
= The Tahoe REST-ful Web API =

1. Enabling the web-API port
2. Basic Concepts: GET, PUT, DELETE, POST
3. URLs, Machine-Oriented Interfaces
4. Browser Operations: Human-Oriented Interfaces
5. Welcome / Debug / Status pages
6. Safety and security issues -- names vs. URIs
7. Concurrency Issues


== Enabling the web-API port ==

Every Tahoe node is capable of running a built-in HTTP server. To enable
this, just write a port number into a file named "webport" in the node's base
directory. For example, writing "8123" into $NODEDIR/webport will cause the
node to run a webserver on port 8123.

This string is actually a Twisted "strports" specification, meaning you can
get more control over the interface to which the server binds by supplying
additional arguments. For more details, see the documentation on
twisted.application.strports:
http://twistedmatrix.com/documents/current/api/twisted.application.strports.html

Writing "tcp:8123:interface=127.0.0.1" into $NODEDIR/webport does the same
but binds to the loopback interface, ensuring that only the programs on the
local host can connect. Using
"ssl:8123:privateKey=mykey.pem:certKey=cert.pem" runs an SSL server.

This webport can be set when the node is created by passing a --webport
option to the 'tahoe create-client' command. By default, the node listens on
port 8123, on the loopback (127.0.0.1) interface.

== Basic Concepts ==

As described in architecture.txt, each file and directory in a Tahoe virtual
filesystem is referenced by an identifier that combines the designation of
the object with the authority to do something with it (such as read or modify
the contents). This identifier is called a "read-cap" or "write-cap",
depending upon whether it enables read-only or read-write access. These
"caps" are also referred to as URIs.

The Tahoe web-based API is "REST-ful", meaning it implements the concepts of
"REpresentational State Transfer": the original scheme by which the World
Wide Web was intended to work. Each object (file or directory) is referenced
by a URL that includes the read- or write- cap. HTTP methods (GET, PUT, and
DELETE) are used to manipulate these objects. You can think of the URL as a
noun, and the method as a verb.

In REST, the GET method is used to retrieve information about an object, or
to retrieve some representation of the object itself. When the object is a
file, the basic GET method will simply return the contents of that file.
Other variations (generally implemented by adding query parameters to the
URL) will return information about the object, such as metadata. GET
operations are required to have no side-effects.

PUT is used to upload new objects into the filesystem, or to replace an
existing object. DELETE it used to delete objects from the filesystem. Both
PUT and DELETE are required to be idempotent: performing the same operation
multiple times must have the same side-effects as only performing it once.

POST is used for more complicated actions that cannot be expressed as a GET,
PUT, or DELETE. POST operations can be thought of as a method call: sending
some message to the object referenced by the URL. In Tahoe, POST is also used
for operations that must be triggered by an HTML form (including upload and
delete), because otherwise a regular web browser has no way to accomplish
these tasks.

Tahoe's web API is designed for two different consumers. The first is a
program that needs to manipulate the virtual file system. Such programs are
expected to use the RESTful interface described above. The second is a human
using a standard web browser to work with the filesystem. This user is given
a series of HTML pages with links to download files, and forms that use POST
actions to upload, rename, and delete files.

== URLs ==

Tahoe uses a variety of read- and write- caps to identify files and
directories. The most common of these is the "immutable file read-cap", which
is used for most uploaded files. These read-caps look like the following:

 URI:CHK:ime6pvkaxuetdfah2p2f35pe54:4btz54xk3tew6nd4y2ojpxj4m6wxjqqlwnztgre6gnjgtucd5r4a:3:10:202

The next most common is a "directory write-cap", which provides both read and
write access to a directory, and look like this:

 URI:DIR2:djrdkfawoqihigoett4g6auz6a:jx5mplfpwexnoqff7y5e4zjus4lidm76dcuarpct7cckorh2dpgq

There are also "directory read-caps", which start with "URI:DIR2-RO:", and
give read-only access to a directory. Finally there are also mutable file
read- and write- caps, which start with "URI:SSK", and give access to mutable
files.

(later versions of Tahoe will make these strings shorter, and will remove the
unfortunate colons, which must be escaped when these caps are embedded in
URLs).

To refer to any Tahoe object through the web API, you simply need to combine
a prefix (which indicates the HTTP server to use) with the cap (which
indicates which object inside that server to access). Since the default Tahoe
webport is 8123, the most common prefix is one that will use a local node
listening on this port:

 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/ + $CAP

So, to access the directory named above (which happens to be the
publically-writable sample directory on the Tahoe test grid, described at
http://allmydata.org/trac/tahoe/wiki/TestGrid), the URL would be:

 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/URI%3ADIR2%3Adjrdkfawoqihigoett4g6auz6a%3Ajx5mplfpwexnoqff7y5e4zjus4lidm76dcuarpct7cckorh2dpgq/

(note that the colons in the directory-cap are url-encoded into "%3A"
sequences).

