From: Zooko Wilcox-O'Hearn Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2014 18:24:38 +0000 (+0000) Subject: formatting fixes X-Git-Tag: allmydata-tahoe-1.10.1a1~171^2 X-Git-Url: https://git.rkrishnan.org/uri/%22doc.html/frontends/FTP-and-SFTP.rst?a=commitdiff_plain;h=bb13bba2a5092c6cf224cb58a4808f2aa1cb2a61;p=tahoe-lafs%2Ftahoe-lafs.git formatting fixes --- diff --git a/docs/running.rst b/docs/running.rst index 0dbcbad8..d5770ce5 100644 --- a/docs/running.rst +++ b/docs/running.rst @@ -1,4 +1,5 @@ -.. -*- coding: utf-8-with-signature -*- +.. -*- coding: utf-8-with-signature-unix; fill-column: 73; -*- +.. -*- indent-tabs-mode: nil -*- ===================== How To Run Tahoe-LAFS @@ -28,32 +29,32 @@ nodes (see the note about small grids below). If the Tahoe-LAFS ``bin`` directory is not on your PATH, then in all the command lines below, specify the full path to ``bin/tahoe``. -To construct a client node, run "``tahoe create-client``", which will create +To construct a client node, run “``tahoe create-client``”, which will create ``~/.tahoe`` to be the node's base directory. Acquire the ``introducer.furl`` (see below if you are running your own introducer, or use the one from the `TestGrid page`_), and paste it after ``introducer.furl =`` in the -``[client]`` section of ``~/.tahoe/tahoe.cfg``. Then use "``tahoe run -~/.tahoe``". After that, the node should be off and running. The first thing +``[client]`` section of ``~/.tahoe/tahoe.cfg``. Then use “``tahoe run +~/.tahoe``”. After that, the node should be off and running. The first thing it will do is connect to the introducer and get itself connected to all other nodes on the grid. -By default, "``tahoe create-client``" creates a client-only node, that +By default, “``tahoe create-client``” creates a client-only node, that does not offer its disk space to other nodes. To configure other behavior, -use "``tahoe create-node``" or see configuration.rst_. +use “``tahoe create-node``” or see configuration.rst_. To construct an introducer, create a new base directory for it (the name of the directory is up to you), ``cd`` into it, and run -"``tahoe create-introducer .``". Now run the introducer using -"``tahoe start .``". After it starts, it will write a file named +“``tahoe create-introducer .``”. Now run the introducer using +“``tahoe start .``”. After it starts, it will write a file named ``introducer.furl`` into the ``private/`` subdirectory of that base directory. This file contains the URL the other nodes must use in order -to connect to this introducer. (Note that "``tahoe run .``" doesn't +to connect to this introducer. (Note that “``tahoe run .``” doesn't work for introducers, this is a known issue: `#937`_.) -The "``tahoe run``" command above will run the node in the foreground. +The “``tahoe run``” command above will run the node in the foreground. On Unix, you can run it in the background instead by using the -"``tahoe start``" command. To stop a node started in this way, use -"``tahoe stop``". ``tahoe --help`` gives a summary of all commands. +“``tahoe start``” command. To stop a node started in this way, use +“``tahoe stop``”. ``tahoe --help`` gives a summary of all commands. See configuration.rst_ for more details about how to configure Tahoe-LAFS, including how to get other clients to connect to your node if it is behind a @@ -71,7 +72,7 @@ A note about small grids By default, Tahoe-LAFS ships with the configuration parameter ``shares.happy`` set to 7. If you are using Tahoe-LAFS on a grid with fewer -than 7 storage nodes, this won't work well for you -- none of your uploads +than 7 storage nodes, this won't work well for you — none of your uploads will succeed. To fix this, see configuration.rst_ to learn how to set ``shares.happy`` to a more suitable value for your grid. @@ -84,33 +85,51 @@ This is how to use your Tahoe-LAFS node. The WUI ------- -Point your web browser to `http://127.0.0.1:3456`_ -- which is the URL of the -gateway running on your own local computer -- to use your newly created node. +Point your web browser to `http://127.0.0.1:3456`_ — which is the URL of the +gateway running on your own local computer — to use your newly created node. -Create a new directory (with the button labelled "create a directory"). +Create a new directory (with the button labelled “create a directory”). Your web browser will load the new directory. Now if you want to be able to come back to this directory later, you have to bookmark it, or otherwise save a copy of the URL. If you lose the URL to this directory, then you can never again come back to this directory. -You can do more or less everything you want to do with a decentralized -filesystem through the WUI. - .. _http://127.0.0.1:3456: http://127.0.0.1:3456 The CLI ------- -Prefer the command-line? Run "``tahoe --help``" (the same command-line tool +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 create-alias tahoe``". 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-LAFS CLI uses +as the 'tahoe:' alias by running “``tahoe create-alias tahoe``”. 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-LAFS CLI uses similar syntax to the well-known scp and rsync tools. See CLI.rst_ for more details. +To backup a directory full of files and subdirectories, run “``tahoe backup +LOCALDIRECTORY tahoe:``”. This will create a new LAFS subdirectory inside the +“tahoe” LAFS directory named “Archive”, and inside “Archive”, it will create +a new subdirectory whose name is the current date and time. That newly +created subdirectory will be populated with a snapshot copy of all files and +directories currently reachable from LOCALDIRECTORY. Then ``tahoe backup`` +will make a link to that snapshot directory from the “tahoe” LAFS directory, +and name the link “Latest”. + +``tahoe backup`` cleverly avoids uploading any files or directories that +haven't changed, and it also cleverly deduplicates any files or directories +that have identical contents to other files or directories that it has +previously backed-up. This means that running ``tahoe backup`` is a nice +incremental operation that backs up your files and directories efficiently, +and if it gets interrupted (for example by a network outage, or by you +rebooting your computer during the backup, or so on), it will resume right +where it left off the next time you run ``tahoe backup``. + +See ``__ for more information about the ``tahoe backup`` +command, as well as other commands. + As with the WUI (and with all current interfaces to Tahoe-LAFS), you are responsible for remembering directory capabilities yourself. If you create a new directory and lose the capability to it, then you cannot