kipp
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A flexible file storage server
kipp
Getting started
The easiest way to get started with kipp is by using the image published to Docker Hub. The service is then available simply by running:
docker pull uhthomas/kipp
docker run uhthomas/kipp
Databases
Databases can be configured using the --database
flag. The flag requires
the input be parsable as a URL. See the url.Parse
docs for more info.
Badger
Badger is a fast, embedded database which is great for single instances.
SQL
Kipp uses a generic SQL driver, but currently only loads:
As long as a database supports Go's sql package, it can be used. Please file an issue for requests.
File systems
File systems can be configured using the --filesystem
flag. The flag requires
the input be parsable as a URL. See the url.Parse
docs for more info.
Local (your local file system)
The local filesystem does not require any special formatting, and can be used like a regular path such
--filesystem /path/to/files
AWS S3
AWS S3 requires the s3
scheme, and has the following syntax:
--filesystem s3://some-token:some-secret@some-region/some-bucket?endpoint=some-endpoint.
The region
and bucket
are required.
The user info section is optional, if present, will create new static credentials. Otherwise, the default AWS SDK credentials will be used.
The endpoint
is optional, and will use the default AWS endpoint if not present.
This is useful for using S3-compatible services such as:
- Google Cloud Storage - storage.googleapis.com
- Linode Object Storage - linodeobjects.com
- Backblaze B2 - backblazeb2.com
- DigitalOcean Spaces - digitaloceanspaces.com
- ... etc
Policy
Required actions:
-
s3:DeleteObject
-
s3:GetObject
-
s3:PutObject
This is subject to change in future as more features are added.
Building from source
Kipp builds, tests and compiles using Bazel. To run/build locally with bazel:
git clone [email protected]:uhthomas/kipp
cd kipp
bazel run //cmd/kipp
API
Kipp has two main components; uploading files and downloading files. Files can
be uploaded by POSTing a multipart form to the /
endpoint like so:
curl https://kipp.6f.io -F file="some content"
The service will then respond with a 302 (See Other)
status and the location
of the file. It will also write the location to the response body.
Kipp also serves all files located in the web
directory by default, but can
either be disabled or changed to a different location.