Likewise, to access the file named above, use:

 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/URI%3ACHK%3Aime6pvkaxuetdfah2p2f35pe54%3A4btz54xk3tew6nd4y2ojpxj4m6wxjqqlwnztgre6gnjgtucd5r4a%3A3%3A10%3A202

In the rest of this document, we'll use "$DIRCAP" as shorthand for a read-cap
or write-cap that refers to a directory, and "$FILECAP" to abbreviate a cap
that refers to a file (whether mutable or immutable). So those URLs above can
be abbreviated as:

 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/$DIRCAP/
 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/$FILECAP

The operation summaries below will abbreviate these further, by eliding the
server prefix. They will be displayed like this:

 /uri/$DIRCAP/
 /uri/$FILECAP


=== Child Lookup ===

Tahoe directories contain named children, just like directories in a regular
local filesystem. These children can be either files or subdirectories.

If you have a Tahoe URL that refers to a directory, and want to reference a
named child inside it, just append the child name to the URL. For example, if
our sample directory contains a file named "welcome.txt", we can refer to
that file with:

 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/$DIRCAP/welcome.txt

(or http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/URI%3ADIR2%3Adjrdkfawoqihigoett4g6auz6a%3Ajx5mplfpwexnoqff7y5e4zjus4lidm76dcuarpct7cckorh2dpgq/welcome.txt)

Multiple levels of subdirectories can be handled this way:

 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/$DIRCAP/tahoe-source/docs/webapi.txt

In this document, when we need to refer to a URL that references a file using
this child-of-some-directory format, we'll use the following string:

 /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME

The "[SUBDIRS../]" part means that there are zero or more (optional)
subdirectory names in the middle of the URL. The "FILENAME" at the end means
that this whole URL refers to a file of some sort, rather than to a
directory.

When we need to refer specifically to a directory in this way, we'll write:

 /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR


Note that all components of pathnames in URLs are required to be UTF-8
encoded, so "resume.doc" (with an acute accent on both E's) would be accessed
with:

 http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/$DIRCAP/r%C3%A9sum%C3%A9.doc

Also note that the filenames inside upload POST forms are interpreted using
whatever character set was provided in the conventional '_charset' field, and
defaults to UTF-8 if not otherwise specified. The JSON representation of each
directory contains native unicode strings. Tahoe directories are specified to
contain unicode filenames, and cannot contain binary strings that are not
representable as such.

All Tahoe operations that refer to existing files or directories must include
a suitable read- or write- cap in the URL: the webapi server won't add one
for you. If you don't know the cap, you can't access the file. This allows
the security properties of Tahoe caps to be extended across the webapi
interface.

== Programmatic Operations ==

Now that we know how to build URLs that refer to files and directories in a
Tahoe virtual filesystem, what sorts of operations can we do with those URLs?
This section contains a catalog of GET, PUT, DELETE, and POST operations that
can be performed on these URLs. This set of operations are aimed at programs
that use HTTP to communicate with a Tahoe node. The next section describes
operations that are intended for web browsers.

=== Reading A File ===

GET /uri/$FILECAP
GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME

 This will retrieve the contents of the given file. The HTTP response body
 will contain the sequence of bytes that make up the file.

 To view files in a web browser, you may want more control over the
 Content-Type and Content-Disposition headers. Please see the next section
 "Browser Operations", for details on how to modify these URLs for that
 purpose.

=== Writing/Uploading A File ===

PUT /uri/$FILECAP
PUT /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME

 Upload a file, using the data from the HTTP request body, and add whatever
 child links and subdirectories are necessary to make the file available at
 the given location. Once this operation succeeds, a GET on the same URL will
 retrieve the same contents that were just uploaded. This will create any
 necessary intermediate subdirectories.

 To use the /uri/$FILECAP form, $FILECAP be a write-cap for a mutable file.

 In the /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME form, if the target file is a
 writable mutable file, that files contents will be overwritten in-place. If
 it is a read-cap for a mutable file, an error will occur. If it is an
 immutable file, the old file will be discarded, and a new one will be put in
 its place.

 When creating a new file, if "mutable=true" is in the query arguments, the
 operation will create a mutable file instead of an immutable one.

 This returns the file-cap of the resulting file. If a new file was created
 by this method, the HTTP response code (as dictated by rfc2616) will be set
 to 201 CREATED. If an existing file was replaced or modified, the response
 code will be 200 OK.

