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Running tusd

Starting the tusd upload server is as simple as invoking a single command. For example, following snippet demonstrates how to start a tusd process which accepts tus uploads at http://localhost:8080/files/ (notice the trailing slash) and stores them locally in the ./data directory:

$ tusd -upload-dir=./data
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:10:50 Using './data' as directory storage.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:10:50 Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:10:50 Using 0.0.0.0:8080 as address to listen.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:10:50 Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:10:50 Using /metrics as the metrics path.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:10:50 Supported tus extensions: creation,creation-with-upload,termination,concatenation,creation-defer-length
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:10:50 You can now upload files to: http://0.0.0.0:8080/files/

Alternatively, if you want to store the uploads on an AWS S3 bucket, you only have to specify the bucket and provide the corresponding access credentials and region information using environment variables (if you want to use a S3-compatible store, use can use the -s3-endpoint option):

$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=xxxxx
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxxxx
$ export AWS_REGION=eu-west-1
$ tusd -s3-bucket=my-test-bucket.com
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using 's3://my-test-bucket.com' as S3 bucket for storage.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using 0.0.0.0:8080 as address to listen.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using /metrics as the metrics path.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Supported tus extensions: creation,creation-with-upload,termination,concatenation,creation-defer-length
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 You can now upload files to: http://0.0.0.0:8080/files/

If your S3 bucket has been configured for AWS S3 Transfer Acceleration and you want to make use of that advanced service, you can direct tusd to automatically use the designated AWS acceleration endpoint for your bucket by including the optional command line flag s3-transfer-acceleration as follows:

$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=xxxxx
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxxxx
$ export AWS_REGION=eu-west-1
$ tusd -s3-bucket=my-test-bucket.com -s3-transfer-acceleration
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using 's3://my-test-bucket.com' as S3 bucket for storage with AWS S3 Transfer Acceleration enabled.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using 0.0.0.0:8080 as address to listen.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Using /metrics as the metrics path.
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 Supported tus extensions: creation,creation-with-upload,termination,concatenation,creation-defer-length
[tusd] 2019/09/29 21:11:23 You can now upload files to: http://0.0.0.0:8080/files/

tusd is also able to read the credentials automatically from a shared credentials file (~/.aws/credentials) as described in https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go#configuring-credentials. But be mindful of the need to declare the AWS_REGION value which isn't conventionally associated with credentials.

Furthermore, tusd also has support for storing uploads on Google Cloud Storage. In order to enable this feature, supply the path to your account file containing the necessary credentials:

$ export GCS_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_FILE=./account.json
$ tusd -gcs-bucket=my-test-bucket.com
[tusd] Using 'gcs://my-test-bucket.com' as GCS bucket for storage.
[tusd] Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] Using 0.0.0.0:8080 as address to listen.
[tusd] Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] Using /metrics as the metrics path.

Tusd also supports storing uploads on Microsoft Azure Blob Storage. In order to enable this feature, provide the corresponding access credentials using environment variables.

$ export AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT=xxxxx
$ export AZURE_STORAGE_KEY=xxxxx
$ tusd -azure-storage my-test-container
[tusd] 2023/02/13 16:13:20.937373 Custom Azure Endpoint not specified in flag variable azure-endpoint.
Using endpoint https://xxxxx.blob.core.windows.net
[tusd] Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] Using 0.0.0.0:8080 as address to listen.
[tusd] Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] Using /metrics as the metrics path.

If you want to upload to Microsoft Azure Blob Storage using a custom endpoint, e.g when using Azurite for local development, you can specify the endpoint using the -azure-endpoint flag.

$ export AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT=devstoreaccount1
$ export AZURE_STORAGE_KEY=Eby8vdM02xNOcqFlqUwJPLlmEtlCDXJ1OUzFT50uSRZ6IFsuFq2UVErCz4I6tq/K1SZFPTOtr/KBHBeksoGMGw==
$ tusd -azure-storage my-test-container -azure-endpoint https://my-custom-endpoint.com
[tusd] 2023/02/13 16:15:18.641937 Using Azure endpoint http://127.0.0.1:10000/devstoreaccount1
[tusd] Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] Using 0.0.0.0:8080 as address to listen.
[tusd] Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] Using /metrics as the metrics path.

