If provided, this value defines how much disk space is reserved: the
storage server will not accept any share that causes the amount of free
disk space to drop below this value. (The free space is measured by a
- call to statvfs(2) on Unix, or GetDiskFreeSpaceEx on Windows, and is the
- space available to the user account under which the storage server runs.)
+ call to ``statvfs(2)`` on Unix, or ``GetDiskFreeSpaceEx`` on Windows, and
+ is the space available to the user account under which the storage server
+ runs.)
This string contains a number, with an optional case-insensitive scale
suffix like "K" or "M" or "G", and an optional "B" or "iB" suffix. So
the public key format, so users cannot have a password equal to either of
these strings.
-Now add an 'accounts.file' directive to your tahoe.cfg file, as described in
+Now add an ``accounts.file`` directive to your ``tahoe.cfg`` file, as described in
the next sections.
Running An Account Server (accounts.url)
You will use directives in the tahoe.cfg file to tell the SFTP code where to
find these keys. To create one, use the ``ssh-keygen`` tool (which comes with
-the standard openssh client distribution)::
+the standard OpenSSH client distribution)::
% cd BASEDIR
% ssh-keygen -f private/ssh_host_rsa_key
unlinked or replaced.
When using sshfs, the 'no-write' field can be set by clearing the 'w' bits in
-the Unix permissions, for example using the command 'chmod 444
-path/to/file'. Note that this does not mean that arbitrary combinations of
-Unix permissions are supported. If the 'w' bits are cleared on a link to a
-mutable file or directory, that link will become read-only.
+the Unix permissions, for example using the command ``chmod 444 path/to/file``.
+Note that this does not mean that arbitrary combinations of Unix permissions
+are supported. If the 'w' bits are cleared on a link to a mutable file or
+directory, that link will become read-only.
If SFTP is used to write to an existing mutable file, it will publish a new
version when the file handle is closed.