 Note that the 'curl -T localfile http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/$DIRCAP/foo.txt'
 command can be used to invoke this operation.

PUT /uri

 This uploads a file, and produces a file-cap for the contents, but does not
 attach the file into the virtual drive. No directories will be modified by
 this operation. The file-cap is returned as the body of the HTTP response.

 If "mutable=true" is in the query arguments, the operation will create a
 mutable file, and return its write-cap in the HTTP respose. The default is
 to create an immutable file, returning the read-cap as a response.

=== Creating A New Directory ===

POST /uri?t=mkdir
PUT /uri?t=mkdir

 Create a new empty directory and return its write-cap as the HTTP response
 body. This does not make the newly created directory visible from the
 virtual drive. The "PUT" operation is provided for backwards compatibility:
 new code should use POST.

POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=mkdir
PUT /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=mkdir

 Create new directories as necessary to make sure that the named target
 ($DIRCAP/SUBDIRS../SUBDIR) is a directory. This will create additional
 intermediate directories as necessary. If the named target directory already
 exists, this will make no changes to it.

 This will return an error if a blocking file is present at any of the parent
 names, preventing the server from creating the necessary parent directory.

 The write-cap of the new directory will be returned as the HTTP response
 body.

POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir&name=NAME

 Create a new empty directory and attach it to the given existing directory.
 This will create additional intermediate directories as necessary.

 The URL of this form points to the parent of the bottom-most new directory,
 whereas the previous form has a URL that points directly to the bottom-most
 new directory.

=== Get Information About A File Or Directory (as JSON) ===

GET /uri/$FILECAP?t=json
GET /uri/$DIRCAP?t=json
GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=json
GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME?t=json

  This returns a machine-parseable JSON-encoded description of the given
  object. The JSON always contains a list, and the first element of the list
  is always a flag that indicates whether the referenced object is a file or a
  directory. If it is a file, then the information includes file size and URI,
  like this:

   GET /uri/$FILECAP?t=json :
   GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME?t=json :

    [ "filenode", { "ro_uri": file_uri,
                    "size": bytes,
                    "mutable": false,
                    "metadata": {"ctime": 1202777696.7564139,
                                 "mtime": 1202777696.7564139
                                 }
                    } ]

  If it is a directory, then it includes information about the children of
  this directory, as a mapping from child name to a set of data about the
  child (the same data that would appear in a corresponding GET?t=json of the
  child itself). The child entries also include metadata about each child,
  including creation- and modification- timestamps. The output looks like
  this:

   GET /uri/$DIRCAP?t=json :
   GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]SUBDIR?t=json :

    [ "dirnode", { "rw_uri": read_write_uri,
                   "ro_uri": read_only_uri,
                   "mutable": true,
                   "children": {
                     "foo.txt": [ "filenode", { "ro_uri": uri,
                                                "size": bytes,
                                                "metadata": {
                                                  "ctime": 1202777696.7564139,
                                                  "mtime": 1202777696.7564139
                                                 }
                                               } ],
                     "subdir":  [ "dirnode", { "rw_uri": rwuri,
                                               "ro_uri": rouri,
                                                "metadata": {
                                                  "ctime": 1202778102.7589991,
                                                  "mtime": 1202778111.2160511,
                                                 }
                                              } ]
                    } } ]

  In the above example, note how 'children' is a dictionary in which the keys
  are child names and the values depend upon whether the child is a file or a
  directory. The value is mostly the same as the JSON representation of the
  child object (except that directories do not recurse -- the "children"
  entry of the child is omitted, and the directory view includes the metadata
  that is stored on the directory edge).

  Then the rw_uri field will be present in the information about a directory
  if and only if you have read-write access to that directory,


=== Attaching an existing File or Directory by its read- or write- cap ===

PUT /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME?t=uri

 This attaches a child object (either a file or directory) to a specified
 location in the virtual filesystem. The child object is referenced by its
 read- or write- cap, as provided in the HTTP request body. This will create
 intermediate directories as necessary.

 This is similar to a UNIX hardlink: by referencing a previously-uploaded
 file (or previously-created directory) instead of uploading/creating a new
 one, you can create two references to the same object.

 The read- or write- cap of the child is provided in the body of the HTTP
 request, and this same cap is returned in the response body.

 The default behavior is to overwrite any existing object at the same
 location. To prevent this (and make the operation return an error instead of
 overwriting), add a "replace=false" argument, as "?t=uri&replace=false".
 With replace=false, this operation will return an HTTP 409 "Conflict" error
 if there is already an object at the given location, rather than overwriting
 the existing object. Note that "true", "t", and "1" are all synonyms for
 "True", and "false", "f", and "0" are synonyms for "False". the parameter is
 case-insensitive.