You can also upload blobs to Microsoft Azure Blob Storage with a different storage tier, than what is set as the default for the storage account. This can be done by using the -azure-blob-access-tier flag.

$ export AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT=xxxxx
$ export AZURE_STORAGE_KEY=xxxxx
$ tusd -azure-storage my-test-container -azure-blob-access-tier cool
[tusd] 2023/02/13 16:13:20.937373 Custom Azure Endpoint not specified in flag variable azure-endpoint.
Using endpoint https://xxxxx.blob.core.windows.net
[tusd] Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] Using 0.0.0.0:8080 as address to listen.
[tusd] Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] Using /metrics as the metrics path.

TLS support for HTTPS connections can be enabled by supplying a certificate and private key. Note that the certificate file must include the entire chain of certificates up to the CA certificate. The default configuration supports TLSv1.2 and TLSv1.3. It is possible to use only TLSv1.3 with -tls-mode=tls13; alternately, it is possible to disable TLSv1.3 and use only 256-bit AES ciphersuites with -tls-mode=tls12-strong. The following example generates a self-signed certificate for localhost and then uses it to serve files on the loopback address; that this certificate is not appropriate for production use. Note also that the key file must not be encrypted/require a passphrase.

$ openssl req -x509 -new -newkey rsa:4096 -nodes -sha256 -days 3650 -keyout localhost.key -out localhost.pem -subj "/CN=localhost"
Generating a 4096 bit RSA private key
........................++
..........................................++
writing new private key to 'localhost.key'
-----
$ tusd -upload-dir=./data -host=127.0.0.1 -port=8443 -tls-certificate=localhost.pem -tls-key=localhost.key
[tusd] Using './data' as directory storage.
[tusd] Using 0.00MB as maximum size.
[tusd] Using 127.0.0.1:8443 as address to listen.
[tusd] Using /files/ as the base path.
[tusd] Using /metrics as the metrics path.
[tusd] Supported tus extensions: creation,creation-with-upload,termination,concatenation,creation-defer-length
[tusd] You can now upload files to: https://127.0.0.1:8443/files/

Besides these simple examples, tusd can be easily configured using a variety of command line options:

