(GET/PUT/POST/DELETE) and by appending a type-indicating query argument, we
control how what we want to do with the data and how it should be presented.
-In the following examples "$URL" is a shorthand for a URL like the ones
-described above. "$NEWURL" is a shorthand for a URL pointing to a location
-in the vdrive where currently nothing exists.
+=== files and directories by name ===
-=== files or directories ===
+In the following examples "$URL" is a shorthand for a URL like the ones
+described above, with "vdrive/" as the top level, followed by a
+slash-separated sequence of file or directory names. "$NEWURL" is a
+shorthand for a URL pointing to a location in the vdrive where currently
+nothing exists.
GET $URL
for a human. It also contains forms to upload new files, and to delete
files and directories. These forms use POST methods to do their job.
+ You can add the "save=true" argument, which adds a 'Content-Disposition:
+ attachment' header to prompt most web browsers to save the file to disk
+ rather than attempting to display it.
+
GET $URL?t=json
This returns machine-parseable information about the named file or
corresponding FILEURL or DIRURL (except that dirnodes do not recurse --
the "children" entry of the child is omitted).
+ Before writing code that uses these results, please see the important note
+ below about TOCTTOU bugs.
+
DELETE $URL
This deletes the given file or directory from the vdrive. If it is a
curl -T /dev/null 'http://localhost:8011/vdrive/global/newdir?t=upload&localdir=/home/user/directory-to-upload'
-
-=== just for files ===
+=== files by name ===
GET $URL?t=file
To use this, run 'curl -T localfile http://localhost:8011/vdrive/global/newfile'
-=== just for directories ===
+=== directories by name ===
GET $URL?t=manifest
rename $CHILDNAME, requesting the new name, and submitting POST rename.
+== URIs ==
+
+A separate top-level resource namespace ("uri" instead of "vdrive") is used
+to get access to files and dirnodes that are indexed directly by URI, rather
+than by going through the vdrive. The resource thus referenced is used the
+same way as if it were accessed through the vdrive, (including accessing a
+directory's children with "$URI/childname").
+
+For example, this identifies a file or directory:
+
+http://localhost:8011/uri/$URI
+
+And this identifies a file or directory in a subdirectory of the identified
+directory:
+
+http://localhost:8011/uri/$URI/subdir/foo
+
+In the following examples, "$URI_URL" is a shorthand for a URL like the one
+above, with "uri/" as the top level, followed by a URI.
+
+Note that since tahoe URIs may contain slashes (in particular, dirnode URIs
+contain a FURL, which resembles a regular HTTP URL and starts with pb://),
+when URIs are used in this form, they must be specially quoted. All slashes
+in the URI must be replaced by '!' characters. XXX consider changing the
+allmydata.org uri format to relieve the user of this requirement.
+
+ GET $URI_URL
+
+ This behaves the same way a "GET $URL", described in the "files and
+ directories" section above, but which file or directory you get does not
+ depend on the contents of parent directories as it does with the name-based
+ URLs, since a URI uniquely identifies an object regardless of its location.
+
+ If the URI identifies a file, then this retrieves the contents of the
+ file. Since files accessed this way do not have a filename (from which a
+ MIME-type can be derived), one can be specified using a 'filename=' query
+ argument. This filename is also the one used if the 'save=true' argument is
+ set.
+
+ PUT $URL?t=uri
+
+ This attaches a child (either a file or a directory) to the vdrive at the
+ given location. The URI is provided in the body of the HTTP request. This
+ can be used to attach a shared directory to the vdrive. Intermediate
+ directories are created on-demand just like with the regular PUT command.
+
+ GET http://localhost:8011/uri?uri=$URI
+
+ This causes a redirect to /uri/$URI, and retains any additional query
+ arguments (like filename= or save=). This is for the convenience of web
+ forms which allow the user to paste in a URI (obtained through some
+ out-of-band channel, like IM or email).
+
+ Note that this form only redirects to the specific node indicated by the
+ URI: unlike the GET /uri/$URI form, you cannot traverse to child nodes by
+ appending additional path segments to the URL.
+
+ The $URI provided as a query argument is allowed to contain slashes. The
+ redirection provided will escape the slashes with exclamation points, as
+ described above.
+
+
+== TOCTTOU bugs ==
+
+Note that since directories are mutable you can get surprises if you query
+the vdrive, e.g. "GET $URL?t=json", examine the resulting JSON-encoded
+information, and then fetch from or update the vdrive using a name-based URL.