=== Deleting a File or Directory ===

DELETE /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME

  This removes the given name from its parent directory. CHILDNAME is the
  name to be removed, and $DIRCAP/SUBDIRS.. indicates the directory that will
  be modified.

  Note that this does not actually delete the file or directory that the name
  points to from the tahoe grid -- it only removes the named reference from
  this directory. If there are other names in this directory or in other
  directories that point to the resource, then it will remain accessible
  through those paths. Even if all names pointing to this object are removed
  from their parent directories, then someone with possession of its read-cap
  can continue to access the object through that cap.

  The object will only become completely unreachable once 1: there are no
  reachable directories that reference it, and 2: nobody is holding a read-
  or write- cap to the object. (This behavior is very similar to the way
  hardlinks and anonymous files work in traditional unix filesystems).

  This operation will not modify more than a single directory. Intermediate
  directories which were implicitly created by PUT or POST methods will *not*
  be automatically removed by DELETE.

  This method returns the file- or directory- cap of the object that was just
  removed.

== Browser Operations ==

This section describes the HTTP operations that provide support for humans
running a web browser. Most of these operations use HTML forms that use POST
to drive the Tahoe node.

Note that for all POST operations, the arguments listed can be provided
either as URL query arguments or as form body fields. URL query arguments are
separated from the main URL by "?", and from each other by "&". For example,
"POST /uri/$DIRCAP?t=upload&mutable=true". Form body fields are usually
specified by using <input type="hidden"> elements. For clarity, the
descriptions below display the most significant arguments as URL query args.

=== Viewing A Directory (as HTML) ===

GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]

 This returns an HTML page, intended to be displayed to a human by a web
 browser, which contains HREF links to all files and directories reachable
 from this directory. These HREF links do not have a t= argument, meaning
 that a human who follows them will get pages also meant for a human. It also
 contains forms to upload new files, and to delete files and directories.
 Those forms use POST methods to do their job.

=== Viewing/Downloading a File ===

GET /uri/$FILECAP
GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME

 This will retrieve the contents of the given file. The HTTP response body
 will contain the sequence of bytes that make up the file.

 If you want the HTTP response to include a useful Content-Type header,
 either use the second form (which starts with a $DIRCAP), or add a
 "filename=foo" query argument, like "GET /uri/$FILECAP?filename=foo.jpg".
 The bare "GET /uri/$FILECAP" does not give the Tahoe node enough information
 to determine a Content-Type (since Tahoe immutable files are merely
 sequences of bytes, not typed+named file objects).

 If the URL has both filename= and "save=true" in the query arguments, then
 the server to add a "Content-Disposition: attachment" header, along with a
 filename= parameter. When a user clicks on such a link, most browsers will
 offer to let the user save the file instead of displaying it inline (indeed,
 most browsers will refuse to display it inline). "true", "t", "1", and other
 case-insensitive equivalents are all treated the same.

 Character-set handling in URLs and HTTP headers is a dubious art[1]. For
 maximum compatibility, Tahoe simply copies the bytes from the filename=
 argument into the Content-Disposition header's filename= parameter, without
 trying to interpret them in any particular way.


GET /named/$FILECAP/FILENAME

 This is an alternate download form which makes it easier to get the correct
 filename. The Tahoe server will provide the contents of the given file, with
 a Content-Type header derived from the given filename. This form is used to
 get browsers to use the "Save Link As" feature correctly, and also helps
 command-line tools like "wget" and "curl" use the right filename. Note that
 this form can *only* be used with file caps; it is an error to use a
 directory cap after the /named/ prefix.

=== Creating a Directory ===

POST /uri?t=mkdir

 This creates a new directory, but does not attach it to the virtual
 filesystem.

 If a "redirect_to_result=true" argument is provided, then the HTTP response
 will cause the web browser to be redirected to a /uri/$DIRCAP page that
 gives access to the newly-created directory. If you bookmark this page,
 you'll be able to get back to the directory again in the future. This is the
 recommended way to start working with a Tahoe server: create a new unlinked
 directory (using redirect_to_result=true), then bookmark the resulting
 /uri/$DIRCAP page. There is a "Create Directory" button on the Welcome page
 to invoke this action.

 If "redirect_to_result=true" is not provided (or is given a value of
 "false"), then the HTTP response body will simply be the write-cap of the
 new directory.

POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=mkdir&name=CHILDNAME

 This creates a new directory as a child of the designated SUBDIR. This will
 create additional intermediate directories as necessary.