$ tusd -help
  -azure-blob-access-tier string
      Blob access tier when uploading new files (possible values: archive, cool, hot, '')
  -azure-container-access-type string
      Access type when creating a new container if it does not exist (possible values: blob, container, '')
  -azure-endpoint string
      Custom Endpoint to use for Azure BlockBlob Storage (requires azure-storage to be pass)
  -azure-object-prefix string
      Prefix for Azure object names
  -azure-storage string
      Use Azure BlockBlob Storage with this container name as a storage backend (requires the AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT and AZURE_STORAGE_KEY environment variable to be set)
  -base-path string
      Basepath of the HTTP server (default "/files/")
  -behind-proxy
      Respect X-Forwarded-* and similar headers which may be set by proxies
  -cpuprofile string
      write cpu profile to file
  -expose-metrics
      Expose metrics about tusd usage (default true)
  -gcs-bucket string
      Use Google Cloud Storage with this bucket as storage backend (requires the GCS_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_FILE environment variable to be set)
  -gcs-object-prefix string
      Prefix for GCS object names
  -hooks-dir string
      Directory to search for available hooks scripts
  -hooks-enabled-events string
      Comma separated list of enabled hook events (e.g. post-create,post-finish). Leave empty to enable default events (default "pre-create,post-create,post-receive,post-terminate,post-finish")
  -hooks-grpc string
      An gRPC endpoint to which hook events will be sent to
  -hooks-grpc-backoff int
      Number of seconds to wait before retrying each retry (default 1)
  -hooks-grpc-retry int
      Number of times to retry on a server error or network timeout (default 3)
  -hooks-http string
      An HTTP endpoint to which hook events will be sent to
  -hooks-http-backoff int
      Number of seconds to wait before retrying each retry (default 1)
  -hooks-http-forward-headers string
      List of HTTP request headers to be forwarded from the client request to the hook endpoint
  -hooks-http-retry int
      Number of times to retry on a 500 or network timeout (default 3)
  -hooks-plugin string
      Path to a Go plugin for loading hook functions (only supported on Linux and macOS; highly EXPERIMENTAL and may BREAK in the future)
  -hooks-stop-code int
      Return code from post-receive hook which causes tusd to stop and delete the current upload. A zero value means that no uploads will be stopped
  -host string
      Host to bind HTTP server to (default "0.0.0.0")
  -max-size int
      Maximum size of a single upload in bytes
  -metrics-path string
      Path under which the metrics endpoint will be accessible (default "/metrics")
  -port string
      Port to bind HTTP server to (default "8080")
  -s3-bucket string
      Use AWS S3 with this bucket as storage backend (requires the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and AWS_REGION environment variables to be set)
  -s3-disable-content-hashes
      Disable the calculation of MD5 and SHA256 hashes for the content that gets uploaded to S3 for minimized CPU usage (experimental and may be removed in the future)
  -s3-disable-ssl
      Disable SSL and only use HTTP for communication with S3 (experimental and may be removed in the future)
  -s3-endpoint string
      Endpoint to use S3 compatible implementations like minio (requires s3-bucket to be pass)
  -s3-object-prefix string
      Prefix for S3 object names
  -s3-part-size int
      Size in bytes of the individual upload requests made to the S3 API. Defaults to 50MiB (experimental and may be removed in the future) (default 52428800)
  -s3-transfer-acceleration
      Use AWS S3 transfer acceleration endpoint (requires -s3-bucket option and Transfer Acceleration property on S3 bucket to be set)
  -show-greeting
      Show the greeting message (default true)
  -timeout int
      Read timeout for connections in milliseconds.  A zero value means that reads will not timeout (default 6000)
  -tls-certificate string
      Path to the file containing the x509 TLS certificate to be used. The file should also contain any intermediate certificates and the CA certificate.
  -tls-key string
      Path to the file containing the key for the TLS certificate.
  -tls-mode string
      Specify which TLS mode to use; valid modes are tls13, tls12, and tls12-strong. (default "tls12")
  -unix-sock string
      If set, will listen to a UNIX socket at this location instead of a TCP socket
  -upload-dir string
      Directory to store uploads in (default "./data")
  -disable-cors
      Disables CORS headers. If set to true, tusd will not send any CORS related header. This is useful if you have a proxy sitting in front of tusd that handles CORS (default false)
  -verbose
      Enable verbose logging output (default true)
  -version
      Print tusd version information

Graceful shutdown

If tusd receives a SIGINT or SIGTERM signal, it will initiate a graceful shutdown. SIGINT is usually emitted by pressing Ctrl+C inside the terminal that is running tusd. SIGINT and SIGTERM can also be emitted using the kill(1) utility on Unix. Signals in that sense do not exist on Windows, so please refer to the Go documentation on how different events are translated into signals on Windows.

Once the graceful shutdown is started, tusd will stop listening on its port and won't accept new connections anymore. Idle connections are closed down. Already running requests will be given a grace period to complete before their connections are closed as well. PATCH and POST requests with a request body are interrupted, so that data stores can gracefully finish saving all the received data until that point. If all requests have been completed, tusd will exit.

If not all requests have been completed in the period defined by the -shutdown-timeout flag, tusd will exit regardless. By default, tusd will give all requests 10 seconds to complete their processing. If you do not want to wait for requests, use -shutdown-timeout=0.

tusd will also immediately exit if it receives a second SIGINT or SIGTERM signal. It will also always exit immediately if a SIGKILL is received.