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cc-cloudfuse

cc-cloudfuse mounts the Chameleon object store as a file system.

The cc-cloudfuse tool is based on the Cloudfuse project, but more Chameleon friendly.

Installation

To install cc-cloudfuse, run the following commands:

git clone https://github.com/ChameleonCloud/cc-cloudfuse.git
cd cc-cloudfuse
./configure
make
sudo make install

Usage

Your Chameleon credentials are required to mount the object store. You can configure it via the Chameleon openrc file, or provide the credentials in the ~/.cloudfuse file, or pass the credentials as command arguments.

If using keystone v2, tenantname and username are required. If using keystone v3, projectid and username are reuired, or you can provide projectid and authtoken.

To mount:

cc-cloudfuse mount <mounting_dir> [options]

To learn more about the mounting options:

cc-cloudfuse mount -h

To unmount:

cc-cloufuse unmount <mounting_dir>

Please read Chameleon user documentation for more information.

Original README

Cloudfuse is a FUSE application which provides access to Rackspace's Cloud Files (or any installation of Swift).

Cloud Files is a remote storage system which is similar in principle to Amazon S3. It provides a simple RESTful interface to storing and retrieving objects.

http://www.rackspace.com/cloud/files/

Swift, the software behind Cloud Files, has been open-sourced as part of the OpenStack project.

http://swift.openstack.org/

BUILDING:

You'll need libcurl, fuse, libssl, and libxml2 (and probably their dev
packages) installed to build it.  From a base Debian or Ubuntu install,
this should get you to a point you can build and run it:
    apt-get install build-essential libcurl4-openssl-dev libxml2-dev \
         libssl-dev libfuse-dev libjson-c-dev

For CentOS or similar,
    yum install gcc make fuse-devel curl-devel libxml2-devel openssl-devel

Cloudfuse is built and installed like any other autoconf configured code.
Normally,
    ./configure
    make
    sudo make install

But I'm no autoconf wizard, and there may be dragons lurking there.

USE:

You'll need to install fuse to use this application. It may have already
been installed as a dependency if you followed the "BUILDING" instructions
above.

On Debian:
   apt-get install fuse
   
On CentOS or similar:
   yum install fuse

The following settings can be defined in the file ~/.cloudfuse:
    username=[Account username for authentication, required]
    api_key=[API key for authentication with Rackspace]
    tenant=[Tenant name for authentication with Openstack]
    password=[Authentication password with Openstack]
    authurl=[Authentication url, defaults to Rackspace's cloud]
    region=[Regional endpoint to use]
    use_snet=[True to use Rackspace ServiceNet for connections]
    cache_timeout=[Seconds for directory caching, default 600]
    verify_ssl=[False to disable SSL cert verification]

For authenticating with Rackspace's cloud, at minimum "username" and
"api_key" must be set.

For authenticating with Keystone, "username", "password", "tenant", and
"authurl" should probably be defined.

These settings can also be specified as mount options on the command line:
    cloudfuse -o username=redbo,api_key=713aa... mountpoint/

Or as mount options in /etc/fstab:
    cloudfuse /mnt/cloudfiles fuse username=redbo,api_key=713aa...,user 0 0

It also inherits a number of command-line arguments and mount options from
the Fuse framework.  The "-h" argument should provide a summary.

EXAMPLE:

A typical ~/.cloudfuse configuration file for use with Rackspace:
    username=demo
    api_key=643afce8b5187d40ba15e4827384fc5b
    
    # if no region is selected, it will use your default region.
    #   region=DFW
    
    # if connecting within a Rackspace datacenter, ServiceNet can be
    # used to avoid bandwidth charges.
    #   use_snet=true

A typical ~/.cloudfuse configuration file for use with OpenStack,
noting that "tenant" should be the tenant name, rather than the ID:
    username=demo
    tenant=demo
    password=supersecret
    authurl=http://10.10.0.1:5000/v2.0

DEBUGGING: Cloudfuse may demonstrate the following symptoms: - console locks up for minutes - error message "Link has been severed"

You can debug these situations in two ways:
    (1) Look at /var/log/syslog or /var/log/messages on your swift server
    (2) Use the -d, -f, or debug flag in your cloudfuse config and watch
        the logs or console for errors.
    
Frequently, these are network or certificate errors.  Swift may not log 
certificate failures, so the debug switch is important if you're using
cloudfuse for the first time, particularly in a non-Rackspace environment.

e.g. * Peer certificate cannot be authenticated with given CA certificates
     * About to connect() to 192.168.0.2 port 8080 (#0)
     *   Trying 192.168.0.2... * connected
     * successfully set certificate verify locations:
     *   CAfile: none
       CApath: /etc/ssl/certs
     * SSL certificate problem, verify that the CA cert is OK. Details:
     error:14090086:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed
     * Closing connection #0

BUGS/SHORTCOMINGS:

* rename() doesn't work on directories (and probably never will).
* When reading and writing files, it buffers them in a local temp file.
* It keeps an in-memory cache of the directory structure, so it may not be
  usable for large file systems.  Also, files added by other applications
  will not show up until the cache expires.
* The root directory can only contain directories, as these are mapped to
  containers in cloudfiles.
* Directory entries are created as empty files with the content-type
  "application/directory".
* Cloud Files limits container and object listings to 10,000 items.
  cloudfuse won't list more than that many files in a single directory.

AWESOME CONTRIBUTORS:

* Tim Dysinger                                 https://github.com/dysinger
* Chris Wedgwood                               https://github.com/cwedgwood
* Nick Craig-Wood                              https://github.com/ncw
* Dillon Amburgey                              https://github.com/dillona
* Manfred Touron                               https://github.com/moul
* David Brownlee                               https://github.com/abs0
* Mike Lundy                                   https://github.com/novas0x2a
* justinb                                      https://github.com/justinsb

Thanks, and I hope you find it useful.

Michael Barton mike@weirdlooking.com

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