 If a "when_done=URL" argument is provided, the HTTP response will cause the
 web browser to redirect to the given URL. This provides a convenient way to
 return the browser to the directory that was just modified. Without a
 when_done= argument, the HTTP response will simply contain the write-cap of
 the directory that was just created.


=== Uploading a File ===

POST /uri?t=upload

 This uploads a file, and produces a file-cap for the contents, but does not
 attach the file into the virtual drive. No directories will be modified by
 this operation.

 The file must be provided as the "file" field of an HTML encoded form body,
 produced in response to an HTML form like this:
  <form action="/uri" method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data">
   <input type="hidden" name="t" value="upload" />
   <input type="file" name="file" />
   <input type="submit" value="Upload Unlinked" />
  </form>

 If a "when_done=URL" argument is provided, the response body will cause the
 browser to redirect to the given URL. If the when_done= URL has the string
 "%(uri)s" in it, that string will be replaced by a URL-escaped form of the
 newly created file-cap. (Note that without this substitution, there is no
 way to access the file that was just uploaded).

 The default (in the absence of when_done=) is to return an HTML page that
 describes the results of the upload. This page will contain information
 about which storage servers were used for the upload, how long each
 operation took, etc.

 If a "mutable=true" argument is provided, the operation will create a
 mutable file, and the response body will contain the write-cap instead of
 the upload results page. The default is to create an immutable file,
 returning the upload results page as a response.


POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=upload

 This uploads a file, and attaches it as a new child of the given directory.
 The file must be provided as the "file" field of an HTML encoded form body,
 produced in response to an HTML form like this:
  <form action="." method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data">
   <input type="hidden" name="t" value="upload" />
   <input type="file" name="file" />
   <input type="submit" value="Upload" />
  </form>

 A "name=" argument can be provided to specify the new child's name,
 otherwise it will be taken from the "filename" field of the upload form
 (most web browsers will copy the last component of the original file's
 pathname into this field). To avoid confusion, name= is not allowed to
 contain a slash.

 If there is already a child with that name, and it is a mutable file, then
 its contents are replaced with the data being uploaded. If it is not a
 mutable file, the default behavior is to remove the existing child before
 creating a new one. To prevent this (and make the operation return an error
 instead of overwriting the old child), add a "replace=false" argument, as
 "?t=upload&replace=false". With replace=false, this operation will return an
 HTTP 409 "Conflict" error if there is already an object at the given
 location, rather than overwriting the existing object. Note that "true",
 "t", and "1" are all synonyms for "True", and "false", "f", and "0" are
 synonyms for "False". the parameter is case-insensitive.

 This will create additional intermediate directories as necessary, although
 since it is expected to be triggered by a form that was retrieved by "GET
 /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]", it is likely that the parent directory will
 already exist.

 If a "mutable=true" argument is provided, any new file that is created will
 be a mutable file instead of an immutable one. <input type="checkbox"
 name="mutable" /> will give the user a way to set this option.

 If a "when_done=URL" argument is provided, the HTTP response will cause the
 web browser to redirect to the given URL. This provides a convenient way to
 return the browser to the directory that was just modified. Without a
 when_done= argument, the HTTP response will simply contain the file-cap of
 the file that was just uploaded (a write-cap for mutable files, or a
 read-cap for immutable files).

POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]FILENAME?t=upload

 This also uploads a file and attaches it as a new child of the given
 directory. It is a slight variant of the previous operation, as the URL
 refers to the target file rather than the parent directory. It is otherwise
 identical: this accepts mutable= and when_done= arguments too.

POST /uri/$FILECAP?t=upload

=== Attaching An Existing File Or Directory (by URI) ===

POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=uri&name=CHILDNAME&uri=CHILDCAP

 This attaches a given read- or write- cap "CHILDCAP" to the designated
 directory, with a specified child name. This behaves much like the PUT t=uri
 operation, and is a lot like a UNIX hardlink.

 This will create additional intermediate directories as necessary, although
 since it is expected to be triggered by a form that was retrieved by "GET
 /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]", it is likely that the parent directory will
 already exist.

=== Deleting A Child ===

POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=delete&name=CHILDNAME

 This instructs the node to delete a child object (file or subdirectory) from
 the given directory. Note that the entire subtree is removed. This is
 somewhat like "rm -rf" (from the point of view of the parent), but other
 references into the subtree will see that the child subdirectories are not
 modified by this operation. Only the link from the given directory to its
 child is severed.

=== Renaming A Child ===

POST /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=rename&from_name=OLD&to_name=NEW

 This instructs the node to rename a child of the given directory. This is
 exactly the same as removing the child, then adding the same child-cap under
 the new name. This operation cannot move the child to a different directory.

 This operation will replace any existing child of the new name, making it
 behave like the UNIX "mv -f" command.

