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If you're using Swarm without the Gateway proxy, you must add the "--post301 --location-trusted" curl options. You do not need to pass user credentials with Swarm. REGULAR
Regular POST
curl
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-v
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-u
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"USER:PASSWORD"
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-T
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/tmp/myhugefile.zip
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-XPOST
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-H
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"Content-type:
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application/zip"
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"http://mydomain.example.com/mybucket/myhugefile.zip"
This also works, but without "-T" curl will load the entire file into memory. Tip: if
Tip |
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TipIf you need to write an unnamed |
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object you must input the file via stdin and use " |
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This also works, but unless you're using "-T" curl will load the entire file into memory.
curl -v -u "USER:PASSWORD"
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-XPOST
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-H
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"Content-type:
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application/zip"
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--data-binary
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@/tmp/myhugefile.zip
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"http://mydomain.example.com/mybucket/myhugefile.zip"
HTTP
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Multipart MIME (
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Form) POST (
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only via Gateway)
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Info |
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This is only supported via Gateway: |
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see Multipart MIME POST. Multiple files are uploaded in a single POST with |
curl -v -u "USER:PASSWORD"
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-F
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upload=@/tmp/myhugefile.zip
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-F
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upload=@/tmp/foo.gif
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"http://mydomain.example.com/mybucket/"
*Don't forget the "@" before the filename! Note you
Info |
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InfoYou can specify multiple files, but remember these files will use the Gateway spool directory. |
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The URL is only the bucket (or a subdirectory-like path), the |
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object name will be based on the filename uploaded. |
This type of upload will result in streams objects that are either a single object (replcated replicated as policy.replicas
) or EC (see https://connect.caringo.com/system/files/docs/s/WorkingwithLargeObjects.htmlWorking with Large Objects) depending on factors such as the file size and EC settings. Whether a file is uploaded with Transfer-encoding: chunked
can also influence how it's written.
SCSP
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Multipart (
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Parallel Write)
This is useful for uploading large files. You "initiate" the upload, then upload each part of the file , then and make a "complete" request. https://connect.caringo.com/system/files/docs/s/Multipart_Write_Example.htmlSee Multipart Write Example.
This type of upload always results in an EC streamobject, even if the final object is smaller than the EC minimum setting.
S3
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Multipart Upload
The S3 protocol is only supported via Gateway but the implementation of S3 multipart uses Swarm SCSP multipart (parallel writes) and behaves similarly. The s3cmd utility provides a good way to do a multipart upload, but rclone is faster because it uploads the parts in parallel. If your bucket allows "anonymous" writes, you can use "curl". See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/mpuoverview.html
This type of upload always results in an EC streamobject, even if the final object is smaller than the EC minimum setting.