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FUSE

go-ipfs makes it possible to mount /ipfs and /ipns namespaces in your OS, allowing arbitrary apps access to IPFS.

Install FUSE

You will need to install and configure fuse before you can mount IPFS

Linux

Note: while this guide should work for most distributions, you may need to refer to your distribution manual to get things working.

Install fuse with your favorite package manager:

sudo apt-get install fuse

On some older Linux distributions, you may need to add yourself to the fuse group.
(If no such group exists, you can probably skip this step)

sudo usermod -a -G fuse <username>

Restart user session, if active, for the change to apply, either by restarting ssh connection or by re-logging to the system.

Mac OSX -- OSXFUSE

It has been discovered that versions of osxfuse prior to 2.7.0 will cause a kernel panic. For everyone's sake, please upgrade (latest at time of writing is 2.7.4). The installer can be found at https://osxfuse.github.io/. There is also a homebrew formula (brew cask install osxfuse) but users report best results installing from the official OSXFUSE installer package.

Note that ipfs attempts an automatic version check on osxfuse to prevent you from shooting yourself in the foot if you have pre 2.7.0. Since checking the OSXFUSE version [is more complicated than it should be], running ipfs mount may require you to install another binary:

go get github.com/jbenet/go-fuse-version/fuse-version

If you run into any problems installing FUSE or mounting IPFS, hop on IRC and speak with us, or if you figure something new out, please add to this document!

Prepare mountpoints

By default ipfs uses /ipfs and /ipns directories for mounting, this can be changed in config. You will have to create the /ipfs and /ipns directories explicitly. Note that modifying root requires sudo permissions.

# make the directories
sudo mkdir /ipfs
sudo mkdir /ipns

# chown them so ipfs can use them without root permissions
sudo chown <username> /ipfs
sudo chown <username> /ipns

Depending on whether you are using OSX or Linux, follow the proceeding instructions.

Make sure IPFS daemon is not running

You'll need to stop the IPFS daemon if you have it started, otherwise the mount will complain.

# Check to see if IPFS daemon is running
ps aux | grep ipfs

# Kill the IPFS daemon 
pkill -f ipfs

# Verify that it has been killed

Mounting IPFS

ipfs daemon --mount

If you wish to allow other users to use the mount points, edit /etc/fuse.conf to enable non-root users, i.e.:

# /etc/fuse.conf - Configuration file for Filesystem in Userspace (FUSE)

# Set the maximum number of FUSE mounts allowed to non-root users.
# The default is 1000.
#mount_max = 1000

# Allow non-root users to specify the allow_other or allow_root mount options.
user_allow_other

Next set Mounts.FuseAllowOther config option to true:

ipfs config --json Mounts.FuseAllowOther true
ipfs daemon --mount

Troubleshooting

Permission denied or fusermount: user has no write access to mountpoint error in Linux

Verify that the config file can be read by your user:

sudo ls -l /etc/fuse.conf
-rw-r----- 1 root fuse 216 Jan  2  2013 /etc/fuse.conf

In most distributions, the group named fuse will be created during fuse installation. You can check this with:

sudo grep -q fuse /etc/group && echo fuse_group_present || echo fuse_group_missing

If the group is present, just add your regular user to the fuse group:

sudo usermod -G fuse -a <username>

If the group didn't exist, create fuse group (add your regular user to it) and set necessary permissions, for example:

sudo chgrp fuse /etc/fuse.conf
sudo chmod g+r  /etc/fuse.conf

Note that the use of fuse group is optional and may depend on your operating system. It is okay to use a different group as long as proper permissions are set for user running ipfs mount command.

Mount command crashes and mountpoint gets stuck

sudo umount /ipfs
sudo umount /ipns

If you manage to mount on other systems (or followed an alternative path to one above), please contribute to these docs :D