=== Other Utilities ===

GET /uri?uri=$CAP

  This causes a redirect to /uri/$CAP, 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 read- or write- cap (obtained
  through some out-of-band channel, like IM or email).

  Note that this form merely redirects to the specific file or directory
  indicated by the $CAP: unlike the GET /uri/$DIRCAP form, you cannot
  traverse to children by appending additional path segments to the URL.

GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]?t=rename-form&name=$CHILDNAME

  This provides a useful facility to browser-based user interfaces. It
  returns a page containing a form targetting the "POST $DIRCAP t=rename"
  functionality described above, with the provided $CHILDNAME present in the
  'from_name' field of that form. I.e. this presents a form offering to
  rename $CHILDNAME, requesting the new name, and submitting POST rename.

GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME?t=uri

 This returns the file- or directory- cap for the specified object.

GET /uri/$DIRCAP/[SUBDIRS../]CHILDNAME?t=readonly-uri

 This returns a read-only file- or directory- cap for the specified object.
 If the object is an immutable file, this will return the same value as
 t=uri.

=== Debugging and Testing Features ===

These URLs are less-likely to be helpful to the casual Tahoe user, and are
mainly intended for developers.

POST $URL?t=check

  This triggers the FileChecker to determine the current "health" of the
  given file or directory, by counting how many shares are available. The
  page that is returned will display the results. This can be used as a "show
  me detailed information about this file" page.

  If a when_done=url argument is provided, the return value will be a redirect
  to that URL instead of the checker results.

  If a return_to=url argument is provided, the returned page will include a
  link to the given URL entitled "Return to the parent directory".

  If a verify=true argument is provided, the node will perform a more
  intensive check, downloading and verifying every single bit of every share.

POST $URL?t=deep-check

  This triggers a recursive walk of all files and directories reachable from
  the target, performing a check on each one just like t=check. The result
  page will contain a summary of the results, including details on any
  file/directory that was not fully healthy.

  t=deep-check is most useful to invoke on a directory. If invoked on a file,
  it will just check that single object. The recursive walker will deal with
  loops safely.

  This accepts the same verify=, when_done=, and return_to= arguments as
  t=check.

  Be aware that this can take a long time: perhaps a second per object.

GET $DIRURL?t=manifest

  Return an HTML-formatted manifest of the given directory, for debugging.

GET $DIRURL?t=deep-size

  Return a number (in bytes) containing the sum of the filesize of all
  immutable files reachable from the given directory. This is a rough lower
  bound of the total space consumed by this subtree. It does not include
  space consumed by directories or immutable files, nor does it take
  expansion or encoding overhead into account. Later versions of the code may
  improve this estimate upwards.

GET $DIRURL?t=deep-stats

  Return a JSON-encoded dictionary that lists interesting statistics about
  the set of all files and directories reachable from the given directory:

   count-immutable-files: count of how many CHK files are in the set
   count-mutable-files: same, for mutable files (does not include directories)
   count-literal-files: same, for LIT files (data contained inside the URI)
   count-files: sum of the above three
   count-directories: count of directories
   size-immutable-files: total bytes for all CHK files in the set, =deep-size
   size-mutable-files (TODO): same, for current version of all mutable files
   size-literal-files: same, for LIT files
   size-directories: size of directories (includes size-literal-files)
   size-files-histogram: list of (minsize, maxsize, count) buckets,
                         with a histogram of filesizes, 5dB/bucket,
                         for both literal and immutable files
   largest-directory: number of children in the largest directory
   largest-immutable-file: number of bytes in the largest CHK file

  size-mutable-files is not implemented, because it would require extra
  queries to each mutable file to get their size. This may be implemented in
  the future.

  Assuming no sharing, the basic space consumed by a single root directory is
  the sum of size-immutable-files, size-mutable-files, and size-directories.
  The actual disk space used by the shares is larger, because of the
  following sources of overhead:

   integrity data
   expansion due to erasure coding
   share management data (leases)
   backend (ext3) minimum block size

== Other Useful Pages ==

The portion of the web namespace that begins with "/uri" (and "/named") is
dedicated to giving users (both humans and programs) access to the Tahoe
virtual filesystem. The rest of the namespace provides status information
about the state of the Tahoe node.

GET /   (the root page)

This is the "Welcome Page", and contains a few distinct sections:

 Node information: library versions, local nodeid, services being provided.

 Filesystem Access Forms: create a new directory, view a file/directory by
                          URI, upload a file (unlinked), download a file by
                          URI.

 Grid Status: introducer information, helper information, connected storage
              servers.

