- Add web server integration to cluster_demo.sh script - Configure web server port (8090) - Update build_if_needed() to check for toastyfs_web binary - Add get_web_binary() function - Start web server after chunk servers - Update status display to show web server - Update help text to show HTTP interface - Fix bug in web/main.c where --local-port incorrectly set upstream_port instead of local_port The cluster demo now starts a full cluster with: - Metadata server on port 8080 (ToastyFS protocol) - N chunk servers starting from port 8081 - Web server on port 8090 (HTTP interface)
ToastyFS
ToastyFS is a distributed file system designed for self-hosting, so it aims to be pragmatic, understandable, and robust. You can use ToastyFS to store your files reliably over multiple machines knowing they will be automatically replicated and healed in case of hardware failure. ToastyFS works by running nodes on multiple machines. Clients using the ToastyFS C library can then send file operations to the cluster. Here's a quick example:
#include <ToastyFS.h>
int main(void)
{
ToastyString addr = TOASTY_STR("127.0.0.1");
int port = 8080;
// Connect to cluster
ToastyFS *toasty = toasty_connect(addr, port);
ToastyString file = TOASTY_STR("/my_file.txt");
// Create and write to a file
toasty_create_file(toasty, file, 4096);
toasty_write(toasty, file, 0, "Hello!", 6);
// Read it back
char buf[6];
toasty_read(toasty, file, 0, buf, 6);
// Done!
toasty_disconnect(toasty);
return 0;
}
⚠️ Note that ToastyFS is still in early development ⚠️
🎵 Now let's get toasty 🎵
Features
- Cross-platform (runs on Windows and Linux)
- Automatic Replication & Self-Healing
- Automatic content deduplication via internal content-addressing
- Configurable file chunk sizes
- Small and understandable
But ToastyFS is still in early development, so here are the missing features:
- No master replication
- No authentication or encryption
Testing
ToastyFS is tested by running an in-memory simulation of a cluster with many clients running hundreds of random operations in parallel. The test is run for long periods of times under valgrind or compiled with sanitizers.