. Before this revision, s3fs allows executable permission for a passwd file and allows group writable permission for a passwd file(which is not "/etc/passwd-s3fs"). New s3fs checks permission strictly, that is /etc/passwd-s3fs is allowed owner readable/writable and group readable, and the passwd file(which is not "/etc/passwd-s3fs") is allowed only owner readable/writable. 3) Adds disable_noobj_cache option for no-existing object. s3fs v1.68 always has to check whether file(or sub directory) exists under object(path) when s3fs does some command, since s3fs has recognized a directory which does not exist and has files or sub directories under itself. It increases ListBucket request and makes performance bad. For performance if the disable_noobj_cache option is specified, s3fs memorizes in stat cache that the object(file or directory) does not exist. git-svn-id: http://s3fs.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@420 df820570-a93a-0410-bd06-b72b767a4274
126 lines
6.3 KiB
Groff
126 lines
6.3 KiB
Groff
.TH S3FS "1" "February 2011" "S3FS" "User Commands"
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.SH NAME
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S3FS \- FUSE-based file system backed by Amazon S3
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.SS mounting
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.TP
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\fBs3fs bucket[:path] mountpoint \fP [options]
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.SS unmounting
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.TP
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\fBumount mountpoint
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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s3fs is a FUSE filesystem that allows you to mount an Amazon S3 bucket as a local filesystem. It stores files natively and transparently in S3 (i.e., you can use other programs to access the same files).
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.SH AUTHENTICATION
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The s3fs password file has this format (use this format if you have only one set of credentials):
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.RS 4
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\fBaccessKeyId\fP:\fBsecretAccessKey\fP
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.RE
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If you have more than one set of credentials, this syntax is also recognized:
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.RS 4
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\fBbucketName\fP:\fBaccessKeyId\fP:\fBsecretAccessKey\fP
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.RE
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.PP
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Password files can be stored in two locations:
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.RS 4
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\fB/etc/passwd-s3fs\fP [0640]
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\fB$HOME/.passwd-s3fs\fP [0600]
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.RE
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.SH OPTIONS
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.SS "general options"
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.TP
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\fB\-h\fR \fB\-\-help\fR
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print help
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.TP
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\fB\ \fR \fB\-\-version\fR
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print version
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.TP
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\fB\-f\fR
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FUSE foreground option - do not run as daemon.
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.TP
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\fB\-s\fR
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FUSE singlethreaded option (disables multi-threaded operation)
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.SS "mount options"
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.TP
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All s3fs options must given in the form where "opt" is:
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<option_name>=<option_value>
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR default_acl (default="private")
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the default canned acl to apply to all written S3 objects, e.g., "public-read".
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Any created files will have this canned acl.
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Any updated files will also have this canned acl applied!
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR prefix (default="") (coming soon!)
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a prefix to append to all S3 objects.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR retries (default="2")
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number of times to retry a failed S3 transaction.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR use_cache (default="" which means disabled)
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local folder to use for local file cache.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR use_rrs (default="" which means disabled)
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use Amazon's Reduced Redundancy Storage.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR passwd_file (default="")
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specify the path to the password file, which which takes precedence over the password in $HOME/.passwd-s3fs and /etc/passwd-s3fs
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR public_bucket (default="" which means disabled)
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anonymously mount a public bucket when set to 1, ignores the $HOME/.passwd-s3fs and /etc/passwd-s3fs files.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR connect_timeout (default="10" seconds)
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time to wait for connection before giving up.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR readwrite_timeout (default="30" seconds)
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time to wait between read/write activity before giving up.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR max_stat_cache_size (default="10000" entries (about 4MB))
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maximum number of entries in the stat cache
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR stat_cache_expire (default is no expire)
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specify expire time(seconds) for entries in the stat cache
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR enable_noobj_cache (default is disable)
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enable cache entries for the object which does not exist.
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s3fs always has to check whether file(or sub directory) exists under object(path) when s3fs does some command, since s3fs has recognized a directory which does not exist and has files or sub directories under itself.
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It increases ListBucket request and makes performance bad.
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You can specify this option for performance, s3fs memorizes in stat cache that the object(file or directory) does not exist.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR url (default="http://s3.amazonaws.com")
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sets the url to use to access Amazon S3. If you want to use HTTPS, then you can set url=https://s3.amazonaws.com
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR nomultipart - disable multipart uploads
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR noxmlns - disable registing xml name space.
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disable registing xml name space for response of ListBucketResult and ListVersionsResult etc. Default name space is looked up from "http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01".
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This option should not be specified now, because s3fs looks up xmlns automatically after v1.66.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR nocopyapi - for other incomplete compatibility object storage.
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For a distributed object storage which is compatibility S3 API without PUT(copy api).
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If you set this option, s3fs do not use PUT with "x-amz-copy-source"(copy api). Because traffic is increased 2-3 times by this option, we do not recommend this.
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.TP
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\fB\-o\fR norenameapi - for other incomplete compatibility object storage.
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For a distributed object storage which is compatibility S3 API without PUT(copy api).
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This option is a subset of nocopyapi option. The nocopyapi option does not use copy-api for all command(ex. chmod, chown, touch, mv, etc), but this option does not use copy-api for only rename command(ex. mv).
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If this option is specified with nocopapi, the s3fs ignores it.
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.SH FUSE/MOUNT OPTIONS
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.TP
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Most of the generic mount options described in 'man mount' are supported (ro, rw, suid, nosuid, dev, nodev, exec, noexec, atime, noatime, sync async, dirsync). Filesystems are mounted with '-onodev,nosuid' by default, which can only be overridden by a privileged user.
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.TP
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There are many FUSE specific mount options that can be specified. e.g. allow_other. See the FUSE README for the full set.
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.SH NOTES
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.TP
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Maximum file size=64GB (limited by s3fs, not Amazon).
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.TP
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If enabled via the "use_cache" option, s3fs automatically maintains a local cache of files in the folder specified by use_cache. Whenever s3fs needs to read or write a file on S3, it first downloads the entire file locally to the folder specified by use_cache and operates on it. When fuse_release() is called, s3fs will re-upload the file to S3 if it has been changed. s3fs uses md5 checksums to minimize downloads from S3.
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.TP
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The folder specified by use_cache is just a local cache. It can be deleted at any time. s3fs rebuilds it on demand.
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.TP
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Local file caching works by calculating and comparing md5 checksums (ETag HTTP header).
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.TP
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s3fs leverages /etc/mime.types to "guess" the "correct" content-type based on file name extension. This means that you can copy a website to S3 and serve it up directly from S3 with correct content-types!
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.SH BUGS
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Due to S3's "eventual consistency" limitations, file creation can and will occasionally fail. Even after a successful create, subsequent reads can fail for an indeterminate time, even after one or more successful reads. Create and read enough files and you will eventually encounter this failure. This is not a flaw in s3fs and it is not something a FUSE wrapper like s3fs can work around. The retries option does not address this issue. Your application must either tolerate or compensate for these failures, for example by retrying creates or reads.
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.SH AUTHOR
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s3fs has been written by Randy Rizun <rrizun@gmail.com>.
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