Skip to content

wabg/node-weedfs

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

75 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

node-seaweedfs (weed-fs)

npm version Build Status Maintainability Test Coverage

This project is a node.js client library for the SeaweedFS REST interface. This is a rewrite of cruzrr's implementation to support Promises for better error handling. Also tests have been rewritten to use mocha and check for more error cases. This module supports readable streams to be written SeaweedFS and be writable streams to fetch files.

This module requires at least node 0.12 to enable native Promises.

What is SeaweedFS?

SeaweedFS is a simple and highly scalable distributed file system. It focuses on two objectives:

  • storing billions of files!
  • and serving them fast!

Install

npm install @wabg/node-seaweedfs

node.js

seaweed client version node.js version
1.3.0 0.12
>= 1.4.0 >=4

Basic Usage

const weedClient = require("node-seaweedfs");
const seaweedfs = new weedClient({
  server:    "localhost",
  port:    9333,
  DataCenterServer: "192.168.8.123", // [Optional] 
  protocol: "https", // [Optional] 
});

seaweedfs.write("./file.png").then((fileInfo) => {
  return seaweedfs.read(fileInfo.fid);
}).then((Buffer) => {
  // do something with the buffer
}).catch((err) => {
  // error handling
});

Test

adjust test/testconf.js to your needs and just run

gulp test

If you want to create new tests this watch task might be handy

gulp

API

write(file(s), [{opts}])

Use the write() function to store files. The callback recieves the parsed JSON response.

Anything passed to the {opts} is made into a query string and is used with the /dir/assign HTTP request. You can use this to define the replication strategy.

client.write("./file.png", {replication: 000}).then(function(fileInfo) {
  console.log(fileinfo);
}).catch(function(err) {
  // error handling
});

Instead of a path you can also pass a buffer or a stream

// using a Buffer
client.write(new Buffer("atroo")).then(function(fileInfo) {
  // The fid's will be the same, to access each variaton just
  // add _ARRAYINDEX to the end of the fid. In this case fileB
  // would be: fid + "_1"
  
  var fidA = fileInfo;
  var fidB = fileInfo + "_1";
  
  console.log(fileInfo);
}).catch(function(err) {
  // error handling
})

//using a Stream
client.write(getReadableStreamSomeHow()).then(function(fileInfo) {
  // The fid's will be the same, to access each variaton just
  // add _ARRAYINDEX to the end of the fid. In this case fileB
  // would be: fid + "_1"
  
  var fidA = fileInfo;
  var fidB = fileInfo + "_1";
  
  console.log(fileInfo);
}).catch(function(err) {
    //error handling
})

You can also write multiple files:

client.write(["./fileA.jpg", "./fileB.jpg"]).then(function(fileInfo) {
  // The fid's will be the same, to access each variaton just
  // add _ARRAYINDEX to the end of the fid. In this case fileB
  // would be: fid + "_1"
  
  var fidA = fileInfo;
  var fidB = fileInfo + "_1";
  
  console.log(fileInfo);
}).catch(function(err) {
  // error handling
})

For multiple files any combinations of path's, Buffers or Streams are allowed

read(fileId, [stream])

The read function supports streaming. To use simply do:

client.read(fileId, fs.createWriteStream("read.png"));

If you prefer not to use streams just use:

client.read(fileId).then(function(Buffer) {
  // do something with the buffer
}).catch(function(err) {
  //error handling
});

// https://github.com/chrislusf/seaweedfs#read-file
// If you want to get a scaled version of an image, you can add some `query` params:
client.read(fileId, null, {
  query: {
    height: 200,
    width: 200,
    mode: 'fill',
  }
}).then(function(Buffer) {
  // do something with the buffer
}).catch(function(err) {
  //error handling
});

find(file)

This function can be used to find the location(s) of a file amongst the cluster.

client.find(fileId).then(function(json) {
  console.log(json.locations);
});

remove(file)

This function will delete a file from all locations.

client.remove(fileId).then(function() {
  console.log("removed filed");
}).catch(function(err) {
  console.log("could not remove " + fileId);
});

masterStatus()

This function will query the master status for status information. The callback contains an object containing the information about which master server is the leader and which master servers are available.

client.masterStatus().then(function(status) {
  console.log(status);
});

systemStatus()

This function will query the master server for information about the current topology and available storage layouts.

client.systemStatus().then(function(status) {
  console.log(status);
});

volumeStatus(host)

This function will query an individual volume server for information about the volumes on this server.

client.status("127.0.0.1:8080").then(function(status) {
  console.log(status);
});

vacuum(opts)

This function will force the master server to preform garbage collection on volume servers.

Force Garbage Collection

If your system has many deletions, the deleted file's disk space will not be synchronously re-claimed. There is a background job to check volume disk usage. If empty space is more than the threshold, default to 0.3, the vacuum job will make the volume readonly, create a new volume with only existing files, and switch on the new volume. If you are impatient or doing some testing, vacuum the unused spaces this way.

client.vacuum({garbageThreshold: 0.4}).then(function(status) {
  console.log(status);
});