FairOS-dfs
Latest documentation is available at https://docs.fairos.fairdatasociety.org/docs/
The Decentralised File System (dfs) is a file system built for the FairOS.
It is a stateless thin layer which uses the building blocks provided by Swarm to provide high level functionalities like
- Exposing a logical file system
- Creation of logical drives
- User and Permission management
- Charging and Payments
- Mutable, Indexed data structures over immutable file system
dfs can be used for the following use cases
- Personal data store
- Application data store (for both Web 3.0 DApps and web 2.0 Apps)
- Data sharing with single user and on an organizational level
User
The first step in dfs is to create a user. Every user is associated with a 12
word mnemonic based hd wallet. This wallet is password protected and stored in
the blockchain as ens record. whenever a user created a pod for himself, a new key pair
is created using this mnemonic.
What is a pod?
A pod is a personal drive created by a user in fairOS-dfs. It is used to store files and related metadata in a decentralised fashion. A pod is always under the control of the user who created it. A user can create and store any number of files or directories in a pod.
The user can share files in his pod with any other user just like in other centralised drives like dropbox. Not only users, a pod can be used by decentralised applications (DApp's) to store data related to that user.
Pod creation is cheap. A user can create multiple pods and use it to organise his data. for ex: Personal-Pod, Applications-Pod etc.
How to run FairOS-dfs?
Run the following command to download the latest release
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/fairDataSociety/fairOS-dfs/master/download.sh | bash
wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/fairDataSociety/fairOS-dfs/master/download.sh | bash
Or download the latest release from https://github.com/fairDataSociety/fairOS-dfs/releases.
Or use Docker to run the project https://docs.fairos.fairdatasociety.org/docs/fairOS-dfs/fairos-dfs-using-docker.
Or build the latest version with the instruction https://docs.fairos.fairdatasociety.org/docs/fairOS-dfs/manual-installation.
To get the most out of your FairOS-dfs it is important that you configure FairOS-dfs for your specific use case!
Configuration for Bee
bee:
bee-api-endpoint: http://localhost:1633
postage-batch-id: ""
Configuration for FairOS-dfs
dfs:
ports:
http-port: :9090
pprof-port: :9091
ENS based Registration
RPC endpoint
Fairos depends on blockchain RPC to authenticate user accounts. Hence, it needs rpc
to connect to
rpc: http://localhost:9545
Custom configuration for ENS based Registration
For ENS based authentication we can either use a ens-network
configuration in the config file
// define network for ens authtication
ens-network: "testnet"
Other configuration
cookie-domain: api.fairos.io
cors-allowed-origins: []
verbosity: trace
This is how a config file should look like
bee:
bee-api-endpoint: http://localhost:1633
postage-batch-id: <BATCH>
cookie-domain: localhost
cors-allowed-origins: []
dfs:
ports:
http-port: :9090
pprof-port: :9091
rpc: http://localhost:9545
network: "testnet"
verbosity: trace
Run dfs config
to see all configurations
Help for dfs
$ dfs server -h
/$$$$$$ /$$ /$$$$$$ /$$$$$$ /$$ /$$$$$$
/$$__ $$ |__/ /$$__ $$ /$$__ $$ | $$ /$$__ $$
| $$ \__//$$$$$$ /$$ /$$$$$$ | $$ \ $$| $$ \__/ /$$$$$$$| $$ \__//$$$$$$$
| $$$$ |____ $$| $$ /$$__ $$| $$ | $$| $$$$$$ /$$$$$$ /$$__ $$| $$$$ /$$_____/
| $$_/ /$$$$$$$| $$| $$ \__/| $$ | $$ \____ $$|______/| $$ | $$| $$_/ | $$$$$$
| $$ /$$__ $$| $$| $$ | $$ | $$ /$$ \ $$ | $$ | $$| $$ \____ $$
| $$ | $$$$$$$| $$| $$ | $$$$$$/| $$$$$$/ | $$$$$$$| $$ /$$$$$$$/
|__/ \_______/|__/|__/ \______/ \______/ \_______/|__/ |_______/
Serves all the dfs commands through an HTTP server so that the upper layers
can consume it.
Usage:
dfs server [flags]
Flags:
--cookieDomain string the domain to use in the cookie (default "api.fairos.io")
--cors-origins strings allow CORS headers for the given origins
-h, --help help for server
--httpPort string http port (default ":9090")
--network string network to use for authentication (mainnet/testnet/play)
--postageBlockId string the postage block used to store the data in bee
--pprofPort string pprof port (default ":9091")
--rpc string rpc endpoint for ens network. xDai for mainnet | Sepolia for testnet | local fdp-play rpc endpoint for play
--swag should run swagger-ui
Global Flags:
--beeApi string full bee api endpoint (default "localhost:1633")
--config string config file (default "/Users/sabyasachipatra/.dfs.yaml")
--verbosity string verbosity level (default "trace")
HTTP APIs
https://docs.fairos.fairdatasociety.org/docs/fairOS-dfs/api-reference
REPL Commands in dfs-cli
https://docs.fairos.fairdatasociety.org/docs/fairOS-dfs/cli-reference
To make binaries for all platforms run this command
./generate-exe.sh
Generate swagger docs
Install swag
go install github.com/swaggo/swag/cmd/swag@latest
Generate
make swagger
Running swagger-ui
By default, swagger-ui is disabled. To run swagger-ui we run the server
command with --swag
flag
$ dfs server --swag
This should run the dfs server along with swagger-ui, available at http://localhost:9090/swagger/index.html
assuming
server is running on default 9090
port on your localhost
Running fairOS on sepolia testnet and swarm mainnet
we need to set network
configuration in the config file as testnet and bee configuration should point to a bee running
on mainnet
network: "testnet"
bee:
bee-api-endpoint: http://localhost:1633 # bee running on mainnet
postage-batch-id: <BATCH>