+This is because the actual state of the vdrive could have changed after you
+did the "GET $URL?t=json" query and before you did the subsequent fetch or
+update.
+
+For example, suppose you query to find out that "vdrive/private/somedir/foo"
+is a file which has a certain number of bytes, and then you issue a "GET
+vdrive/private/somedir/foo" to fetch the file. The file that you get might
+have a different number of bytes than the one that you chose to fetch,
+because the "foo" entry in the "somedir" directory may have been changed to
+point to a different file between your query and your fetch, or because the
+"somedir" entry in the private vdrive might have been changed to point to a
+different directory.
+
+Potentially more damaging, suppose that the "foo" entry was changed to point
+to a directory instead of a file. Then instead of receiving the expected
+file, you receive a file containing an HTML page describing the directory
+contents!
+
+These are examples of TOCTTOU bugs ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOCTTOU ).
+
+A good way to avoid these bugs is to issue your second request, not with a
+URL based on the sequence of names that lead to the object, but instead with
+the URI of the object. For example, in the case that you query a directory
+listing (with "GET vdrive/private/somedir?t=json"), find a file named "foo"
+therein that you want to download, and then download the file, if you
+download it with its URI ("GET uri/$URI") instead of its URL ("GET
+vdrive/private/somedir/foo") then you will get the file that was in the
+"somedir/" directory under the name "foo" when you queried that directory,
+even if the "somedir/" directory has since been changed so that its "foo"
+child now points to a different file or to a directory.
+
+In general, use names if you want "whatever object (whether file or
+directory) is found by following this sequence of names when my request
+reaches the server". Use URIs if you want "this particular object".
+
+If you are basing your decision to fetch from or update the vdrive on
+filesystem information that was returned by an earlier query, then you
+usually intend to fetch or update the particular object that was in that
+location when you queried it, rather than whatever object is going to be in
+that location when your request reaches the server.
+
+
== POST forms ==
POST $URL
present under 'to_name', akin to 'mv -f' in unix parlance.
-== URIs ==
-
- http://localhost:8011/uri/$URI
-
- A separate top-level resource namespace ("uri" instead of "vdrive") is used
- to get access to files and dirnodes that are indexed directly by URI,
- rather than by going through the vdrive. The resource thus referenced is
- used the same way as if it were accessed through the vdrive, including
- child-resource-traversal behavior. For example, if the URI corresponds to a
- file, then
-
- GET http://localhost:8011/uri/$URI
-
- would retrieve the contents of the file. Since files accessed this way do
- not have a naturally-occurring filename (from which a MIME-type can be
- derived), one can be specified using a 'filename=' query argument. This
- filename is also the one used if the 'save=true' argument is set, which
- adds a 'Content-Disposition: attachment' header to prompt most web browsers
- to save the file to disk rather than attempting to display it:
-
- GET http://localhost:8011/uri/$URI?filename=foo.jpg
- GET http://localhost:8011/uri/$URI?filename=foo.jpg&save=true
-
- If the URI corresponds to a directory, then:
-
- PUT http://localhost:8011/uri/$URI/subdir/newfile?localfile=$FILENAME
-
- would upload a file (with contents taken from the local filesystem) to a
- new file in a subdirectory of the referenced dirnode.
-
- Note that since tahoe URIs may contain slashes (in particular, dirnode URIs
- contain a FURL, which resembles a regular HTTP URL and starts with pb://),
- when URIs are used in this form, they must be specially quoted. All slashes
- in the URI must be replaced by '!' characters.
-
- PUT $URL?t=uri
-
- This attaches a child (either a file or a directory) to the vdrive at the
- given location. The URI is provided in the body of the HTTP request. This
- can be used to attach a shared directory to the vdrive. Intermediate
- directories are created on-demand just like with the regular PUT command.
-
- GET http://localhost:8011/uri?uri=$URI
-
- This causes a redirect to /uri/$URI, and retains any additional query
- arguments (like filename= or save=). This is for the convenience of web
- forms which allow the user to paste in a URI (obtained through some
- out-of-band channel, like IM or email).
-
- Note that this form only redirects to the specific node indicated by the
- URI: unlike the GET /uri/$URI form, you cannot traverse to child nodes by
- appending additional path segments to the URL.
-
- The $URI provided as a query argument is allowed to contain slashes. The
- redirection provided will escape the slashes with exclamation points, as
- described above.
-
-
== XMLRPC ==
http://localhost:8011/xmlrpc
put_uri(vdrivename, path, URI)
etc..
+