File System (WNFS)
Working with the Webnative File System (WNFS)
The Web Native File System (WNFS) is a file system built on top of the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS). Each Fission user has their own WNFS, and apps store user files and data in it when granted permission.
Each file system has a public tree and a private tree, much like your macOS, Windows, or Linux desktop file system. The public tree is "live" and publicly accessible on the Internet. The private tree is encrypted so that only the owner can see the contents.
All information (links, data, metadata, etc.) in the private tree is encrypted. Decryption keys are stored so that access to a given directory grants access to all of its subdirectories.
WNFS is structured and functions similarly to a Unix-style file system, with one notable exception: it's a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG), meaning that a given child can have more than one parent (think symlinks but without the "sym").
Permissions
Every file system action checks if an app has received sufficient permissions from the user. Apps request permissions
when they initialize webnative. The Fission Auth Lobby grants authorization.
Apps request permission for app storage, additional private and public directories, and user apps published with the Platform APIs. For example, a notes app might request these permissions.
The app would have access to its dedicated app storage and public and private Notes directories.
Apps request permissions.app
to store user data in a default app storage directory and other public and private directories. Webnative creates these directories for your app if they do not already exist.
Platform permissions. The platform permissions could be left out of this example because this app will not need them. See the Platform API guide for more information on working with user apps.
The initialize function will return a NotAuthorised
scenario if one of the UCAN will expire in one day to minimize the likelihood of receiving an expired permissions error. But to be safe, apps should also account for this error.
WNFS
WNFS exposes a POSIX-style interface:
add
: add a filecat
: retrieve a fileexists
: check if a file or directory existsls
: list a directorymkdir
: create a directorymv
: move a file or directoryread
: alias forcat
rm
: remove a file or directorywrite
: alias foradd
Publish
The publish
function synchronizes your file system with the Fission API and IPFS. WNFS does not publish changes automatically because it is more practical to batch changes in some cases. For example, a large data set is better published once than over multiple calls to publish
.
Returns: CID
the updated root CID for the file system.
Remember to publish! If you do not call publish
after making changes, user data will not be persisted to WNFS.
API Summary
Methods
Methods for interacting with the filesystem all use absolute paths.
Paths created by path functions have a FilePath
or DirectoryPath
type. Methods with a DistinctivePath
param accept either a FilePath
or a DirectoryPath
.
The FileContent
that WNFS can store includes FileContentRaw
, Blob
, string
, number
, and boolean
. FileContentRaw
is Uint8Array
. In addition, the private file system can store Object
s.
add
Adds file content at a given path.
Params:
path:
FilePath
requiredcontent:
FileContent
required
Returns: CID
the updated root CID for the file system
Example:
cat
Retrieves some file content at a given path.
Params:
path:
FilePath
required
Returns: FileContent
Example:
exists
Checks if there is anything located at a given path.
Params:
path:
DistinctivePath
required
Returns: boolean
Example:
get
Retrieves the node at the given path, either a File
or Tree
object
Params:
path:
DistinctivePath
required
Returns: Tree | File | null
Example:
ls
Returns a list of links at a given directory path
Params:
path:
DirectoryPath
required
Returns: { [name: string]: Link }
Object with the file name as the key and its Link
as the value.
Example:
mkdir
Creates a directory at the given path
Params:
path:
DirectoryPath
required
Returns: CID
the updated root CID for the file system
Example:
mv
Move a directory or file from one path to another.
Params:
from:
DistinctivePath
requiredto:
DistinctivePath
required
Returns: CID
the updated root CID for the file system
Example:
rm
Removes a file or directory at a given path.
Params:
path:
DistinctivePath
required
Returns: CID
the updated root CID for the file system
Example:
write
Alias for add
.
Params:
path:
FilePath
requiredcontent:
FileContent
required
Returns: CID
the updated root CID for the file system
Example:
Versioning
Each file and directory has a history
property, which you can use to get an earlier version of that item. We use the delta
variable as the order index, primarily because the timestamps can be slightly out of sequence due to device inconsistencies.
Requesting many versions with file.history.list
can be slow. The acceptable delay will depend on your application.
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