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Getting Started
Download the latest official release from https://github.com/chrislusf/seaweedfs/releases.
Decompress the downloaded file. You will only find one executable file, either "weed" on most systems or "weed.exe" on windows.
Put the file "weed" to all related computers, in any folder you want. Use
./weed -h # to check available options./weed master -h # to check available optionsIf no replication is required, this will be enough. The "mdir" option is to configure a folder where the generated sequence file ids are saved.
./weed master -mdir="."
./weed master -mdir="." -ip=xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx # usually set the ip instead the default "localhost"./weed volume -h # to check available optionsUsually volume servers are spread on different computers. They can have different disk space, or even different operating system.
Usually you would need to specify the available disk space, the Weed Master location, and the storage folder.
./weed volume -max=100 -mserver="localhost:9333" -dir="./data"Actually, forget about previous commands. You can setup one master server and one volume server in one shot:
./weed server -dir="./data"
# same, just specifying the default values
# use "weed server -h" to find out more
./weed server -master.port=9333 -volume.port=8080 -dir="./data"With the master and volume server up, now what? Let's pump in a lot of files into the system!
./weed upload -dir="/some/big/folder"This command would recursively upload all files. Or you can specify what files you want to include.
./weed upload -dir="/some/big/folder" -include=*.txtThen, you can simply check "du -m -s /some/big/folder" to see the actual disk usage by OS, and compare it with the file size under "/data". Usually if you are uploading a lot of textual files, the consumed disk size would be much smaller since textual files are gzipped automatically.
Now you can use your tools to hit SeaweedFS as hard as you can.
Use with docker is easy as run locally, you can pass all args like above. But you don't need to worry about "-ip". It'll be treated by the entrypoint script.
docker run -p 9333:9333 --name master chrislusf/seaweedfs master -ip=master
docker run -p 8080:8080 -p 18080:18080 --name volume --link master chrislusf/seaweedfs volume -max=5 -mserver="master:9333" -port=8080
But with Compose it's easiest. To startup just run:
docker-compose -f docker/seaweedfs-compose.yml -p seaweedfs up
You can use image "chrislusf/seaweedfs" or build your own with dockerfile in the root of repo.
docker run --name weed chrislusf/seaweedfs serverAnd in another terminal
IP=$(docker inspect --format '{{ .NetworkSettings.IPAddress }}' weed)
curl "http://$IP:9333/cluster/status?pretty=y"
{
"IsLeader": true,
"Leader": "localhost:9333"
}
# use $IP as host for api queriesMake a local copy of seaweedfs from github
git clone https://github.com/chrislusf/seaweedfs.gitMinimal Image (~19.6 MB)
docker build --no-cache -t 'chrislusf/seaweedfs' .Go-Build Docker Image (~764 MB)
mv Dockerfile Dockerfile.minimal
mv Dockerfile.go_build Dockerfile
docker build --no-cache -t 'chrislusf/seaweedfs' .You can use docker volumes to persist data:
# start our weed server daemonized
docker run --name weed -d -p 9333:9333 -p 8080:8080 -p 18080:8080 \
-v /opt/weedfs/data:/data chrislusf/seaweedfs server -dir="/data" \
-publicIp="$(curl -s cydev.ru/ip)"Now our SeaweedFS server will be persistent and accessible by localhost:9333, :8080 and :18080 on host machine. Dont forget to specify "-publicIp" for correct connectivity.
- Introduction
- API
- Configuration
- Filer
- Filer Stores
- Advanced Filer Configurations
- Cloud Drive
- AWS S3 API
- AWS IAM
- Replication and Backup
- Messaging
- Use Cases
- Operations
- Advanced
- Security
- Misc Use Case Examples