GET /status/

 This page lists all active uploads and downloads, and contains a short list
 of recent upload/download operations. Each operation has a link to a page
 that describes file sizes, servers that were involved, and the time consumed
 in each phase of the operation.

GET /provisioning/

 This page provides a basic tool to predict the likely storage and bandwidth
 requirements of a large Tahoe grid. It provides forms to input things like
 total number of users, number of files per user, average file size, number
 of servers, expansion ratio, hard drive failure rate, etc. It then provides
 numbers like how many disks per server will be needed, how many read
 operations per second should be expected, and the likely MTBF for files in
 the grid. This information is very preliminary, and the model upon which it
 is based still needs a lot of work.

GET /helper_status/

 If the node is running a helper (i.e. if "$BASEDIR/run_helper" is
 non-empty), then this page will provide a list of all the helper operations
 currently in progress. If "?t=json" is added to the URL, it will return a
 JSON-formatted list of helper statistics, which can then be used to produce
 graphs to indicate how busy the helper is.

GET /statistics/

 This page provides "node statistics", which are collected from a variety of
 sources.

   load_monitor: every second, the node schedules a timer for one second in
                 the future, then measures how late the subsequent callback
                 is. The "load_average" is this tardiness, measured in
                 seconds, averaged over the last minute. It is an indication
                 of a busy node, one which is doing more work than can be
                 completed in a timely fashion. The "max_load" value is the
                 highest value that has been seen in the last 60 seconds.

   cpu_monitor: every minute, the node uses time.clock() to measure how much
                CPU time it has used, and it uses this value to produce
                1min/5min/15min moving averages. These values range from 0%
                (0.0) to 100% (1.0), and indicate what fraction of the CPU
                has been used by the Tahoe node. Not all operating systems
                provide meaningful data to time.clock(): they may report 100%
                CPU usage at all times.

   uploader: this counts how many immutable files (and bytes) have been
             uploaded since the node was started

   downloader: this counts how many immutable files have been downloaded
               since the node was started

   publishes: this counts how many mutable files (including directories) have
              been modified since the node was started

   retrieves: this counts how many mutable files (including directories) have
              been read since the node was started

 There are other statistics that are tracked by the node. The "raw stats"
 section shows a formatted dump of all of them.

 By adding "?t=json" to the URL, the node will return a JSON-formatted
 dictionary of stats values, which can be used by other tools to produce
 graphs of node behavior. The misc/munin/ directory in the source
 distribution provides some tools to produce these graphs.

GET /   (introducer status)

 For Introducer nodes, the welcome page displays information about both
 clients and servers which are connected to the introducer. Servers make
 "service announcements", and these are listed in a table. Clients will
 subscribe to hear about service announcements, and these subscriptions are
 listed in a separate table. Both tables contain information about what
 version of Tahoe is being run by the remote node, their advertised and
 outbound IP addresses, their nodeid and nickname, and how long they have
 been available.

 By adding "?t=json" to the URL, the node will return a JSON-formatted
 dictionary of stats values, which can be used to produce graphs of connected
 clients over time.


== safety and security issues -- names vs. URIs ==

Summary: use explicit file- and dir- caps whenever possible, to reduce the
potential for surprises when the virtual drive is changed while you aren't
looking.

The vdrive provides a mutable filesystem, but the ways that the filesystem
can change are limited. The only thing that can change is that the mapping
from child names to child objects that each directory contains can be changed
by adding a new child name pointing to an object, removing an existing child
name, or changing an existing child name to point to a different object.

Obviously if you query tahoe for information about the filesystem and then
act upon the filesystem (such as by getting a listing of the contents of a
directory and then adding a file to the directory), then the filesystem might
have been changed after you queried it and before you acted upon it.
However, if you use the URI instead of the pathname of an object when you act
upon the object, then the only change that can happen is when the object is a
directory then the set of child names it has might be different. If, on the
other hand, you act upon the object using its pathname, then a different
object might be in that place, which can result in more kinds of surprises.

For example, suppose you are writing code which recursively downloads the
contents of a directory. The first thing your code does is fetch the listing
of the contents of the directory. For each child that it fetched, if that
child is a file then it downloads the file, and if that child is a directory
then it recurses into that directory. Now, if the download and the recurse
actions are performed using the child's name, then the results might be
wrong, because for example a child name that pointed to a sub-directory when
you listed the directory might have been changed to point to a file (in which
case your attempt to recurse into it would result in an error and the file
would be skipped), or a child name that pointed to a file when you listed the
directory might now point to a sub-directory (in which case your attempt to
download the child would result in a file containing HTML text describing the
sub-directory!).

