From: Brian Warner Date: Tue, 3 Jun 2008 01:00:16 +0000 (-0700) Subject: docs/using.html: update CLI section to reflect the new alias: scheme. Closes #431 X-Git-Url: https://git.rkrishnan.org/%5B/%5D%20/uri/frontends/FTP-and-SFTP.rst?a=commitdiff_plain;h=313876263d698b53f6f7430d12a8ce58866ac131;p=tahoe-lafs%2Ftahoe-lafs.git docs/using.html: update CLI section to reflect the new alias: scheme. Closes #431 --- diff --git a/docs/using.html b/docs/using.html index e77a78b4..ee61800a 100644 --- a/docs/using.html +++ b/docs/using.html @@ -23,8 +23,20 @@

The CLI

-

Prefer the command-line? Run "tahoe --help" (the same command-line tool that is used to start and stop nodes serves to navigate and use the decentralized filesystem). To make commands like "tahoe ls" work without the --dir-cap= option, you have to put a directory capability (e.g. http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/URI:DIR2:ovjy4yhylqlfoqg2vcze36dhde:4d4f47qko2xm5g7osgo2yyidi5m4muyo2vjjy53q4vjju2u55mfa) into ~/.tahoe/private/root_dir.cap.

-

As with the WUI (and with all current interfaces to Tahoe), you are responsible for remembering directory capabilities yourself. If you create a new directory and lose the capability to it, then you cannot access that directory ever again.

+

Prefer the command-line? Run "tahoe --help" (the same + command-line tool that is used to start and stop nodes serves to navigate + and use the decentralized filesystem). To get started, create a new + directory and mark it as the 'tahoe:' alias by running "tahoe + add-alias tahoe `tahoe mkdir`". Once you've done that, you can do + "tahoe ls tahoe:" and "tahoe cp LOCALFILE + tahoe:foo.txt" to work with your filesystem. The Tahoe CLI uses + the same syntax as the well-known scp and rsync tools. See CLI.txt for more details.

+ +

As with the WUI (and with all current interfaces to Tahoe), you are + responsible for remembering directory capabilities yourself. If you + create a new directory and lose the capability to it, then you cannot + access that directory ever again.

P.S. "CLI" is pronounced "clee".