FrostFS is a decentralized distributed object storage integrated with the NEO Blockchain.
FrostFS S3 Gateway
FrostFS S3 gateway provides API compatible with Amazon S3 cloud storage service.
Installation
go get -u git.frostfs.info/TrueCloudLab/frostfs-s3-gw
Or you can call make
to build it from the cloned repository (the binary will
end up in bin/frostfs-s3-gw
with authmate helper in bin/frostfs-s3-authmate
).
To build binaries in clean docker environment, call make docker/all
.
Other notable make targets:
dep Check and ensure dependencies
image Build clean docker image
dirty-image Build dirty docker image with host-built binaries
format Run all code formatters
lint Run linters
version Show current version
Or you can also use a Docker
image provided for released
(and occasionally unreleased) versions of gateway (:latest
points to the
latest stable release).
Execution
Minimalistic S3 gateway setup needs:
- FrostFS node(s) address (S3 gateway itself is not a FrostFS node)
Passed via
-p
parameter or via S3_GW_PEERS_<N>_ADDRESS
and
S3_GW_PEERS_<N>_WEIGHT
environment variables (gateway supports multiple
FrostFS nodes with weighted load balancing).
- a wallet used to fetch key and communicate with FrostFS nodes
Passed via
--wallet
parameter or S3_GW_WALLET_PATH
environment variable.
These two commands are functionally equivalent, they run the gate with one
backend node, some keys and otherwise default settings:
$ frostfs-s3-gw -p 192.168.130.72:8080 --wallet wallet.json
$ S3_GW_PEERS_0_ADDRESS=192.168.130.72:8080 \
S3_GW_WALLET=wallet.json \
frostfs-s3-gw
It's also possible to specify uri scheme (grpc or grpcs) when using -p
or environment variables:
$ frostfs-s3-gw -p grpc://192.168.130.72:8080 --wallet wallet.json
$ S3_GW_PEERS_0_ADDRESS=grpcs://192.168.130.72:8080 \
S3_GW_WALLET=wallet.json \
frostfs-s3-gw
Domains
By default, s3-gw enable only path-style access
.
To be able to use both: virtual-hosted-style
and path-style
access you must configure listen_domains
:
$ frostfs-s3-gw -p 192.168.130.72:8080 --wallet wallet.json --listen_domains your.first.domain --listen_domains your.second.domain
So now you can use (e.g. HeadBucket
. Make sure DNS is properly configured):
$ curl --head http://bucket-name.your.first.domain:8080
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
or
$ curl --head http://your.second.domain:8080/bucket-name
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
Also, you can configure domains using .env
variables or yaml
file.
Documentation
Credits
Please see CREDITS for details.