If your recursive algorithm uses the uri of the child instead of the name of
the child, then those kinds of mistakes just can't happen. Note that both the
child's name and the child's URI are included in the results of listing the
parent directory, so it isn't any harder to use the URI for this purpose.

In general, use names if you want "whatever object (whether file or
directory) is found by following this name (or sequence of names) when my
request reaches the server". Use URIs if you want "this particular object".

== Concurrency Issues ==

Tahoe uses both mutable and immutable files. Mutable files can be created
explicitly by doing an upload with ?mutable=true added, or implicitly by
creating a new directory (since a directory is just a special way to
interpret a given mutable file).

Mutable files suffer from the same consistency-vs-availability tradeoff that
all distributed data storage systems face. It is not possible to
simultaneously achieve perfect consistency and perfect availability in the
face of network partitions (servers being unreachable or faulty).

Tahoe tries to achieve a reasonable compromise, but there is a basic rule in
place, known as the Prime Coordination Directive: "Don't Do That". What this
means is that if write-access to a mutable file is available to several
parties, then those parties are responsible for coordinating their activities
to avoid multiple simultaneous updates. This could be achieved by having
these parties talk to each other and using some sort of locking mechanism, or
by serializing all changes through a single writer.

The consequences of performing uncoordinated writes can vary. Some of the
writers may lose their changes, as somebody else wins the race condition. In
many cases the file will be left in an "unhealthy" state, meaning that there
are not as many redundant shares as we would like (reducing the reliability
of the file against server failures). In the worst case, the file can be left
in such an unhealthy state that no version is recoverable, even the old ones.
It is this small possibility of data loss that prompts us to issue the Prime
Coordination Directive.

Tahoe nodes implement internal serialization to make sure that a single Tahoe
node cannot conflict with itself. For example, it is safe to issue two
directory modification requests to a single tahoe node's webapi server at the
same time, because the Tahoe node will internally delay one of them until
after the other has finished being applied. (This feature was introduced in
Tahoe-1.1; back with Tahoe-1.0 the web client was responsible for serializing
web requests themselves).

For more details, please see the "Consistency vs Availability" and "The Prime
Coordination Directive" sections of mutable.txt, in the same directory as
this file.


[1]: URLs and HTTP and UTF-8, Oh My

 HTTP does not provide a mechanism to specify the character set used to
 encode non-ascii names in URLs (rfc2396#2.1). We prefer the convention that
 the filename= argument shall be a URL-encoded UTF-8 encoded unicode object.
 For example, suppose we want to provoke the server into using a filename of
 "f i a n c e-acute e" (i.e. F I A N C U+00E9 E). The UTF-8 encoding of this
 is 0x66 0x69 0x61 0x6e 0x63 0xc3 0xa9 0x65 (or "fianc\xC3\xA9e", as python's
 repr() function would show). To encode this into a URL, the non-printable
 characters must be escaped with the urlencode '%XX' mechansim, giving us
 "fianc%C3%A9e". Thus, the first line of the HTTP request will be "GET
 /uri/CAP...?save=true&filename=fianc%C3%A9e HTTP/1.1". Not all browsers
 provide this: IE7 uses the Latin-1 encoding, which is fianc%E9e.

 The response header will need to indicate a non-ASCII filename. The actual
 mechanism to do this is not clear. For ASCII filenames, the response header
 would look like:

  Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="english.txt"

 If Tahoe were to enforce the utf-8 convention, it would need to decode the
 URL argument into a unicode string, and then encode it back into a sequence
 of bytes when creating the response header. One possibility would be to use
 unencoded utf-8. Developers suggest that IE7 might accept this:

  #1: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="fianc\xC3\xA9e"
    (note, the last four bytes of that line, not including the newline, are
    0xC3 0xA9 0x65 0x22)

 RFC2231#4 (dated 1997): suggests that the following might work, and some
 developers (http://markmail.org/message/dsjyokgl7hv64ig3) have reported that
 it is supported by firefox (but not IE7):

  #2: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename*=utf-8''fianc%C3%A9e

 My reading of RFC2616#19.5.1 (which defines Content-Disposition) says that
 the filename= parameter is defined to be wrapped in quotes (presumeably to
 allow spaces without breaking the parsing of subsequent parameters), which
 would give us:

  #3: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename*=utf-8''"fianc%C3%A9e"

 However this is contrary to the examples in the email thread listed above.

 Developers report that IE7 (when it is configured for UTF-8 URL encoding,
 which is not the default in asian countries), will accept:

  #4: Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=fianc%C3%A9e

 However, for maximum compatibility, Tahoe simply copies bytes from the URL
 into the response header, rather than enforcing the utf-8 convention. This
 means it does not try to decode the filename from the URL argument, nor does
 it encode the filename into the response header.
